Plymouth Tribune, Volume 3, Number 35, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 June 1904 — Page 2
XTbe ftrtbune.
Established October 10, 1901. Only Republican Newspaper In the Couaty. HENDRICKS & CO., Publishers. OFrlCE Blssell Building, Corner LaPorte and Center Streets. Telephone No. 27. SUBSCRIPTION RATE9One Year, in adnnce, 1.50; Six Months. 73 cents; Three Months, 4U cents, delivered at any postoffice ADVERTISING RATES made known on application. Entered at the postoffice at Plymouth, Indiana, as second-class mall matter. Plymouth, Ind., June 2, 1904. . Republican State Ticket. For Governor, J. FRANK II AN LEY. For Lieutenant Governor, HUGH TH. MILLER. For Secretary of State, DANIEL E. STORMS. For Auditor of Sthte, DAVID-E. &IIEKRICK. For Treasurer of State, NAT U, HILL, For Attorney General. C II ARLES W. MILLER. For Reporter Supreme Coürt, GEO ROE W. ELF. uperlntendentof Public Instruction, Fr A. COTTON. Chief of Bureau of Statistic, JOSEPH II. STUBBS udtre Supreme Court, 2d District, OSCAR II. MONTGOMERY. Judpe Supreme curt, 3d District, JOHN V. HADLEY, County Ticket. For Coujrres, 13th District, ABRAHAM L. BRICK. IFor State Senator, JOHN W. PARKS. Vest Township Republican Convention. The Republicans of West township will meet in mass convention at West school house, Saturday, Jane 4, 1904 at 2:30 p. m, for the purpose of nominating a township ticket and transacting other necessary business. Every Republican in the township is reauested to attend. Township Committee. Repnblican County Convention. Pursuant to call of Republican Central Commttee, the republicans of Marshall county will meet In mass convention in each township on or before June 17tb, 1904 for the purpose of electing delegates to the county convention to be held at Plymouth, Ind., June 18th, at 2 p. m. for nominating officers for the republican county .ticket as follows: Representee, treasurer, recorder, surveyor, coroner, county council and two commissioners one for 2nd and one for 3rd district. Following is the delegate vote by precincts and townships based on cne to ten or fractional vote thereof cast for secretary of state at last election. Bourbon, First Precinct 6; 2nd 9; 3rd 9; 4th 9; total 33. German, First Precinct, 5; 2nd 11; 3rd 10; 4th 9; total 35. Union, First Precinct 6; 2nd 12; 3rd 7; total 25. Green, First Precinct 4; 2nd 8; total 12. Walnut, First Precinct. 9; 2nd 9; 3rd 5; total 23. Tippecanoe, First Precinct 10; 2nd 9; total 19. - 2s orth. First Precinct 8; 2nd 8; total 16. Polk, First Precinct 7; 2nd 8; 3rd 8, total 23. West, First Precinct 10; 2nd 8; total 18. Center, Eirst Precinct, 10; 2nd 7, 3rd 9: 4th 7; 5th 10, 6th 14: 7th 7; total 64. The total" delegate vote is 268. Township meetings will be subject to call of township chairmen. F. Groves, Co. Chairman. O. R. Porter, Sb'cy. The Kansas City Star, famed for its column of short pungencies, rises to remark that whatever else may be charged against Mr. Bryan, it cannot be said that he ever took -any hush money. ' Joseph W. Folk is discouraging his presidential boom nursed by Bourke Cockran and Tom L. Jobnson. Mr. Folk desires to be governor- of .Missouri and to all appearances will be. The South Bend Times sajs it was popularly expected that the Plymouth Tribune and Chronicle would be con solidated. If the editor of the Times lived in Plymouth he would know that the owners of the Chronicle have something that no other paper could afford to take as a gift. Senator Depew said a true thing to students of Yale Law School when he told them that there are many clerks In the departments who are wiser men than -the heads of the departments they serve. He might also have added that the reputation of some men high In public esteem was made and is held up by the men who write their speeches,-collect the statistics for their arguments, furnish the brains to digest facts and elaborate plans that are afterwards woven Into - the texture of national policy.. Many a speech that thrills the public is the product of the rh'etorical still possesccd by some yoac clerk, and . the studious labor, the exacting research T? hich he had given to the theme. But ths worker get3 co credit vrhilo ttz
world applaud3 the c-a who gave Tdce to tfc2 Er::ch. Elltirt r.svi:v7.
Gorman has full control of the democratic party in Maryland. Tbf state convention adopted the platform submitted by him and allowed blm to select the four delegates at large tu the St. Louis convention.
The Indianapolis Journal thinks Ilearst could tell the country if he would, what the officers of democratic committees are worth, lie had among his boomers almost all the officers of the national committee and many of the state committees. The boom for Joseph W. Folk,of Missouri, for the democratic presidential candidacy is growing considerably and should there be no choice at the St. Louis convention for several ballots, It is not unlikely that a stampede for Folk will take place. Tammany's opposition to Parker might help rather than hurt him were it not for the fact that Murphy 'is able to show pretty definitely that the Parker boom had Its inception in and has received its chief support from the back office of the Belmont banking house. The Japanese appear to have made their various landings on the Port Arthur peninsula without serious loss to their army. Once on shore, they can fortify and form secure bases of their own. To this Important extent the Japanese have pressed forward successfully. Japanase were defeated in a battle at Kinchow, according to reports received in St. Petersburg. The islanders were lured into a defila swept by two Russian guns and their ranks decimated. The .Russian loss is 141 men, and it is believed the Japanese loss is much greater. M. E. Dunlap, of Jacksonville, 111., the gentleman who has managed the Ilearst campaign in his own state as well as supervising Willie's campaign in Indiana, was deieated as candidate for delegate to the Illinois state convention. bS own precinct having declared against him. Dunlap is the man who guided and directed the II ears Utes at Indianapolis. during the 12th of May convention. Fiitcen thousand Russians, advancing on Fengwangcheng in the belief that the town bad been abandoned were met in Tatung Pass by 30,000 Japanese, and 4,000 Russians were killed according to a report from New-' chwang. It is said also that 1,000 Russians surrendered. Kinchow was captured by the Japanese after a short, fierce engagement, according to reports from Tokio and Shanghai. There is more state and county prohibition In the southern states than in any other part of the country. This has occasioned some surprise until it is ascertained that the laws are passed to keep the negroes from getting Intoxicants. The whites have the laws as a measure of protection, it being claimed that strong drink stirs up the animal in the negroes and makes them dangerous. Even Texas and Kentucky have much territory from which saloons are excluded bv law. v The Knights of Fidelity News, the official organ of the saloons of Indlana, acknowledges the services of the Phalanx, the organ of the Prohibition party, by saying: "The Phalanx goes after the Nicholson law and the antiSaloon League in a manner which is exactly to our liking." No better compliment could be paid to the law, which has stood the test of the Supreme Court at every assailed point, than that it is assailed with equal violence by the saloons and the Prohibition party. It is not likely to be repealed to please either assailant. Indianapolis Journal. Former Governor Robert E. Pattison, of Pennsylvania, gives it as his opinion that the democrats, by nominating a good, strong, conservative man for president and adopting a rational platform, will stand an excellent chance of winning a substantial victory next November. Pattlson evidently wants the empty honor of being a democratic candidate for president He Iknows that no democrat of the present generation will come any nearer the presidency than being a candidate; but tu sees that W,, J. Bryan tZTTTca' fame and fortune as a candidate and he thinks there ta ccuh in it fcr r.obert E. Pattieon to cpend dc 3 cency ia czmpeJja at tiia head cft!:2C:z:ccratIscaUezil tieiet.
The treasury department at Washington has decided that the portrait of the late Senator Hanna shall be printed on the Panama canal bonds, in recognition of the service rendered by the deceased in advocating measures which have made the waterway an assured fact.
The direction in which the Parker boom is moving may be inferred from the fact that the talk of renominating Cleveland has been revived. It is argued that he would carry several northern states, as in 1892. Let the Cleveland promoters take a few test yotes among Indiana democrats. That will settle their pretensions as to one state. In his memorial aiy proclrmation, Gov. Durbln recommends that the day "be observed as asacred holiday, in a manner in harmony with the deeply patriotic purpose for which it was Instituted, by the cessation of usur.1 business, by appropriate ceremonies and exercises, and by the adornment with flowers of the graves of soldiers wherever buried. It should be a day solemly given over not only to the heroic memories of our militant past, but to a reconsecration of our people to the principles and purposes for which these men contended on the battlefield," The Indianapolis News sounds a note of warniDg that people will not submit to any scheme to down the Nicholson liquor law and curb it in any way. It does not require a crank temperance advocate or a confirmed prohibitionist to take this position. That the Nicholson law is good and just is admitted. It causes no hardship for people who desire to be in the liquor business and abide by the law. The much talked of blanket remonstrance feature is sane and has provided much good. The people of Indiana have no desire to discriminate against the man engaged in the saloon business, but they will not stand for interference of the Nicholson law. Goshen Democrat. In connection with the decision of the Postoffice Department to take steps to eliminate objectionable patent medicine and other objectionable advertisements from the newspapers, as announced some weeks ago, it is stated that all these cases will be taken up individually on their merits. Each case will be considered carefully oy the law officers of the department and when the cases are found to involve violations of the law governing such matters, the American Newspaper Publishers Association will be notified. That body, according to the present plans, is to notify all of its papers who are members of the organization that the advertlsment is contrary to law Hearst lost his fight In Ohio, Tennessee and Alabama. In Ohio the friends of Judge Harmon were victorious, and succeeded in preventing either instructions or indorsement, and in getting the unit rule adopted. With the adoption of that rule Hearst's chances for any delegates vanished, for he carried but three districts. The Alabama democrats followed the same course, and the delegation from that state is entirely controlled Dy the Parker men, who will apply the unit rule. Parker was indorsed as the most available and acceptable candidate at the present time. In Tennessee the delegation was instructed to vote as a unit, for Judge Parker, and on all questions that might come before the convention. Tne capture of Kin-Chou is a great surprise to the Russians. They supposed its reduction would need a siege train, and would call for careful approaches and much time. What the loss of the Japanese was is not known. It may have oeen heavy. But, whatever it is, they have Kin-Chou. And that is the main point. At the beginning of the war there was much speculation as to how the Japanese troops would behave when they met the Russians face to face. That queseion seems to be answered. They swept the enemy before them in the Yalu fight, and now they have carried a fortified town, which was no doubt bravely defended. Probably the Japanese soldiers are no braver than those of the Czar, but they are more intelligent and eCclsnt, and they es era to es core skilfully led. At anyt rate, they tav3.th.c3 fir dens uhitever vri3 zz-zl cf them.
A number of promineut democrats in this county are beginning to understand what a leading politician meant when he said some men borrow trouble, some bave trouble thrust upon them and some engage in the pursuit of office.
The head of the Associated Press claims that the ill feeling between Russia and Japan was fomented by the British newspapers, and that a fake" dispatch from London precipitated the first encounter at Port Arthur. Root of Divorce Evil. Persons engaged in efforts to lessen the divorce evil ought to bear in mind that it Is much more important to avoid mismating than it is to place obstacles in the way of terminating unfortunate and unhappy matrimonial alliances. The trite saying that an ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of cure," holds good in the matter of Ill-advised matrimonial ventures as well as in other things. The root of the dJyorce evil is that marriage is regarded too frivolously and too lightly. Modern society is largely responsible for this. Wholesome public opinion 13 more efficacious than attempts at regulating matrimonial affairs by legislative enactments. From the family circle should come wholesome counsel and adylce, judiciously and tactfully administered to prospective aspirants to matrimonial bliss or woe, as it may turn out to be. When the majority of family circles in a community bold to correct ideas in regard to matrimonial ventures such ideas will become the predominating sentiment of the locality. And that is worth a good deal. South Bend Times. When Dtwey Wasn't Known. When Admiral Dewey started for his station in the Pacific Ocean, prior to the Spanish War," said a wellknown railway man recently, "he attracted little attention. On his way West he took the Baltimore & Ohio train to Chicago. He and his secretary had a drawing room. While they were temporarily absent from it some one stole $80. This robbery soon became known and the officials in Chicago were notified. "Two of the company's trusted officers were sent down the line to meet the train. After conversing with the Admiral, so as to obtain a clue, the Pullman conductor said another man had also been robbed. This victim happened to be a conductor who had just bad bis month's pay cashed all of which the robber took possession of. He was interviewed and was asked if he had any suspicions. He said; 'Yes, I have. I believe that short man In the drawing room(meaning Admiral Dewey) has my pile.' " An Assured Success. If at any time any doubts lingered ia the minds of those who originated the entertainment to be given by the Junior Girls'' Guild of the Episcopal church at the Centennial opera house June 7, they have been dispelled by witnessing the able manner in which Miss Vera Humrichouser, who has charge of the preparations for the "Mermaid" and "Fairy" drills, and the "Colonial Sketches," handels her young pupils. As those who have witnessed the recitals given by Miss Humrichouser's pupils are well aware, she Is a very capable instructress, but to those who have been less fortunate we will state, that as a physical culturist, few who have come before our notice have the complete command over the little minds under their control that is displayed by Miss numrichouser. , World's Pair Stamps. Two or three weeks ago we described the series of stamps commemorative of the Louisiana Purchase which are now on sale at all post offices. We have been asked by a number of persons to describe them again. They are beautiful and were described as follows: One cent, green, subject, Robert R. Livingstone, United States minister to France, who conducted he negotiations for the Louisiana purchase; two cent, red, Thomas Jefferson, president of the United States at the time of the purchase; three cent, purple, James Monroe, special ambassador to France in the matter of the purchase, who with Livingstone closed the negotiations; five cent, blue, Wm. McKinley, who as president of the United States approved the acts or congress, officially connecting the United States government with the commemorative exposition: ten cent, brown, United States map showing the territory of the purchase. Can't Be Opened. A Chicago telegram says: The doom of the Iroquois theater practically was settled yesterday. Mayor Harrison, moved by protests which have reached him from every quarter of the city, declared that its owners must meet the provisions of the new theater law to the smallest detail before a license would be Issued. That apparently is tn Impccsibility. , It is not believed that the building will ever be ueed ts a tttater ain.
Land Swindlers at Work. The department of the interior at Washington warns homeseekers of an organized band of swindlers actively at work in several western states, notably Utah, North and South Dakota, and also operating to a lesser extent in the east These sharpers have selected as easy victims prospective homeseekers who are greatly interested m the various reclamation projects undertaken by the government. By means of advertisments cleverly worded, in which they claim to have secured inside information regardiDg the plans of the engineers, and by the display of alleged copies of government maps and surveys, they have
been successful in duping many un wary homeseekers For a consideration cf from $50 to $200 these swindlers guarantee to locate settlers on the best irrigable lands under the government works. Pottawatomies After Cash. About 50 Pottawatomie Indians, ranging in age from ten to eighty years, came to Allegan, Mich., Saturday from Hartford, Athens, Salem, Wayland, Bradley and Battle Creek to get their appropriation in payment of their claims of land owned by them. The amount paid oui aggregated $78,000, and administrators were ap pointed for 38 estates, while 28 estates are open. Mysterious Patient Died, William, the Silent, acred about 37, who has been a patient at the Long Cliff hospital for many years, dieq there of tuberculosis. In all his years at the hospital for the nsane he has not spoken over a dozen words to any one, so his keepers say, beyond what was absolutely necessary. No one seems to know his real name or anything of hishistcry. CURIOUS THINGS FROM CHINA The Mott Magnificent Beds Ever Seen Are Part of lh Celestial Empire's World's Fair Exhibit. The Chinese exhibit at the World's Fair is filled with pleasing surprises. Some of the most magnificent articles of furniture are a part of this wonderful display. The carving and Inlaying of ivory, bone and wood illustrate the marvelous skill of the Chinese. Models included in this Interesting exhibit show the homes and home life of the Chinese, their weddings and funerals. Chinese tea house, restaurant and shop. Chinese weaving and some of the beautiful silks and wearing apparel of the Chinese and their methods of manufacturing them. One feature of the exhibit is two magnificent Chinese beds, each of which has the appearance of being a small house of great beauty. One is a summer bed. the other for winter. The summer bed is hand carved and inlaid with ivory and bone figures and landscapes exquisitely carved and so skillfully joined as to appear a part of the wood. The bed and furniture are of carved bamboo. The bed consists of an anteroom, with tables, chairs and tea stands, and In an Inner room, which Is the sleeping apartment, there Is a couch with coverings of gauzy silks. The winter bed is still more elaborate. It consists of three compartments. The first contains four chairs, a tea poy and a chest of drawers. This is the sitPOKTION OF "VARIED INDUSTRIES BUIIlD150, WOULD'S FA III. ting apartment. The second is the dress Ing room, and the third is the sleep lag apartnie:. or the couch itself. The furnitur is of rosewood inlaid witli ivory carving of birds, flowers and trees. The couch Is covered with silks of the finest texture and in gaudy colors. .The sleeping compartments are lighted with Chinese lauterns of silk hung at the outer entrance, while the light enters through gauze panels, hand painted and . in forma , of rosewood inlaid with Ivory fibres. . A table and dish made of highly polished ash, with exquisitely carved bamboo figures inlaid, are shown. The work Is so artistically done that each article seems to have been made of one piece of woodThere Is also a large display of Chinese lanterns made of sUk, gauze and other light material and some made of beads artistically arranged with glass centers. The silk and gauze are beautifully hand painted, v There are models of some of the great Chinese temples, theaters and arches, showing elaborate carving in wood and ivory and two large elephr.pt tusks exquisitely carved. Notice. Claims against the estate of D. K. Harris deceased will be paid by me if presented. And any person desirlns: to purchase a cheap home is invited to Inspect the Harris home on North Center street tsd to coll on me for terms of sale. 33t4 Harlky A. Logan.
k - 1 .Willi IsiilifsilJ
wi ffmii I'd Mffi'mttfr
A FACADE OF THE LIBERAL THE UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION The Achievements of Individuals and Nations Faithfully Recorded by Thb Encyclopedia of Society. Br FREDERICK J. V. SKIFF, Director of Exhibits. World's Fair. "The wisdom of all ages Is none too great for the world's work. In this single salient sentence, uttered In Ms famous address at Buffalo In September, 1901, President McKinley described the object and the result of expositions. ' A modern universal exposition is a collection of the wisdom and achievements of the world, for the inspection of the world, for the study of its experts, by which they may make comparisons and deduction and develop plans for future improvements and progress. Such ax universal exposition might well be called an encyclopedia of society. It constitutes a classified, compact, indexed compendium of the achievements and ideas of society in all phases of Its activity, extending to the most material as well as the most refined. It offers illustrations covering the full field of social performance, from the production of the shoes on our feet and the pavement beneath them to a presentation of the rarest and most delicate creations of the brains and hands of men in what are called the fine arts of civilization. The Universal Exposition In St Louis in 1904 will be such a social encyclopedia in the most comprehensive and accurate sense. It will give to the world in revised and complete details 'a living picture of the artistic and Industrial development at which mankind has arrived" and will actually provide "a new starting point from which all men may direct future exertions." It will pj-esent for the Inspection of specialists In all lines of indus trial and social endeavor and for the public an assembly of the best which the world has done and has to show in industry, art and science, and. what is very Important, it will offer these achievements of society, these trophies of civilization, in a highly selected, accurately classified array. The creators of the St. Louis Exposition have had the experience of all previous great expositions by which to plan and - effect its high organization. The continuous and repeated burden of the message of experience handed down by all expositions has been more perfect, more effective classification and arrangement of exhibits. The classification of the St Louis Exposition has been prepared to present a sequential synopsis of the developments that have marked man's progress. On Its bases will be assembled the most highly organized exposition the world has yet seen. The St Louis classification is divided into 10 departments, 144 groups and 807 classes. These grand departments in their order will record what man has accomplished at this time with his faculties, industry and skill and the natural resources at his command In the environment In which he has been placed. At the bead of the Exposition classification has been placed Education, through which man enters social life. Second comes Art, showing the condl tlon of his culture and development Liberal Arts and Applied Sciences are placed third, to Indicate the result of his education and culture. Illustrate his tastes and demonstrate his Inventive genius, scientific attainment and artistic expression. These three departments equip him for the battle and prepare him for the enjoyments of life. The raw material departments, Agri culture. Horticulture. Mining and For estry, show how man conserves the forces of nature to hi3 uses. The De partment of Manufactures will show what he has done with them; the Department of Machinery the tool3 he has used. The Department of Transportation will show how he overcomes distances and secures access to aU parts of the world. The Department of Electricity will Indicate the great forces he has discovered and utilized to convey power and intelligence. And so through the several departments to Anthropology, in which man studies man; and to Social Economy, which will illustrate the development of the human race, how it has overcome the difficulties of civilization and solved problems in which society is Involved. Last Is placed physical culture, in which man, his intelligence having reached the supreme point, is able to treat himself as an animal, realizing that his Intellectual and moral constitutions require a sound physical body to prompt thtfin to the proper performance of their function. Education Is th keynote of the Universal Exposition of 1904. Each department of he world's labor and development Will be represented at St Louis, classified and Installed in such manner that all .engaged or interested In such brunch of activity may come and see, examine, study and go away advised. Each of the separate sections of the Exposition will be an equivalent cf-or, rather, will be in actuality a comprehensive and most effective object lecson in the line cf Industrial az-i eodai achievement and progress hlch Its presents.
ARTS PALACE, WORLD'S FAIR.
COWS TRAINED FOR THE TEST Jerseys at the World's Fair Are Expected to Show That They Are Superior to All Other Breeds. The herd of Jersey cows assembled at the World's Fair at St Louis to represent the Jersey breed in the universal dairy test has been Inspected and has been pronounced In perfect conditio and ready to start upon their six. months' grind on a day's notice. W. It. Spann of the Burr Oak Jersey farm, Dallas, Tex., was the inspector, and he was thorough In his work. He passed a week on the Expositioo grounds, and much of the time was spent in and around the Jersey catt! barn, and the condition of each int vldual of the herd of forty cows was definitely ascertained. Never was more intelligent and careful treatment lavished on animals. Noathlete was ever better trained for a contest requiring the development of speed, skill and endurance than has been this herd of Jerseys. When it is known that this herd is to compete with selected herds of Holsteins, Shorthorns. Brown Swiss and Devons, and. the herd making the best score for the production of butter, milk and cheeseis to establish the standing of the various breeds, the importance of the cows being in perfect condition may be understood. For a solid yeah the Jerseys havebeen In constant training. Twentyfive cows will participate in the contest Cows were selected from the best herds in the United States. Dr. J. J. Hicbardson. president ot the American Jersey Cattle Club, un der whose auspices this entry Is made, toured Europe and visited the famed. Isle of Jersey, where the breed originated. He was Reeking the best cow but returned satisfied that liuro.could show no cows that were betti than those bred in America. Though only twenty-five cows will participate in the test, forty cows were selected. They were assembled at Jerseyville, III., a year ago. This IS near St Louis, and the cattle have v' come acclimated. Last December . . were removed to St Louis. The cv are the property of Individual meml of the club and are loaned for the r of the test C. T. Graves, a brei! , at Maitland. Mo., was selected.as t: superlntr'ent to have chaige of the cattle, aud he has been highly complimented by Dr. Rlchanlso and lit epector Spann for the wonderfully ft, condition In which he has placed Hz herd. v A series of model dairy barns have been built for the breeds competing lit the test The barns are octagonal In form, and are so arranged that the cows are in the center and a wide promenade permits visitors to pass around and view the cows as the 6tand in their stalls. The. milking and feeding are to be done In plain view of the public, and representatives of the various herd? will at -all times have access to all tht barns to see that no 6harp practice are Indulged in. The test not only consists In showing the amount of butter, milk 'fcnt cheese produced, but the cost of production is taken Into consideration Every ounce of food given each cow is weighed and carefully recorded. When the cows are milked, the milk Is conveyed to a model creamery in the Agricultural buUdlng, where It la tested and made into butter and cheese and where all records are carefully kept The Jersey cattle participated in a similar test at Chicago during the Co lumbian Exposition and carried off first honors. Superintendent Graves la sanguine over the result of the present test He says that the Jerseys have always demonstrated their superiority over all other breeds when placed in competition, and this time they will show to better advantage than ever. Not only Is the Jersey milk richer in butter fat than the milk of any other breed, says Mr. Graves, but It can be produced at a less cost The Jersey cows are the smallest of the standard breeds, and he asserts that they consume less feed. They assimilate their food, and it is converted Into milk and butter and is not nsed In building up and sustaining a large carcass. We are going to make all other breeds take to the woods after this test," said Mr. Graves. 1 44 A few daja ago I was testing some of our Jersey milk, and my hands were all sticky and greasy from the enormous amount of butter fat the milk contained. Mr. Von Heyne, who Is in charge of the Holsteins, sent over a quantity of his milk for me to test Of course, from a commercial standpoint., there was no comparison between the milk, but It was a pleasure to test his milk, for when I got through there was no grease on my hands. After this I will have a bucket of Holstein milk around handy to wash my hands in after testing our own rich Jersey mUk." The test begins May 16 and continues 120 days. N Tell your ceihoors about the Ood qualities of Tnn Tkibtjne.
