{ title: 'The Otsego farmer. (Cooperstown, N.Y.) 1885-1910, October 23, 1886, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-10-23/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-10-23/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-10-23/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-10-23/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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'the conme of a couple of months fiiaé ho\ ] “EN 13,2110 fie forfigtten @oril Frsmont's Daily me’ Tit Wikkiigton \Stay shop finhn ; Fiémont's or hcomifig 7 o wrgtte e - Tho sage Love the Living, ty that is about tho dead,... - ...-... To rake us love themfli'r re Millie, hére L $ Is nob it woll to find the llvl'ng‘eear, {Inferestin Tang of a Former $51: kei; nepeah unsel $2 Enegshifilfl-“E. _Soffi if}; £ Jghopy Man “5&0“ mig An. * .R \Kol. firm, and they stole x1113m§2vafhiroxn LBA Sheffield:\ ~ti-*Civerpool six * weeks before he know the name _of the city, When he had been taught how to | dance, sing, tumble, and walk a- tight- rope—n metttgk'gog thise mpuths', hme-r- he was taken' iround the 'country with a Reminisponces of Senator. Tom Benton. ind Zlf,:’.zzdelp]:H Ohe of the most interesting of the old- Mme talkers at Wa yhmgtoq, wfltes the 'COlévélarid Zeddor correspoxidont, is\ Gan,: John Tyler, the son of.the President.. a anomaly; 112456 55331; overlooksxtge woods, ed grounds 'of the British Legutlon, the trees\ of: 'Ninoteenth: street, * and> the shrubbery Circle. 'The family at présent -hero .cousists of the General and Mrs. Fremont and their daughter. The two gone. are. named, One {g in the nivy, the othor lives in Montana. \ f Mme]: contfort as they\ can, New hope or memory. only: © - Can fill-we nisolef Shall Destiny A ,of worn-out garments bey «Afiactivmstze rn, mdxpent. the beart ABTA insonsale to its smart, And all the universe to me More emptiness and mockery; I dying here so lonely! 'Yes, this is all, ifhfemushbe *. But-what we touch'and what we - And outward flowering only. _ It depths of being-underlie > And love surrdun y the mystery; It help divine.mosts human pain . And trausient loss is endless gain. In sharpest stress if God draw near Andlnthe dark new suns appear, Ab; then,-who- need. bo-lonely? D. H. R. Goodale, in Independent, KIDNAPPED. There was nothing now in the plot of the desperate villians who sought to ex- tort money from Mr. Ross by stealing his son Charley. The kidnapping of children for the sake of gain or revenge has been practised for hundreds of years. 'There are doubtless to-day in this country a score or more of Charley Ross enses, but as the parents are not rich sud promi- nent, and the search not aided by legis- lative actlon 'and the united press, they are seldom heard of by the great public. The case of Willie Allbright, an Eng- lish lad, was full of strange adventures. He lived at Sheffield with his parents until five years of agé. His - father was employed in a great fac- tory there and his mother was a dress- maker for the neighborhood. They lived in a cottage in the suburbs of the town, and at the age of four the boy was permitted to run about the meighborhood a good deal. At five, when ho was kidnapped, he was sent to the stores to make purchases, and knew all the streets clear to the factory in which his father worked. One day in 1861, about 2 o'clock in the afternoon, he was sept to a store three blocks away after some buttons. 'Before hoe reached it a strange man necosted him and asked his name. He thin gave Willie some sweetmeats and asked him to go and look st a Puoch and Judy show in the town, promising to return with him in & half hour. 'The boy eagerly set off with him, and was taken to the railroad depot and placed on a train in charge of a middle- aged woman, who gave him more sweet- ments and was very kmfily spoken, Bho said the stow had moved away and thoy were going after it, and the ' novelty of the child's position prevented him feeling any anxiety, When the detectives camo to take the case up, as they did two days: sfter the boy's disappearance, they got no clew whatever. Although he had walked a mile in ° hand with the abductor along crowded streets, nobody remem- bered seeing the pair. 'They had gone penly to the railroad station, but no ¢ one thers had noticed them. - The guard | cate placer gold or buried money. - Bur- on the train dimly remembered awoman|ied treasures can also be located by and child in a compartment, but could watching the movements of the culebrites give rio discription: - As the Alibrights | or little green snakes that love to draw were poot snd lowly, no grest stir was | their coils near such spots. - Yet if that ahd no great effort was thade by | omen were infallible it would indeed fliedétecdiesto restore the boy to bis keep the snakes busy coiling. The scar- permit. fibeywutaken from Sbeffield to he was «Ation; and was for two or 'three © yem |a familiar look, gazing at him in an _| him say to a friend: or two hand Justlco done he slipped away in the ni «Med—Mm in z way, too, that Emall show,. which. the woman._owned.. 11 - P The\novelty of travel was so agrééible that he almost forgot his situa- quite content. 'There was no ope ' to teach him Kow to read or write,' but he was quick-witted, 'and could reason be- yond his years. 'He had hopés that' the show would 'some day\ reach Sheffield, and he would slip « ott andrun home,but 'the pépplp of course carefully avpldea the place. Once, 'when they: were show- ing at Doncaster, .a few miles away, Willie observed a man,. whose face bad earnest raanner, and préseri¢ly .. heard ~ ''The laddic keeps mo thinking of the child who was. stolen away from. neigh- bor Alibright; but of course it can't be the one.\ > The boy was about to call out that his name was Willie Allbright, when the woman, who always kept an eagle eye on him, came closer, and intimidated him, ('The show then' hurriedly packed up and left the place. 'The boy now realized- more-fully than ever that his right name was Allbright, and that he had been stolen from home, but he also realized his hopelessness. Ho had been told that if he ever tried to “fun away, wild animals would pursue.. and devour him, and he was in mortal terror of a bulldog which' followed the show. He therefore humbly obeyed all orders; .and made no move to run away. He was about sight years old when he changed masters, being sold fora good round price to a man who called himself Prof. Williams, This man.was a ventriloquist and juggler, ond he took the boy to Australia with him, and gave hall per- formances form year or so. They then returned, and made the tour of Seotland and Ireland, and sailed for America. Allbright was about eleven years old when he landed in New York. The Professor then took the name of La Pierre, though he was no Frenchman in look or speech, and travelled for a year. Cne day as they were filling a date at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the boy was sent to the postoffice with let- ters, and s curious thing happened. One of the four boys who had witnessed the performance the night previous made up to him in a friendly way, and asked his namt. ''Johnny Manton,\ was the reply. ''Yes, but that is your stago name, What is the other?\ «\Wiltte Albright,\ ''That's funny. A family named All- bright live next door to us. They lived in England. ''So did I.\ ''Maybe you rre related. I'm going to tell e'm about you.' Two hours later a man and his wife called at the hotel and asked for the boy, and the mother had no sooner set eyes on him than she bugged him to her heart. The father was longer making up his mind, but he soon came to feel certain that John Manton was Willis Allbright and the boy who had been stolen from him seven or eight years before. The parents had been in Amorica three years, and had long before given up all hopes of ever hearing from the child. 'The pro- fessor made a great kick, as his bread and butter were at stake, but when he found the people determined to have ht sud was heard of no more. -New ork Sun, Hidiog Treasurs in Mexico, The sand -whirls of a storm-wind indi- city of banking facilities, the frequency of ravolpfions and forced \loans has made Mother Earth the favorite savings bank of our next neighbors, and the burying or resurrection of a little hoard finally a matter of daily occurfence. **Where have you been, amigo-fishing or hunting?\ the stranger may ask an early riser, and as likely as not get a frank, though rather unexpected, answer: *No, serior, been burying a-bit of nothing short of is apt foamyfimmg-plnz. With a'stick .} and, having placed it on the sidewalk, :| totettect beiskn Cen. Tyler days mis father aia not stall iks Tom Benton, and that ho considered him- both treacherous and. dishonest. \When Benton's Thirty Yoars' View' was fikst published;\ says . Gen.. Tyler, “Judge Haliburton asked. my fatherif ha had read | it.. My father roplied:- 'L have nut, fit; and it is a matter of the utmost indiffer-' ence to me what Benton says about my- self or about my administration,! Judge Haliburton said: 'But you ought to read the book, «President Tyler' I don't care to\ read it.\ was my father's reply, ~ Nevertheless, said Judge Halibur ton, 'I will bring the book to your room,. the second volume, which relates to your administration, and lay it on yourdesk. If you want to read it you can; if not, you can leave if alone.' ''He did so. My father picked up the book, and, putting one finger on the leaf where Bonton began to write of the Tyler Administration, he turned over leaf after leaf until he came to the point where the administration of Polk began. He then picked up the book,. keeping: his fingers at the beginning and end of the ports relating to him. He thus car ried the book to Judge Haliburton, not having read a line of it, and said, © -| find, Judge, that Benton told the history of five Administrations in this volume, and that he has devoted more than half of his space to mine, Itis enough for me to know that he appreciated the im- portance of it, and I do not care to read what he thinks about it.' With that he gave the book to Haliburton. If you will look at Benton's 'Thirty Years' View' you will find that its second volume deals with the Administrationt from Martin Van Buren to Pierce, and it contains 788 pages; 420 of these pages are devoted topho Administration of President Tyler,\ Gen. Tyler well remembers John Ran- dolph. When he was a boy his father took him to a Virginia convention in which John Randolph was sitting. He remembers him as a tall, thin, gray- bgired man with a shrill voice. He tells me an. interesting reminiscence of his father with Randolph when Ran- doiph was in Congress and was living at Georgetown, Said he; \John Ran- dolph had had a discussion with a man named Sheffey, who was one of his col- leagues, and who had been a shoomaker in early life. Bheffey had made a speech which excited Randolph's jealousy, and Randolph, in replying to him, said that Bheffey was out of his sphere, and by the way of illustration told the story of the sculpter Phidiag. 'This sculpter,' said Randolph, 'had made a noted figure, secured a hiding place near by, whore, unobserved, he might hear the criticisms of those who passed upon his statue. Among those who examined the marble was a shoemaker, and 'this man criticised the sandals and muttered over to himself as to where they were ' wrong. After he had gone away, Phidias came forth and ex- amined the points that the shoemaker had objected to and found that his criti- clam was correct, He removed the statue to his studio and remedicd - the defects, The next day Phidias again placed it upon the street and the shoemaker s stopped before it. He saw at once that the defects ho had noticed had been remedied sud he now began to criticise very foolishly other points about the statue, Phidias listened to him for a time, snd then came forth with s Lstin phrase which means, \Let the shoe- maker stick to his last.\ And so, con- cluded Randolph, 'I say in regard to my colleague.\ ''The lough was then upon Sheffey, who, hereupon arose snd made such a scathing speech against Randolph that it made him really sick, He went to his house in Georgetown snd sent his negro, Jubs, for my father:. When father ar- rived he found Mr. Randolph in bed,and was grestsd with, in faint, shrill tones, Iam dying, Mr. Tylet, dying. I shall notoutlive the night, and have sent for you to have you winkechxrgeot my fameral. I am not poor, and I don't want Congress to bury me like they did \Beau Blank,\ mentioning the name of a y idious Ccngiemmn who had f been boned at the expense of the gov- of the house The handsome bed-room fuiniture of the apartment was removed to give [place to the necéssary workmg outfit. There isn bay 'window in the cast end.of the room, on the right . of which is placed the :General's table, .sur- mounted by a tall set of plgeonholcs, where letters, noteg, and papers are kept, On the other side of the window is placed Mrs, Fremont's table, a. large | plain affair, covered with green leather, The- General dictates, and'Mrs. Fremont ' writes down each word of the story as it falls from his lips. The family group is, howover, not yet complete, In the al- cove is placed a type-writer, and with it Miss Fremont transforms her mother's manuscript ' into neat, legible print. Here they all work togother, as happy as need be, all day long. The rule of the house is to rise at 7, take a cup of tea and a roll, and begin work at 8 and con- tinue until 12, when breakfast is taken. At 1 o'clock thoy resume work and forge ahead until 6, when the stop for the day and for dinner is made. In the evening the copy is sent out, and in the morning other proof-shects are received from the printer. , General Fremont is now 74 years old, but looks scarce 60. His hair, short beard and moustache are white, but his brown eyes are as clear and bright as stars, and his complexion has the ruddy, healthy glow of happy childhood. His height is medium and his slight figure is comfortably rounded. Houses In Georgia Pine Forests, The log houses are generally built of the sapling pines. They are long and straight, and when. peeled {carefully are 'of snowy whiteness. I noticed one old building that has stood the test of half a century, and it seems to be all right yet. This house is a fair sample of all the others of that day and time. It was built of logs, notched on to each other at the corners, the whole structure rest- ing on two light wood sills that lay on the ground. The roof was made of rough elapboards, riven out of bent pine, and the cracks and gables are ceiled with long strips drawn smoothly and nailed neatly on. The floor was of hard red clay, beaten into mortar, and then put down and packed until hard and smooth. Apertures were cut for the two doors, and the shutters were made of riven boards. 'The chimney was made of a luyer of solid pine sticks, peened all round, then a loyer of red clay mortar, another of sticks and so on to the top. House and chimney are still standing, although a whole family of children have been born, grow up and married, and none but the aged pair who came there in the flush and heydoy of youth are left to bear witness, There is a some- thing about these ping trees that is won- derfully fascinating to me. I look up at thoir tall, trim, soldierly bodies and try to imagine how many lifetimes old they are, The dust of many generations of men must mingle around their atrong roots, Could they but tell of the scenes they have witnessed! Ahl they do speak, if you will but bend your car to | to watch their low, soft whispers, as I The work;room, is on..the setond Algor | ; sacs to give origin to the hairs, which i like this arg th QM 'The bender thoughts we nurture tor a 105 Of mother, friend or child-Oh} {t were wiso To spond this glory on the earnect 0yeS, The longing heart, that feol life's present e 'Give also Herey to the living hore, Whose. keen-strung souls will quiver at your touch; The utmost reverence is not too much : For eyes that weep although the' lips may atibor, Independent. HUMOROUS. -- _. The sigh of the seamatross-A- hem. > A suit of armor was the- old-fashioned Kniaht dress. The 'biggest gum-boil on record has. : been discovered in a mucilego factory. . Across old bachelor suggests that births should bo- announced under the head of new music, Brilliant men 'are born thh black eyes.\ Men with less brilliancy have their eyes blacked artificially, \'There's a coolness between us,\ . said the sea captains to each other whon an iceberg passed between the ships. . Bome one asks: \\Is there a field for a man who can live on fifty cents a week?\ 'There is, | It is called Potter's Ficld. Uncle Sam is monarch of millions | of unsurveyed _ mores, -- and is - that much better than Alexander Selkirk, who was only monarch'of what he sur- veyed. \Pve eaten next to nothing,\ lisped Smithers, who was dining with his girl. \Ob J always do that when I sit by you,” responded | the young lady pleasantly. \My good man,\ said a philanthropist to the street laborer, ''do you ever have cause to grumble at your position?\ 'No, sit,\ was the answer: \I took my pick at the start,\ 'Children,\ said a Dakota school teacher, \'from the noise outside I think a dog fight is going on. Yow .are all excused and may go out and watch it. Don't get in a hurry, here, it will look better to let your teacher go first 1\ and he shot out of the door followed by a wild rush of the scholars. The Structure of the Skin. Roughly speaking, the skin is com- posed of two layers--the cuticle or scarf- skin and the corlum or true skin, 'The former is principally made up of two portions, the horny layer, which is the principal protective to the body, and the mucous layer, which contains cells to be pushed up and become the horny layer after awhile, and these contain the col- oring substance which gives the tint to the complexion. It is true that some of tho microscopists are uncertain about the transformation of the mucous into the horny layet of the akin, but it is difficult to imagine where the outside protection comes from if not from the layer next under it. The true skin is composed of a net- work of fibres intermixed with par- ticles of living matter abundantly sup- plied with blood vessols, nerves and all the apporatus necessary for a continuous sup- ply of fresh materials for the build- ing up of new structures as well as of means for removing those that are worn out, The glands for the secretion of the perspiration and for the formation of a fatty, lubricating matter are to be found almost everywhere, as well os the little are mere modifications of the cells of the have done so many; many times, They have tought me things deeper than the | love of the woods, and in my thoughtfal moods I have found the sweetest enjoy- ment in the lonely companionship of their brooding silence.-Aflanta (Ga.) Constitution. Can be Youched For,. While an old gentleman named Wal- deck was fishing sbout a mile from War- saw, Missouri, on the Osage river, he saw an immenso snake sunning itself be- . hind s log. The suske was one of the horned kind, such as had never been seen in that localify before. It was some fifteen feet long, 'and as it showed signs | of anger, Mr. Waldeck thought it | timo to be off. In his haste Mr. Wal- ' Geck dropped his spectacles, and, reach- ' ing down to pick fhem up, saw the | snake in pursuit of him and approaching i tapidly. Mr. Waldeck» left his glasses | and made haste toward Warsaw, where | he reported the fests. ~ A party of citi. | | zens started out to kill or capture the | snake, aud upor reaching the spot were | very much surprised to tee the mm wearing* Mr. Waldeck's spectacles and | : sense of touch is almost everywhere pres- akin. 'The nervous apparatus for the ent, much more abundantly in some lo- calities than in others. | Muscular fibres are found in connection with the hair sacs and glands for keeping the skin oily and supple; they are not under the control of the will, but act to squeeze out the lobricating material and to raise , the hairs to an upright position, as in the so-called \goose skin,\ noticed under the influence of cold and sometimes of fear, - Globe- Democrat, Black Chewing Gum, Lately there has crept into the Detroit market a substance known as \black chewing gum,\ made out of tar, which is said by medical men to be extremely harmful and pernicious. | It is becoming a great favorite with local gum-chewers, |- but physicaus assert its use is productive f sore. mouths and innumerable throst liscases. Put up in\ Tancy paper, sold | 1t s penny a block, flavored with some 1nknown ingredient, and christened with a sweetly-sounding name, as \luti-taff fot instance, the black k chewing gum is “mam told him that he did not think he would dis, and afters little talk got his mind away from his grievances. His to play, 'and I2 a short memamww m Ea whipin mathefimmwstbt alle -- Hepive Fusfiag 1. { goreg and made one 6f the ablest cf Es Efe.\ reading the snake stories in the Giote.\ ut which be was laughing ' \This fs a Mastery and can . bevcmizeilorhya 'nuribe? of Benton —-BZ w obs. “Yelee- to like 09585? remarked | fiemflfinflMMM cup | toe ime £tth time, -. | \Tes mora, it kfldl’h Eh ccofes 1, woulda't drink so merch trarmjwuter try. | w beuet Fim is bis Sift ings. forcing I® entrance into all grades of Detroit society, and driving its rivals to the wall | Bot it isnothing but tar- cheap tur at that-mixed with gelatine j and flavored with-heaven und the man- ufectarer only know what. -Zres Prefs. | Orerrercred Himself, She-James, do you ksow you put , three buttons on the plate in church to- day? He-Yes, I krew what I was abock perhaps you don't know |- ; thet I beaght those buttons . yesterday | _ Tor mig new frees ard ped fly conts fe :| Blaing Pills sels\ my ya—eqsfls—xxb- 'Calds, Coughs, Sore Throst, influenzLan. - chitls, Proumoniay: Swelllng of tha Joints, Lumbago, Inflammations, Rheuma- tigm, Neuralgia, Frostbites, Chg. blalns, Headache, Tooth acho, Asthma. ~ DIFFICULT-BREATHING. CURES THE WORWPAIifl tn from.one to' cwm 7 -- nutes, NOT ONE HOUN after readin- this l {grainement noed any my; 'SUFF Sure wil uv te ene Sproles sen nba l\ can“ lilo Only a 'A That unfunny stops the auost, exernclating pat alloys toflemmatl of and cures C ingestions, wh man; of the Lanes, tangy): owels, or other glands of organs. by one applicati A half to a tmpoonlul In half a tumbler of water will m 1] few minutes onte Cramps, \Heartburn Kiel-nut Slgkflendwhe.n latchcem,. . Oo o, lency, and all intornal pats, MALARIA Chills and Fever, Fever and Ague Gonquered. ° RADWAY'S READY, RELIEF Not only. cures the patient rolzod with. this terrible foe to syelllerl in ngwly-‘enled districts, whoreth Malaria or Ague existe/Mut It people ex sed. to I will, every. mommg on dttin bed, take twenty or thirty dro heady Relief in a glass of water and eat‘ny acreoker they wiil nape at tacks. This must done before golnz ont Therois not m mmedhl ent in the world that wilt core Fover Aldlg other Maliggua Pinon.- and other even. 1‘s, so quickas HAI WAY’S RbAD RELIE Fifty cents per bottle. Sold by drnlelu.’ DR. (Xho. Only Genuine) SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLYANT The Great Blood Purifier, r eure of all chronfo disensos, Scrofula, Blood mnu Syphume00m taints, goneumpnlon Gland: ular Dlscase, Ulcers, hronlc ncgmatism. £819 h i tain a ections of, the Lunge p Hp Bice restoring health anit vigon Sold by Drogicluta. DR. RADWAY'S PILLS The Great Liver and Stomach Remady For the euro of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver Bowels. Kidnoys. Bladder, Nervous Disons Appotite, Hoadache, Oostiven Indigestion, Bu lousness, Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Pllos andall dt ngemem-s of the Internal Viscern. Pure- év‘v'ekeugle, containing , no mercury, minerals or eteterinn®d Price 25 conts pox-1m: Bold by all druggists, pyYSPEPSIA! Dr. Kadway's Pills ato a $ for this come plaint. They restore strebgth the stomach end M flimiili‘l'fi fault ot 8 in earand w oin the Lin! yo {he 31mm to maggot Eliza-am Take the medicina according to tlons, and obsorve what wo say In \Falso and True\\ respecting dint. a I’TSend Jettor stamp to D {t. TLA D WAY &e ., No. ‘2 Warren pfllrut. New York, for \Flue and ** BE SURE TO GET RADWAYs. ON Y N ASK FOR THE w. L. DOUGLAS Best mlllel'lll. per‘tedcl n’l’ equals Any “313g 31:0 t warrante ake none un \tip. ‘ssm hoe, Warranted.\ Congress, . Boy for the W. L, Dougins' $2.00 Shoe. Ramo any es as {~, the $3.00 Bhoe. If you cannot got these shoes from deals ers, sond nddreu on postal card to Doe‘lu. Brockton, Mun. $1 per Bottle. noe El ”Ml!!!“ Water, Oll orGas, uflfllll borerxa mzoworxmnmnm than axy «a drum; fly-murmu- mam 5pm © heer. uncut-u Heme Well Exedv-ter Ce .. New York. Fen-n nnytfi’MEGCollelflme Inllllnaa tor Boarding Beminary In the State, ml newnute‘t \twelve Teachers. collate paratory. uat e tady. Art, Musia, Orato th year 022355: Ruin-cation except woeks 333i!“ any vacancies remain students received 3 nag-lime, at proj lonate rater to closg of curre a very low for quality of ac- commodations, For eat-ll en or further Inlorm tion address JO8. E. KIN ., Fort Edward, N. BOOK ‘AGENT! WANTED mt PEATFORM; EGI'IOES or LIVING FOR HEAD » By John B. G Beam Box i set rump-4M \Tati or Inn-Lu ' MON No Revue Cut 08: flan-32 Manes. Odibggdom‘}. Tiuemnno: I oie farmers Aor recelptof81.. any-11mm\ gm\ mung-as. 2 fl f Sord tor Pis ade (§ 3. MIGHTHOE'SB. tor» M. =- CUT THIS OUT!! And send to us with p return TM“‘?'$rmamn-. L r o r mem zurries, and full fnrtroc non-tog” a nice, cary business that will, bf gm brigg ergetio lad mafia 01.2 enon daar 123 ie ov an hour, Atau BurPLY Co, mg % Frmk'slln mreflemed] tn \ quiet-Ty cure any ease of m or rapture E rummage Brondway, New, York. Remedy. _ 5Gicts. ___ “am' Se E 3 mm. m sun-an museum- Mm -Trestsunnt nout on trial CO., La¥xystte, Ins Pensions LG,” aptzce for then- Werklagion Stor, assies _ yew X X6 : Gontand _ sown deep} sink c the t thus somet a half moist to gre rain, ing w once © other result migh piled back in th sprin «half Amer Ww yello are b in th they ~grow keep wi fork. gro to d after then whic two put of a floor a foc pile ing. they free: tall proc and usu orch enc met bar whe sho jour in g abi an be the gro the we thi fe or aw off all