Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, June 09, 1910, Image 12

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    CHICHESTER SPILLS
DIAMOND BRAND
c $ **
LADIES t "V^»r
A«v your Drumrl.t for CIII-CURS TRR'R A
DIAMOND ItKAND DIM S iu Km and/Vv
Ooi.u metallic boxes, Bcalcd with BluevO)
Ri'ibon. TAKE NO oninn. Bo jof ronr W
DRUITKLOT NOD FTFLK SIR OUI-CUKR-TER S V
111 \ UONI» nitANIl I»11.1,8, for twenty-five
years regarded as Best, Safest, Always Reliable.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
TIMK FUrnVIA/UCRF WORTH
THIRD tVtnl Wntnt TESTED
Roof Slating
I am especially prepared to
Contract for Slating
By th square or job. As to my work
manship, I refer, by permission,
to the work recently completed
for the Hon. B. VV. Green.
GEORGE A. WRIGHT.
Get My Prices Before You
Use Shingles
Save Your Wife
liy buying a REX WASHER,
the King of Washers, the washer
with the HIGH SPEED PLY
WHEEL AND PAST RE
VOLVING DASHER. Any
child can work it. Stop in and
look at it.
We also have a fulljline ot
Mantles, Globes,
Earners, Chandeliers
and Light Hardware.
And|if it is Plumbing, Heat
ing or Tinning, call on us.
DININNY, BURNSIOE&Co
Broad St., Emporium, Pa.
(k J. Lilllill'
Fiiniitiire
The Set to Set Before You
Is waiting for you in the shape
ol a nice set of* crockery. We
are now showing a splendid stock
of good sound Crockery, every
single piece warranted free from
fault or blemish. The finest as
sortment iu the county at rea
aonablejprices.
UiHlertakiiig
(iit J. Liilliir
Party's File on One Vote.
Instances ntv niaiiiiun a-ugh In
clectVuis whi'ii a s gle \ i !>• urns the
scale but for tha, vole ti> ccc.de not
'•nly the fate of a C.II < late, but of a
ptirly as well, is ran-, fut a maj«»rl
tj of fiic iti i .irliai.it* i.. uhi It may
logically dcpcini on a i.i.ijurltj of one
in the country, :..«.s woikci! suae of the
most lii'jmout'H ■ :■ ■ <11! . .ssible. The
rl.is. leal exaii.i . • M IU act of unlou
of I TOD, n'i.ai.i..* ami ng the largest,
most important ,1. I n.ost n mnrkabte
eh. 111.. ever in i.japll hed by a legis
lative In (l.v. < >::e hundred and six
voted for it and 105 against. Then a
majority of or.c curried the great re
form 1.111 In IS.J2.
Majorities only a little bigger have
rgalti and again been responsible for
l'.irreacliing consequences. A majori
ty of tivc threw out the Melbourne
government in IN."!). By the same tig
tire Lord .John Pussell's government
was defeated In l- Gladstone went
■nit of office in IST.) because he lacked
three votes, and the public education
net, one of the 1 . st important ever
passed, was placed 011 the statute
book by a majority of two. —Loudon
Chronicle.
Wild Pens of Asia.
The whole tribe of wild dogs, which
in closely allied forms are to be found
in the wildest jungles and woods of
Asia, from the Himalayas to Ceylon
and fro: i China to ihe Taurus—unless
the "go'.ileu wolves" of the Itoman em
pire are now extinct in the forests of
Asia Minor—show an individual and
corporate courage which entitles them
to a high place among the most dar
ing of wild creatures. The "red dogs,"
to give them their most characteristic
name, are neither large in size nor do
they assemble in large packs. Those
which have been from time to time
measured and described seem to aver
age some three fe->t in length from the
nose to the root of the tail. The pack
seldom numbers more than nine or
ten, yet there is sufficient evidence that
they are willing and able to destroy
any creature that inhabits the Jungle,
except the adult elephant and perhaps
the rhinoceros, creatures whose great
size and leathery hide make them al
most invulnerable to such eueniies us
dogs.—London Spectator.
London's Big Ben.
Why is the large bell in the tower
of the house of parliament in Loudon
called Big Ben? The average London
er himself seems to have no idea how
it got its name. When the building
was designed Sir Benjamin Hall had a
great deal to do with carrying out the
plans of the architects, being high
commissioner of public works, and his
coworkers appreciated the fact that to
liini the city of London was largely in
debted. So when the question came
up in parliament as to the name of the
enormous bell that was to be hung in
the tower a member shouted, "Why
not call it Big Ben?" This suggestion
was received with much applause as
well as with roars of laughter, for Sir
Benjamin was an enormous man, both
in height and girth, and had ofteu been
called Big Ben. From that day on
the bell whose peal every Londoner
knows has been known only as Big
Ben.—ll arj >er's Weekly.
Mirjhty In Titles.
The ruler of Turkey, In addition to
the titles sulian and kha-khan ihigh
prince and lord of lords), also claims
sovereignty over most districts, towns,
cities and states iu the orient, specify
ing each by name and setting out In
each of his various titles "all the forts,
citadels, purlieus aud neighborhood
thereof In regular legal form. His of
tlclal designation ends, "Sovereign also
of diverse nations, states, peoples aud
races on the /ace of the earth." All
this Is in addition to his high position
as "head of the faithful" anil "su
preme lord of all the followers of the
prophet." "direct and only lieutenant
on earth of Mohammed."
The Great Eastern.
The dimensions of the one time world
famous Great Kastern were as fol
lows: Length, <>:»- feet; width, K.'l feet;
depth, tiO feet; tonnage, 24,000 tons;
draft when unloaded, 'JO feet, wheu
loaded, ao feet. She had paddle
wheels llfty-slx feet In diameter aud
was ulso prov liled with a four bladed
screw pro|H>tler of twenty-four feet
diameter. She had accommodations
for soo Hrst class, '2.UUO second class
and 1,200 third class passengers, 4,000
iu all. Her speed was about eighteen
miles an hour. The Great Eastern was
dually broken up for old irou in the
year after a checkered career of
some thirty-one yoars.
Fair, but Stormy.
A gentleman boarded the Karorl car
at Kelburne avenue IlecoguliUiK a
friend »u one of the seats, he nodded
pleasantly and then said "Well, what
do you think of the weather?"
"Oh, horrible!" was the reply.
"And how Is your wife today?"
"She's Just about the Mine, thank
you!"— New Zealand Krve l.ance.
Na Ear Far Music.
"How do you like the music, Mr.
JudklusV Maid Mlaa l'ar»ous.
"I'm sorry, hut 1 hare no ear for
music," be answered
"No," put In Mr Jusp»r. "U* u*'s
his for a peu rack."
An Ivan Scare
' What ta your objection to him.
papa?"
"Why, the fellow isn't make enough
money to support you "
"llut neither cuu you "
Na Use Far Theory
WlgWrtfc- It 1-. u t«»t theory of min*
that iwu cau He u r(Map!) ss oue
Yoiiugpop lluh' It's plain to lie «?#u
yo« w«»r« MI ei the father «»f twtua
I'hUsdelphla Record
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY JUNE 9, 1910.
Home Course
•
In Poultry
Keeping
V. The Raising of
Chickens.
By MILO M. HASTINGS.
Formerly Poultry man at Kansas Experi
ment Station, Commercial Poultry Ex
pert of the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture. Author
of"The Dollar Hen."
[Copyright, 1910, by American Press Asso
ciation.]
MOST of the arguments con
cerning natural versus arti
ficial incubation will apply
to the question of using bens
or brooders for rearing. The state
ment is generally made that the hen is
the best mother. Recently doubt has
been thrown upon this claim, however,
for many experimenters seem to have
demonstrated that the discredit that
formerly fell upon the* brooder Is due
to the fact that incubator hatched
KANSAS EXPERIMENT STATION BROODKK.
chicks are not normal and hence not
as livable as hen hatched chicks.
This loss of wee chicks is tho most
discouraging part of the poultry busi
ness. If this loss Is much greater than
15 or 20 per cent there Is something 1
radically wrong somewhere, and the
mistake must be found and rectified or
failure is inevitable.
Coops For Chicks.
Tho coops provided for hens with j
chicks should be one of the most care
fully constructed features of the poul
tryman's equipment. First of all, they
must be rat tight and rain proof, but
uot air tight. They must also be easily
cleaned. These points are best ob
tained by building a platform and set
ting upon it a floorless coop. The j
shape of the coop is not important, but !
it should have an open front protected >
by a projecting hood, so the rain can
not beat in, and covered with wire net- 1
ting or in cool weather netting cloth, i
The coop itself if built of cheap lum- |
ber must be covered with roofing pa- 1
per.
From twenty to forty chicks may be j
placed with each hen, the number de- ,
(tending upon the severity of the j
weather. The greatest source of tho j
loss of chicks with hens Is from the |
hungry heu leading tho little ones j
around in the wet grass after raiu or |
heavy dew. The best way to over
come this loss Is to keep the heu shut
In. opening the coop sufficiently for the
chicks to come out aud exercise. The
hen If provided with corn and water
within reach need not be given her lib
erty for several days after the chicks
are hatched aud should be shut In for
several weeks when the grass is wet.
Brooders for chicks have until with
lu the last few years been heuted with
kerosene lamps. Lately a great fad
has arisen lu poultrydoiu for tireless
brooders. These tireless brooders are
simply hoses arruugn! for slow venti
lation. The chicks are kept warm by
hovering under a cloth urrauged In
such a fashion as to represent the j
feathered body of the mother hen. '
Chicks can be raised In tireless brood- ]
ers, and In warm climates the method |
Is all right. In the colder seasons and ,
climates, however, tireless brooders
have uot been found practical by the
majority of poultry men
Lamp Brooders Bast.
I.amp brooders holding from SO to j
100 chicks have been successfully used
for many years and are considered the
best mean* yet devised for handling
young chicks on a large acute. Steam
or hot water heated brooder houses
bare never prwed ve 7 successful,
aud as they are expensive. to start
with. 1 should advise the |>oultrymsn
to be vary sure be knows what he Is
doing befors Inventing OM>uey In a
plant of this kind
The bnxaler should be large, tuvtug
not less thau ulna square feet of flour
space The greatest trouble with
brooders In operation Is the uncertain
ty of the lamp The t>r««>d«r lamp 1
should have suttclent nil capacity and j
* htrgv wick Hruuder (snips are often
exposed to th» wind. sod If ehesplt
constructed or poorly lt»cl.*t#d there
suit will he a chilled bro.*) of chick*
or perhaps a tire.
In a lamp heuted l>r«» >ler t>ne must
see that the heat 1* provided In such
a way that the chicks lu attempting to
ret w srtu will not crowd In corner*
and trample each other t» denth The
beet hri «»ter heater u r hover eutodsts
of a tin drum. iMdtle <>f which c|r« n
la few the hot fume* front the lamp
Beneath this drum the ehtchs hovet
Vhe l>eet form for the heating drum Is
I disk with a hole in tha c<Mitsr. S»UM»
thing on the order of a doughnut.
I This hole In the center acts as a ventl-
I latiitg Hue and causes a gradual clrcu
j la Hon of warm air to pass up through
: the center and down over the sides ot
j the drum, thus keeping the
chicks uniformly warm and at the
same time providing them with fresh
i air.
The exact temperature of the brood
| er is of no particular consequence.
] The warmest part of it should always
i be Just a little too warm so that the
chick may go toward or from the heat,
! as It pleases. The comfortable chick
! sleeps squatting down with Its head
I stretched out. If cold it stands up in
j an effort to get near the heat which
| is above it These attitudes of the
I chicks are by far the best thermometer
| for the brooder.
; The arrangement of the brooder for
tho sleeping accommodations of the
chicks is important, but this is not
the only thing to bo considered In a
brooder. The brooder used in the ear
ly season, and especially the outdoor
brooder, must have ample space pro
vided for tho daytime accommodation
of the chick. This part of the brooder
must bo well lighted and somewhat
cooler than the hover. As soon as
conditions will permit get the chick
ens out on a large floor or, better still,
on the ground. Keep the chicks
scratching in daylight and sleeping
stretched out at night, and the most
difficult problem of poultry raising has
been solved.
Feeding Chicks.
Little chicks should uot be fed for
forty-eight to seventy-two hours after
I hatching. Nature has provided for
j their nourishment during this period,
j and i>eople who worry übout them
starving are wasting pity. Another
error made by kind hearted people Is
I in thinking the chick needs bread and
j milk, hard boiled egg yolk or some
j other soft food or wet food. On the
j coutrary, the chick should be given
the same class of food that it would
get if it first saw daylight in its ua
tive Indian jungle.
The natural diet consists of seeds,
insects and fresh sprigs of grass. This
wo must duplicate the best we can.
A chick may be first fed any grains
• that chickens eat in later life if the
particles are small enough for the
chick to swallow, and they do not
need to be so small, either, for newly
hatched chicks can swallow Kaffir
corn or whole wheat. Hulled oats and
millet are two of the choicest grain
1 foods for young chicks. Wheat, crack
ed corn and Kaffir corn are staple
! poultry food.
Feetl small quantities and as often
| as is convenient If the food is buried
j in a deep litter they must work longer
! getting it out. Tho idea Is to have
i them always hungry enough to hunt
for food and always a little food for
them to find. If the chicks are at liber
ty feeding often is not so Important.
; Three times a day would be sufficient,
■ while If they roam far in the fields,
j finding much food, morning and even-
I lng feeding is all that is necessary.
j It is highly important that the young
! chicks be given a little meat food in
! some form. Commercial beef scrap, to
| be had at the feed store, is the best
! meat food for any sort of poultry. For
I chicks hatched in the spring of the
; year and allowed to range outdoors no
| special provision for green food need
■ be made. If hatched In the winter It
j is highly important that this be pro
i Tided In sotne form. There Is nothing
I better for winter green food than
j kale, which If planted the season be-
I fore will keep green all winter in al
j most any climate Early lettuce and
menu AIM COLON T MO ess.
j other greens may be plauted by those
I who are euguged In chick growing in
I a small way, hut a cheaper and more
1 feasible way Is to sprout outs. Oats
are sprouted by being soaked In warm
water aud allowed to remain lu a
warm place for several days. They
are ready for feeding when the sprouts
are two or three inches long and are
devoured greedily by chicks of all
ages. This abaurdly simple Idea has
beeu extensively sold aa a get rich
julck poultry scheme.
Young chicks should be provided
, wtth grit of some sort. Special care Is
neceaeary to keep fresh water tiefore
them at all times The water dish in
the brooder ought to be partitioned off
In such a way that chicks can reeeh
their head* only to the water dUh.
Otherwise they will get themselves
wet The custoinsry chick watering
fountain Is uisde by Inverting a bottle
or ran In a shallow basin so that the
water will run out aa the ehlcks re
quire
It Is especially desirable that all
young grow lug poultry be given free
range, as there la no lists In the Ufe
of an animal when eierelae and liberty
are so «a»enttsl as during the growing
p#rl"d t 'hicks from the age of f«*ir
week* to alt months are very easily
tah> i care of, s* practically the only
|IU*H diirttis this peril*! ucenrs from the
depr<*lstliMi of thteven human or aul
mal If C'"*t rst tight c<«,|i« are pr..
tided whh'h sre ekxud st night snd
fr«**U WA*er grtl slid hopper* of twef
t rap and cracked ewm are kept before
.he < hi' ken* at alt times they will
h-lve ik(v>H rhe ranch and need tittle
Puzzled ths Packer.
I Tin* first organized work of women
in a relief corps was led by Florence
Nightingale in the Crimean war of
1855. So unaccustomed \v -re people la
Ihut service Hi the lime that it called
out some curious comment. Writing
of "Chinese" (iortlcn. Dr. Hutler tells
in his hook. "Ten (iieai and (lood
Men." how the hoys at Cambridge met
the call upon UKMII for hospital store:!.
One day a letter came suddenly from
the war office telling us that any warm
clothes for the invalids at Scutari
would be prized by Miss Florence
Nightingale. At once ia every college
a committee was extemporized of lead
ing undergraduates, charged to collect
presents of flannel jackets, trousers,
"blazers," ru«:s, greatcoats, furs, even
sealskins.
In a few hours bos after box was
filled with these treasures, and till tho
boxes were kindly and gratuitously
packed for us by the leading upholster
er of the town, his foreman simply re
marking to me in a tone which General
Gordon would have enjoyed:
"A nice consignment for a lady, sir."
Cause of Twilight.
Twilight is a phenomenon caused by
atmospheric refraction. When the sun
gets below the horizon we are not Im
mediately plunged into the darkness of
night. Although the sun is below our
horizon, rays of solar light are bent, or
refracted by the terrestrial atmosphere
and continue to furnish some slight
illumination. The process continues
with diminishing intensity until the
sun Is so far below the horizon that
the refracting power of the atmos
phere is no longer able to bend the
rays enough to produce a visible ef
fect. The time after sunset that the
sun reaches such a position varies with
the latitude of the place. There is less
twilight at the tropic zone than at the
temperate or frigid zone. This is due
to less time taken by the sun's rays to
pass through the atmosphere, at tho
tropic zone the sun's rays being per
pendicular and at the temperate and
frigid zones oblique.—New York Amer
ican.
With a Grain of Salt.
The earliest record of the saying
"with a grain of salt" dates back to the
year 03 B. 0.. when the great Pompey
entered the palace of Mithridates and
discovered among his private papers
the description of an antidote against
poisons of all sorts, which was com
posed of pounded herbs. These, ac
cording to the recipe, were to be taken
with a grain of salt. Whether this
was meant seriously or as a warning
sarcasm Is not known, but thenceforth
it became the custom to say that
doubtful preparations should be taken
j with a grain of salt. From this the
| meaning got transferred to sayings of
I doubtful truth. "Attic salt" was u
! Greek synonym for wit or penetration,
j and the l.atlu word "sal" had some
what of the same meaning. It Is thus
easy to see how the saying "cum
grano sails" could have come to mean
the necessity of accepting doubtful or
suspicious statements "with a grain of
salt."
Molokai and the Lepers.
The general Idea of the leper settle
ment 011 the island of Molokai Is
wrong, says a writer in Harpers
Weekly. Instead of the entire Island
being Used for the leper colony the set
tlement comprises only eight square
miles out of a total urea of 2til square
miles. It occupies a tongue of land on
the northern side of Molokai. The
north, eHst and west shores of tills
tiny spit are washed by the Pacific,
while tui the south side rise precipitous
cliffs of from I.HOo to feet, which
make the Isolation seetn even more
hopeless than the beautiful deep blue
waters of the sea ever could. The
most ditllcult and dangerous trail, con
stantly manned by government guards,
foils •a|Hf, if It were ever contem
plated. by the land side.
Stupid Husband of a Notsd Singer.
Catalan!'* huxtmnd. a handsotun
Frenchman, was even more unlntel
liH'tual than his wife he was stupid.
Once, having found the pitch of the
piano too high, »he said after the re
hearsal to her hustiuud: "The piano U
too high. Will you see that it Is made
lower before the concert?" When the
evening cunie fataluul wus annoyed
to Ouil that the piano had not been
altered. Her husband sent for the car
penter, who declared that he had saw
ed off two Inches from each leg, as
he had been ordered to do. "Surely It
can't be too high now. my dear." said
the stupid husband soiithlngly
Thrsugh the Cracks.
When the celebrated divine Kdwurd
Irving wu» ou a preachlug tour In
Scotland two Dumfries men of decid
ed optulous went to hear hlni. When
they lrft the hsll oue said to the other:
"Well. Willie, w hat do you think T"
"Oh," said the other contemptuously,
"the man's > racked!"
The first speaker laid « quiet hand
ou his *b>>ulder
"WW." sold h', "yotlY n't en awe a
11*1,1 pe..(.lnif thr >t.:!» a > r.wk "*
A Pear Player
Grig** HN Y.ei J,HI| home fr«.<n thi
• luh at mldnlg'it Well 1 *upp • v v.. i
tohl wtltr you bad to work late n »'• 1
• •Wire (Hayed <i|na Wr
eh' Prlfc,". Well cr )»«. lmt e|n..r
h»r sympathies were out »112 fine *>r
I'm s darned r Iminntwiiniw
|t»*steii Transcript
(te*S s'»J Buffisis"! Hsssen
Ktlttor ttut, til I it*** it %% h v tin
% 11 bring thU I*****ll t » !. •' |iii|mm inil
..in 1 in«* H i*ll, r |.u tM ' I hmlli't 1
«*lr 1 1.»I'mU't
Hfm.»rtiitilt 112 *» »l m cttHiiMi with 1
*»•! |«»ff *|ll f|>!|t
THE MASTER SUM.
Sirius. tho Dog Star. May Ce the Cen
ter of /-.tir-ction.
Astronomers mice believed that the
entire starry universe revolved around
a center of attraction, and the star
named Alcyone, in tlie group of the
Pleiades, was selected Uy Maedler as
marking that ureal center
It has long heen known, however,
that Maed'er's conclusion, which was
based on tlie apparent motions of the
stars, was incorrect, and if any uni
versal center exists it has not yet been
discovered !n fact, many of the stars
seem to l,e n -.in..; in straight lines,
some i i one d.icction and some In an
other, and among these Is our own
sun. But it Is possible that further
observations will show that all the
utars are really moving In curved lines.
In the meantime it has been found
that there are certain groups or sets
of stars which appear to travel togeth
er. To what set. If any. the sun be
longs we do not yet know, but De
launey has presented reasons for
thinking that those stars whose dis
tances have been measured (that Is to
say, those which are nearest to us)
group themselves around Sirius, the
dog star, in a manner similar to that
in which the inner planets are group
ed around the sun.
If tills be correct Sirius may possi
bly be the master sun of which our
orb of day Is a distant satellite.—
Harper's Weekly.
GLYCERIN.
In Many Ways It Is a Most Remark
able Substance.
One of the great advantages of glyc
erin in Its chemical employment is the
fact that It neither freezes nor evapo
rates under any ordinary temperature.
No percept" le loss by evaporation has
been detected at a temperature less
than 200 degrees I'., but if heated In
tensely if decomposes with a smell that
few persons find themselves able to en
dure. It burns with a pale tlame, sim
ilar to that from alcohol, if heated to
about H) degrees and then ignited.
Its nonevaporative qualities make the
compound of much use as a vehicle for
holding pigments ami colors, as in
stamping and typewriter ribbons, car
bon papers and tlie like.
If the pure glycerin be exposed for a
long time to a freezing temperature it
crystallizes with the appearance of
sugar candy: but. these crystals being
once melted. It is almost an impossibil
ity to get them again into the congeal
ed state. If a little water be added to
the glycerin no crystallization will take
place, though under a sutliclent degree
of cold the water will separate and
form crystals, amid which the glycerin
will remain in Its natural state of fluid
ity. If suddenly subjected to intense
cold, pure glycerin will form a gummy
mass which cannot be entirely harden
ed or crystallized. Altogether it Is
quite a peculiar substance.
The Barbarous Suitee.
Suttee, or the practice of Immolat
ing widows 011 their husband's funeral
pyres In India, was first attacked by
the British government in 1829. It
was on Dec. 4 of that year that Lord
William Bentinck carried it resolution
in council by which all who abetted
suttee were declared guilty of "culpa
bio homicide." In the year 1817 700
widows were burned alive in Bengal
alone, but since the passing of the act
the practice has entirely died out.
Suitee was really a primitive rite, a
survival from barbarous times, and
uot sanctioned by llindooism, the pas
sage in tlie Vedas supporting It being
a willful mistranslation. But 110 pre
vious governor had the courage to vio
late the British tradition of religious
toleration. Lord William Bentinck
also suppressed thugglstn, which made
strangling a religious rite to the god
dess Kali.
An Ancient Tragedy.
A historical paper in Lord Montagu's
collection In London tells of a strange
tragedy "done in Ilolborn, a little be
fore Christmas." several centuries ago:
"A boy seven years old came up into a
• gentleman's chamber and prattled tc
! him and drew his sword and flourished
* with It. The gsntlwmau, being In bed
! Wondered to see the boy toss his bliuii
| so and said; 'So, good boy, thou has
done well. But In tho sword." The boj
persisting, the gentleman ro»e and heli
him the scabbard, and the rude haud
ed lud, thluking to sheath the sword
lustily chopt It Into bis body. Cortipr
ny were called One offered to strik
the child, "I.#t him alone,' quoth tb
fentleuiau. Uod Is Just This boy
father did I kill five years sluce au
tioue knew Now be hath reveogi
It.' And the geutlouian died these
oud drees lug
Hie Apology
Mrs Minks -1 don't want to tnak*
scene, hut that UVMIi • ver there U *l4
lug at tue very offensively Mr Mln
- lie Is. eli? I'll »|>eak to hliu Mr
Minks ta f«w moments tateri-Dld 1
spologl^e' *"• Mluk* Y-e-s lie au
be was look lug for Uls mother a
thought at Ursi that you w*r» she
In the 9am« Bea.
lack lentering Hv limirge, 1
rata i» coining «l»wu all right I
1 4:. 1! Tutu \\ lu>r«> la your mnlti
U * t.icl It's It's what I giu |t
i»u Trsiue*rlpt
Pessimietie.
What U an gutlquarlau, paT"
itMU who. uot satisfied with
'»a la I'.',king r i ..
1 e |»i»l " Sew Vork tVefts
ii' t. .irt* ( |f mull ,i rv
•e <l4 ipm lllelr tutor* »' f»* It s<»t|
1 hwi'lHl' M 1 'a*i i>