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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
-A % % stusted to gross examine Senator Thomp- , «ix years terms at A salary of $5,000 a «n am as w a an «n , €lared that the Appellate m other 'asdoctate Judge had C othe wa Page ® bill, amd that he ligo never beep prom- Aayd smything suytiine-to-stgp or fur ther legislation.. He also declared that he had never heard of miy rumor that he had. unill Ji.. was- brought. to lis attention by.. the. charge of Juntice Strong to the Grand-Jury. Brackett Former Benator when he » w » Contianed. from 'vage one gowsli, daughter of: Frapk Rogowski Jennle Grace Beato, damighter of Jasept Beato: Frances Rose Henry, daughtei of Joweph Henry;-Julia Murgaret Hem mer, daughter - of. George - Hemmer Evelyn: Dorothy - Schnappanf. df Joseph F. Schnappaut; Agnes Mary Hoppe, daughter of Herbert Hoppe. Frank E. Hurley was the shonss; for Jobn Francis | Schnelder; . son John Schnelder; Francis Anthony Gately won of Francis J. Gately; John Jame McDermott, son of\ Bernard J. McDber Michael Francis SchnappauF, soy Michael Francis . Schnappauf, son o Joseph F, Schnap ; Kenneth Joseph O'Donohue, son of Cornelius J. O'Done hue; Joseph | Aloysius Koch, son . of Louis Koch; . Francis : Charles Selden here. son of Chayles Seldenberg; James Joseph Marco, son of Antonio Marco Francis Daniel Peterson, son of Fran ols C. Peterson: dames Joseph Thomas Moran, son of Thomas Moran; Alxander Martin Bpgdauty, - son - of flexundrv Bogdaufy: - Richard Francis Hussott won of Richard Hassett; Henry: Josep: Schneider, son of John. Schneider, i Frederick E. Southard was <the sponsor . for «Janet \Josephine ' Calluel dnughter of 'Anthony luel; Glady Mary Martin, daughter of Henry: Mar tin; Elzabeth Marie Dougherty; daugh ter of Terrence Dougherty; Elen Maric Dorothy Kelly, daughter of William J Kelly; Martha Marion Lapey, daughto Herman Lapey;. Mildred: Rose (Conran daughter. of Franklyn G. Conran; Fi ges Cellia Ledogar, daughter of Fran! Ledogar; Elizabeth (Mary Moyer, daugh ter of Adolph Moyer; Helen Rits Nan daughter of Joseph Nan; Muriel Gene vieve | Heldberger, | daughter of Loult Heidberger; Margaret Theresa Heelan daughter of Patrick Heelan; Catherine Constance Mary Hurley, daughter (0; Francis E. Hurley; Marie Dorothy Hel enstreit, . daughter of Henry Heben mtreit; Mary Leonida Donovan, daugh ter-of John J. Donovan; Zeno Virginia Healey; _ Margaret Paranino daughter of Angelo Paranino. \non. prefaced his. question with ,upology which Heniator Thompson Intl mated was not necemsury and added that he would give & frauk fawer to mwnything that was asked. of him. Senator Thompson testified that Je had voted aghinst m bill, but not the one to which Justice Strom bad re- ferred in his charge, that would pro- hibit Judge Lewis J. Smith and Burro- gate Leone D. Howell from the practice of law ontside of their judicial duties because be knew them both as reput- able citizens who had been elected for oi year and that it would be an injustice to those men to compell them to. live on that amount. Under a bill passed'by. Assemblyman Thomas A.. MeWhinngy, following his admitted defeat of gnother. bill, the judge and surrogute were prohibited from the practice of law und the salary of the office was raised to $10,000 start ing January 1 of next year, This was done for the purpose of making the re- turn commensurate with the duties im- posed. Attorney Perkins yesterdaysput in evi- dence the presentment of the 'Grand Jury exonerating Senator. Thompson, which -was not filed until March/22 of this year, and an order of Justice Strong on January 9 last in which he directed that & copy of the Grand Jury minutes be given to him. Assemblyman McWhinney admitting that he called Justice Strong a liar dur- inga conversation with him when the Assemblyman was called as a witness before the John Doe<inquiry that Jus- tice held contended, on cross examina- tion, that it was a \decent thing to do\ under the elrcumstances, Attorney Brackett sought to out from the Assemblyman that he knew Carman Plant, which Mr, Mc- Whinney readily admitted, but which Chairman Jenks refused to permit to go in the record because it was outside the scope of the complaints made by the Bar AssogMition, Attorney Perkins ob- jected to this line of questioning on the Mrs bring (race ground that it was only for the purpose Arthur Henrici was the sponsor Im of getting in the newspapers the name} Alfred Francis Young, son of Robert [-of a man now a. convict in Sing Sing) Young; Philip Joseph Schneider, soi Prison) . of. Jolin Schneider; Bernard Josep! Cofmaei for thé committee said that p Rdward McDermott, son of Bernard 4 mo objections were 'made to the right McDermott; James John Burns, son o} } of the judge to investiggte the high-| James H. Burns; Alphonsas Philly ways matters In this county but. that| Gately, son 'of Thomas Gately; Josep: objections were made to that part offthe} Frederick Balleweg, son. of Herman judge's charge wherein he :\attempted| Balleweg: Philip. Emil+ Hoffman, son to cogrce the Gand Jury\ by telling/of Henry P. Hoffman; Thomas Patrick i e. had. evidence enough. to | J Gately,. «on. of. Thomas. J.. Gate Indl hm a higher court had held |ty; ph Joseph Moyer, son pT Adolph was improper, and which was a part of Moyer; 'C Francis -Nicholar, son. of the grounds on which the indictment against Both and Weston had been dis- missed. Attorney Perkins characterized. such action as \not legal autocratic and mandatory.,\ When Mr.Brackett sought to show that Justice Strong was within his right to so charge the jury, Mr. Perkins de- Willtam P. Nicholar; William Vincent Schalt, son (of Vincent: Schalt; John Joseph Hurney, son of Joseph Hurney Harold Dennis. Gay,- son .of William Clay: Robert Thomas Tunney, son -of Robert L Tunney. Angelo Ruoceo was the. sponsor Sylvester C. Sorrentino. for Carmelia. Sorrentino. ann 2 gean ec Seek New Supplies of Ivory. Gelpine T¥ory is exceedingly scarce, and many hunters left: Seattle last summer to prospect the Yukon and Norton sound tundras for iinstodon tusks, says the Scientific American. Another soures of supply is the Behr Ing sea walrus and narwal, Philippine Lace Making. Some of the nest luce in the world Is made by the women of the Philip- piue islands from: strong, silky fibre obtained from pineapple leaves, add- Ing to the commercial: value of this plant, recently used in the manu- facture of puper. wise An thi svery matter, The Bar Asso- wlation, said Mr. Perkins, does not ob. ject to any proper Investigation in Nas. sau County. The hearings now await that testi- mony that District Attorney Charles R. Weeks can give and the testimony of some twenty other witnesses whom Mr. Perkins sails be will call, The Bar Association, represented by Isaac R. Ueland, of Brooklyn, also has present at the hearings its committee of lawyers, George M, Bode, James Gehrig and Charles N. Wysong. Carp Has the Biggest Brain. Of all figh the carp, in proportion Jo its size, has the largest brain. 1 QUALITY, not PRICE \ Tells the Story, so please don't pre judge these High-Grade Meats by their Low Prices ~ Pork Loins MMQ.@R 23¢ Lamb - HXSSANMENS OR - 30¢ Chickens (* KMED, pais - 25¢ Spring Lamb \*\XY*\ 20¢. Spare Ribs BM n* 12i¢ \ADN AFC-n\ Merrick ' oa, In J. WALS NTREICT, Corner Tuban Airset, Wm. o Ke He 5 _PELTON TRENT, Derner Twombly Place, 'Jamak®) 12 L. CENTRAL NVENUR, Corner Spruce Strect,. Oodurhurst 10 WOMDAH: _ HTRKKT, Gea Cove, to 4 14 % MXN Corner New York Hunt 1s % Dl STRINWAYT AVENUK, Nene Broadway, Ann-viz\?I l.~ _ MILL, Covner Irma Avénes, Fork Waakington, HAIN: STRIAT, Patchagars, to 1, R* AIN STRENT, Comer Bay Thore Mar & ' & Janes Butler: Inc. Mest Markets The sponsor for Amelia Angelo wae (Contiaued from page on«s The annual report of Secretary Au: gust Kath, of Nammu showed that 488 Also, 15 new companies had joined 'the association. The growth- has. been more satisfactory than any previous Fear. While no place was determined upon for next year's convention, it seems wrobable that It will be held on Staten Island. Treasurer: Philip Peters, of Queens, submitted his annual report, showing a balance on hand of $898.64, a net in crease. of $239.46 over the preceding year, . Edward Gombert of Roosevelt, made inquiry as to the responsibility of a chauffeur of motor fire apparatus. By request reply was made by George J. Sclineller, counsel of the Firemen's As sociation of the State of New York Counsel stated taht the chauffeur's re sponsibility is the same. while driving fire apparatus at any time is the same as any other operator of a motor ve- hicle. He suggested that it might be well for fire departments or fire com- panies to arrange for compensation In- be surance, as such companies would responsible for damages. The stage is all set for the men which will be held today. Nearly half a million doilars worth of the est motor apparatus has been entered for the parade, which started at 10:30 A. M. 'The contests will be held at the Fair Grounds, beginning at 1 P. M. more than fifty prizes bave been donat- d for the parade and contests The following are the «officials for the tournament: Announcer, Archer B. Wallace: fleld judge, Joseph M. Kén- nedy, George Wackenhut, John B. Keck, James W. Eaton, Edward Donlon, Ber ard IP. Hug] Fred Santre, WilliainP. Gocbel, Charles A. Schiffmacher, George M. Solan, Archer B. Rackett, Robert J. Smith, Willia N. Mullion, Commodore J. Ebb Weir, Harry B. Howell; parade tourns Judges, Patrick: J., Mc-Carthy, Henry Hoider, -John Bechtold, Peter, Crilly William M. Thomas; protest Phillp Pe George H. Schiffmache Frederick Sheide; timers, John 1, Heay e William H. Swartout, Edward H son; starters, Charles O. Synd m N. George, Fred Marz; clefk of course, August Kalb; surveyor and measurer, Daniel R. Young. Referring to the State Firemen's Home at Hudson, William H. Swart- wout, secretary of the home, stated that under its new superintendent, improve ments, were noticeable, that he was mtores'than pleased to learn through Hudson-papers-that for 'the first-time in the history of the state institution the superintendent bad all the firemen, inmates of the Home, march cemetery and place a flag and flowers on the graves of their departed com: rades. It pleased the residents of the city of Hudson, and indicated the character and sentiment of the new Superintendent. 'The Home at Hudson is. for indigent volunteer, active, or exempt firemen from any part of the Empire State, who ave thus kept from being sent to county, town or city-aims houses, Continuing Mr. Swartwout said that he had had the pleastire a fortnight ago of being a guest with other officers of the- State Firemen's Association at Freeport, where the general committee of the Freeport Fire Department out- lined the plans 'for entertaining the State convention in August. He said \It was considered that the greatest entertainment. at any of our state con ventions was the one «at. Watertown some twenty. of more years ago when you who attended will recollect Roswell P. Flowers made it so pleasant for us, Let me say from what I learn- ed at Freeport, the fAremen there are making greater avrangements for. your entertainment than. any. flremen's con- vention ever held in this state. . If you misd this convention -at Freeport you will miss something you will always regret.\ moore ron ronal ss., Many Minor Planets, There continues the discovery of asteroids or minor planets, especially with the aid afforded by celestial pho- tography, Among a vast multitude of stars, crowding a photographic plate one, perhaps, will be seen to have drawn a-short thin: line on the plate during its hours of continuous 'expos- ure, The astronomer knows at once that t 1s @ither an asteroid ora comet, - Bubsequemt observations soon decide 'the point. Only the more In- teresting: ones are . afterward - ob served with attention, but once (dis- covered they cannot be Ignored, ind the rapid growth of the flock becomes an - embarrassment.. . Eros, which at times approaches the earth {nearer than muy: other regular members of the solar system, except the moon, and asterold No. 685, which at nphelion is more: distant than Jupiter, ns fur as their - orhits \are )concerneil, romain 'Fun Fast members, -134. campanies and three ex | chiph. engineers had paid dues this year, | Ca to the} how | Is Frecport, June 16,.-Pratty gids, bril- {Hant scenery, a melange of songs, dances | spectaity acts, and a variety. of mirth \ making that.kept an nudience of 1,000 applauding and laughing last night mulrked the minstrel © and vaudeville show of Holy Redeemer Council No 1974, Knights of 'Columbus. |_ Home of the numbers which scored were Little Miss Muriel Germeroth, in 'her song and dance specialty, \When Frances Dances With Me.\ and Yankee Doodle\ brought down the house. She encored with a dance. Miss Audrey McVay, in character songs and dances won warm applause: | Miss Frances Keiran with her two brothers, Ray and Mat, gave a fifteen minutes entertainment that evoked hearty greeting. Crawford and Boderick, two headliners [on the vaudeville circuit put it across in grand fashion, 'They proved extreme» |y ~clevervand mang and danced in a ' style of their own. Kathryn and Nancy McCord sang a mumber -of well chosen. songs. They pleased the Jarge audience and were en« batred and was planning to organize &- campaign to make all men the slaves of women. He said the in- veterate man haters aim at the com- plete subjugation of man by woman- kind, He further said. that the con verts to the movement were recruited In large stores, where they are com- bating men assistants, and also in hospitals where nurses are taught to undermine the doctors. A woman. friend of bis, be 'said, had been: in- vited to a formal lecture given by a Freach woman on sex war, and found herself in a center of this man-hating where the lecturer declared that its aim was to keep men in sub ordinate positions, \Just as men have kept women in slavery for centuries.\ cout on Long Inland, the first one also oif 'to a Huntington girl. Miss Cora Whaley, now Mrs. Carl Jarvis. Super visor Abraham L. Field, presented the Eaglet to Miss Thomas, who !s a mem- ber. of his awn household, and whe has been receiving the congratulations of her host of friends. Hempstead mm Sold Hempstead, June 15.-A-W. Brierley's real estite mifemcy has sold for the Hempstead Realty® Associates, the new dwelling: on the west side 'of, Wash- ington street, opposite Lincoln Boule: vard, to Dwight Lyman Moody of Cen- tral. Park,: who will take occupancy about August 1st. MAID 18 SOUGHT To TESTIPY IN WILL CASE Two-ninths Departed. The suburbin lady's collie is. um» awe-inspiting and toward eats is. most nzgressive. During the process of serving the Sund Rockville Centre, June 15.-A reward awaits Johanna Hildrud, a maid form- erty employed in New York, or any one knowing her, if her address is forward- ed.to Green and Hurd, New York law | wip iy .... Mo Astin topper yesterday in her seventy-slxth year at the Home of her son, Charles Kappauf, on Louise place, Valley - Stream. Death wis due to a complication of diseases, . Funeral services will be held this evening at clght o'clodk, the Rev, Roy M. Terry officiating. . Funeral armngements are in charge of Pbttit Brothers of Rock: ville Contre, -. Interment » wil} 'be in Greenfield Cometery, Ain sct Joseph A. Pucker Joseph A. Tucker of Lynbrook. died yesterday in his forty-ninth year of acute Bright's disease. Funeral services will be held at the Church of the Ascer sion, Rockville Centre, Saturday after- noon at two-thirty o'clock, the Rev. F. H. Handsfield officiating. Interment will be in Greenfield Cemetery under direc» tion of Pettit Brothers of Rockville Cen- tre. The deceased is survived by his widow and eight children, Arnold J., Henry, Charles, Richard, Walter, Ward, Ivy, 'and Mrs. Blanche Lageman. norn o nie Mrs, Gisola-P. Henry Mrs. (Gisela P. Henry, Wife of Jacob H. Henry, died suddenly Tuesday at her home in Baldwin, 237 South Grand ave- nue, of heart disease. . Funeral services will be held at her late residence at eight o'clock this evening. . Interment in Greenfield Cemetery, the Rev, M. Barbour, -D. D., officiating, Funeral arrangements are in charge of Péttit Brothegs of Rockville Centre, an ogee, In That Sense, Anyway. \Failure is sometimes the beginning of success,\ says a philosupher. . At rate, seeing ome's finish is apt to give one a start. -| cored. Miss Florence Keogh accompani-] yers. She is believed to be in NassaU) the maid lot Lassle escape from Th8] Honey ed at the plano, Miss Marion O'Connell] County at the present time and Is want- confines of the kitchen'into the yard, is a pleasing voice, and could not sing 64. to tes in legal proceedings ong goon q tremendous racket was nough for the crowd. , ing out of a contest over a will made heard, The family rushed to the res- The Mechanic Doll, a pantomiine in| by one of her former employers, M p j - j ene. A neighbor was just rescuing which Littlc Miss Anna Behr was the her-cat from the onslaught. \I wish doll and Rosella Meyers wound her up Romance of Words. & 1d keep that dog h Mikey and made her sing and dance proved |- Words have a romance all their own, ¥9% Would keep that dog home,\ she a novelty ad was well liked by the| MacAdam was a road builder, Guillo- #84 m'syljl' rm lsithe “ii“\m histine: audience. | tine a compassionate physician, Der- be M48 killed this poor cat, A Tom Smith, the boy who had made} rick an inventor. General Sithouette nulllrlns lnnvgifl vmfmhlnlt l‘):|‘l|:‘i'“;:|llll:ullslit; frst devised the \cut out,\ which in tng Tar nery % NW our ' the hands of a few has been raised original and funny stunts. He was a} |}° ,, , £ conut t. Lord tiot and scored a big hit. o the point of genuine art Lc Sandwich made a basty repast at the gaming table. The spurlous jewelry M « Miss Rosell yers, gave a few min- {utes of 'old fashioned buck and wing | dancing which was well received. called pinchbeck is made of a cheap The end men, eight in number, gotf alloy first used by a jeweler of that [a laugh for every joke they crac d. name. Mrs, Bloomer set the feminine They had some original and clever] world agog in her day. Mr. Boycott comedy. The entire show was was a landlord in Ireland whose ten- fiedly the best staged in Freeport in antry refused to pay their rentals um til certain of their demands granted. Strange is the word were Grand Knight of nhs He took ymond Malone, the council, was interlocutor. off his part creditably terer, sprung from La Sainte Terre bs ri(\( E Others who took part in the program (the Holy: Land), whither pilgrims \ \ were Agnes and Mildred Murphy; Mrs] Tere wont leisurely to journey, Strunger the word 'haberdasher, which is suld to have been derived from the Thomas O'Brien and Kathorine Robin- son; Helen Keogh and Lillian Rhodes; Katherine and Claire $ullivan; Maur German habt Thr das hier? Another Ice Halpin, Edward 8. Keogh, Jr., Char axoti¢ corruption, this time from the les Harris, Ambrose Folimar, prench, is qu'en dirai for quandary. “lam“, George G... McCord, Chaney Detroit. News. Ebbetts and \Joseph \Lyons the \elight merry jesters of the show; Frances Fitz- | sommons; Wam Martin,. Mrs. M. Ray, Miss M. O'Connell, Jack O'Connor May McQuade, Jennie Abrams, E. Mess ner, Jack Hunt and T. Cashioppe, Beat rice and Gladys Golden, Frances Thorn, |Florence Keogh, Margaret Hatton, Ju Jin Smith, Helen Kremelberg, . Jame# {Gunnion, Jack Kelly, Frank- Murphy Charles Egan, Jr. and John' J., Kelly. He Would Like to Know. An official of the village improve- ment society In New Jersey tells of a note recelved from @ Japanese of an Inquiring turn of mind. 'The subject of the inquiry is one that is familiar to most parts of the world, but no doubt thd community of which it was made felt. Hatter | 'The show was staged under the per-] Ratt (by 'this evidence sonu! direction of John F, Germeroth\f of- its popularity=~@Phe note 'read: I anais \f \The honorable soelety \are asked in | Ancient Yucatan Relics. what way: do. they vid themselves 'of ; At Chichen-iza, in Yucutun, him the much troublesome mosquito? | there. is a sacred sinking well, all4 How do they approach lim in' his sorts of beautiful sacrifices have been house among the reeds and niarghes, found embedded in the mud. Jade] so as to remove him effectually from | necklaces, gold plates and small jars heavily studded with jude, sometimes containing. human. bearts, have been | found in this well, says the Detroit the dangers that he does to people of good minds whose skins he must punt ture? All this I would like so much | to know.\ | News, The Maya Indians made these mucrifices when they wanted rain or Qualitic® Statesmen Require. |a blessing for their crops.. Beautiful The statesmar of today requires a® gold knives that were undoubtedly | nsed to carve up the victims of sac- vilice, usually young women, haye also heen found. The Maya Indians of orthern. Yucatan probably. use the sun\linguage as the builders of the | ruins mmong which they live,. says | Prof, A. M. Tozzer, ot: Harvard uni- versity. w---_-_--#-__-__i-@a Victor Hugo's Historic Funsral, 'The largest funcral ever held In France, and probably the largest In the history of the world, was that of Victor Hugo, the great poot, author 'emprehen«ive n vision and as pro- found a wisdom as those of former times, with intenser labor, and a far wider range of knowledge; but he ree quires. other -glfts once scarcely need- ed; for he has not only to decide what ought to be done, and the wisest way to do it, but he hus to do It of as much of it as- he wan, in the face of obstacles which would have baffled Mazarin, and before which Chatham and Walpole might well have stood aghast. To be useful and great he must carry the nation along with him, and be the embodiment of its sober- | I iand dramatist, who dted 4n' May, 1886, est and maturest wisdom. -David 'and was burled in the Pantheon the | Greg. first of the following June; At the head of the funeral procession were Climbing Fish. In: his \Natural History sof Ceylon,\ Bir J. Emmerson Tennent states that On «one occasion he saw hundreds of elimbing fish crawling up the bank of a driedup pool, diverging in every di- ection an renching the top to a dis- tunce of 50. yards and 'still traveling enwitrd, 'The supposition is that they travel by night or before sunrise. One peculiarity (Js. the large size of the vertebral. cofumn, quite out of propor- tion .to the rest of the body. In mi- “(My they keep their gills expanded three enormous - wagons | filled -with flornl: tributes, - among them a- huge diadem of Trish 1iles 'with the inserip- tion \To. the World's Greatest Poet,\ sent by Lord 'ennyson, poet-Inureate of - England.. Telegrams - were _ re- celved - from virtually all the prom nent ~men _ alive, and . the number of spectators was at 1,000,000, of . all .classes. and. kinds, all striving to do homage-to the memory. of the foud writer. c moro -& ___ -__ the most Interesting members of the entife group and are kept under con stint | observation - whenever . etrcuim» stances permit.-New York. Horald. teo fe _ _The King Snake's Dinner, A “0”mequ who lived. In and -w been reading tho paper' sttice \he was a little write to toll ns wist he knows about the cannibalistic bablt® Of shakes . As' my brothers and \I wore cocking hay in a clover fold, He Writs, wa found a king shgke bask Ing tn the July wun; he:was soo find full to move, (Bobgccuriots to know what die dind devaured, wa cat him open, To \ wire antenishment? we found that-he contitied a black anike B8 inclcs «ling, -miare: thai 'ape Anch Tanger \Thai: ' and- Jnxlde the black: we Cound a ndwee and m granshapy The. and\ dock af the Black snake were purples and - to- dicxted that the king snake bad.ktiled lt-Youth's _ Compauion. a a Air 'to. Thin on Mar. Tle: 66 Mare © abou refequaster to qrest as on | tho aar L \ Market and moistened: by: n. curious vessel AL the rmt“n:::\;”\m:'\'b above <the gills that holds.. witer. yer. \08 carte an ounce, sh ounce When 'the figh leaves 'the wter if C. Lorna Doone 29 . ce, an. ounce of curries with it enough water to per pound.. .... . . gold, $20.07, in worth practically thirty thas the. value 6f an ounce of sitver. The Unjted | State gavornment \ paid # dollat au ounce for siver produced ; the Unifed Stites under a law a“!!! daring the World war, which mobsten Jts @llly ws often as neces sary-to sustain Jife. The: eggs dloat loosely at the surface of the water and listoh In two at three days. 'The color Of this fib is as Hight ifimcy colive, with byes of deimge, ifs Tehgth is up Whest Braud, £0 10¢ provided for welling\ shout 300,000,000 6x. loaf :-, Aubetioan \gitver dollars, , melted Jifto -» unMeld\ 10¢ bullion, (to the Rrutlish governiient, Raisin Bread 16 o« Bon Bin (Cake, 4 and for the replicetment of, these sit- | hired 4 15. pho In (Y t. . ver dqthiars by purchyse of sliver from domegtie prodeers at n dollar am conect. _reguefiess bf _)Jts, world value, On' this bnsis .the rallocof gefid. to wil ver value is about twosty to one. Kaap Bwest-Siger, When barveling 'cldeir piit ogich Bog \or bavial dight tafeapoon fuls of white mastard weed. Thi wht tetail the procées af becoming Nard ir wot, « 13¢ 100° Paper Naphina, 10¢ Lunch Paper, 5¢ Galoanized. Pails, 6a., 20¢ Berah Brasher, on . . '.160 45. Seam to Prove Darwin's Theory, Certain. Ilan expremiens. ouch -As Ihe baring Of the deoth: In- rage -And the bristling: of the it: wader (thie las Lignée of extreme frar. heve bore puk fir ward lit srientiabe.-20, jove at descant -from antmals,