Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 59, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 March 1917 — Page 3
■ I. <*..« . , ——— —. -pr— . mii ksi*ji ■ m 11. *i*i ■to Chicago and the west, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and the So "th, Louisville and French Lick Springs. CHICAGO. INDIANAPOLIS & LOUISVILLE RY. ' SOUTHBOUND. Louisville and French Lick. , No. 3 11:10 pm Indianapolis and Cincinnati. No. 35 1:45 am Louisville and Frenfch Lick. No. 5 10:55 am India'apol is and Cia< nnati. No. 37 • .11’18 am' Ind’plis, CincinnatT and French Lick. No: 38 ..;.. v; :... r.“. 1 :57 pm Lafayette and Micuiguxi City. No. 39 ....: 5:50 pm Indianapolis and Lafayette. No. 31 v 7:81 pm NORTHBOUND. No. 36 Chicago 4:51 am No. 4 Chicago 5:01 am No. 40 Chicago (accom.).. .7:30 am No. 32 Chicago 10:36 am No. 38 Chicago 2:51 pm No. 6 Chicago 3:31 pm No. 30 Chicago ............6:50 pm For ti eke and further information call on W. H. BEAM, Agent. g. ■ The Yellow Bus Rensselaer-Remington Bus Line 2 TRIPS DAILY Lv. rtensseiaer 7:45 fl Ar. Remington 8:30 c.n Lv. Remington 9:10 no Ar. Rensselaer >.....9:55 arn Lv. Rensselaer 4:00 pm Ar. Remington 4:45 pin Lv. Remington 5:15 pm Ar. Rensseiaer 6:00 pn * AR E 75c EACH WAY. = BILLY r<t v E. P-np
Professional Cards DR. E. C. ENGLISH Physician and Surgeon Opposite Trust and Savings Bank. Phones: 177 —2 rings for office; 3 ring*l'»r residence. Rensselaer, Indiana. C. E. JOHNSON, M. D. Office in Jessen Building. Office Hqprs—9 to 11 a. m. 1 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Specialty: Surgery Phone 211. ; DR. 1. M. WASHBURN Pbysician and surgeon Attending clinic at Augustano Hos pital on Tuesday morning from 5 a. m. to 2 p. in. Phone 48. -- ~* - II ■ SCHUYLER C. IRWIN Lata, Real Estate, Insurance 5 per cent farm loans. Office in Odd Fellows’ Block. F. H. HEMPHILL . Physician and Surgeon Special attention to diseases of women ~ and low grades oX fever. —Ottoa.. near Fandiflr'S DrtRT StOV*. Telephone, office and residence, 445. DR. F. A. TURFLER . Osteopathic Physician Telephone, office hnd residence, 442. Rooms 1 and 2, Murray Building, Rensselaer, Indiana. Phones, Office —2 rings on 300; Residence —3 rings on 300. Successfully treats both acute and chronic diseases. Spinal curvatures a specialty. WILLIAMS & DEAN Lawyers Special attention given to preparation of wills, settlement of estates, making and examination of abstracts of title, and farm loans. Office in Odd Fellows Building. JOHN A. DUNLAP Lawyer (Successor to Frank Foltz) Practice in all courts. Estates settled. Farm loans. - f —— Collection department. Notary in the Office. Bansselaer - - - - Indiana H. L. BROWN Dentist CrbwiT and Bridge Work and Teeth without Plates a Specialty. All the latest methods in Dentistry. Gas administered for painless extraction. Office over Larsh’s Drug Store. .. '■ . . ... ... / , ’ ■ -■ - . E N. LOY Homeopathist orriCß phomb » Successor to Dr. W. W. Hartsell. Office —Frame building on Cullen “treat Residence College Avenue. Phone 80-B. east of court house. WORLAND & S()\S Undertakers Motor and Horse Drawn Hearses Ambulance Service Office Phase 33. ce
COLLAPSIBLE STEEL BARREL.
‘•Empties” Can Be “Knocked Down,* Thus Saving Space. A collapsible steel barrel is the latent device of a Pennsylvania man. Tixb article in question i» comprising of a center, two adjoining sections and two. end caps. The whole fits together with over-lapping rims> and, when set up, is held tight by a steel cordage running from end to end. If it is desirous to ship back empties, the barrels may be knocked down, and valuable space saved by telescoping.
The Nerves of the Sky-Scraper.
The nerves of the sky-scraper are the telephone wires, of course. And, inasmuch as . progress in evolution is 'measured by complex nervous development, it is natural that New York’s Down-Town, where Business, the highest form of social biology, has attained its fullest development, should be an enormous spider’s web of telephone wires. The per capita consumption of telephone wire in New York is six times as much as in London. That represents the relative nervous intensity of business in New York and in London. Some such ,excess of wiring I suspect in the sky-scrapers of DownTown. There are hundreds and thousands of rooms, and in every room one or more men with their mouths and ears at the telephone. It is all cellular partitions and wire ganglions reaching out to Chicago, perhaps, or San Francisco; wires to the Stock Exchange around the corner, wires to the assistant in the adjoining room, wires to the heart of the dictative into which Business is, being dictated and from which Business will travel to the ear of the stenographer who will transfer it to paper. Our ghostly tourist will conclude that modern Business is a matter Of conversation. Down-Town, inside of its tens of thousands of sky-scraper cells, is thus terribly busy—about what? So "far as the eyw can see, about nothing in particular. A man with a telephone at his elbow, a flat-topped desk with a metal basket holding a dozen letters perhaps, a photograph of the man’s wife in a 'silver frame at one end of the desk, and that’s all. But if the cell is a large one, sometimes reaching the dimensions of an entire floor in a sky-scraper block, the desks, telephones, metal baskets, and photographs are indefinitely multiplied. The substantialities of Business are not there—the steel, wheat, cotton, bullion, the beams, casks, boxes, and bales which you recall being hauled toward quaint little wharves on toy trucks driven by men in jumpers and shovel-hats in the pictures in your school geography labeled Commerce. By externals there is no way of telling whether the man at the*Mesk is engaged in selling sfocks and woolen remnants, or railway accessories, or trusts and> mergers, or theater tickets. There is lacking the concrete symbolism of the old count-ing-rooms— the heavy ledgers, Whose bulk suggested the raw materials of traffic, the clerks on their high stools, the bustle of prders given and taken. The heavy ledgers have been replaced by filing-cabinets, whose purpose seems as much decorative as useful. Your business office might as well be the catalogue room jf a college library.—Harper’s Magazine.
Fitting the Man to the Job.
The largest industrial plants, in aU parts of the country, are now establishing employment departments. In the old days, the foreman had the privilege of "hiring and firing.” It was a prerogative which he jealously guarded. However, he seldom performed his duty with much skill or ■ intelligence. He was notoriously a person of likes and dislikes; he had no system, Beyond & few crudely asked questions; appraising human nature was pot usually his strongest point. Prejudice entered largely into his choice of underlings; not infrequently he was venal, demanding a bribe as a prerequisite to giving a job, and securing pay increases on condition that he obtained a percentage. But this old-fashioned foreman is rapidly losing his power. In hundreds of our largest establishments he now does no “hiring or firing” at all. The modern employment superintendent has succeeded this functionary. This office, usually having a large staff, passes candidates for all positions through its hands. Foremen, when they need steel, iron, or other material, make out written requisitions; now, in the places having up-to-date employment, departments, they do the same thing for their materials- of brain and muscle. The employment superintendent’s business is to supply precisely the kind of men and women needed to do the particular work. If the person sent does not fill the bill, the foreman can refuse him; the employment department sends another mail, and then sends the rejected person somewhere else, where his services seem mote clearly indicated. The employment department thus performs two functions: first, it studies the requirements of the shop; secondly. It studies minutely the miscellaneous human beings who offer themselves at its doors. Its theory is that every person can do something. It submits all its applicants to physical and mental tests, canvasses their past successes and failures, learns their habits, their aptitudes. By the aid of a competent medical man, it examines their eyes, noses, throats, teeth, heart, lungs and digestive systems. After the employee is once engaged, the department’s work has really only begun. It gets periodical reports; if the man is not doing well, it finds out why; and it makes a point of shifting him around until he finds his appointed place.—Harper’s Magazine. you can’t push ahead by patting yourself on the back.
the evening republican, benssebaer, IND.
EMPLOYS MICE TO WEAVE THREAD
RODENTS earn six shillings APIECE A YEAR Half-penny’s Worth of Oatmeal a Month Is Sufficient Food for Each One. ‘ '
Man has harnessed waterfalls, the tides and the winds, he has disciplined the horse, the ox and the elephant, but now he has gone a step farther, he is making the mloe do bls work for him. Aware that stores of profitable animal energy are going to waste, David Hutton, a Scotchman, taught mice to weave thread. The experiment not only has proved practicable, but highly profitable.. Mr. Hutton’s own account of his experiment follows“I had occasion to be at Perth. While inspecting the toys and trinkets that were manufactured there, my attention was attracted by a little toy house with a wheel in the gable that Was running rapidly around, Impelled by the activity of a common mouse. For one shilling I purchased the house, the mouse and the wheel. But how to apply half-ounce power (which is the weight of a mouse) to a useful purchase was the difficulty. At length the manufacture of a sewing thread seemed the most profitable.” Mr. Hutton found that an ordinary mouse would run on the average ten and one-half miles a day; he had one mouse that ran the remarkable distance of eighteen miles in that time. -He found that a half-penny’s worth of oatmeal was sufficient for thirtyfive days’ food for one mouse, which during that time ran 362 miles. Mr. Hutton kept two mice constantly engaged in the making of sewing thread for more than a year, lids thread mill was so constructed that the mouse was able to twist, and reel from 100 to 120 threads a day. To perform this task it had to run ten and one-half miles, which it did with ease every other day. According to Mr. Hutton, one of his mice, on the half-penny’s worth of oatmeal, which lasted for five weeks, made 3,350 threads, 25 inches long. Since a penny was paid to women for every hank made in the ordinary way, the mouse at that rate earned 9 pence every six weeks. After deducting the cost of food and machinery, there Was r. 'dear yearly profit from each mouse of over six shillings.
Measuring the Human Voice.
The ordinary sewing room tapeline promises to bring about a small revolution in the musical world as the result of the discoveries made by a Minneapolis musician, who believes he has found an infallible means of determining the true qualities and possibilities of the human voice. By measuring the resonating cavities of the singer or would-be singer, he has been able to answer with precision many of che questions which perplex the ringer. Four years have been spent in working out the thedry that the human voice can be measured and properly catalogued as to its possibilities for future service. In that length of time the voices of 12,000 singers have been measured, many of them members of the prominent grand opera companies of New York and Chicago. Exterior measurements of the resonating cavities of tire- head will give a true index of the kind and quality of the voice possessed by the subject, it is claimed, By this means it can be determined"whether the voice has been developed or trained to its proper range, and whether years of study and work are to be crowned with success or failure. In many of the tests it was found that persons who had no idea of being singers had voices of unusual range and power. Three such discoveries were made among 100 persons tested in Minneapolis. The lung capacity of the individual has little to do with the power and range of the voice, as one frequently hears a deep bass voice from an undersized man, while a large man will be the possessor of a high tenor voice. The deceptive qualities of the human voice are being gaged so accurately by the use of the tapeline that it is possible to tell whether the individual has a tenor, contralto, basso or baritone voice without hearing the sound of the voice. If a person has been overtrained, the tapeline will make the secret known long before it is apparent in the singer’s voice. Many good voices have been ruined by lack of ability to judge their proper qualities and trail them in the proper manner. Many weeks have been devoted to research work in the skull room of the Museum of Natural History in New York City, the investigations being later extended to thousands of N#w Yorkers. The voices of 1000 boys and 300 girls in the public schools were measured by the tapeline, with equally as accurate. These experiments furnished proof that 57 per cent of the women of America hava Bvprano voices, and 43 per cent contralto voices. Among the men, baritone voices are more common, only 43 per cent have tenor voices. Nothing pleases a fat woman more than to have some man call her Ms little girl. Only a man who is wise doubts Ms own - «
HANGING GRIVE.
Mrs. S. B. Snadeker was at the bedside of hdi-dnother, Mrs. J. R. Sier, at Medaryville a few days week. < . Sam Cook is confined to his home with a severe case of grippe. W. R. Willits went to Rensselaer Thursday to assist his son, Russell, move into a property in the northeast part of town. The petit jury was excused Thursday for the term and Bov Bussell assumed his duties on route one Friday. A. N. Bailey and family, visited Mr. ..and Mrs. Bert Wood Sunday. Mr. and Mi's. John Osborne, Jr., have moved to the farm vacated by O. M Putt Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Morton and family have moved in with their son-in-law, Marion Large, for temporary quarters until they cam get their new house -btuilt on their farm. Wash Lowman has moved back to his brother’s farm. Leslie Lowman has moved to the farm recently vacate 4 by Newton Sunderland and will work for Geo. Parker bv the month. Chas. Lowman has moved to a farm 2 mules northeast of McCoysbung. Verna Kay and Opel Doan drove the former’s father’s Ford through from Elwood Saturday. There will be preaching service at McCoysburg Friday and Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. ’ Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bussell went to Chicago Saturday for a visit over Sunday with their son, Elvin. George Parker, the township assessor, is making his annual rounds. Mrs. Roy Cochran visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Ringeisen, a few days last week.
Gallery of Opera House Will Not Be Used at Play.
The gallery of the Ellis theatre will not be used at the high school play on Thursday and Friday evenings, of this week. The gallery is unsafe and has been condemned and Manager Ellis is already tearing it out relative to reconstructing >tlie building for another purpose. The price for the show will be 35c straight. Only the main floor seats will ibe sold. This high school lay will be the final performance in the Ellis theatre afid the plans are to give it a splendid goodd>ye performance as possible. Seats may be reserved for Thursday and Friday nights at Fendig’s drug store after Tuesday noon.
Lester Rich’s Grandmother Dead.
Mrs. Sarah Rich, of Remington, died at her home Sunday evening. Her husband, William L. Rich, had, preceded her in death hut two months, he having passed to the great beyond early in January of this year. Mrs. Rich was seventy-two years of age and was a member of the Christian church. The funeral will be held at Remington Tuesday afternoon at 2:30. She leaves three sons, Walter E. Rich, of Goodland: Jacob D. Rich, of Goodland, and Frank C. Rich, of Kentland.
Mrs. Newt Koupka Died At Newland Friday.
Mrs. Newton Koupkk-. of Newland, passed away at her home Friday after an' extended illness of tuberculosis with which she has been afflicted for some time. The funeral was held Sunday, the ' ervices being conducted at the Barkley church and burial being made in the Brown cemetery.
BOY SCOUTS.
The meeting tonight is an important onq as all boys who OXpect to be Scouts for the coming year must enroll, as certificates expire March 18.
NOTICE. The ' Dodge and Cbevrolet salesroom is now located in the W. J. Wright building, the first door west from the Rensselaer Garage. Call and see our line.—M. I. Adams & Son. GRAIN MARKET. March 12— Com $1.02, oats 58c, wheat SI.BO and rye $1.30. E, G. Whitford, with his wife and voung daughter, visited his uncle, William Ervin, arriving here Saturday and returning to their home at Fall City, lowa, today. Mr. Whitford is the agent for the Burlington railroad at that place.
Some of the goods we purchased before the big advances. Less than wholesale prices today. I —„________ FOR 10c YOU CAN BUY: 1 2 lb. can of standard string be-ns. 1 2 lb. can of standard lye hominy, i 3 lb. can of standard pumpkin. 13 lb. can of sweet cider. 1 3 lb. can of standard apples. 1 % ’lb. can of salmon. 1 lb. of good California evaporated peaches. 1 lb. of good -prunes. 1 large package of new figs. 1 large bottle of catsup. 1 large jar of mustard. u - ' . We will handle fresh fish during Lent. John Eger.
HOT WATER AS A RIST CURE
Four Hours* In Bith Good M light ‘ In Bed. . Sleeping in a bathtub fun of water kept at blood temperature is claimed by some physicians to give the required amount of rest in half the time that sleeping in bed requires. In other words, four hours’ sleep in a bathtub filled with water at the proper always maintained at that temperature—will result in the "texact amount of restfulness that eight hours in bed will give. The explanation is that warm water completely relaxes the nerves, which, ordinary sleep does not necessarily do. The most difficult part of the treatment is in mainttaining the water at a constant temperature. For the purpose of. accomplishing this result, a middle-western manufactureer has recently brought out on the market a thermostatic water control apparatus. ( . In practice, the patient climbs into a bathtub filled with water, his head protruding thru a hole in a rubber blanket which is strapped around the edges of the tub. Water constantly flows in at one end of the tab, and oat at thd other.
Manifold Uses of Electricity.
flahdly as old as a grown man,.the electrical industry— including railways, telephones and telegraphs—has already Invested >8,125,000,000 in the. business of America. Its utility companies alone pay Uncle Sam >200,000,000 every year for taxes —seven out of every ten use it in some form every day. It is unmistakably the most vital factor to-day in America's prosperity. Its resources are boundless. As Secretary of the Interior Lane expresses it, there is enough hydroelectric energy running to waste to equal the dally labor ot 1,800,000,000 men or 30 times our adult population. This strange power, only recently harnessed, that has actually revolutionized life and* promises more radical reformation in the future —what is it? Mysterious, yet dependable; powerful enough to drive ponderous machinery, yet gentle enough to warm the baby’s bottle; almost omnipotent, yet the best trained of servants; omnipresent, yet invisible—what a paradox is this inanimr-te yet living thing we call Electricity for lack of a better name! Many people living to-day remember those practical electrlclcss days when electricity was used only for a few telegraph lines, and knowledge of its action and of Its laws was exceedingly primitive. . Today Berlin radios New Jersey. Every part of the earth and ocean is now within the wireless telegraph nmge. The next logical step was the wireless ’phone. It is there already. Washington recently tolked to Paris and a few days later to Honolulu—--5,000 miles away. Voices ’vere distinctly heard over this vast span of air. These illustrations are typical of electrical progress in every phase of life to-day. One stastician now figures 608 practical uses of electricity; another finds 70 uses of electricity on an automobile. In the home, upon the farm, in the factory—everywhere, the world is fast becoming electrified. Of the 20,500,000 homes in the United States one-fourth are already lighted by electricity. At the present rate of transfers from steam to electric drive, we are told that three-fourth of all America’s industry will be electrified inside of five years!—From Leslie’s.
Passing of Cigar Store Indians.
Whither are they gons, the cigar store Indians? History tells us that It was a pesky redskin who first slipped a sample package of Pocohontas Mixture to Capt. John Smith. Soon, thanks to Sir Walter Raleigh, the world’s first tobacco press* agent L all lire. colonists anda lot the folks at home were cultivating Jimmy pipes or teaming to roll their own. And succeeding generations, anxious to give the red man his due, set up his wooden image before the door of every tobacco shop. Stiff and proud stood old Chief Colorado Maduro, in one hand a bundle of wooden cigars, grasped tightly; in the other a wooden tomahawk. He was an unendifig source of inspiration and pleasure to all small boys, their glass of fashion and mold of for in, A romantic figure, too constant reminder of the poetry of tobacco smoke. Now they axe gone, these silent braves, gone up perhaps along with the priee of tobacco. In their place the boys of today arc being brought up on pictures of shiny gentlemen in dress suits who live in palatial clubs and roll cigarettes from 5-cent packets of “smoking mixtures.” Forgotten is the full flavored romance of tobacco smoke.
Makes. X-Ray Better.
The X-ray has become indispensable to the modern surgeon, and. improvmenta are always being made upon IL A recent one is a device which, afton revealing the location of an injury of diseased spot, enables the surgeon to keep it in sight as he operates. A frame work going around the surgeon’s head Is fitted with a fluoroscope —an instrument by means of which objects revealed by the X-rays are made visible to the human eye. The patient is placed on a special operating table with the X-ray turned on and the surgeon can work easily, since he sees what is before him continually instead of . having to work groping from the reihembrance of what was revealed in the X-ray photograph. Paterson woman with a paint brush made all her hens green-spotted, and in that way caught the thief who had been stealing them.
REMINGTON.
Adrian Foster went to Lafayette Saturday evening. , * ll Miss Berth Primmer spent Friday with her mother at Chalmers. Mr. and Mrs. Chet Beeae, of Wolcott, spent Sunday with relatives here. Mrs. Frank "Wolfe, who spent several days last week with Mrs. Geo. Stoudt and family, returned to her home at Michigan City Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bear were Sunday visitors at the Sharkey home. Miss Mary, Dluzak, of Kentland, - spent Sunday here. Andy Hawn and family, of Goodland, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. G2O. Haacall. , The members qf ,tbe Jolly Club and ‘ their husbands were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Beamier Friday evening. Miss Marjory Hascall entertained a number of her young folks Friday Evening. F Mrs. M. K. Gray, who has been sick for some time, died Friday morning. The funerrJ was held Sanaa** at the Christian church and burial made in the Remington cemetery. Editor Bartoo has purchased a new Model K linotype, which arrived here Friday. Mrs. Wm. Rich passed away Sunday morning after an illness of only a week. - . Rev. LHly, of the Presbyterian chui h, exchanged pulpits with Rev. Pea y, of Chalmers, Sunday. Mrs. Harry Miller and baby, of Moi icello, spent Tuesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Moran.
Fiank Ham made a business trip to Bloomington, Ind., today. Emery Mills returned today to his horn? at Muncie. -His mother, Mrs. Cha‘les Mills, accompanied him. D vid Blitetein, of Chicago, was here today transacting business with Tho. as Callahan. M.-. and Mrs. Loren Sage went to Genesee, 111., today to visit the latteris parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vanatta, of Fowler, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Honan over Sunday. A. E. Conrad, brother of Mrs. Nelson Shafer, returned to his home at Logansport today. For good work and reasonable pl ices, call Lee Richards, Phone 416. Painter and paperhanger. Mifis Laura Brinker, of Winamac, was the guest over Sunday of Hazel and Florence Jacks. Theodore Keiper, Joseph Borntrager and Arthur Watson were in Lafayette today. Mrs. Harvey Moore went to Lafayette today for a visit with her Ma-ter-in-law, Mrs. Roy Cheesman. Walter Hopkins is moving today into the property lately purchased by N. Hopkins of Charles Paooton in the northwestern part of town. Mrs. John Werner accompanied her daughter, Margaret, to Indianapolis, where she will again take up her training in the institution for the blind.
George H. Sharp returned to his home at Cambridge today after a very pleasant visit with has friend and former townsman, Clifford Paricison, of Pleasant Ridge. __ ' Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kanne and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Luers and little daughter, Doris, were the over Saturday and Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Luers, of Kouts. Mrs. Lyman Zea received a message today from her son, George, announcing the serious sickness of his wife -with rheumatism. Mt. Zea is living on one of the Lawler farms near Dyer. _____ Margaret Alexander, of Bellevue, 111., who has been the guest for some Jacksonville, 111., Misses Jane Parkison and Luella Robinson, returned to her home today. • The Wheatfield schools are closed on account of the very serious illness of Supt. Sterrett’s mother. Miss Pearl Babcock returned to her home here today and Miss Lora Bond has gone to her home at Indianapolis. J. D. Allman was unable to return to his post as assistant cashier at the First National Bank Saturday afternoon and is still confined to his home with rheumatism. He is repored t» be somewhat better todav. Misses Gertrude and Gwendolyn Kannal returned today from a very pleasant trip through the south. They have been gone about three months, during which time they have Visited most of the cities of interest in the warm, sunny southland. N 1 1 • 111 1,1 Mrs. Ocie Brusnahan, of Gillam to’'.T-ship, was operated upon at the hospital today by a local physician. Mrs. Brusnahan is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Wood, of Parr. The operation was not a serious one and she is getting along very nicely- - The small son of Frank E3Hs was Iritten by a dog last week. The dog was killed and the dead sent to the state health board and an investigation made to see if there were any evidences of rabies. There were none and it is thought that no ill after effects will be felt. In a letter in which William Fuller, formerly of Union township, encloses his renewal subscription for a year, Mrs. Fuller writes a note in which she says that her daughter Floy «a assistant principal of the lone, Wash., public schools and Edith is married and lives m Peck, Idaho, where_Jier husband is the cashier of the First State Bank. This information was written in a letter to the editor and Mrs. Fuller asked us not to publish it, but we are sure their many fnends will be pleased to know that the Fullers are all so well and prosperous.
