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\f. *>;.;! 'flir'-^:- (j^-i-'V «*• _/ v. ^Jw»^£^?>*!wyW.-J- 1 -«( •. , «*r , Wr*''^,V''! ,i ff , *' , >i'U^ijMta^iK^V-r^''^ J ^ i % iv -^ THE N0RW09D flEWS, NOKWOOD, «EW YORK °MVER SUMNER, u, h No. i Bark st , .'- D * No ,10 St - fr «ttl'f 03 .i *J H Ashlov'« >.•,„ without ,nain 'S ? ce «ifaiii ( il A |I *o«c-i R \ AN : Dental s \^ The State Bonk Affect 1-h1 atll t r , Time Pov Verless to «\ect Those Blessed With Mutu- • al Affection. ™Z LOVE_LAUGHS AT AGE ^HOST ^QRIES VARY LITTLE Shafts pf Fathftr TI». '».....•... ... r • * J - FLETCHER and Counsellor iu r»' i its. Draiiches LUTHER E. ELLISON , and Counsellor n, T „ ••'•-•'-'''' Count,, N°'? tLa /;.Wte General Auctioj,,^ estate-and persoml E. WRIGIII; Attorn ey-at-Law Office Block, Norwood,^- M mi WM m-, '%m :il i 'oSm ?mi m WW mm » «a r ite TO lift lif^ ss?*-'. Life InsuratiqefI ACCIDENT AND HEALTH^' INSURANCE > Vi •DANDY, General Agem^ g - ' • New York/, PRINGLE, Special A B ei|; : New York. . ., **&* $ *G 38*3 m .v^ •;•, vc .'ifc Bridge Over River rHATEVER material In Montjc are style, are chiefly Il0tlcenblp ork »f their external for the No. 486,1.0:0 1<l ti y \ e ^ en «ne.fat Odd Ffeil Mechanic street. Mtfl most cordially invited ' ' ' Sec. R..A.Hm,s:-y railings, door knockers, and heraldic insignia. Shields, men In armour, gonfalons, and weapons figure in brass or copper to distinguish and to give a name to separate mansions. It Is said that the impetus given to metal work was due to French Protestant Immigrants, who •fled to Montjoie. At any rate, there is something quite French in the atmos- phere of the place, and there Will be Optician? New York, will be al.fl Oct. Gth.p. m.and 7thaildil| New Whitney House, OcW House, Oct. 9th. above place every eight«... a'ri'd have your eyes corral Examination Erse. ;.Wfi Mapsvillej| advan- tages may accrue by-and-by bras;' a\nd ironw .to Belgium, from the restitu- decorations in . tlon.of Her old possessions lanterns the Bifel, there can be no dispute ™- • - - ' it the most picturesque -townlet. in those border regions of the former Ichies of Limburg, Jul'iers, and Berg is .-passed at once into her hands in '' ancient and little-known,' because iluded, human habitation, on the :h bears the picturesque e of Montjoie, writes Demetrius 0 ralger in the London Graphic. - ' no shnrn „,, \ , • \ the days of the Franks, -before aside ZP' l n »« People.casting lestones. came into vogue, it was the Delfed t ™ n drPSS tho * wer e com* ictice to mark the stages along £e centov ^ agiUhSt their wlU ** a In routes by- erecting a pile of ines, and sometimes- i t happened- A Dm IT 777 ~ ' t the spot selected was on a field of AtSUU \ HUSBANDS AMD WIVES tie—ih£se_Jheaps-or—piles-were- \- -*^ -- med \Montjoie\ from the Latin | °\ e Who Should Know rds Mons Jovis, and when the name Ipntjpie was incorporated in the bat- Cry of France it signified no more Forward St. Denis. ' The Burgun- ^ battle-cry, ^Montjoie St..-Andre,\ the same period, was only. Forward Andrew. Baedeker's. plausible ingestion that the Bomans built a irtress here and gave it a high-sound- ig Same may b e relegated to the or- f-ot fairy tales. \ -Montjoie then Has a Words to Say on Inter, esting Subject. a series of Few stories written' by Pierre Perard, - - - was nothing more |an a stage or resting • point on the road of the. Franks across Aus- 'a'sia td» the Rhine. Situated in' a ! rge of the upper Boer, it .gave the slest access from the south to the a'ters of Frank, not Teuton, culture •the Aix, Juliers and Stollberg re- lon, In Jean nerre i J erard, designated the most married man In the world, be- cause he has 23 times led blushing brides to the altar, are many things Illuminating to men and women. Two of his stories discuss men and women who make the best husbands and wives. In his. own words: Consideration for his wife's feelings is the good husband's middle name. He doesn't bttwl her out in public. In fact he doesn't bawl her out at- all, but if something goes wron Ordinarily; we would cuss to the lim- it' a \peeper\ or an eavesdropper. But we'have a confession to -make on the first count, and we woulcl plead miti- gating circumstances. Here is the' story: On a drizzling, fog|y night, our way lay down a side street toward home. Several rods ahead there was a shaft of light and when we reach/ed'.the, spot we jound a window -witl/ fhtf shade half-way up. Wickedly,, but not mali- ciously, we hesitated, stopped—and we peeped. There sat an old man and his-wife; They must have been well up to the allotted three-score of years. He was smoking and she was knitting. Still we peeped. Then she looked up a t him and smiled and said something. H e laid down a book, struggled up from out of his comfortable seat and kind of hobbled out of the room, shortly- returning, and carrying'a glass of wa-' tor, which he handed to\ her. And- as she drank she held the wrinkled and bony hand of her lover. Then, as she fl-nishe'd drinking, she re- leased his hand and the look she gave him and the look he gave her were-like shafts of sunshine breaking through the murky clouds after clays of rain. • That picture has haunted us .a long time. Somehow she seems beautiful in our eyes, 1 and yet we did hot get a \closeup\ of her features. And he, why as -we keep thinking of him, wej hark back to the days -when we once visited a fine old Southern gentleman who possessed the graces ofMi Chester; field- and the courtesy of a Don Juan. Then we recall the words of a poet which fits the case precisely: .\lief Time reach out with his sickle as- far as ever he can; although he can reach ruddy cheeks and ripe lips and flash- ing eyes, he cannot quite reach loye.\ When a man really loves a. woman she will never grow old, and when .a woman loves a man he Is neither de- crepit nor bowed nor tremulous. She is the, same lass he wooed and_he is [-al-wn-j's-thc-ssimrgalffinryoung fellow who won her heart ' amd her Invariably pnly Two Elements at the Base of Japanese Tales of the Supernatural. \ The elements a t the base^ of the ghost story of Japanese thought aie simple, They are foai and anger, two emotions not sepaiahje, the oner'imply- ing the other and forming a single mo- tive—a fact perhaps true throughout\ the rule of the exercise of these..two passions. -. . . They deal with- men. and women, and are complete novels of everyday life. Of the past; 'there is the carefully preserved traditional treatment, as accurate as the delight- ful reproduction of old-time, costumes and old-time life found in the long line of artists of- the brush, whether in painting or literature. But this is a trait of the race, so eminently given to minute detail in featuring its environment. . Its preju- dices are instanced in the great impor- tance and strict injunction as to ob- servance and practice of long-time cus- tom, in the ready reference of divers ills to old superstitions always upper- most in the popular mind, some wide- ly spread, others severely local. . . . With all the varied detail and confu- sion of plot, the stories are all cast in the same rigid lines. 'In general terms —one read, all have been read. This can be attributed to the essential same- ness found throughout Japanese social life. The ghost itself is to be ~'~- tioried. • . hand. They .are absolutely equals\ happy and free. These two lovers are traveling toward the City of Silence, but they are leaving behind a picture never to be forgotten.—Fremont Herald. N. Y. | 9 a. m. to 3 p. pi,' ,._„$5O,WQ;C $6.0^ PROFITS._j$70,C OFFICERS esident. 4- Fletcher, Vice-Pres. J. B. Pringle. CasblsJ DIRECTORS W. J. Fletcher.: S. P. Phelps E. Wrirdit Of merchants, manufacltjri on favorable terms, deposits. . , on all 'points. Dratis/i all the principal CMMJ facilities for the J? banking business aniMat s and sufroundinBlo*hsipH ! treatment to all coucera^ Time York Geiilral SOUTH; - ,.-. 0:15i »nd m Nostra*. 10:00 .*.,%• j : a'Md 1:10 midnigbj; leave NomopqifSMJ ttoorii ••tmi \Rutland BAST, h . In Picturesque Setting! iDnllkeMalmedy,-Montjoie aspires to political role. It rests its claims Jame in the picturesqueness of its patlon, and - the charm of it s »val buildings bordering its nar- BWreets., The Boer, here only a fallow stream for-three parts of the PV rippling over a stony, bottom, m through the town, and in. some RWs even under the houses! It is |#.n.in the early spring by the «lUng snows of the Eifel, but it has H! , T forltseI fi'so geep a chan^ BL. !f ds are ra ^' as « sw eeps 5 n ^Increased Volume past' mS s t0 iohx the Meus * founded by the most beautiful E 1\ ? 6 Hert .Ogenwald. or Hohe ¥V which completely screen the lit- gw that a cricket ball might be ^n from the height to.which are , •ng of the old castle to the oppo- KV Q Whlcl1 ls &* Waller or f«a o* er .; This was placed where- .J,because i t allowed of a better &ML 1 d0 ?MhVvalley in the K Zi ? robber ^ a «« ° f Rei ^ ^ evied toil on travelers even if rw not compkteiy plunder them. ftrt wf ^^Wfe; where 'the Per- ? n , m t ? y fl be t^dlike.aflilver \1 p flows though, the wood to ^Boer.. This.stream:,is called 8* Tr ? iCh *¥* -tr^bry was ^Kr Ut '*° •&**& claimed g^ 101 ^ clay-to. faw discos ^I^BulIdih fl s l ; M^^.&tfe e t 8 . WZ^J*'*^'** J t9 se> ^I>«hnp Sr bjrvofcflftfcj action', ffi S2 , reacfr ®# ^nm that go _ „ 0 or he thinks he isn't getting, a square deal somewhere, ho has it out with her and gets it off his chest. He. doesn't about with a grouch bottled up. He doesn't keep a strangle hold on the purse__ strings or dole out the shekels ns'if he were sitting in a continuous game of penny ante, but neither does be throw the clutch and hit on all twelve cylinders. When you come to face the fads in the-case at hand the \good\ hus- band is the one-who heeds the advice of the Good Book and doesn't let his right hand know what the other does —or words to that effect. The. women who make the best wives-are the onus who see to a man's comfort without making any fuss about it. They're the ones who take an interest In their husband's comings and goings without keeping tab on him till he feels as if home were a jail and she's the keeper. They are strong-minded enough to keep husband in the straight and nar- row path, but they refrain from push- ing him too far or too fast To sum it up the women who make the best wives are the ones who regard marriage as an occupation or a profes- sion.—New Tork Mail. Patriotic Kansan. I had looked forward.to my first glimpse of France with an almost fa- natical eagerness. France—the land of dreams*-! had visionedlt~io often! But my first real sight of it, save for a few harbor lights, was not at all the thrilling experience that Iiiad ex- pected. As we steamed ; up the river to Bordeaux I stood, with\ a group of esjger watchers, beside the rail, and' looked at the fields, stretching along the sides of the .river. They were very green, even though it was winter time; ii nd though I was almost breathless with the wonder of reaching a prom- ised land, that vivid green was, the only thing that I could quite compre- hend. ''I never saw grass like that!\ I ex- claimed stupidly. ^ ... One of the men-^-a newspaper man from the middle West—answered me. \You ought to see the grass that we, grow-in Kansas!\ he said.—Margaret B. Sangster In the Christian Herald. It is an unworshiped spirit, or, owing to some atrocious injury in life,. it stays to ..wander the earth and to se- cure vengeance on.the living perpetra- tor. The mind concentrated in its hate and malice at the last moment of life secures to/ the spirit a continued and. unhappy sojourn among the living un- til the vengeance be secured, the grudge satisfied and'the spirit pacified. There are other unhappy conditions of this revisiting of life's scenes; as when the dead mother returns to nurse her infant, or the dead mistress to console j a love. Vengeance satisfies the grudge, time assuages grief; but the ghost can err by excess and find no easy pacifica- tion. The most Strenjic^s._eJfoj:ts..pf~an-y' bTi'fT3Te\\salntTiest of men are without success In the redemption. ' In __ the case of Sainen, the reprobate cleric yet stalks the earth in sfflte of the prayers of generations of sinners and. sinless, offered, at the'Suwa shrine.; an instance of malignant persistence rare, even In the ghostly annals of Nippon, .-—•Asia Magazine. OPERATION OF A ROAD DRAG Principal Factor Is Skill on Part of Operator—Suggestions Given , r as Guide. (Prepared' by the United States*Depar,t- . ment of Agriculture.) 'J ' The principal factor in successfully operating a properly constructed road drag, provided that the condition of the road is favorable, is skill on.the part 1 of the operator. Such skill can be obtained Only by intelligent experi- ence in the use of the drag, and no rules can be laid down which would enable an inexperienced operator to produce first-class results. The' fol- lowing'suggestions are intended, there- fore, to serve rather as a guide to the judgment than as a criterion to be im- plicity followed. -... , ' . Under ordinary circumstances the position of. the hitching link on the draw chain should be such that the runners will make an angle of fr<$» 60-to 75 degrees with the center, line of the road, or, in other words, a skew- angle of'from 15 to 30 degrees. It is apparent that by.shifting the position of the hitching link the angle of skew\ may be increased or diminished ..as the conditions require. When dragging immediately over ruts or J down the center of the road after the sides have been dragged, \ft is usually preferable. to haye the hitching link at the center of the chain and t o run the drag 5 with : out (\skew. . When the principal pur- pose of the dragging is to increase the crown of the road, the drag should be sufficiently skewed to discharge all material as rapidly as it is collected on the runners. On the other-hand, if depressions occur in the road surface, the ^kew may perhaps be advantage- ously reduced,to a minimum, thus en-,. „,< abling the operator to deposit the^ma- tserial which;_collects_ inJlront-of—the~| HER EXPENSIVE H^T. A woman entered\ a car rather out of breath and presented a singular ap- pearance, for instead of a hat she was balancing a huge basket on her head with as much grace and ease,as if it had been her Sunday bonnet. Sh e could just manage to get through the. doorway, but she sat, down with the:-basket gracefully poised on her head! : . .- \ •k-f.'- '\Atl fares; please, 1 \ said the con- ductor; \and --shall want twopence for''that there 'basket, mum \ • \Get away with yer,\ she said \D'ye charge anything for ladies' hats?\ \No mum.\ , ' \Thin get on with yer work. This 'er .basket is a-going- to be my hat.\-— Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. 1 No Life There. Patience—Where . is Peggy living now? Patrice—Philadelphia. \Is she married yet?\ < \Not her.-\ . • - \ \Well you know while there is life there is hope.\ \But she says there is no life' In Philadelphia.\ '•'. ''•'•, t . • - Love Me, Love My Dog. 1 \I suppose- you have loved other girls /besides me?\ asked the sweet young thing. ':'•*• \Yes replied the man; \but that was puppy love.\ \Well I hope you haven't lost all your puppy love,, for I have a dog, you know.\ « TEACHING -WOMAN'S RIGHTS. \ Plans to Export Pure-Bred Stock.. To work but plans for increasing the. exportation of pure-bred breeding , stock from the United States to South America, David Harrell and H. P . Morgan of the bureau of markets,, will go to South America, as representa- tives of the United States department of agriculture. They recently' con- ferred in Chicago with secretaries of. various breeding associations. Secre- taries representing all breeds of hogs and all but two of cattle attended. Ways and means of .stimulating inter- est among South American stock rais- ers in importations of pure-bred stbek from this country were; discussed. -It was planned to send a shipment of hogs to South American live-stock shows.. This plan*-it is believed, is one of the best ways of\ introducing to South American stock ra'isfers the quality of animals now being grown in the United States. runners at such points as he desires by lifting or otherwise manipulating the drag. Many other examples of con- ditions which require modifications in the angle of skew might easily be Cited, but-these will readily suggest' themselves to ah intelligent operator 1 as his experience' increases. The length of hitch is. another very important consideration.in operating a road drag. In the desigjis which have been discussed the draw chain may.be readily taken tip. o r iet out-.at-.either end and the length of hitch .thus in- creased or diminished as desired. I t is Impracticable to. prescribe .even an approximate rule for fixing the length of hitch, beca.iise i t is materially'af- fected by the height of the team and the arrangement', of the harness, as well as by the condition of the'..road surface. Experience will. Soon teach the operator, however, when to short- en the hitch ip xirder to lessen the -p-r <%TQ« if) \Who's getting scolded in your house now?\ \ \Nobody. That's just ma teaching pa a few.;reasons why women ough£ to vote.\ •\ t Essay About Hens, A child of nine Jn Standard in ot a Sheffield school 'wrote the- following essay on \Hens says the London Tel- egraph: \Hens are treble (terrible) things In a garden. They do not chew their food; they swallow it holl. Hens, eat bits of pot and then the egg shells ore made from these. They lay a lot of eggs if you are ducky. Some peo- ple put pot eggs in the hens nest.to tys Cfcfce) them to lay. When hens start eating the eggs, the people put mustard in an eggs shell. Hens have cloven feet and scarly (scaly) legs. One kind of hens are Called cockerils.\ Dog Watches for Auto. Does evolution in the'life of animals pause them to take added care in go- ing across a street infested, with an- tes? Some folks says it does.' Early in the auto age numerous dogs were killed because they would run out to bark at an auto and, judging the speed by that of a horse-drawn vehicle, they often were run over. This fact can'still be noticed in some' country districts, where autos are not plentiful. Close students and lovers of dog's in the city say they have often noticed dogs looking to the left and to the right before they start across a street. Of course,-not all of.them do, neither do all hunum beings, hut the~\thinklng\ dog does. Wfftch it .for yourself. * r' 1 'lids tut I- Drinks of Colonial fimes. The Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania early in its career translated into English an account by the Swed- ish traveler Israel Acrelius of the dif- ferent sorts of strong drinfe that were popular hereabouts. . '' \Mamm\ Was made of water, sugar and rum, and was the chief, stock-in- -trade\ Of many a tavernkeeper. \Man- athan\ Was rum, sugar and beer. \Lillibub\ was made of milk, wine and sugar. \Tiff' was beer, 'rtim and sugar poured on buttered toast. \Sampson\ lived up to the.name—a mixture of cider and rum.' The in-' gradients of \sangaree\- were wine, water, sugar and nutmeg. When brandy'and sugar were added to cider it became \eider royal.\ \Baw dram %!*. * SflS r « * &W% 4*-: m Kawrepfie*; Bound . • «.% vM 11:20 nm 11:60 1M0. pi% Mr im life.) &0S' lies »7' *\ m Sttiali^nd 'cfamped ^J^f oso * ***»$( s» Jttoiloa *%Vh. T mm ' ^ • even loftier X N : £ * ti *-'®^io.nae\(ik>nce •*2W? ' 8t \*ft;wfelch; at Some *H$* « {1a y !ft 'tflMhWe; and kw EM e^ttihglt i« buried. isssk + m thernore Wtlceabie fc«£ h'rt °, ft -utos* toe .'fr&fee the: fi if 1 ^JPs^e^^ea'ia the 1 Praiso for YelloW Hammer. ' Few birds have so;mauy scandals connected with their names_ as the yelioSv haffimeFnas in BnglahdV'Whefe the old Wives used to tell that the scratches and hieroglyphics on. its' eggs Were the handwriting of old Nick him- self. They do say, too, that this bird \drinks a drap o'the deevli's blood every Monday morning,\* certainly a bod way'to begin Hie .week. So far as'I can lerirn the yellow hammer is really n harmless chap. Tve always Future of \Tired\ Nations. The recuperative powers of. nations fs great beyond belief,:and hope.Is ever present as long as the spark' of vitality is left. The same superhuman effort that was put forward to repel tile in- vader will again be exerted to remedy* the damage that has been done; only there must be a breathing space be- tween effort, and in that space lies the greatest danger. This danger, how- ever, is more imaginary than real, and. whatever means are. resorted to by the population to deaden the effect Of.this, reactive period, it soon prills and the sober minds of the populace again,at- tain the' ascendency.-—Forbes Maga- zine. • ---.• • Extravagance In Combs. : The notice, \Ladies are requested to remove their combs,\ appears now- on theater programs in London, be^ cause of the vogue of the huge Span- ish comb among smart women. Some of the combs are of. enormous §b;e. Standing on Drag While in Opeiation. amount, of' cutting done by the front runner find when to lengthen it in or- der to produce the Opposite effect. When the road surface is sufficient- ly hard or the amount of material i,' AI« * i\ 1 \ii ~~\ T>V,Vr which it iss desired to have the drag was the title for straight rum.-Phila- move , is • st]fflclMt to W£frra „ t th e opt deipnia meager. erator standing upon the drag while it is in operation, he. can greatly facili- tate/its work by shifting his weight'at proper times. iFhr .example; ; if it is de- sired to have the drag discharge more rapidly, the,operator should, move to- ward the discharge, end of the: runners. This Will cause the ditch end of the rtinners to swing forward and thus iri> crease, the skew angle of the drag. The operator may,'.of course,' produce the. opposite effect; by/moving :his weight in-the. opposite. direOtion. in the sarbe way, he'eafl partially cohtrpl the amount of\'cutting' which the, drag does by. Shifting;;,his„'w0ight. hack-ward of fprwjttfd, as the case inay b,e> : Ah ih.tSlI'ig.enfe and -'ififer^teti ..opera- tor; will .sb'on jearfi iuairy.'-Simple, ways by meahs of/which he can easily, con* troi the different features;, of the work which a. drag performs^ and he. \will al# leaih i& utilize effefitiVeiy .every elffqf.t' ^hich;hj|g tearii .exerts.. , „ The tortoise.shell vogue is an expen- loved *'the name given by the Italians gIve one A Ji^iit tortoise shell dres\s- tothe young of this species which is j lng set eosta ^QQQ or more, \rlgoletfo the name of the court fool in a weli-known opera.—Exchange. ,,. fr •.,-•.\-. v., W v»-.,» w.v goardlna Hsuse Romance. \% J^nwttoifc after dark «our landlady seems to hitve.no sou? ^^mW-immmmv^ ior m^nec.\ \EM\ \Displays m «»„„ - - r - - interest In those two young people who atkloye.'' \^ j^^JS It's a romance to us. but to her it sim- ply means the loss of wo Boarders, - tonJ«rlUe Oourie^otiraaL W«i,L™ e feai»efou$ jpftssagea ^*to«^'-':-\•.'; • 1 Protected His Tonsils. • John Lay'denies the; story that he had his tonsils sunburned by gazing skyward the Other afternoon a t the airplane that was cutting didos in the sky. He Says the machine shifted' 4$ position often enough.to ke^p,hfin turning about, so that jpaifet of the^tniejj . h» mouth was la th6 ^iiidt.*-Silc9itoii Stend*«l. ' «*«*%>»»» Physical Impossibility,. Unless broad thinking is your plan _ You're 'doomed to some mistake. ,. It's plain' a narrow-minded- mart Cannot be wide awake • His. Excuse. Mrs. Eagle—Sir, what do you mean by staying away from home for five, hours? Her .Spouse—Well, I'll tell you, my dear. I wasn't feeling very well and 1 ha.d to flight to rest myself. I guess I must have dqzed a little, 'cause when •I..came to I was five hundred miles 'away. I had lit on one of those coa« founded airplanes «r; A Business Man's Assertion. \You used to say I Wagner was a wonderful musician \ ' \I say so yet\ declared Mr. Cum- rox. \ I figure 'that admissions to Wag- ner concerts have cost me several thou- sand' dollars. Anybody who coula* work off that kind ,of material at Wagner's^ figures is what I call a wonder.\ Not Puntture Proof. Smith (at the wheel)—Do you know, I have a new theory about saving mo- tor car tires. Nervous Companion—Good heavens I What was that noise? Smith (wearily) — Only another theory exploded! — *r TRAVELING ABROAD •4**-' 1 ty ; ( 'We can stop at Milan for an hour.\ • Lanf see much in an hour.\ I Ofily want, to get • ' - \ r .pasted'on my '• trunk.\ local label I w,'.- :• -\P- Sstart s the lift, Sfffijhtiy^ixetl. . Men's andi Women's Work. 1; A w!oma'ifi r.uhs^ja street car swift HIGHWAYS SUJLf IN FOffESlS I tfA^' Accordinfl to tJeparttnent's,OfficfaL Re- port 'Tdt^i\:pf '-.iri846> (Vi\''>e.#-'Was:-. i \ 'irUcte^.''. ... v A total of 88.19 itiiies y^as cofistruct-' ed iirfder the forestry, i-oad ftihds-dur- Ijag the past year, according, to the de- partment's official report k,t the end pi* the fiscal yeiii? forty-three fctirjfaets W0P0 undsi? cooperative ftfre^irieat, 'ftt fal?t^''?**' *X* cii y> 1* might be, working «* \* T h Jll ° * ' , ««. Meftdadlty. .\Figures won't lie.\ mmm'*mJF£WM^mi ••i2$!\>S&'«*^ to,\ answered ,.^'%,<**«W*!!^^^ raw m. **•*»• 'l#':.#<if.;^d|\^~tte\«>irt'» tu&tfkt. I . :'