THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUfcO. V-i. SlOliT v. , , 1-0 -"J 'Til tell v.v, r r. patient. s nvi'ii ; H If i:i 'be dent 1st'.- i w : v. ""':; la't 11 e I've cot a lpji-i ,t!i, h.'i.,!i' 1 XBOW It. I'm ;.ti!. ;iv.a'.' t.'i at It !;;" iMen rn-l.(t"'l. If I 1n 1 taken .-. re f my lei th tl.i y v o ,', 1 :'t I"- in 1 adltlon an 'I in t'...n' a--e I chouldn't lave had to ini-.e to oi. l v.Tiit to Y that uiub-rsloo 1 l.--fore I be rtn." "That's understood." tald the d'-n-leL "Loan ba-k. please, and open our mouth and L-t in ' see what's he trouble." "Walt a minute," said the patl -tit. "Don't you tell mo that you intend eonduct the examination from tl.i' jatalde. 1 know that too. I'm not tolng to open my mouth any wl 1t 'ban I can without hurling it lin ens It's necessary so you needn't be jlarmed. I know that's just a pro 'eaelonal Jok, but I don't like pro .'eeslonal Jokes." "I won't make any," the dentist taeured him. "If you think you've got to fill the ooth you needn't get jocular about he dam that you're going to put In-o nj mouth. There are twenty-five leatlsts in this building besides yoir--elf and I'll let fin that there --n't M of tliem that l,an't sprung' tl.r.t. 'on mot every time lie 's pulled a she.-t. jf rubber over r, tooth." Til k-ep i: dentist. "I wish that latient. "I'll I rhlle you Mi:! in mind." sai 1 the '.on v n il I." s: i 1 ii." cMI-e-.l to you. And .i 1"' quite right in .urmlslng tha' I t!-.-r expiitel to ear a gobbm rrow:i until after I vent to that bourn from wh :- .hat Jest, too, will be superfluous." "Are you ready now?" asked the dentist. "Just a word or two more us a natter of precaution." said the pa 'Itnt. "If you think you have to put a bridge say so plainly and simply ind don't consider the possibility of i. ferry answering the purpose." "Well." said the dentist, a little .mpatlently. "I've come to have my teeth fixed." ootlnued the patient. "That's the tarpote I entertained In visiting you. t expect to suffer physically, but I iven't any notion of allowing you o Inflict mental anguish on me at he ame time. If I can help It." "Quite right, and there's no oc r.aelon for It," agreed the dentist. "You needn't tell me, either that -on arent going to hurt me," stipu ted the patient. "That might go 'own with somebody who'd never "en In a dentist's chair before, but all Isn't the first time wit", me and know blamed well that you are --otng to hurt me. T! e painless lalms of dentistry ar'.y strictly and olely to the pract1' I iier. You need -.ot ask me If yjj hurt me. You'll 'loar toe ho'I'r and feel me Jump Mid that ought to be enough vtthout asking fool questions, I aould think." "I haven't any doubt that I shall ' able to tell," said the dentist. "I light put a glass of water handy lr you to throw at me if I don't em to understand and you object telling, however." "I don't want to offend you," said le patient. "Don't mlseonstrue what m saying. I want to got this over Ith as amicably as possible and I'm lentioning a few of the things that ave a tendency to irritate me. Yoj in't cheer me up v.i.h witticisms, ou couldn't mr.ke me laugh with .ughlng gas and It would interrupt jur work any way, if I Indulged in -.a of mirth I'll tell you now that y worst tooth the one that spur d me to action has stopped ech ig. It stopped Just as I wub about get in the elevator, so I feel quite idependent about it. Some men ould have turned around and left le building without paying you a nt for the effect of your name as iey read It In the directory, but I'm ot that kind." "Are you ready to open your outh and let me begin now?" asked e dentist. "Oh, darn it!" said the patient Well, I suppose If 1 must I must." The Malncrn Wildcats. In the forests of Malacca and other lands In the Indian ocean may ill be found the animal known as .e wildcat. The upper parts of It e generally of a clear yellow color, Ith black spots; the lower parts are hlte, with black spots also. On the .ck the spots lengthen almost into nes or rings, blak on yellow. The average length of the nnltrnl, eluding the tall. Is almost two feet; e tall averages nine inches. !ts Ight when standing erect Is about ' inches at the shoulder and 15 rhes at the hind-quarters. Its Htn r Is mild and gentle; It p!ay3 al st like a domestic rat, or, ntther, 'ten, chasing Its tall and amusing elf with anything that It can roll 'th Its pavs. Molern He1p1etnec. The best inheritance that either y or girl m.oy have Is that of re urcefulness and self-reliance. It a common experience of those who iploy the best brought up children the present day, the young men ho go to the best f -hoois nri'l ac tlt themselves well at the unh'er les, that they are afflieted wth a nd of helplessness. Thin matter, Ids Country Life, to which tho at ntlon of education leaders should l-j directed. OLD NEW YORK M'LESTONES. Several Still Standing on Each cf the Old Pott Roads. L'&ch of the o'd post roads leading out of Manhattan still has some of tie old milestones remaining. In Yonkers, cn the Albany post road, there is a stone on the east side of Broadway near the Lowerre stutlon. Usually milestones In this section are placed ou the west Fide of the rosd, and this txei ptien It ads one to think that this stone has possibly been re moved from its original position to preserve It, As the top of the stoce has been broken oft the cumber can not be stated, says a writer In the Westchester County Magazine. It la probably 17. The nineteenth Etone Is built Into the stone wall on the estate at 618 Broadway and the twentieth is on the east side of the roadway at about 115 Broadway. At Dobbs Ferry Is a milestone, dilapidated and undecipherable, at the comer of Broadway and Walnut street; some local society should res cue this stone and put It In a perma nent condition. It may be the twenty-third mile stone. At Crotononthe-Hudson are two milestones built into the wall about the Van Cortlandt houses. Both were probably placed here for preservation as they do not proj erly belong here. One of them should be the fortieth miie stone. In this same wall is a curiosity of Indian manufacture, a hollowed out stone for grinding corn. At rt-ekskill, by ihe Holman house, a short distance north of the village, is the fiftieth mile stone, lately repair ed and reset by the D. A. K. The old ho i e Is the Iius.-nbury Tavern of Rovo'.untioi.ary days. Here Major n dre was kept overnight after his cap ture at Tarrytown. Along the Boston Post road may be mentioned the nineteenth mile stone at New Roihelle, at the corner of Echo avenue; the twenty-third mile stone at Rye, near Mamaroneck, and tho twenty-fourth at Rye, opposite the John Jay house. A mile stone dissimilar to the others Is the one on the White Plains road, Scarsdale, near the Wayside Inn. The Inscription reads: XXIV Miles to N. York 1775 It Is the only milestone that baa been noticed bearing Roman numer als. The Wayside Inn, a low. ram bling, picturesque building, waa a tav ern in the early days, and it la said had a charter from one of the Georgea tor a perpetual license to sell liquor. Unappreciated Sympathy. The soda-fountain clerk was en gaged In vigorously shaking up a chocolate and egg, says a writer in the Bellman, when suddenly the glass broke In his hands, and the ensuing deluge made him look like a human eclair. The horrified customer leaned over the counter and tried to be sym pathetic. Not knowing exactly what to say, he finally blurted out, consol ingly: "Oh er too bad! Did the glass break?" Dripping from head to foot, the clerk looked at him witheringly. "Did the glass break?" he repeated. "Did the glass bre.ik?" And then w ith freezing sarcasm, "Oh, no, not at all, not at all! You Just happened to step in while I was taking my morning shower." Another Fake Nailed. The manager of a big ostrich farm In South Africa, now visiting relatives In New Jersey, declared to me the other day: "In all my experience with these birds I have never seen one in the act of burying its head in the sand. That familiar old story Is a fake, pure and simple." In some of the school books are pictures ot the ostrich hunt, men racing wildly on horseback after the plumed bipeds, and such of the latter as are in danger of being run down are depicted with their heads In the earth. Millions of us were educated in the belief that the ostrich really acted in this man ner, and remained perfectly still while Its richest plumes were being extract ed. Another tradition gone wrong." Preferred to Send a Substitute. John L. Sullivan was asked why he bad never taken to giving boxing les sons. "Well, son, I tried it once," replied Mr. Sullivan. "A husky young man took one lesson from me and went home a little the worse for wear. When he came around for his second lesson he said: 'Mr. Sullivan, it was my idea to learn enough about boxing from you to be able to lick a certain young gentleman what I've got It in for. But I've changed my mind.' says he. 'If it's all the same to you, Mr. Sullivan, I'll send this young gentle man down here to take the rest of my lessons for me.' " The Cat In the House. The presence of a cat to those who care tor him, Is tranquillizing and a mental restorative. A cat asleep in the most comfortable chair In the room or drowsing on the window seat suggests reposefu'ness as almost noth ing else can do. A cat's purr 6pells profound contentment, and is the synonym of perfect peace. No other domestic animal has such a soft fur to stroke If It Is a weakness In a humau to care for a cat. the cat lover errs In the excellent company of tho good and great of all the ages. Phila delphia Ledger. HAS 2,000 PATIENTS lOJOH PAY i Dr. Blair's Jab at Dronx Zoo in New York City is Full of Excitement DIFFICULT AND YAillZD PRACTICE Answers Hurry Calls from Bengal Tigers and Alligators Pulls the Teeth of the Python Manlcurea the Elephant. The doctor who has perhaps the largest and most difficult and varied practice of any in the city Is up in the Bronx, says the New York Sun. He has more than two thousand patients who have come from nil parts of the world, and he ha.? fever received a fee from one of them. Ho U Dr. W. Reld Blair, who is responsible for the health of nil the animals, reptiles and birds In the New "ork Zoological Tark in Bronx Tark. Not until Dr. Blair began to make a systematic and statistical study of ; diseases, together with their causes, j among animals and birds did tho .managers of other zoos think it worth while to do uo, though they were an nually losing thousands of dollars worth of valuable animals The bene fits of the s'.uly arid the work of Dr. : Blair sunn bo-rre app- ret-.t. and now 'the zoological parks of I.o:;d-.n. Her ein. WashlrtL-tou I'!. l.ulo'.phia and 'other cities r.r rVo pt.-...!i,g the i fame line of investigation. Many theories of long ptam'.ir. .; have been 'dispelled by aseertainin-i tho actual .facts and the animal death rate ha3 been greatly reduced. Dr. Blair Is fond of all his patients land interested 1l his work. He is a mild looking man, even tempered, a close student, and from his appear ance one would not suspect that he constantly associates with the wild est of animals and birds. His patients never visit his office, but he treats them all at their homes. He finds many stubborn and puzzling cases to deal with, for frequently when his patients need him most they make It hardest for him. Lately some of them have become accustomed to his treatment and take their pills and medicines without Its being necessary to conceal the drugs In their food. The difficulties of this doctor's prac tice may be Judged when it Is taken into consideration that when he re ceives a midnight call his patient may be a Bengal tiger, an African elephant, a wolf, an ostrich or a deadly snake from the Jungle or a hungry alligator from the tropics. Many men would not care to take chances with a lion or a tiger even If the animal were un der the Influence of ether, for he might wake up, and then there would surely be trouble for some one. Dr. Blair has ben treating animals in the park for seven years and has not yet met with a mishap. In many instances he ha3 had hard fights and only succeeded In accomplishing hi3 purpose with the aid of a dozen strong men. He has pulled the teeth of the twenty-seven foot regal python, operated for appendicitis on an orang outang, removed an eye from an os trich, cut a nine round corn from the foot of an elephant and performed other difficult operations upon a buf falo, hippopotamus, kangaroo, etc. He is Just now curing Gur.da, the ele phant, of a skin disease. Dr. Blair understands his; patients as few other i "'.p'.f understand ani mals. He spends all his time among them. He h:is various kinds of ani mal babies to trke care of. In the equipment of the Zoological Park is a laboratory and a drug store. There will shortly be added an animal hospital that will contain an operating room and private and public wards, fitted with up to date appliances. When any animal seems to be 111 the keeper makes a report to the doc tor and a record sheet is filled with the name of the animal, date and diagnosis, dally respiration, pulse and temperature, together with the diet and treatment. In case of a death there follows an autopsy. A record Is made of the condition of all the organs. A sample block of each organ is hardened with paraffin und sliced into very thin sections by the microtome. The section Is mounted on a glass plate, stained with aniline dyes and studied under the microscope. Thousands of such records are filed away, forming an invi.luhble record. There are also kept many mlccroscopio samples of the blood of living ani mals showing dkeased states. This year Dr. Blair h:is bejn mnk Ing a special 6tudy of pneumonia among his patients, as this is the most deadly disease, especially umong the primates and hoofed animals. When a new animal conies to ttie park the doctor first places It In quarantine un til be Is convinced that It Is not suf fering from any contagious disease. Altogether Dr. Blair has one ot the most interesting practices in the city of New Y'ork. Too Good. Hans -came In from uis ranch, two miles from Olney, to buy a horse. "I've got the very thing you want," said Ike Bergman. "It's a fine road horse, five years old, sound as a qual, $175 cash down, and he goes ten miles without stopping." Hans threw up his hands skyward. "Not for me." he said, "no, (or me I wouldn't give you five cents for blm. I live eight miles from Astoria, und I'd hat to walk bade two miles." iliilB OFFffifl Of! Ml '.'art Hfisted on Dec jrs Sewing It to Ctur.'.p .inc It's Gsit g to SUy far Coed. I.' jut Ii ii;iii,f i ld. N. J. When Wil liam .r.ilidii o; this town aceid'-ntal-ly c 'it one of his thumb off. his r huiu's and friends thought he must g i through life with a maimed hai.d Wabirou. however, knew a game w. rth 'wo of that. He ph k-.d up tile thumb and carried It to the Muhleii b' lg Hospital. "I've Just cut my thumb off and would like to have It put on again," he said as coolly as if he simply were ordering the repair of a broken strap. The surgeons looked at the severed thumb and the stump and decided to try It. Antiseptic solutions were sent for and the wound was cleansed thor oughly. The severed thumb also was immersed In the solution, anJ then the surgeons did more. They put tho thumb ot. the stump and slti.hed it there, warning Waldron t) be care ful aud not dislodfi It. Bandages were applied and developim nu were awaited. To the surprise of many i ersons the operation Is a success. The bandages were removed and the severed bun 1 and flesh are knitting. Even the severed veins have made new con nections and ire sending enough the thump to keep the tissue alive and ward off all danger of blood pois oning. Waldron is happy and the sur gions feel they have done a good piece of work. TO PLANT 9,000,000 ACRES. Ertgli3h Royal Commission's Plan to Solve Unemployed Problem. London. The Koyal Commission appointed to consider the question of i.i'iorestation as a palliative for un employment has issued its report. It recommends a plan for the plaiitin;; o." H.Iju'J.Ouu ucres in Great Britain and Ireland over a period of eighty years, about 100 000 acres to be afforested annually and the work to employ 1S, wO men In the winter months. The report says that Parliament could be asked to grant the necessary powers, and that the scheme should be fi nanced by a loan, the Interest of which would be defrayed by taxation. It Is estimated that ttie forests would be self-supporting utter the fortieth year, and after eight years the in come from them would reach $7,500, 000. The commission included among Its members H. Rider Haggard, the au thor. It is understood that the govern ment, probably at the next session of Parliament, will take steps to ob tain approval for the scheme laid out by the Royal Commission. This li railed editorially by all the morning newspapers as an Important and busi nesslike proposal especially In view of the great advance In the price of timber In recent years and the fact that Great Britain in 1907 imported timber to the value of $160,000,000, of which twenty varieties could be grown In Great Britain. AUTOGAPHS OF ELIHU YALE. University Gets the First That Have Come Into Her Possession, New Haven, Conn. Y'ale Univers ity has Just received the gifts of two autographs of Governor Elihu Y'a'.e. Its patron, these being the first that have ever come into her possession. The first of these is the signature of Governor Y'ale, sent on by Dr. Ed gar Thurston. Governor of the muse um at Madras, India. It is cut from the consultation book of the Council of Tort St. George, Madras, when Eli hu Y'ale was Governor of that body. The second memento of Governor Y'.'.le is an autograph letter, said to be the only one in America. It is given to the university by L. S. Whipple of the class of ISS1 of Boston. WOMAN A POULTRY STUDENT. Mrs. Saare, Owner of Large Catsklll Eetatc, Feeds Chickens at Cornell. Uraca, N. Y'. Mrs. Olive Bj-own Paare, past mldale age, was the most interesting figure In the short courses in the Cornell College of Agriculture. Although she has a large estate known as Y'ama-no-Achi in the Catskills, with a retinue of Japanese servants, she came to Cornell to study poultry, and every morning In company with fifty husky young farmer boys she went out to the poultry house to feed the chickens and study them. Mrs. Saare is an authority on Japan ese architecture. Her chicken houses on her estate are patterned after Japanese pagodas and her home Is of Japanese architecture. SLOW WORKING CONSCIENCE. After Forty-one Years, Man Sends $10 to Its Rightful Owner. Pennsburg, Pa. A letter has been received by Abraham Benfield, of Huff's Church, in which the writer asked whether he remembered miss ing $10 from a 5100 roll of bills forty one years ago, when he wanted to pay a bill to Jacob Dausman at the Bech telsville store. Mr. Benfield readily recalled the in cident and replied in tho affirmative, whereupon he received a check for $10, presumably conscience money. Coal Under Yellowstone Park. Helena, Mont. Cleveland Hllson, manager of the Mont -.mi Coke and Coal Company, of Eldridge, says a largo deposit of coal lies unt'er Y'el iowstona Park. "There is no ques tion." he says, "that millions of dol lars' worth of coal and other materials r.re located on the national reserve, r.nd I look to see them opened one ... mm tells mu Co a Little Ilarsa and They'll Stampede to You, Says Nice OKI Jonnson DON'T MAKE "MO-GDC" EYES Dluebear:!'s Quest was for Cash, not Heads Mati Admitting 18 Mar riages Tells Others to Go Slow Made Living by Bigamy. O20D00D30CD3DDC0ODOOOOOO: Epigrams for Wooers by Bigamist Johnson. Treat the Intended victim a little hnr-h. He distant and she will come to you. Don't cat calf-glances. Iinn't make poo-goo eyes. Widows are easiest. Don't waste time on manoeu- O vrt-s. X lie ntiick and decisive. ODDOOOOOOOCXDODOOOOOOOOOOOO San Francisco, Cal.- One of the rtost remarkable confessions ever made by a bigamist in the V tilted f-'i.i'en has been obtained from Chris ti.vn C. Johnson. This rl.e o'.d g-ntleman bigamist, n'nv in P:in Q ientin prison, serving a term of seven years, Is a living testi monial of the fact that t he women of tliis country are on a stampede to tlto I'.ymenea' altar. Johnson did not be gin his Bluebeard career until he had reached the ripeness of sixty, was portly, gray-haired and a trifle stiff in the Joints. Y'et he had only to step Into the open and announce: "Ladies, I am looking for a wife," and they flocked to him in a headlong rush. In three years this venerable Don Juan married six nnd proposed and was accepted by eighteen. More than a thousand others wrote to blm that they were hunting a husband and his description of himself sounded allur ing. Had this "nice old man" been able to arrange his dates with facility he might have led a bride to the nltar every day in the year. "My experience has taught me," said the bigamist, on bis way to pris on, "that women are fools. Any kind or condition of man can marry as often as he wishes. He need only bear in mind the following rules: "Don't be soft or sweet with them. "Treat them a little harshly. "Be a little distant, and she will surely come to you. "Do not waste time with manoeu vres." Johnson says that the women he met fell In love with him after he had talked to them a few times. He did not Indulge In what he termed "calf glances" or "goo-goo" eyes. But this mlly, white-haired enchant er was not In the marrying business for sentiment. He had been a horse trader all his life, nnd wearied of its tedium. He had read how Johann Hoch and other notorious bigamists had fleeced thrir squadrons of wives. They had begun a little earlier than he. Consequently he thought he could better their plans with more mature judgment. Bigamist Johnson could not recall the names of all his fiancees. Their names had been legion. He named eleven from whom he had obtained sums ranging from $100 to $1,000 and left in the lurch, for the most part waiting at the church. There may be others, he admits, as his memory is not absolutely to be depended upon In the rush from altar to altar and hurried flit from one honeymoon to another. He courted, for Instance, he says, ten women at once In Portland, Ore. The majority of his victims are widows. Some of them still love the nice old bigamist. Mrs. Josephine Henninger, of Oakland, whom he cruelly deceived, followed him to San Quentin Prison. Johnson had tak en all her money from her, she said, but she still loved him. Others in the California lot of his wives have confessed to the police that they can not shake off their love for the pro fessional enchanter, even though they know he did not return the sen timent. The officers on the train which bore Johnson to San Quentin would not al low Mrs. Henninger to approach him. Nevertheless, the woman fol lowed him to the gates of the prison and threw a kiss as he entered the jail yard. The old bigamist has been put to work in the Jute mill. In his detailed confession this amazingly fascinating old man not only gave suggestions on how to woo and wed wholesale, but uttered a caution to womankind. "I would warn all women against marrying a man who talks too sweet," he said. "He has something up his sleeve every time. Marry a business man one who will talk business al ways. Widows particularly should ray heed to this advice, for they are most easily influenced." Johnson said that In many cases he had to resist the ardent wooing di rected ngalnst him. "If a man says nl"e things to most of them," he said, "they will smile and smirk until the roor man finds himself taking pity on them and proposing. Y'ou can win them either way by being stern or distant or being sweet. If one way does not work, the other surely will. Pome are so eager to marry that you fairly have to race away from theiu." i ur imnncn i IIL iIUULU NOVEL CALENDAR. Strips Over Each Data Are Dtlachtd Dally, Indicating Current Date. A iiis'oin common with pro'.v.fy everybody In using calendais iti:s out with pen .r pencil j, dale of the n.onfh as It goes. Tl Is then small elumre of mlst.il ij.r :'i (f-itn. A Philadelphia man sut ?:-.: a : if'di hen. r and neater m-M,ii nf i In el. Ing rl tho dates in n c.ih-r be has pniented, nn lllnsti a' ior; (,' which is.sluwn here. In (IiIr taler ,r hero is n series of transverse p..r strips extending fo the tenter of , ,. , row of figures. The dates are prfitvil i 'd partly npnri tho sheet and -i:pon the nfrips, the latter lei-.-, cured to the sheets only between :.: .-! mid detachable under tN urs. When the strip Is remove i top and hotto?') portions of th still remain vl.OMe. Each ( . , strip covering the corresponding i Is removed. The msor Is thus abi tell at a glance the date of the in": Also. If he desires to refer to dates of days nlready passed, he reauily determine thorn from the ly broken figures. VI TO SHOW PHOTOGRAPHS Album Is Equipped with Magnifng Glass and Mirror. A compact and interesting device for home entertainment has beer in vented by a New Y'ork man. It run sluts of a photograph holder, wlsicY Is at the same time an exhibitor, th? whole being designed In the form ot an album. The album is set on stand, back down, and Is divided Ir.to throe compartments, the two side compartments for holding photogray'as and an electric battery, and the ni tre division having a mirror set ia the back and a lens in the front, wl space between for inserting the news. This inner section is movable aru! can be adjusted to any position sired, the magnifying glass In th-; front enlarging tho views and briv. In.; out all the detail. An elect:. c l's'lit. supplied from the battery lu th storage compartment. Illumines th exhibition chamber and enhances t'M general effect of the picture. For evenings at home this device can made both Instructive nnd enterta ins with a collection of historic vie. Squab Courtship. The squab farm Is an interestia; place. Belgian homers are the U't breeders. The parents birds are tb'J pick of all the flocks. They piif young. The male selects his partnvr. and his wooing Is not easy. At fc"t he Is pecked at angrily. He Is a r1' slstent fellow though, nnd will not b-i repulsed. The object of his atteniioi tries to escape by flight. He pursue relentlessly; when she Hies he flie after her; when she runs he r after her, when she roosts he roe'- beside her. This keeps up on t-i average for two days, then W'-tt Pigeon relents, evidently deciding ;t would be hard hearted to deny so ar dent a lover. The couple then sen: down to a staid married life. The average Ave pairs of squabs a . Kggs are hatched in eighteen aX and four weeks later the squabs to market. They grow like weed J, at the end of the four weeks beit fully feathered pigeons. What's In a Man. "All the constituents of a Im pound man are contained in I' c-bf.s," said the chemist. "There Is enough gas In a man," f o went ou, "to fill a gasometer of V C-I0 cubic feet. There is enough to make four nails. There is eniv-S fat to make 75 candles and a lw cr.ke of soap. There is enough pti'' phoroua to make 8,06-1 boxei matches. "There Is enough hydrogen lu K:" to fill a balloon and carry him up t tho clouds. The remaining constitu ents of a man would yield, If utJ'v'-. six cruets of salt, a bowl cf sugar ku! ten gallons of water." No wonder the Psalmist Ft!d: "I am fearfully nnd wonderfully iuui.'t' 1 I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers