The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 18, Vernon, Jennings County, 23 October 1919 — Page 3
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I Sal;-3 Fdlity Trcj!o Ihi I Life Miserable, But Doan's l .n.- . v r All S, -x T- , I --"H j Aii ir. j Ircisria. ii-iizj c wuiicca since . -!'! I' ;u3 ,KS"vr rair.- in rrT ", V' ili'!',,lia Avenue, I nil. I :..n, i';... ":si.sl t'r.J-v r!::;-;t 'i-Mei !..-! up. ?.:u-.y a d!iv T oouIlYo-t'll-ll I' :. .1 1' 4 ..-. ... I 'J ... j K-'i:u'l h -i If ;av bnck wouid break in t'". o. !!v f'-r nnkp-s suc-lP-: until I bad to w jr !.!--'-sized s!irp.-rs and r-omciiinf s I couldn't M.'ird '.If;. end dreadful LeadachoR and flery r.a.hfcS pas-sodi br- lira. Akroyd f.-.re my ( j r-s. Had a b.-iivv weight be;n rating c-i mv head, tho min co-;ld r.t , n- io(.fl m.ro d--trej- -- --- noise Marneu me, i v.u.s i-t nrr -. 1 couidn ontnd the kidney secret ions and the pain In passage was awful. "It 'v,r.5fi to k a.s (hough rr? cr?? "was l.;-vf,r,rl t li reoch i.f mfdlrir. lif.HI I v-i-.fl Zaun's i:..1n-j ITils. rn. fir-t 1'ox li.--n"-f.tMt ni fiud four !ioi; s cured all the troubles. I have had no further cause for complaint." Sworn to before me, Thos. H. Walters, Xotary Public. CUt ESoAa at Aey Store. 6-3e ls i i03i:-r:jLZV7.:i co rurr.'xj. n.y. Only Reel Riches. "1 "here is no wealth but Iif ; life, ialiiflin all its pow ers of Jove, joy and f admiration. Thnt -ountry is tht ri'host. which nourislios the greatest nunibor i.f nolile ;tnd happy hurann b1Inu. ; that man is richest who, having IHTfiM ti't! th' nni'M ions of his own life to the turnout, has- tflso the widest helpful !it:ltn !'t, both personal and by tuoju.s u his posses-slons, over the lives f others. Iluskin. M: u who said things would never he the same after the war was tiht. Umbrellas and self-respect lost are .seldom regained. whea To Preserve and keep all household linen spotlessly white and in perfect condition use in c t in the laundry f every week. I Nothing else will take its place and nothing else is just as 2d- All grocers, 5c 1 ' 1 f t i L4 Lai IU U Imrncdlatc Possession Rich land, rl.rt of larg Bnrcpssfnl Bstt, urw bandings, soft trter. paed roads, main Una R. H., on HtAt lligtiwar. Rood niarkoie, hlti'O clol, rr4 t r boots, ehcr"-hs, g(K4 Auir3ca etbbo"i. Xanit jriiowod and readT w tto fn at any tlsce. Will condidnr tinly s;ool hard-working honest farmere wio Ilf.ow t rfat opportunity and mbo want to become owners tbrawwif-cs. WU1 Rt a At year lease and yoa run aera: from U f " per acre per year as ocrn.irti. Vpu must bae stock, lrop:iients, and Koiuit moorr. Yoa rjinst b wiiling to worn hard fidars a k. For that kind of a u;.in wi!i b piTen a ct Lr.c v ova a placrt fr himself. Land proanoes twoemtw ?ar. B'f. train, alfalfa, truck, f rait. cav te and hir fdinit and dairying farn-a In America. I.jo"i!el l -a f.ti Joaquin Vaiie?. CaHf orn at Chow ciiiii" n--ar t tesnn. Farms all about th! estate e-iiMl C0 inldd' western fanners and bankers. Vf ri if qnicK td uU me all iboct yon rseif list yonr f aii-iif. live uwk and JwplfBienta. State In detail Tnr Knaosl ennd'tion. It yoa meau fcnsiness 1 ran wnt u J'rein ai to JW0 acre or entp.ojr yon Karat Ur. i.ton't beettat don't pat ttot Tell t?ia f.nl lwlilcs.1. Tms ts an op-p-rti'nnr tia lifa uuso f.r eerai ruea and tAelr Arew EASTERN TRUSTEE Suite 618 103 N. Cearborn St.. Chicago. V. Culicun Soap is Sasy Shaving fcr 1 Jab ics JTmile When JTctf" FOOD i-i and n-uMir t rr.oticrs. jF t-tl fi?t 4u'i- . Iv dr.. - -t-or !"- 1 rot:;a.w Motlcr' V SBfV T STOPS jf T T "LT-T f j5iJ! STOPS WW-k,Ki? Gc::c::nc3 AM r L IS k j ..... .! i tul liiiw,w' lt.ivil O WUwl( i ths-o ,t c.rn v.i.1 le svc. -i ir T resizes c-"- i tts ti..!JS a co. r ii ( J
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! 1 by Mary Graham Bonner THE NAUGHTY MOTHS. "I think it is nice to be naughty." said little Miss Moth to Master Moth. "I agree with you." said young Master Moth. "You are dear children," said Mother Moth. "The summer is such a nice time, but alas it is all over," said Miss Moth. "Yes. folks will be taking out their clothes find will be wearing their warm things before long," stiid Master Moth. Now this moth family belonged "Taking Out Their Clothes Now." to a family known us the ease-making clothes moth faintly because they make for themselves a little case. "My head and front wings are yellowish and my hind winjrs are grayish and silky," said Master Moth. "That is as it should be." "Just as it should be," said Mother Moth. "Mother, dear," said Miss Moth, "won't you tell us something of our family history?" "Certainly, dear, if you would like to have me tell you," said Mother Moth. "I would," said Miss Moth. "So would I," said Master Moth. "In the northern part of the country," besan Mother Moth, "our family eoriie out around June and stay out until some time in August. There is usually one brood of little moths for each mother moth. But in the southern part of the country our family ehoose the months from January until October and they have one or two precious broods of young." "Would people call them precious broods of young?" asked Miss Moth. "I don't believe they would," said Master Moth, 'Tin sure they wouldn't," s:'d Mother Moth. "Well, pray continue," said Miss Moth. "I didn't mean to interrupt." "The larva, which is a word all moths and caterpillars and most children, I think, understand," said Mother Moth, "is a whitish sort of caterpillar with brownish coloring mixed in too. It can move around in its case and it can make its case larger by making slits for itself. Isn't that clever and interesting?" "Very," agreed Miss Moth and Master Moth. "Then the case can be made longer by being added to, and the case itself is made of wool on the outside and silk on the inside. By changing the larva to different materials the case can be made of many colors, being the lengthening and adding which I hnve told you about. "Sometimes the precious eggs are brought up on the material a mother chooses for her home and sometimes in trunks and boxes. "We have cousins, such as the tapestry moth, but they aren't as common rs we are and their ways are a little different, for they do not make a case for themselves. That is true of the southern moths, for they build a beautiful cocoon of silk, but that is not until they are quite grown. The tapestry moth relations are larger than wo are. "We have our habits, our ways of turning into our different growths, but our lives aren't so long. By turning info our different growths I mean from one stage into another stage, such as into the chrysalis stage. Tiien. too, we can move our legs from out of our case w hen j we are trying 10 do a piec? of work, such as changing our position and adding some silk to our cases. "But though we a r e interesting tad have our little ! ways such as all ( reaf res have, j they 'ir-a't like us j t h e p e p 1 e j don't." ! 'Never uinid." j srrtl Miss Moth, "I j had pleasant j summer and on- ! ioved ; ;l my "Tell Us Sc thing." memeal- immensely.' 1 Master Moth. -'And "So did I." sa J T do enjoy 1., '. I what I should! nsr naughty and eating n't hits of wool and cloth and such nice delicacies." But unlike most mothers Mother Moth smiled and said, "I like to hear of the little taoths eating what people think they shouldn't and nibbling where they're not wanted, for they take after the whole family, they do." Case-Hardened. "Pap-:." said a small boy to his parent the other day, "are not sailors very, very small men? "No, my dear, answered the father. "Pray what leads yoti to suppose that they ere so small?" "Because, replied the young id-a. "I read the other day of a Gi-rro.iE sailor going to" sleep on his watca."
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"FIDDLE-FIT" Keep Liver and Bowels Clean and Active with "Cascarets" Sick headache, biliousness, coated tongue, sour, gassy stomach - always trace this to torpid liver; delayed, fermenting food in the bowels. Poisonous matter clogged in the intestines, instead of being cast out of the system is re-absorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches tfce delicate brain tissue it causes congestion and that dull, throbbing, sickening tead.iche. Ca sea rets immediatoly cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter end poisons in the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will nave you feeling clear, rosy and as fit as a fiddle by morning. They wcrir wMle you sleep. Adv. Perfectly Natural. A schoolboy listened calmly to a lecture on "Nero." The " lecturer recounted all Nero's debaucheries, cruelties and crimes. Then, afterward, he asked the boy: "Well, boy, what do you think of him?" The boy squirmed in his seat, but made no reply. "Come," said the teacher. "Spertk up. What do you think of Nero? Was he a good man? Would you caro to introduce your sister to such :t man? Would you like to know him?" The boy squirmed again; then he whined : "Well. Nero never done nothin' to me." ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name "Bayer Aspirin- " is on Germing -say Bayer Insist oa "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin5 in a "Bayer package," containing proper directions for Headache, Colds Pain, Neuralgia. Lumbago, and Ilheumatlsm. Name "Bayer means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin toses of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salieylicaeid. Adv. What the Railroads Collect. In 191G, a year of normal conditions, each person in the United States paid $25 for railroad freight, a bill of $123 nimually for the average family. Therefore each increase of 25 per cent in freight rates above the .1010 level means an increased per capita tax of S0.25, or an increased" tax for each "American family of $31.25. Freight rates have increased more than 50 per cent since 1916, therefore the freight bill for the average family is now around 200, all of which is paid indirectly, of course. These figures are worth studying before we again dip Into our pockets to help railroad finances. PHYSICALLY FIT AT ANY AGE It isn't r.2?, it's careless living that mts men "down and out." iieep your internal organs in good condition and you will alway3 be physically fit. The kidneys ere the most overworked organs in the human boey. When they break down under the strain end the deadly uric acid accmrulatcs end crystallizes look out! These sharp crystals tear and scratch tut delicate urinary channels causing" excruciating pain and set up irritations which may cause premature depeneration and often do turn into deadly Bright's Disease. One of the first warnings of sluggish kidney action 13 pain or stiffness in the email of the tack, loss of appetite, indigestion or rheumatism. Do not wait until the danger Is upon you. At the first indication of trouble CO after the cause at once. Get a trial box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules, ininorted direct from the laboratories in liolland. They will give almost immediate relief. - If for any cause they shor.li not, your money wi.l be refunded. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL "- .None other it gcuuiae. la sealed boxes, ttree -izes Adv. ' Clay Output Falls Off. The quality and value 'of the clay mined in the United States in 1913 showed a considerable decrease in outnut but an increase in value compared with 1917. The total qnrmtity of clay mined and marketed as such is estimated at 2.S-10.0C0 short tons, valued at $9,207,000. or $3.2$ a ton. This is a decrease of about ytM.rtOo tons, or 10 per cent, in quantity, but an increase of about $1,105,000 or 14 per cent in value. The imports decreased in both quantity and value, Cutieura Scathes Itching Seal? Oa retiring gently rub spots of dandruS! and itching with. Cutieura Ointment. Next morning .shampoo with Cutieura Soap and hot water, ifake them your every-day toilet preparations and have a clear skin and soft, white hands. -Adv. Bagdad is famous for Its breed of white asses. Their ears and tails are sometimes colored a irigkt red.
The Kitchen Cabinet Never p':v a rr.or.int to cent;'. vt. but utilize the time that would otherwise bo spent in this way in looking forward . and actualizing- tha condition you rlesire. -Ralph Waldo Trine. SALADS AN D SANDWICHES VARIOUS OCCASIONS. FOR A sandwich is never out of season, for it is the substantial part of a meal at whatever time or place it IS served. If one desires a large quantity of filling for sandrACOTr"Til niches, the followJcCTp! recipe will be a good one to ic:- . jf a iow. It may be easily divided. Th dressing may be used on potato or other vegetable salads: Cheese Sandwich Filling. Mix together one cupful of sour cream, three eggs, one tablespoonful of butter, one tablespoonfui of sugar, a few grains of cayenne, one teaspoonful c tard and one teaspoonful of salt f mileBeat all together In a double boiler until the eggs are broken ; set over hot water and stir until It begins to thicken. Add three table-spoonfuls of vinegar, hot. to the cream mixture. When "cooked until it coats the spoon, set aside to cool. But one and one-half pounds of cheese, two green peppers an 4 two sweet red peppers through a meat popper. Mis together, and add enough of the dressing to make the mixture spread easily. Use on thin slices of bread. Cream Cheese Filling, Cream two small cream cheeses, add gradually one tablespoonful of butter and onefourth of a cupful of orange juice. When well blended, add half n cupful of chopped pimentoes, one cupful of chopped walnut meats and one-half teaspoonful of salt. Mix well and spread on buttered graham bread. Onion Sandwiches. Chop fine a Bermuda or Spanish onion, and mix with a little well-seasoned French dressing. Spread on buttered bread and serve for Sunday night sandwiches (after church). Carrot and Nut Sandwiches. Mix together one-half cupful each of ground carrots and nuts (peanuts, walnuts or pecans may be used). Add one-half teaspoonful of salt, one-half tablespoonful of olive oil, one teaspoonful of lemon juice. Mix thoroughly and spread on slices of buttered bread. Pressed Egg and Ham Sandwiches. Chop fine six hard-cooked eggs, one green onion and one-half a green pepper. Mix with one-half teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoonfui of prepared mustard- Place half of the mixture in a small, greased pan. Press down, then add a layer of chopped ham, using one and one-half cupfuls. finely chopped. ' Finish with the rest of the egg mixture ; pour over two tablespoonfuls of soup stock and place in a cool place until molded enough to slice. And you who judge so harshly. Are you sure the Ptumbllnx-stone That tripped the feet of others Might not have bruised your own? Are you sure the sad-faced angel Who writes your errors down Will ascribe to you more honor Than him on whom you frown? -WHOLESOME GOOD THINGS. Frostings for various cakes haye not been the usual thing during the months of sugar shortage. The following are two desirable frostings which may be covered and kept in a cool place for weeks and, by adding a bit of moisture or healing over water, will be ready for use: Fondant. This recipe has appeared before as txsaaciHiai candy foundation, but makes very satisfactory frosting. Use four cupfuls of sugar, one cupful of water and one tablespoonful of glucose. Boil until the sirup makes a soft ball when dropped in water. Set away to cool ; when ecol enough to boar the finger, stir until creamy. Put into a jar or bowl, cover with waxed paper and let stand until wanted. ' Take out what will be needed for Icing, melt It over hot water, add flavoring, coloring orxhocolate and spread on the cakes. Another Frosting. Use confectioners' sugar and milk or cream. To two cupfuls of sugar add a tablespoonful of cream, adding a few drops more until soft enough to spread. Try it on a i small cake until o f the right consisti encv: use what is nceded and cover j the' rest, set ting it in it m n cool place ! where it will not dry out. It will keep ) for three weeks or longer. , Eachelor's Buttons. Rub together four f ablespoonfuts of butter and ten 1 tablespoonfuls of flour. Divide ten taI blespoonfuls of sugar; stir five into the . ilour and the other five into two well1 beaten eggs; flavor with anise and j add to the flour mixture. Make into j small .walnut-sized balls, place on a j buttered baking sheet and bake In a I hot oven. Dip in fondant and sprinkle j with nuts. Sunshine Cak;. Take the whites of ! eight eggs and the yolks of six, one cupful 6f Hour, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, salt and vanilla. Beat the yolks until thick, add vanilla, beat the whites until foamy, then add the cream of tartar; finish beating, until stiff ; add tlK' sugar, a little at a time, then add yolks and fold in the flour. Bake forty-five minutes, la a" moderate oven. -9S 52 m ww WW m V & www
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BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. In these days of unsettled weather look out fur colds. Take every precaution against the dreaded influenza and at the first sneeze remember that Bosehee's Syrup has been used for fifty-three years in all parts of the United States for coughs, bronchitis and colds, throat irritation and especially for -lung troubles, giving the patient ft good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration in the morning. Made in America and kept as a household panacea In the homes of thousands of families all over the civilized world. Try one bottle and accept no substitutes, Adv.
Postlude Larga. Mrs. Brown was at th back of the church waiting to have her baby christened. Baby was getting restless, so she beckoned the verger. "Is the sermon nearly finished?" she asked. "No, mum," replied the verger, "another half hour of it yet. He's onlv on his 'lastly. " "But," said Mrs. Brown, "will It take him half an hour to get through his 'lastly'?" "No," mum." was the demure reply, "but there's the 'one word more and I'm done. and the 'iti conclusion to come yet. Don't be impatient. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, J ucas County is. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the lirra of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will psy the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL.L.AK5 for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv the use of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, .this tth day of Decern tier, A. D. 1SSS. (Seal) A. W. Gleason, Notarv .Public. HALL'S CATA1UIH MEDICINE is taken internally uml acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Oiiio, Worth Remembering. Here is a good thing to remember : "When you get sore at the world, don't forget that it will not hurt the world at all, while it may do you Inconceivable harm." You are but a very small part of this old world and it will wag along just about as well without you as with you, so your complaints are not going to make so very much difference-after a!!. Better keep sweet and do what you can to make conditions better instead of getting grouchy because things do not go to suit you. The cheerful man gets farther than the grouch. Coming Events. "The -extraordinary tilings of yesterday will be the ordinary things "of tomorrow," remarked Justice Darling recently. "Already I can picture little Tommy waking up in the night and crying: "'Mother, 1 hear something on the roof! and hearing mother answer: "'Go to sleep; it's only your father taking off his shoes to sneak through the skylight. He's just come home from his club in his airship." Pearson's Weekly. To Acquire Greatness. Tho best guarantee to greatness is an intense interest in a great program. Then it is that the fellow becomes so full of the' job that lie hasn't time t'i think about whether he's great or rot. Ife sees the thing to be done and becomes so full of how to do it that he rises without knowing that he's becoming great in the eyes of the world. Ho the best thing is to be filled with our job and work it until it gets the fruits. Distinction. "Did you go up Mount Washington?" "Oh, yes; we stayed overnight nt the summit." "I suppose you lived high?"" "Yes, we had a tip-top supper." !"" Yes! i "What is the proper length of a girl's dress?" "A little over two feet." Cartoons Matrazine.
a.dalight to. the palate. Do as your neiglibor Is doing and cut. trie Mglii cost of living by drinlcing
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Instead of coffee. Ho Raise in. ?nce 50-CupHns 30P-I00-CupTIns 50? Made by Postum Cereal Compalw Battle Creek. Mich. Sold hy Grocers mxd General Stores
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p if1'" r fTfflW "'" ? i I f e 1 ' ft uird fcy entire families becays it is purely vejctatlr, dees the w;rk costs very UtUe. Wt.y rrti-cs t :r ? ?-a-l te---"-! t-s Bi'tii nor arc JV' t: ;n Dr. Carter's U. r:(i H, -:. tv 1 "" !n r urtp-- ii-,:.tr.;-', -a:i V.r, v,r J (.'.-:, a":d r par!:.. J"' l?f ,t t:r.. . r.'. 1 tl-.ey ltiv-c be-: 'i .Jri-i,,-; i; f.-r e.u ?, ..'s c:'i-r 1 1 - !:vcr jnd iur".s brive t-j tmi c ii..;. t ion ii 'ev t', y- ty -i fore t"..::i 'i -,;;. t f -. t "niy an ro ! "r;.it "zi ta p. ""-f rvi, nr- nee.f. J Vecp on.fe- lit ii.:d t Pec-; vo iltr-sk. a of T-Vr. t'a--ter's K. end H. Te,i orv :n t wt.i.' : drain, if -vor, l",;ivr ,t::v i :til- k sii.-k r.e;iilavln; or -.ii:.-v.- -'t-s. li'f tcr loyp tn nrl'. -p-c-..!y ti(TTo iv-.'. Are p?vi'. ;-tm fre'fiil. 1 njr:-.i--t l.,iii ten 5fi.:r- It or irs'tnv v.'.it. 5 :-W$rt -Gel H ii t;jf I: - ir;i. r, P ;!n 1 1 1 1 i l '.'. v 'H ; f i i $4,000,000 Is the Er.arrsons Less In Fighting Influenza aad 500.000 Tenth!f is Its total. Mi',vrar.-ji aj-prt.-rlatinsr $1,604,040 to tl?bt Ha probable recurrence ag-ain ore introi!tici in botH branches of Ccngres.-v sveond and tktrl years to ihow frightful af tr-ffceta ua.'f specific remedies aro found. Physician liftlieve Nardfne la the Nation' rroateat remedy tor laftucn.-j, Catarrh, Hiytaver, CoM In the head jsnl lunifit. A few application" reltove Catarrh, dispel a :.-.!! an t check fluema. That destructive maia.lv that baa ravish.-. 1 the worM an:l cllms it victim by the thousand l;-i likely to amxar affair this i .-ill and winter. It bepinit with a ci. Be prepared to check tho colci and yoa -ill prevent Pneumonia tnti Tnfltiensa by k5S3iinsr Dr. Nardine's remod? continually t h-"-nd. Z't full treatments Free. Hend 36e to cover cost ot v.tj ri'iii'T and poet are. llnSxs Kc&a! Co., be, CI. Dspl, kfom Gty, il f . At hi: stuck u.vncii. -.i v, . Slo. J3 taiU: new ov n win-; a. tr-, and clover; river, crp:k, Kprlnea : ntock Easwall winter. Hiir ranch barcaln. $3.at9. l-J. Felix, 31 Shenando.ih Ave,. St. I,-.oH M-l-pp Sals- tr Trade, 120 ceres corn belt laud Welt ):? i v-.i. CroiM v, ill ii 'iia 't: v ' land. McCjn'..'r. Mirier., ln.ilAna. RUSSIANS HiT BY FAMIWES Shortages cf Food Czte From 16C0 S.CCO.CCO Persons Reduced to Starvation in Famine of 19 It. Next to th? proletariat of In din nnJ China, the Bussian peasant feels the pinch of poverty and hunger more keenly and. more fn. pient!y tfuu; oey other, says tho National Geographic society. One of the earliest Kussij famines on record was that ;.' 1000, with a death toll of oOOjx) poasjruts. Cats, dogs and rats were eaten, cm, even the strong overcame the weak. Human flesh was sold in the marketThree Russian famines of recent date were among the roost sere i history in 1S01. V.W and 1911. During the ten years following the frS of these, the government allcde! nearly $125,000,000 for relief, bust the sums were not always judiciously expended. In 1000 the government gave 40 pounds of flour a month lo nil persons under eighteen years old and ovo fifty-nine. Those between these ogereceived no allowanee, u;d the older and younger sharded "heir pitfarit.--with the others. The famine of 1011 extended over one-third the area of Bin-ope and affected 30,000.000 persons, while 8,000,000 were reduced to starvation Weeds, the bark of trees, and hitler bread made of aeortis, eonstltoUnS the chief diet. It is easy for n man to nmmige ); wife. ' All he hiss to do is to follow her instructions. j ; f V i i i; 1.
