Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 23, Number 46, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 22 January 1902 — Page 7

IMPROVING A BARN. Hoof Window That Give* a Chance to Unload Hay Into the Loft from the Outside. There are thousands of barns like the original of that shown in the cut scattered throughout the country, the roof space in which is but little, if at all, utilized, largely for the reason that the roof space is inaccessible. A barn was recently seen, by the writer in which this difficulty was solved by the Insertion of a roof window similar to that shown in the cut. This gives a chance to unload hay into the loft from the outside, either by hand or by a hay fork, and whereas the loft before was dark and poorly ventilated, it is now light and airy. The style of window that is shown is much better than the pitched roof dormer win-

THE IMPROVED BARN. dow that is sometimes put upon roofs. The style shown admits of having a large square window in front—especially useful if a hay fork is to be used. The advantage of thhs changing a barn is that the loft can be floored over and the hay and straw stored in the •second story, utilizing the space clear to the ridge pole. This leaves the ■first floor clear for a silo and quarters for the stock, giving more room for the latter, and affording a warmer barn, since many 'buildings are kept cold almost wholly because of the big empty space in the top—'heated air always rising because lighter than cold air. With a window in each end of the barn above, and flie new window in front, the loft will be as light as the firslf floor, while in summer this means of i entilatiom, with the loft floor to separate the upper part of the barn from the lower, will cause the lower part of the barn, where the stock is confined at night, to be much cooler than it otherwise could be.— X. Y. Tribune, THEY NEVER COMPLAIN. Bat That Is No Sign That Horse* Do Not Feel the Neglect to Which They Are SuhJ.eete'Jl, Horses are the most abused of animals; not only because they happen to. be the most used and the most useful, but also, and perhaps even more, because nature, for some mysterious reason, has denied them the power of audibly expressing pain, such as is possessed by the cat or the-dog. Under extraordinary circumstances, says The Road, they .have indeed begti known to overcome the impediment. The extremity of terror, as when they have been attacked by savage beasts or the sudden shodk of agonizing pain, as when they have been horribly wounded on the battlefield, has sometimes extorted from them a piercing, dolorous, almost human scream, which nobody who has heard it can easily forget. Most horses which die in pain ■expire in silence, or utter merely a moan or whine. The galled jade may wince, but utters no cry. The >eaTt horses of our busy cities make no audible complan.it under the lash of the Whip, the strain of an overload, or the stupid jerkings of the reins by the ignorant drivers. It cannot be that they lack the will, btft they have been (denied the power. A-few exceptional instances, up more affect the general truth of this rule than the case of Balaam’s ass provides a proof “that all asses (of the four legged variety, be it understood), possess the power of speech. Practically their dumbness is absolute. Feeding; Corn to tlofi*. It is hard to understand why hog growers of the west are rushing hogs to market half finished. The price of hogs is about $6.40 to $6.5© per 100 live weight, and that of corn 55 cents a bushel. Experience has shown that a bushel of corn makes about 11 pounds of gain, lire weight, when fed to hogs. That would make the corn worth about 70 cents a bushel when io fed. It doesn’t cost the difference between 55 cents and 71% cents a bushel tomarket torn fed hogs, by a good deal. Otherwise also it is a mistake to rush hogs to market half finished, as it breaks down the market, both because of quality and quantity.—lndiana Farmer. Make, the Cellar Fit Well. A sweat pad is undesirable if a wellfitting eollar can be secured, says Farm and Fireside. It is warm and.it springs the collar out of shape. A hard, smooth leather surface is probably as .good as anything for the shouldfers. The fitting is best done by soaking the collar and then pounding any place or places that unevenness of the shoulder may demand. The shape of the hames has much to do with the fitting of the collar. \ Exercise the Brood Mare. The brood mare should haye regular exercise, but it should never be carried to the point of fatigue.

CARE OF CORN FODDER. Mach Depemda on the War It la Picked, Otherwise Ice and Snow Will Injure It. _____ ■ _J More corn fodder will be fed this winter than ever before. For this reason it will be necessary for the farm* er to rick up his fodder in a way to keep well and still be easily handled. The use of the shredder, if proper storage room is available, will greats ly simplify matters; but there will be many farmers who will feed fodder extensively without shredding and who will therefore welcome any hint as bo the best and handiest methods. The following has Several points to recommend it: Set a row of posts about eight feet apart and as many as the amount of fodder will require, in a place out of the way and still as near to the place where the fodder is to he fed as may be. From one of the posts to the other, spike or wire poles or two by four scantlings. These should be about five feet from the ground. The tops of the stalks are to lie or lean against this with the butts standing on the ground. Both sides can be built up simultaneously, building one section at a time. By having the butts stood about a foot from the perpendicular on each side, a good-sized space will he left the whole length of the rick. This will give perfect ventilation to the pile and the dog and cats about the premises will take advantage of this and see that, the mice and rats do not trouble the fodder. The rick can be built up as the fodder is hauled in from the field. *9 Put up in this way the stalks will shed the rain perfectly. Only the outside stalks will be exposed and the butts on the ground are the parts that are never eaten. In feeding, the rick can be opened at one end and only as much as is needed be taken down, leaving none exposed by so doing. There is no loss in this way, and the fodder is always dry and free from ice and snow.—Ohio Farmer. CURVED METAL DRAIN. A Little Convenience, the Ueefulne** of Which I* Too Apparent to Require Comment. The cut shows a shallow, curved metal drain that can be placed behind a row of horse stalls, and the liquid manure led away to a convenient manure heap. This shallow drain can be washed out with a pail of water at any time. Anarrow, removable board can be fitted at the rear end of the

CURVED MET AIL DRAIN.

platform so that no solid matter can fall into the drain. Do not make the openings between the ends of the planks large enough to let any solid matter through.—Farm Journal. TIMELY STOCK NOTES. Itisagood plan to have heifers drop their first calf at about two years old. Good corn silage is highly relished by stock, and is an economical food for fattening steers. Pulp roots or mangels, carrots, sugar beets and the like should form a part of each day’s winter feed. Weed out the poor cows, sheep and fowls. They are a sburce of loss continually, and good for nothing when spring eomeß. A ration of three parts of corn ensilage, by weight, with one part, of oats straw, is adapted to maintain health in the-animal. The temperature of the stable has much to do with the fattening of the beef animal or the quantity of milk from a milch cow. If the heifer is to freshen in the sjSflfigv in the^afhT ter. Add four quarts of bran daily to the coarse fodder. = g As the heifer nears the time of dropping the calf give her a little corn meal in addition to above and a little ' linseed meal to keep digestion free. At an experiment station in Canada it w’as shown that an average two-year-old steer would eat its weight in different materials in about two weeks. Don’t keep the eows in milk the year around. They should have a month’s vacation at least, and if you can arrange to have that month in August, do so. It’s fly time then. —N. Y. une. Hint* on Wintering Ewe*. I do not think it advisable to keep the ewe%too much confined. I always permit mine to run on the pasture during the day time, when the weather is suitable, and when they can. get at the grass. At the tame time I feed them some corn foddev. At night also, if the weather is mild, I leave the doors of the barn open, so they can go out and in at will. As to feed, I always give them all the clover hay they will eat up clean. For 100 head of sheep the grain feed consists of two bushels of oats and corn, mixed ip the proportion of one-third corn and two-thirds oats.—John H. Henn, in Farmer’s Review. Good Money la Mutton. Farmers who at one time abandoned sheep are again bringing them oa the farms. They are also learning that there is more money is mutton than in wool.

NO ENFORCED DECOLLETE. <tneen Alexandra's Sensible Change in the Old Engllah Court Custom. The land of low-necked dresses (also the land of “bad” throats and tuberculosis) is to have a good example of ways sensible and comfortable set by its new and beautiful queen, Alexandra. This lovely lady has announced that “dispensations” will be granted to those ladies who attend court functions and for any good reason do not wish to wear the almost bodiceless dress insisted upon by Queen Victoria, says the New York Commercial Tribune. The late queen was not above her little vanities, it seems. When a young woman her shoulders and arms were of singular beauty, and even when she grew old and dumpy in figure her little hands remained so soft and shapely that they made one forget that the-queen was not a pretty or a regal-looking woman. Out of the young queen’s natural vanity for her best points grew the regulation sleeveless and very decollete court dress. Many were the protests against Jt, especially among the thin and rheumatic old dowagers and the newly fledged debutantes. But no exception was ever made. Health, age and bones all had to* v ive way before the decree. The result was that the irreproachable Queen Victoria had the “most decollete court in Europe," and the dress of her daughters was a revelation to visiting princes, who have recorded their amusement (and amazement) in their notes of travel. Sweet Alexandra has other ideas. Even at the coronation no one’ Is to be uncomfortable or unhappy, if she can prevent it. The coronation bids fair to be a fearful affair, as far as comfort goes. It will be in June, and ermine and velvet cloaks are to be as common as peers. There is still much uncertainty, however, as to how far tradiition will be followed, and if the king and queen who are practical, kind-hearted, and very much in touch With the world and its ways, can have their wish—which, being a king and queen, they rarely can the poor peers won’t die of sunstroke or be smothered by their splendid robes, and the pretty peeresses won’t have headaches from wearing their coronets for 17 hours at a stretch.

Many women of the smart world don’t care for low-cut dresses. When Empress Eugenie set ih<yfashions of Europe she frowned upon decollete old ladies, and her mother, Mme. de Montijo, never wore a low-cut hodice. The beautiful Countess de Kessler, of Paris, whose shoulders were exquisitely lovely, did not wear decollete for many years, because she had a delicate chest, and preferred caution to fashion. Mme. Broisat, of the Come.die Francaise, never wore low-cut gowns, no matter what the play was she appeared in. Mme. Pannetler de Milville, Mme. Purges, Duchcsse de Doudeauville, Mine. Paul Poirson—all women of the “elegant world” in Paris seldom appear decollete for reasons of health or beauty. It is to be hoped that the fashion of low-necked gowns will never become extinct, for many women otherwise plain have lovely necks and shoulders, and a pretty woman with pretty shoulders is more of a delight to the eye than a beauty with a thick neck or painfully visible collar bones. Nevertheless, the court of St. James will seem a strange place when the poor thin dowagers or the shy debutantes come veiled in chiffon instead of bare necked and bare armed* It Went Away Ip. A well-known speculator on the stock exchange was sitting in a friend’s office one hot day last summer, and during the conversation, which was chiefly about stocks and shares of different kindis, he informed his friend that he had picked up a cheap thing during the-'winter. “Jt stood at .'l3 then, and yesterday it touched 84!” he said. “By Jove! what an extremely lucky fellow you are! What was it?” said his friend. “(hilly a thermometer,” was the quiet reply.—London Tit-Bits. THE MARKETS. ~ New Yl.rk, Jan 21. LIVE STO< 'K-Steer,- It .Vi 44-0--25-- , Jlog s 3 70. fa 6 50 Shi t'p : 3 oo fa 4 eo FLocR -Winter Straights.. 3 30 fa 3 to WHEAT-May ...:........... 85'/ i'll SO July 85 %'<!/ 85% CORN .Vlay 68%fa 00% July BO fw 69% OATS 53 ife 58 RYE--No. 2 70%fa 70% BETTER—Creamery 15 U 23% Factory 13 4# 15% CHEESE 9%fa 31% EGGS 25 fa 27 CHICAGO. CATTLE—Prime Beeves .... |7 20 ® 7 00 Texas Steers 4 35 fa 6 60 Stockers 2 404/ 5 80 p-sellers ' 5 90 (a 4 75 TANARUS; Hulls 2 25 fa i 75 HOGS-Light 5 80 fa 6 25 Heavy Mixed 595 416 -45 SHEEP . 360 fa 000 IS L'TTEIt—Creamery 15 U 38(4 Hairy M4%@ 20 EGGS—Fresh 20 fa 24 POTATOES— (per bu.J 65 fa 78 MESS PORK—May T 7 r 4/17 20 LARH—May 9 70 fa 9 75 RIBS—May 8 65 fa 8 72% GRAIN-Wheat, May 79%fa 80% Corn, May 64%41/ 60% Oats, May 46%fa 4% Rye, Ni/. 3 60%fa 01% Barley, Comm'n toCholee. 45 fa 00 MILVVAt KEE. GRAlN—Wheat. No. 1 Nor'n $ 77 fa 77% Oats, No. 2 White 47 'll) 47% Bariev, No. 1 64 fa 64% Rye, No. L...: ‘ .. 64%fa 64% K/fNSAS CITY. GRAlN—Wheat, May 3 77%fa 77% Corn, May 66%fa <9;% Oats, No. 2 White 48%fa 49 Rye, No. 2 63%fa 64% ST. LOt'lß. CATTLE—Native Steers .... $3 50 fa 6 30 Texas Steers 3 50 fa 630 HOGS—Packers *l. 600 fa 0 115 Butchers' - v 640 fa 663 SHEEP—Natives 3 55 fa 4 05 - OMAHA. ; CATTLE—Native Steers $4 Oft fa 6 75 Cows anel Heifer 5......... 300 fa 4 75 Stockers and Feeder*.... 2 75 fa 450 HOGS—Mixed 6 20 fa 630 SWEEP—Mutton* , 450 fa 5 JO

THE TAG ENDS OF THINGS. Canada has only 12 medical oolleges. The advance in wireless telegraphy was the chief siSkntiflc event of last year. ' The agricultural department now requires a larger appropriation for its administration than any other department except the treasury. Anew and effective treatment of tree scale is in use in California. The tree is sprayed with oil, which smothers the scale insect, and the oil is then converted into soap by spraying with a caustic alkali solution. , WHAT SETTLERS IN SASKATCHEWAN VALLEY HAVE TO SAY. Formerly from the United State*. Roshern, July Bth, 1900. Frank Pedley, Esq., Superintendent of Immigration. Sir: —We the undersigned settlers in Saskatchewan, Township 43, Range 6, beg to submit the following letter. We came/ from Springfield, Bonbonnne County’, S.Dakota, in the spring of 1899, and settled where we now reside. We had considerable crop last year we put in on breaking, and- it was very good, and this year 1900 our crop is excellent. Our wheat will yield about twenty bushels to the acre, the oats and barley are- also- very good, and our potatoes and root crop all that could be desired. We consider this a fine country, and are glads we came, as our prospects could not he better. A poor man will get a start, in this country much quicker than in Dakota. We are yours respectfully. John H. Schultz, IT. A. Coalien, S. Cors, B. H. Dirks, C. D. Unry, P. Unry, A. Ratzlief. All from South Dakota, IT. S. A. 7 Some people act the hog all their lives, and then don’t get much.—Atchison Globe. Pleasant, Wholesome, Speedy, for coughs is Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike’s Toothache Drop* Cure in one minute. Blaming others is the way some people have of praising themselves. —Ram’s Horn. Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of the throat and lungs.—Wm. O. Endsley, Vanburen, lnd.. Feb. 10. 1900. It’s a man who can be silent on any subject.—Rain’s Horn. - • Stop* tlie Cornell and Work* Oft the Cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Prioo2sc. Flatter the girl and spoil the woman.— Chicago Daily News. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are fast to sunlight, washing and rubbing. Better to lose your argument than your friend.—Ram’s Horn.

DO TOO SET UP WITH A LAME BUCK? Thousands of Women Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect it. * i . To prove what The Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp-Root, will do for YOU, every reader of this paper may have a sample bottle sent absolutely free by mail.

Women suffer untold misery because the nature of their disease is not always correctly understood; in many cases when doctoring, they are led to believe that womb trouble or female weakness of some sort is responsible for their ills, when in fact disordered kidneys are the chief cause of their distressing troubles. Nervousness, headache, puffy or dark circles under the eyes, a dragging pain or dull ache in the back, weakness or bearing down sensation, profuse or scanty supply of urine, frequent desire to pass it night or day, with scalding or burning sensation, — these are all unmistakable signs of kidney and bladder trouble. Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. A trial will convince anyone. If there is any doubt in your mind as to your condition, take from your urine on rising about four ounces, place it in a glass or bottle and let it stand twentyfour hours. If on examination it is milky or cloudy, -if-therc is a-brick-dust settling, or If small particles float about in it, your kidneys arc in need of immediate attention. When the heart is acting badly, have you ever thought that it may be due to kidney trouble, as is often the case ? Other symptoms showing that you

need Swamp-Root are sleeplessness, dizziness, sallow, unhealthy complexion, plenty of ambition but no strength. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is used in the leading hospitals, recommended by physicians in their private practice, and is taken by doctors themselves, because they recognize in it the greatest and most successful remedy that science has ever been able to compound. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-ccnt and one dollar size bottles at the drug store* everywhere.

I l mSußi JF

MRS. SCOTT.

EPITORIAL N OT ICE.—Swamp-Root, the great Kidney. Liver and Bladder remedy, is so remarkably successful that a special arrangement has been made by which all our readers who have not already tried it may have a sample btottle sent absolutely free by mail. Also a book telling all about kidney and bladder troubles and containing- many of the thousands upon thousands of testimoniaMetterß received from men and women cured by Swamp-Root. In order that your request for sample, bottle may. have immediate attention be sure and mention reading- this generous offer in this paper when sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Cos., Binghamton, N. Y.

WINTER IS HEBE Bringing With it Catarrhal Diseases or All Kinds—Pe-ru-na Cures.

~

* t 1 mu Rxvm 11!$| i: i •

A Singer’s Experience.

Miss Maud Palmer, "Thp Willows,” Cataraugi, Out,, is a singer of local note. She writes: “ / acknowledge with thanks the value of Perunn as a splendid remedy In case of a severe cold. Last winter 1 caught a cold and did not pay the proper attention to It until It got so bad that I could not attend to my regular work. My aunt advised me to try Peruna and 1 commenced taking It at once. Within three days I found great relief. In ten days I was not entirely well but my system was toned up, and I felt much stronger than I had before. We keep It on band, and If any member of the family feels sick a dose or cure.” Winter is half over. People are continuing to catch colds, and not a house but hears the winter cough. People are trying to get something to cure these troubles which are almost inevitable at this time of the year. It can -jsafely be said that nine.tenths of the people hi the United States have a cold some time during the winter. There is one remedy which will prevent colds and cough and cure them with certainty when contracted. This remedy is Peruna. Tuken with regularity’ during the winter months, it will entirely prevent, colds, coughs, la grippe, consumption, bronchitis or pneumonia. It will also cure without failure ontnrrli and recent oases of Queen A Creaeent ltnute. Through trains, diners, observation cars, palace day coaches, fast schedules, through sleepers iroin the North to New Orleans and Florida.

VM. HUM an A to.

DOCTOR AFTER DOCTOR. “Mono of Thom Suspected that tho Cause of Mly Trouble Was Kidney Disease.” Vistoh, lowa, Jvi.y Htli. iooi. In llii) dimimer of 1 mi taken violently ill. My trouble began with pain in my atoinacn, o •evere that it Jeerned a* if kmveawero tutting roe. I wa* treated by two of tlie beat physician* in the county, and consulted another. None of them eutpected that the route of my trouble uat kidney dlteate. They all told roe that I had cancer of the atomarh, and would die. I grew ao weak that I could not walk any more than a child a month old, and I only weighed iiixty pound*. One day my brother taw in a paper your itilv.-rtine-roent of Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy. He bought me a bottle at our drug More and I took it. My family could xee a change in me, for the better, to they obtained and f continued the tite of Swamp Root regularly. I waa ao weak and run down that it took considerable time to build me up again. I am now well thank* to Swamp Root, and weigh i.li pound*' and am keeping bonae for my hutband and brother, on a farm. Swamp Root cured me aftei the doctors had failed to dome a particle of good. MRS. GERTRUDE WARNER SCOTT.

Him lilßpr sH 1 rjp Ps?l| m Ols> WmmßI'Ai - /\l I A ( MM _ 1 \ a Jill \ *o

MISS MAUD PALMER,

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■ thmri aro no obj act I on* hi a foafcuroa In tho pow- B ■ Accept no other; If your (Jailer do not ■ B hove tty ln*Ut yotlt for you. ■

FEED THE BABY “Ridge’s Food” aa it ia the oldest, cheapest and best food produced. Makea the BABT health y and happy. Invaluable to the Dyspeptic and Convalescent, All I’hyaictana recommend it. Send for free .ample and booklet. WOOLRICH & CO., Palmer. Mass. (SacoiufcS cathastlc I*.. Ma DnnUa Genuine stamped CC C. Revet sold io balk. Bqware of the dealer who tries to sen “something Just as good." A. N. k.-a 1901

woof Peruna Is all that Is needed to MISS MAUD PALMER. consumpiion, and often in advanced stages. Everybody should have tlie 6-1-page book on ('atari'll und winter diseases which is being sent free by The l’eruna Medicine Cos., of Columbus, Ohio. If you do not derive prntnpt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to I)r. Hartman, giving n full statement of your case, and he will lie pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Peruna can be purchased at any firstclass drug store at SI.OO per bottle. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.

JUST THINK OF IT. Every farmer bin own (luiKlturd, no oncuinI I'laiK-uH, lil bunk iii-connl (VilllKddn'g I lncrelng yuiir by year, J.lAvi FaO land vtUue Inuruuhlng. BJo wj | monk Im-reaalug. upleiiJPXffetrlfflKZflMdld ollmute. oioellent V* Fill*Q •cih<x>Uuiiilrhurolii>s low ” limit lon, high prided for niiHle dial gruln low rail- ’■ Wlijr ~*l*,, and every poddllile comfort. Till* U tho condition of th* farmer In We.tern Canada—Province of Manitoba and dlmrldla of Addin I hula, Hadkatoltowan and Alberta. Ttummiiiddof Amvrloaiidaro nowdettled tlinri*. Reduced rated oil all rallwayd fur homeaeukdrd umUeLllnra. New dlatrloLa are being opened tin Ibid year The new forty-page ATI.AM t WKNTKKN CANADA and, another Information mint free to all applleanta. V*. I'KDI.KT, Hupnrlulendnnl of Immigration. Ottawa. Canada, or toO. J. UItOUUUTON. 107 Monaduook Uldg.. Ohleago. III.; M. V. McINNKH, No. 2 Avanu* Theatre lttouk, Detroit, Mlob.i JAMKH (IMIKVB. Him It Hie. Marie. Mleb.; (V A. LAURIE, Marqiielt*. Mleb ; T.O.OURRIK. Callahan Uldg.. Milwaukee. Wle ; N. ItARTIIDI/)MKW, HOI! Fifth Htreet. IX* Mol lie*. 11l : H T. lIOI.M KH. Room B HlgKour Hldg., ludlanupoll*. lnd.; Canadian tloreruuieut Agent*.

fto I nrgent growers of WBgwJW • Clover, Timothy and M ■ Grasses. Our northern grown Clover, ■ I for vigor, frost and drouth resisting B • properties, hasjustly become famous. M I SUPERIOR CLOVER, bu. $5 90; 100 ibt. $9,801 I U Crow Prim* Clour, bo. $6 60; 100 Ibt. $9.20 B M Sampled Clover, Timothy and Gratui and frtat ■ ■ Catalog mailed you tor tc pottage. B 1 JOHN A. SALZER 1 A Seed Co.4|\ '^feUCROSSE.WIS.*?^ *

OUT they GO TO NORTH DAKOTA. Wo own 100,000 Berta In fMturn Morion and other North Ihokot* coHiiflri * litre thr grratmt flood of I*mla*ra ore ffoltt*. ftlcla, nutrition* grmamom, drrn, lln< k aolli purr water In aprlnoa, at rmmi mn4 r** 1 lww * amik kkkk home•TKAI Ah JOINING. Volvo #4.00 to $7.60 prr •*rr. Wr will aril In Imrgm mo antitll tmrtai aplra* did for alork mlalng or geuorul tgrplng. Wo want rrlluMr rr u I ratal# Mon to form ooloaU-a. i*o now* don’t wmII uutilftpring. h. WM. H. BROWN ft CO. U.vlU Lake. No. Oak., or lOA l.a*allo L,< bl<ro.

Ihazardi I Thrrollilblolutol^nt^B I nJtrfKKlyrrrlno In IfAZAXh ■ IHMOKIXKHM I'OWhKH; It ■ I U purely a gun cotton |>ow ■ I flr, which inakttN It note ■ I aitfl uniform, M<*ori'lto none ■ 1 In ahoof Ififf (juallUom; In fart ■

ln'uroe. ’Vihj fl