®Jic (Tnitre $ rniocr.it. IIKI, LKFONTK, 1A. -ZV. O- IC "CJ 3L. T "CT o^,-ei. XJ. NKWH, FACTS ANI HUUUKSTIONH. Til K TEST 0 TBI S (TIOKAL UKLI.IK 111 TUB IHTtI-LI- Erery former in hit on nun/ er/ienenee discover* Something of mine. Write it ami send it to the "Agricultural Editor oj the Dkmochat, Hellefonte, I'enn'n," that other former* may hare the benefit of 1 1 . I.ft communication* be timely, ami be sure that they are brief and cell /Hunted. "Hon disease" has made its ap pearance in Northampton county. Commissioner Le Due should circu late his "Special Keport No. 12" among the owners. Tux United States Consul at Odes sa reports that the wheat crop of Hussia will tall far short of the usu al harvest, and that American wheal must l>e in great demand in all parts of Europe. As an evidence of the increasing importance of the poultry interests, the Poultry )'or roads—the ridiculousness of the present system of roadmaking, that they will take the matter in hand, and sulMtitute for it some plan which shall have common sense and business-like ideas M for its foundation, and good roads for its object, it will be entitled to the everlasting gratitude of ail com ing generations. Oall it a Truck Patch. Fff.m lb* Farm Journal. P Away with the old vegetable garden I Knlnrgoit* boundarie*—make it three times ■u> Inrgi-—call it s truck patch nJ turn in the florae, plow and cultivator. It t about * time that aenaihle farmer* ahould abandon , the *p*de and hand bis* a the chief Imple ment* in growing vegetable* for market, or even for the home trade. 1 That's sound through and through, f and we are glad to see our teachings ! so heartily endorsed by our spicy, ! vigorous little contemporary. The a only way we can make It "seasonable," however, in to advise our leaders that now in the time to get ready for thin. Select the ground, put on all the innniire you can get, plow and sub ! soil it, and let the winter mellow it, and then you will he prepared to act , upon the Journal '* advice next ijuiiiy. ! Among Our Contemporaries. We have noticed with great pleas ure that for some time back nearly all the prominent publications of the day, including even the technical | scientific journals, and the great liter ■ ary magazines, have taken pains to devote more and more of their at tention and space to such matter us pertains to agriculture and is of special interest to the tillers of the | soil. We have once or twice refer red to this matter in these columns, I as an evidence of the rapidity with which "fanning" is growing in the appreciation of all classes (if people; and we venture to predict that the time is not far distant when no peri odical publication, dependent upon the general public for its patronage, which ignores the "industry which is the foundation of all other indus tries" will stand a chance forc'xist ence. Kvcn now, Scrihutr* Monthly, which is recognized as one of Un loading literary magazines of the world, and which always aims to Is "ahead," has taken the cue, and has so much of distinctively agricultural matter in its November issue as to warrant the publishers in advertising it as an "agricultural number." Of the general character of lyrihwr'* as a literary publication it is not our province here to speak, excepting to say that it confessedly stands on the top rung of the ladder, and that whatever it undertakes to do is well done. The agricultural features of the November issue are no exception to this rule, as witness the following list of half a dozen pajs-rs of the highest interest to farmers, and oth ers interested in rural life: "The Ag ricultural Distress in (ircat Britain," by P. T. (Juinn ; "Farming in Kan sas," by Henry King ; "Success with Small Fruits," by K. P. Hoc; "Hare I,awn-Trees," by Samuel Parsons, Jr.; "The Mississippi Jetties," and their elfect on the prices of agricultural products, and "How Animals get Home," by Krncst Ingersoll. Then are hundreds of farmers in Centre county who have sons and daughters growing up in the comparative isola tion ol farm life, and who ought to take fjcribnert for them as a connecting link with the "culture and progress" of the world, while at the same time its agricultural matter would prove of the greatest interest to the farmers themselves. Price, $4.00 a year ; .tfi cents a number. .Subscriptions should lM'gin with theft Novcin'x-r number. Buy it of you rook-seller or send the subscription price to the publishers, Scribner A Broadway, New York. ' That "old reliable," the Country CJent/rnutn, presents its for I MHO this week, and it gives us pleasure to say a good word for it. Kstablished in IMB I, it has almost rounded its first half century, and has well-earned its claim to Is: "the (•est of agricultural weeklies." When 4t* publishers assert that "it is un surpassed, if not unequalled for the nmount and variety of the practical i information it contains, and for the ability nnd extent of its correspon dence—in the three chief directions of farm crops and processes, horticul ture and fruit-growing, live stock nnd dairying," we have only toexpressour 1 hearty concurrence. Dignified and courteous in its intercourse with its contemjKiraries ; always reliable in its information ; old enough to Ire firmly entrenched in the affections of its friends, and young enough to be in the full vigor and strength of mature manhood, the pajier could have no Itelter name than Country Gentleman. Published by Luther Tucker A .Son, at Albany, New York. Since July Inst we have missed from our table our valued contempo rary, the Scientific Farmer, nnd felt its absence as a real loss. Wo nrc pleasantly surprised this week to find its place more than filled by its hand some and well-filled successor, under the new title of Lawl nnd Home. We do not particularly fancy the name, but pcrliajm it is no more ob jectionable than that of its prcdcccs- nor, and "Wliitt'K in ii mum- ?"t uny rate. Its content* are of the best ; fresh, a little ont of the much-worn i ' "agricultural" rut, and written in unexceptionable Kugli*U, In chang ing inline, the |in|er also changed "local Inibitntioii," anil hand and 11 am r i* now published from S7 Park Itow, New York, and given internal evidence of having enlisted brains in it* inlere*t*. Dr. 10. L. Stiirtevant will continue as editorial writer on the new paper, and will lie assisted by a corps which includes such emi nent names as I,awes, Ileal, Stock bridge, Kiley, Harris, Lyman, Weld, Henderson, IJtiinn, Hexuiuer and many others. Let the Boys Care for the Poultry. In this way it may serve the double purpose of furnishing a good ly share of the income of the farm and contribute largely to the whole some training of the boy in those habits of care and industry which may make all the difference, in his mature years, ls-tween a man among men, and a loafer. The N. Y. ll>r nld has this paragraph on the sub ject, and the comment* added below, are from the |>en of a correspondent of the I'l/ullry Yard: "Let one of the children assume the care of the poultry yard, if you have not time to make it a feature of your farming. Kncouragc him by selling him fowls at a fair price, allowing him to pay for them in eggs, which you buy at the regular price, or which are sold and placed to his account. (>et him to keep hisown account ; let him pay for the feed purchased also by sale of eggs and chickens. The boy will l- happier for the ex|>crimeiit, and gain habits of industry that will be valuable to him all bis life." Nw, Unit * what I < all -outid |T<-, II- , itti; There ar-- ue-r- limn a f<-w men wte, go to ruin, linam tally and morally, Is-- ratio- they are not trailed to - tiling-" when they are voting. I begsn thr- ■ vt-arn ag - with my i--y the very ] in de-cribsd above, and it ha- worked tirt rate >o far. It inu-l Is- done niKt. No humbug alt-nit it. Thi- giving a dime t" a rhlid to g-> I-- Issl ..ii ali i then taking it away in the morning, wont pay. 1 have known aparenl to give a child a little white chicken, and then when it wa grown kill it for family rontumption, and give the child a wing f--r hi- .bare, or, wurii- yet, tell the carta'- to tin- market man, ami give the juvenile owner ru-t --nt cent of the proceed-. Hitch training t* training in inju-tit e, K-iii-hnt-tt ami tin It, an-1 w-tr-e llian n>> training at all If you pretend t-- give vour boy a (lock of fowls, ttick to lb- text I have quoted above, and do not allow a is'iiml of i hirken or a- much a* one egg to be u-.d in the family or otic r wi-t- di-j -i-d of without | vying mil f>-r it. Tt a, h your Isty- how to handle money without burning their linger* with it, and it will le worth ten time*, yea, one hun dred lime*, a- much In them a- the uioney iUelf. Teach them the worth of a dollar by *howing them bow mm h hard work (cr < are ~r patience, which are harder than work ) it take, to earn a dollar, and then they will know the worth of a dollar. A they gr -w old enough *h--w them how to buy their clothe* . and a* their linsnm* augment have them *elc< t and pay lor every -iiil they wear, and then compliment them before vour intimate friend* on hal ing earned the clothe* they tand Iti by their own ytenatic effort*. Thu* you wiil build up habit- of e)f.irlianee an-1 o-lf-re# t. lint ls-fore tliey are old enough to buy their own clothe* rarefully w at' Ii their habit* ol spending money, and when they make a gi*i investment Commend and encourage th'-m for it, with out being tisi severe wlien tliey make a had bargain "pay too dear for the whistle." Keeping |K>ultrv is one of the ls>t thing- for children b> la-gin with, (iar detiing i* good, in it* way ; but does not , avail in winter, and even in summer it don t d'-inand that con-tant "morning. nn and Highland between while." care and vigilant'- that poultry doe*. There is nothing quite so good for the industrial training of the young folk* its fowl keep, ing. Waste. We find the following in the Srint tijic Amrrir.in, ami it npplies with as much force to lite farm, as to the "workshop, counting-room, kitchen or laboratory." A tight stoppage of nil the "wastes" of the farm would go far toward making "farming pay There must be, of necessity, a |>erc*nt*ge of lo* in all the material transaction* of evcry-day liie, whether tho*e lw carried on in the workshop, the counting-room, the kitchen or the laliorntory j hut this inevi table waste can be *o (ar reduced by good management that it amounts to but little in the course of a year. (Mi-<-rvation ha* convinced u- that tin* the loe- in large work-hoji* must he considernhle, for in a great majority of case# we have se-n mate rial- lying about under foot—bills, nuts, washers, kicked around in the mud out in the yard, new work 0*p0.,-d to Injury from the elements, tools mi-placed, essential articles, or bails necessary to the perfection of certain parts of the work, at great dis tances Irom each other, and an infinite number of abo-es which, although small of themselves, when summed up, make a grand total loss at the end of the year. As the thirty-second part of an Inch too little on one piece of a steam engine, a sixty fourth on another, and as much on still another will result in great derangement of the functions of the machine, so Infinitesi mal waste, continually occurring, is the representative of hundred* of dollar* for which there has been no return. No mat ter what the nature ol the trade or menu future, It is very certain that a material r <1 action of the expense* of every depart ment can be made nv careful attention to the minor mailers, arid these remark* nro • made with the hope that all interested will g.vo them attention.' Bring on the Quail. Prutu tli rinu.i. ij.hu Itororif. It is -aid tliut fi2,OUO live -jon i Is are lie* : ing import d from Knglnnd t-s ho set at liberty in i'emisylvanlu. There is hurdly ; any IIMI for this, if every pot-hunli-r is p-r --in it ted t-i slaughter tlie young lord, that run hurdly II y a rod. * llring on thu quail, und "warn oiP Hit: "pot-hunter*." If they refuse to stay oil' for the warning take their naiue*, and proceed against tlicm by the open highway of the law. Birds arc too decidedly the "farmer's friends," in the uninterinitting war lie is compelled to wage against hi* insect i-neiiiien, to permit of their being "Hlaughtered" by "put hunt- is" or any but ly else. Follow the good ex ainple net by our (arming brethren in Connecticut a* follow*: Many Northvllln (Conn - farmers have t coiiihininl to prevent tio- shooting of quad and partridge on their premises, In-lii-viiig that the wholesale slaughter of these birds deprives them of their be-l ins--< t d<*stroy ers. How to Feed Pig* Profitably. Al> 11!•* lit ihfl Ouutilf) Ufiiil"n make Home timely *uggcstions about its economical manufacture. There i no animal—an the Shaker* found by trying to go without it—that will eat up the refuse of a farm establishment and convert it into valuable food, as a pig doe*. The slop* of dish-water, the fragments of till- table, the skim med milk, whey and other refuse of the dairy, the unmerchantable tipple* and other fruit*, the stale uu-at* and vegetable*, and even the dead animal* of tin- farm find a market in the pig pen, *o that he who undel lake* to run a farm without the aid of porker*, will liud himself minus one great source of income. There i* nothing that pushes a pig along faster than skimmed milk, By being akimmcd, milk lose* very little of it* virtue a* food for young animal*. The fat which i* taken oil' i* not essential to the development of bone* and mus cle*. An ex|Hsrienced breeder once said that skimmed milk is worth iw iceut* [s r quart to feed to calve* and pig-. This was in the day* when |>ork com manded a higher price than nt pres ent, but it is one of the l*-*t use* of skimmed milk at tjie price* which milk and jKirk now bring. If a farmer ha* an orchard which can IN- used a* a pig pasture, the grass, grub* and windfall* which the pig* will pick up, aided by a little skimmed milk, will keep tbern growing and thriving till it i* tune to shut them up and put the fat on their healthy and well-develop ed carcasses. The cost of raising pigs in this manner i* trifling in com parison with feeding them with meal in a |ien. Meal is poor feed for young stock of any kind. It make* them look plump and sleek, but it* tendency is to develop fat rather than bones and muscle*. In the latter part of their orchard life a little meal may IK- add IS I to their milk ; but if anything is required during the sum mer, in addition to their grass and milk, it i* bran rather than meal. The pig i more of a graminivorous animal than is commonly RUpposcd, and with a good range of pasture and plenty of water lie will live; but the object is not simply life but rapid growth, and milk, grass and apple* w ill stimulate this, and, if these are not sufficient, wheat or rye bran will supply the deficiency. The pig is also carnivorous, and hi* desire for flesh is partly gratified by the worms and grulm which lie finds in the ground, and in the windfall apple*. The indirect bcm-tU which he thus renders to an orchard is no slight recommendation ol this mode of rearing pigs. Hound, fair fruit may i IN- ox|M-t-U-d in an orchard used as a pig pasture. While the pig is getting his growth he should IHI allowed the little pieces of bone* which are left from the table. The IH-SI developed litter of pigs I ever saw were fed by a boarding house keeper almost exclusively from tnc refuse of his table. It was a conglomerate of everything, milk, IMIIICS, meat and vegetables of all sorts, and the pigs showed that they were equal to their opportunity, and that they were omnivorous, could eat everything and thrive an their mixed, rich ration*. If growing pig* show any signs Of being stunted, it is well to gixe them a slaughter-house ration occasionally—some blood, l>one* or other offal, which can alway* be ob tained for a trifle. Fork producers should ever re member that while pork is pre-emi nently the diet for cold weather, it is most economically manufactured in summer and early autumn. Corn fed Ur hogs in Octolrcr and Novcm ber will produce ten to twenty per cent, more pork than in December and January, a* in these latter months much carbon I* consumed in keeping up animal heat. The two great ends of food art*, building up the tissues of the body and furnish ing heat. Any surplus of carbon la dr-jiosilcd in the form of fat, thus making a reservoir of fuel which nißy be drawn ujon in eaae of scar city in the regular supply, llcnee tiic economy in keeping pigs, and indeed all animals, warm and com fortable in cold weather. It i* a great saving of food. *''o com|icl bog* to lie out-door and wallow in mud is as wasteful a* it is cruel. W hen shut up for f'ullcuing, tliey should b.- provided with a warm l*-d --room and a clean *lruw l*-d. They should also have a water-closet, and they will invariably use it. Tlie common notion that a hog i* a dirty animal is a mistake. In warm weath er he wallows in the mire to keep himself cool, but he loves cleanli ness, and, if permitted, will keep himself neat. No animal pays liet- U-r for tidy, comfortable quarters than docs the hog. While growing, some exercise does him good ; but when being fattened, he should have nothing to do but to eat and sleep, and hi* dining room and bed-room should be so convenient that little ef fort need IN: made to go from one to the other, 'I lie times of feeding should also be regular. Some careless feeders throw in a few ear* of corn to their Il iltOH. Mr I'llrlanc .( Co., Iliirrlurtri Dr tilr rt HARDWARE! WI I .sr >X,MI FA I {r, AXK A: CO. STOVES,RANGES * HEATERS. AIX) I'ainls, nils. ,II F..,NH M UTT UF JW UAL>. ... I V .. U.U, L',N..IML J:.ig II <.. A HINT. I/A LLHTI. A ILL .1 U. • J II J „A II N.TI. IF 11, INULA A~ . ULA J,> LGA* LL'IT.T '..ILL LI.KI J.M |T),I 1V..11. NOT*,. J I .TUT HUNT H.. .1. R .I.L <| K ' ■' ■ KM HUARI.U, H ...1., . ( 1<..4. A MI UK A 1 I. 1,1,1,1.1 ALL. Tl„> LULL). \ | 6,.,, M.AUFL- JOAA AC. T.T I. 7.11,.., 1.,,, '"""I) #••■> .. J •, HIVU. I• I ~. R R I .KI.IIFCK I ..IT I N,I!. 1.. , \.I.ATA 1..,.. . ILL J. H LLT.HLT ■ 1., L 1,.• . .IT.IJ R,IN„ ... IIK.T IN > ML. • I ' I, ( . ... M IV ,11 1 II M!.' I ' -,,1 II ... |T,| TFTIK .7, IKIIIH I I.IT A JUL' T NITA*.| I,|,|,| K M IK* II,7 KIT II J.KIT. Juty I IN-N.M IT. R III.K 11 UK JR, N.IA.IJ HIT. HI U A, IF." . 1.1,1, I: T FI- ■ .1,. P, .( 111.,, M, ,1. S..L.T . . I*. 11, . M LIT H.KL. M. M I'.'LTTK, J II 1 1'.U11.11, HRILH'TTLT DIRECTORY. RILL HI 111.-, A RU>.II\TKI:I W ► ..!. I •!..] JET .R II AT 1 • . A * AU4 7 i r m I'MFTI MM! „ \% ■ !!< I'Ul,' J FWT I- F .. T) ALI. |F|#F ll* ®T . |*R •. T, TO- • • •# I TOUT.?#* A IIKI )I. 4 M HT-4 :> , t Alt A H'F U|. 7 A M L'N F. KI TA J HTU N, F MALDL I •I lv,} 4 i , \U. f lii.T •.'! rbb. H T J"HN to M*IWILL'ALA. F*'IUIMI IULH*I 1 >•NI'T "( A!I#AI#O *'■! IAKI> •!/ HA COTMLIT 1' *• * * * W . IBIWIU) IRTLKM IU T V NNI TOTIN IN |I.T HNRXTAV Jr ■,LB I .##<• WO-TT )•! > IIAT'H I'7 II KFT-A N, -ITUAL'-,) N.4ILH* CTIURR H. | HAITI" 1 !. TI ?1LI*L O-TTIH *F M'ILI ATUL ; P' ,-H ILFKU S ♦♦<<. HHI|I j AI.ITH CF K|4TAL DIUALI. I MTKI HITLCTIIHHN NLMM ONF HIMUI HIGH IB'L T ; WM MT|<. At LO.fr' M AN<) T' r V I'TAT#T ?RW LING. M IV|TO*'TA 7 1 V R ■ ?** LOT, J M. flHilh. •*...< FFI # T'MTR—K, LW.<| F'LBFR AFLTIRAN MRRILODIFT. HUkl-1 k'..lh #,! at LTI!I MFWT FTKFTKM. HUO'LAX TO B I AB4 ?J T TV I"F• ANIB#*U R. M. HOTT'IM -•, IN : 'KBH •! . ' F K RMLOF, RN JONTT, TTI"O lo#J rRIKJH'?. NIUIIMI #■ tl of itiol, TMA H llrf itil# %,i|rbt| H<#Uli(r, I**l It'l A | II A. II I N Y M < A RMTFT M KOMFTTTR MTFUT : At 4 AT. I M#n ftl'lkt feliUf M lb III# Miitti i,t ll,# A* TKTLOFI AOJ# LH* |ST NFLLN# A I Nl' TI MMLNN to TIXM IB TL# R**'MTH# FLTT MIRNU* In #A< H M NTH AT 4 R M H.-.TN NJ*TI #R#TT OLFHT FRI 7 TO V R. . *TW| \H*> I NATIMIAL RTIIIKTIAN L ! ni>n AT 7 -ft* r w., n THUNXUR. TH# I.AVTLLDR TKMRKRAKCK I'RAV I R-MKKTLNT# ' i"i* in Um- l/T*N lt OiMrrn-i AD. I Alt * of Ut# Twirttt tfr l,rx-hi(lt# to futitinrt Y. thai ti ( #j AT# I<> hum t*M. w will forH to r%rty wifWx-r hf ntll. p>**t |Ai'l. Am. Ttia Hot W 'I'HI T NNNF TOUR NWRNRT UNTIL YON AT# pnfoilT AATI*9LO MAIL, MI RWRR4|>T OF |RK< # A44RWA, ASH ,V ROB BINS, U >< N.U.KI,M. N. T. FITS, EPILEPSY, 0 o* FAIILIVT; SHKVEM #1 >EHMAXKNTLY CUUKD—No A LLMNILMG-B# IM MOLH'I IUM F OR, OBK ARD'I CL*BRIL*4 LNF.M.,I. fIL PRW#• R. T*. .ON KIKCB MLLWI THAT >• R. I|L A, ALL • .LAIN FOR LL A, WILL A. R.l LL,,W H; MALL, MI ,11.. A RAM 7*lll AN. A> I> ONWLANL LA IHA '.IILJ I L.VAM.N THAI HAA ITW NWTA 11.,A LLAAAW A IFAILAL ALMLI. Al*4 AA HI .MIR KM,ALULA- 111 HIAAII TA L,A" LAM NUI'IMT MIR AL H|R IBA OF IBAAA PNWNTA*. ART AIU INIOIN . IAA,.AI IM LA *> NAAA, OF ATR, AA NR AU. " ORTAA.P JULA.FL.RTA MI (L*A LIMA IN,W#ARA AN AAHF IHAL, IT,I LAA U*,TIO.A4 .AT IBAIR RARW U- NNWARA I'RL. A, B,R LARY* BN, FLU,, OR < BN*N F.A TLIKM, AN,I BY MAIL LA ANY PALL OF IBA VALLA# MALA, M LIANA.LA OH RNF ALPT OF PLLI R OR BY AIPMAA 0. 0 11. A'MIMA ASH A KOHHINH, 4T-L# M FALBN PTRML, A,.,8L R A, K. F. I>iH every time they go by their jMrUM. 'I his disturbs. then nap, k cps them uneasy, anil wastes much vital force. \\ hen a hog in once accus tomed to getting hi* break fan t at hi* o'clock, liia dinner at twelve, and hia supper at aix, he will snooze and snore all the intermediate time, and awake up at the usual hour of meal a refreshed with a good appetite, but if fed haphazard, lie ia kept constantly on the i/ui vtve. ' orn ia emphatically the fattening food of boga, but if a few applea or roots arc occasionally thrown to them, they serve aa a variety, and conduce to health and appetite. The change of diet from the orchard to tlie pen should be gradual. Too much rneul, all of a sudden, may pro duee disease, \ few apples, and an occasional ration of lioiled pumkiria or beets will counteract the feverish tendency which a aurieit of meal is wont to induce. The pro*|iect ia that |ork will appreciate in value this year, and pay for increased pains in its manufacture. I >KI.LKF< >N'I K A- s.\'o\V SIIOK I> _M It. 7.,„. 7.1 II mi J,, * T " rn>.-a l IMI-fc.nl. 11 '* ' " ' * I"" M"* 4U * H *'* ' " * Tr "" 1,1 ""'"I *■ ' ' * UTIIM tl hu.M *|,. ' >' * ItAMI.I. ItIIOAMI. • .i-n-ial I >ALI> KA(iI.K VAI.I.KY KAIL. i> Ult Tlai MI | IfTT lj Mul •UXili aaarw.kn £.■(>. Mail. . M | r k i i : ' - iirfM iiTri tu Un . 7 €t . : •-i v.n • . t Ji< ► ' H ' i< " IM7 k..-!. " „. ; it -*' t """ Rftftttftki " ... 7>6 vdj : u ir ;■■??! t\\ . to 13 .... - JalUft " ... ao] V -ill f .•? ? :: ! ■ ..-lit. 4: !ii 1 Ww In " ... a4l v | I 6 41 1 . ** *• . . fc 24 <. *■ i| !< lift - |l< llffatli# " ... p '• * '• * •* k 4;, in J-, ' l ? ff ' " £•** - ... W, Jo *fc ; ; J*• ! 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W ti11.............. 17 *ii, .in •"im ftl ll.inrf .iTft m " Krt M.il Niftr S,| iw. tm, 1„k H.n ,'V..|„|...|1,..„ *,, .ftl IHi j Ki|.i. K..1 fti.kft . I.. ~H,ftftrt.H.. | .Norllmml-iUnd vilh L t IV H It ikptlrr- r, 1.4'*,• K>|'ift Tftt, n,l |m, ' ' I ""** H "•* •"' '*k iU.Tft VIM, n.k.i l,. -iiiB.IU m W ,m. r ,,„ B K c K mtft. ninth n *"'• Xlftftmrm K|irH Wnt, and !> £*"v' *i* c '""* "'<>'• l lx*k lU,en 'th H K 1 R R train. KH. Mali Rant and