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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH Farm Drainage Is a Timely Subject The GRAPHIC BIBLE By LEWIS BROWNE $ McClure WNU Serrics. Nmpsper Sradtcsia. Btkuuf Amu fgt ?i dlrswd 1 tirr-r- . J By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter ' a vvj. a - E'VE got a yarn here today from A. Edwin Fatsclier of Port Richmond, N. Y., who now works in the oil refinery business. Ed says he likes the oil business because it's so nice and safe. Outside of being blown up. or burned up. you don't have anything to worry about So he' glad he quit his Job a a refrigeration engineer, where you never knew what was liable to happen to you. Ed says refrigeration engineering wouldn't be so bad if it weren't for the ammonia they use in a lot of those big commercial refrigerating plants. You know, as a rule we think of ammonia as a stimulant I've seen many a guy brought out of a dead faint by just a whilT of it under hi3 schnozzle. But if you get enough of it it'll work just the other way as Ed can doggone well tell you. Ammonia Gas Knocks Ed's Boss Cold. It was in 1923 that Ed got his biggest dose of the stuff. He was new at the business then, and detailed to work as a helper to various of the experienced engineers on the staff. One day they got a call to go to Newark, N. J., to (lx a machine that was not working properly, and on the way over, Gaynor, Ed's boss said: "I hope I don't have to take another lungful of ammonia gas today. My chest still hurts from the last dose I got I couldn't stand another one. But whether he could stand it or not, Gaynor was slated to eat one heck of a lot of ammonia before the day was over. They arrived on the Job a plant in the cellar of a produce company and found that theyd have to take the head off the compressor. Gaynor set Ed to draining off the ammonia, running it into a pail of water to kill the fumes, and dumping the water outside. Ed had emptied two buckets of the stuff and was going back for his third, when he was greeted with a gust of ammonia that almost knocked him over. Something had gone wrong down there in the cellar where Gaynor was working on the pump! Apprentice Improvises Gas Mask to Effect Rescue. Ed leaped back into the fresh air and wiped his eyes. His first thought was of Gaynor, down there in the cellar. Already weakened by Ed Gripped the Unconscious Man by the Coat Collar. previous doses of the stud that day, Gaynor wouldnt have a chance in that hell of biting, searing gas! I knew, says Ed, that he must have been knocked unconscious. Otherwise, he would have been out in the air long before this. I knew, too, that if I were going to get him out alive I'd have to act quickly. A man can't live more than a iew minutes in fumes that are ns concentrated as these were. I grr.bbed a rag that was lying on the ground, saturate it with water and tied it around my nose and moj,h. Yanking my cap down low to protect my eyes a little, 1 hurried down into the cellar where the r achine was. basement almost The first step Ed took down into that knocked him off his feet again. In spite of the cap brim, fumes got into his eyes and blinded him completely. In spite of the rag around his mouth, the deadly, biting gas burned and scorched his lungs. Foot by foot he crawled through that cellar, but at every step he felt he couldn't go an inch farther. gas-fille- water-soake- d Gaynors Peril Is a Challenge to Eds Courage. I finally loFumbling, groping, he searched for Gaynors body. cated him, he says, but by that time I was just about done for and had to rush back t the open air to keep myself from passing out. My head was bursting, eyes streaming tears, and my nose burned as if it were full of lighted piiosphorus. Before I left, I had managed to pull him a few feet nearer the door, but that had taken all my strength. By that time, the fumes had penetrated the store above, and the owner came rushing out into the yard. Ed told I.im to rush over to the fire house for t. gas mask, but he knew that Gaynor would be 'ead long before hat mask arrived. There was nothing to do but face the fumes agair and face the fumes he did. A second time Ed went down into the cellar and groped his way I kept my nose close to .he floor, he to the spot where Gaynor lay. says, and crept toward the place where I had left him. It seemeu as though I would never get there, but finally I found him and got a grip on hs collar. ry Ed Has Another Job Now and Likes It, Thank You. After that it was a battle a grim battle to determine whether Ed got Gaynor out alive, or fainted himself, and lay down to die beside him. Foot by foot he dragged Gaynor toward the door. When he got to the bottom of the stairs, he was leady to give up. But he couldn't give up then. Gaynor's life depended on him. At last he was out of the cellar, into the fresh air above. He grabbed a pail of water and threw it on him, then bathed his own face with water from the hydrant. 1 still had a job on my hands, says Ed, for Gaynor was full of ammonia. I started to work on him, but soon after the fire department arrived and took over. They fought for his life a long tim . Finally they brought him around but not to work. I took him to his hotel and he didnt see an ammonia compressor for five days. So now Eds working for an oil refinery, where the wors. that can happen is an explosion or a fire. WNU Service. Strongest Indian Confederation There are nearly 2,000 mountains in the Adirondack, some of them towering more than a mile in height, and the Iroquois, who possessed them, built up in their vigorous and bracing climate the strongest Indian confederation in Its power extended far history. down the East coast to the Caro-linathe group covering an area of nearly four million square acres. s, Appropriate School Sign Of all the building signs in existence that indicate by symbols the kind of goods sold or the sort of service rendered by the establishment, writes Edward J. McGowan in Colliers Weekly, the one that would probably take the prize for simple originality is nailed on the front ol a schoolhouse in Punaauia, Tahiti. It reads: 2x2-4- . Character in Pencil Points Here are some hints on judging character from pencil points, given by a writer in Pearsons Weekly: The person who gives a pencil a sharp, stumpy point is inclined to be mean. The business man gives his a long and carefully even point. The generous person makes a long, narrow, uneven point which breaks very easily. The man with artistic tastes cuts a long, irregular and finely sharpened point South America Near to Europe The South American continent extends 2,600 miles farther east than New York. Its southern part, Atlantic side, lies practically as near to Europe as it does to the United States. A line drawn straight down from New York would pass through the Pacifio ocean. iC 1 MI f "l IE IL Gi Q Foreign Words IL AMNIO) and Phrases Froperly Maintained System Is Especially Needed, Says an Expert. fty H D. Pritt, Kiinnon Yeriiiv of Illinois WNU ftsrWcs. Uni- - , ft t.MJ Jesus Preaches in Central Galilee Jesus had flnUhed on WHEN Mount,the heSermon returned with his disciples to Capernaum, u here he healed the slave of a friendly Ilonmn officer. lie remulned, however, only one day In Capernaum, for he saw that he could best spread Ills teaching by going out and preaching through the countryside. Although with Ills followers he went Into Central Galilee preaching and performing miracles along the way. At the village of Naln, Jesus raised a widow's son from the dead. Perhaps at this time and place he received certuln messengers from John the Baptist, who was anxious to learn whether Jesus was Indeed Messiah. the Another memorable Incident on this Journey was the meeting with the scarlet woman. Jesus had been Invited to eat In the house of a Tlinrlsee named Simon, and there lie was approached by a strange woman who anointed him with a costly unguent and washed Ids feet and dried them with her flowing locks. Now this woman was obviously a sinner, and the host, who was a very strict man, marveled that Jesus would permit such u creature to approach him. But Jesus explained Ills conduct with the simple parable of the Two Debtors, declaring with noble kindliness, Her sins, which are many, are forgiven ; for she loved much : but to whom little Is forgiven, the same loveth little. The woman about whom this was said Is often taken to be Mary of Magdala, but only because a character by that name Is mentioned as one of the followers of Jesus from here on. There were several other women In the little company of believers who followed Jesns. He went through the hilly countryside preaching that the Kingdom of God was at hand, and that It was the duty of all to repent. And hundreds came to hearken to him, and to witness the miracles which he performed. But while the multitude followed after Jesus, the pious and respectable folk of the upper class grew Increasingly hostile. They began to declare that Jesus performed his miracles with the aid of Satan, not of God, and they began to plot evil against him. Jesus, who was back In Capernaum now, left the city and went down to the shore of the lake to And so tremendous was preach. the crowd that came out to hear him that he had to go out In a fishing vessel and preach while floating there at the waters edge. That same evening Jesus and his disciples rowed across the lake to the eastern shore, stilling a tempest on the way. They landed near a village called Gerasa, and there Jesus performed the miracle of healing a madman, sending his many evil spirits Into a herd of swine. This miracle, while It helped the madman. Incensed the people who owned the swine, and they as much as ordered Jesus to leave the country. So Jesus returned to the western side of the lake. For a second time he went to his own village of Nazareth, and now, having achieved a reputation, he was not so abruptly rejected as on the previous visit. Nevertheless, he could not win followers In Nazareth, for the people could not forget his lowly origin. On the morrow, therefore, he departed and went to the other villages of Central Galilee. He sent his disciples off by themselves, giving them orders to spread the gospel. Two by two he sent them out, commanding them, however, not to preach In the villages Inhabited by the heathens or the Jesus may have felt Samaritans. that at this time the good tidings of the coming of the Kingdom of Heaven were to be told only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. d Jesus and the Multitude wandering along through Galilee for some time, Jesus returned to Join his disciples In Capernaum. There the sad news was brought to him that John the Baptist had been put to death by AFTER Herod Antipus. Jesus was greatly agitated and at once decided to seek retirement In the village of to the northeast of the Sea of Galilee. But no sooner hud he reached this place than he found a great multitude awaiting him, and once more he had to preach and perform miracles. With five barley loaves and two small fishes he fed a multitude of five thousand. Whereupon the people were so Impressed that they wished to take Jesus by force and make him their king. EviThe Incident Is significant dently most of those to whom Jesus ministered could not begin to understand what manner of person he was. They Imuglned him to be one who would lead them In a great war against Rome. But what Jesus desired to preach was not war against Rome but peace with God, hnd therefore he hastily withdrew from the excited mob. He ordered Ills disciples to take ship and cross the lake again, he himself walking on Hie water that very night. They landed at the Blaln of just south of Capernaum, and there Jesus performed more miracles. Thence they returned to Caiiernaum, where Jesus completed his Galilean ministry by preaching In the synagogue the famous discourse on the "bread of life" which is to be found in John 6:2o-57- . But that discourse offended many of Jesus own followers, and only ttie 12 disciples retained their faith In him. So together with them Jesus fled toward Phoenicia, which was heathen territory. But even here people continued to seek him out because of his miraculous powers, and finally he was compelled to cross Galilee once more and seek seclusion in the Deeapolis, which was also inhabited by Gentiles. But here again the people came to him for healing. After a while, therefore, he sailed back across the Sea of Galilee to the city of and thence almost at once to the village of From here he pushed northward to the city of Caesarea Philippi, where he remained several days. It was during this stay that Peter openly declared to Jesus Thou art the Christ, the son of the living God. And thereupon Jesus foretold how he would have to go up to Jerusalem, suffer death, and after three days rise again. The little company then returned to Capernaum and after dwelling there quietly for some time, they turned their faces southward and went up to Jerusalem. Jesus did not follow the usual caravan route which went to Jerusalem by way of the Jordan valley. Instead he took the shorter but far more difficult route across the mountains of Samaria. His followers were few, chief among them the 12 disciples. It might be well to name them here: (1) Simon, who was also called Cephas ("stone) or Peter (rock"), a former disciple of John the Baptist, and a native of who from first to last seems to have been the most important of the disciples; (2) Andrew, his brother; (3) Philip, a fellowtownsman of Simon and Andrew; (4) James the son of Zebedee; (5) his brother, John, "the disciple whom Jesus loved"; (G) Bartholomew (that Is, the son of Tolmal), who Is usually Identified with Nathanael from Cana; (7) Matthew or Levi ; (8) Thomas or Didymus ("a twin) ; (9) James, the son of usually referred to as "the Less to distinguish him from thfc son of Zebedee; (10) Judas Thtid-deua brother or perhaps a son of James the Less; (11)' Simon so named probably because he belonged to the Zealots, the militant rebels against Rome, before he joined Jesus; (12) Judas Iscariot a man of (that Is, Kerioth," which was a little village In Judea). With these disciples and a handful of other followers, probably most of them women, Jesus made his way to the village of Bethany, near Jerusalem, where he found shelter In the house of Lazarus and his sisters, Martha and Mary. Thence he made his excursion to the Temple, but aroused so much opposition by his preaching there that he was compelled to flee at a across the once to Iieth-Sald- a Beth-Said- Beth-Said- Bar-Tolm- Zel-ote- s, Beth-Abar- Q Apres nou le deluge. (F.) After us the deluge (attributed to Madame de Pompadour, in reference to aigni of an approaching revolution). Bordereaux. (F.) A marginal note; a memorandum. (F.) A masterpiece. De nihilo nihil fit. (L.) Nothing comes from nothing. F.n deshabille. (F.) In undress. In hoc signo vinces. (L.) By this sign thou wilt conquer, (Motto of Constantine.) Wie Gewonnen, so terronnen. (Ger.) As won, so flown; "light come, light go." Ippissima verba (L.) The very words. Chef-d'oeuvr- Illinois farmers have an investment in public drainage systems and private drainage improvements estimated at $150,000.-00this investment in recent years has been taken for granted by the average farmer, and the maintenance of drainago Improvements has been neglected. Proper maintenance of drainage systems is especialy urgent now if farmers are to make the most of the soil improvement practices advocated under the new soil conservation program. In the new program legumes occupy an Important place, and these crops must FUhrrmfB ot Helgoland. have a well drained soil. Applicah Viitl n! OertrtwpMe 0vclsty( row of boarding houses and hotels, Prepared tion of limestone is another pracW &. I tvrvic tice recommended in the new plan. TELGOLAND is falling offering to resorters the first sniff of salt breeze before It readies naTo be of maximum benefit in makI down I may be sung tives on back streets. Through the ing a good stand of legumes possisadly to the tune of town runs Kartoffalallee, or Potato ble, limestone applications must "London Bridge" if there be preceded by good drainage. is truth in reports that Germany is Lane, bisecting the island through Individual (jrmers can improve fortifying tins pinhead stronghold garden patches of potatoes and cabbage, through pasture spots where and aid in maintaining their (arm in the North Sea. Firing great guns a few sheep and goats, past drainage systems by careful inmenaces the island more than any graze the red and white cone of the lightspection and correction of any de- enemy, for at every big shot secfects that may be present Most tions of its vertical sandstone sides house, to the little cafe on the northern point where the "Fog Cow damage to crops from lack of plunk into the surrounding sea. bellows warning every two minutes drainage will be avoided if the outof block Like rasptriangular when the mists swirl low. let channel into which the draina vast on platberry ice The lower town, lacking horses age system discharges is open, is ter, Helgoland is melting away into and vehicles of any sort, is not large enough and has sufficient fall the North sea. The island is literwithout its own method of rapid to carry away flood water and surally crumbling away around its popnamely, sliding down face water. ulation of 2,500 mainly pilots, transit banisters. Men of Helgoland have An inspection of the tile drain or fisherfolk, been known to scorn the elevator outlet will reveal any damage Here the Helgolanders try to between the chfftop and by freezing and thawing, erosion, hold together their island, their operating "down-town- '' y level of the silting and stoppage by any cause. flourishing summer resort business, the mount the iron town; they Surface inlets and catch basins aland their traditions on a small bare so require periodic inspection. It rock upon which would fit the Fed- hand railing of the stairway along the cliff's face and nonchalantly is recommended that each farmer eral Triangle buildings along Penn- skid down to the foot of the preclearn the location of his tile drains, avenue in Washington, sylvania ipice. Here in the shelter ot the as he is then better able to check without too much margin. cliff, houses and shops cluster about (or sink holes and wet spots. morsel is the reThis concrete Greater productivity from high- motest of the Frisian islands, which a knot of streets. ly fertile lands that previously were water has out from the gouged Sun tan is the money crop of thought to be worthless has proved northern coastline ot Europe, and, This is raised chiefly at the effectiveness of the drainage Helgoland. scrubbed historic within times, systems. Maintaining the dram-ag- e down until reduced in size, or in the expense of summer visitors ot systems will aid in maintain- some cases washed away altogether.' basking on the frail barren beach of the Dune or Sand ing the productivity that has been Broad submarine rocky ledges in into the obtained by drainage. the shoal area around Helgoland Island, apparently melting North sea a mile southeast of the are submerged souvenirs of its fora mer extent, estimated to be five main rock. Hereforhas been located Strip Crops Hold Soil bodies nameless tiny graveyard is which Us present size, When Wind Whips Field times washed up by the waves. Amof a square mile. about Strip cropping, one of the best The island lost ground to the extent putated by a seaquake in 1720, the Dune was previously joined to its and most economical methods of of about 250 square yards a year rocky home base by the tall White checking erosion by water, also is until 1892. Then the wave-wornow visivaluable in checking wind erosion. western side was around Cliff of fine quality chalk, ringed ble as a reef at low tide. Chalk Whether planted on contour lines with a of girdle granite brought or at right angles to prevailing from the Danish island of Born- export, which occasionally attracted to Helwinds, strips of sweet clover, alfalholm. Even thus protected, it is as many as a hundred ships one at harbor time, grew goland's fa, sorghum, sudan grass, or sundoomed within eight centuries, say so great that it killed the chalk that not only stop soil that the flowers pessimists. More generous geolstarts to blow, but also break the ogists give it about forty to go, but laid the golden egg; the White Cliff caved in during a storm and tumwind as it sweeps across the field. go they all agree it will. bled into the sea. It is small soil particles carried by reof what After erosion, ages a high wind that produce the scourIts People Are Frisians A of mains Helgoland? ing effect known as wind erosion. Inhabited by Frisians, a rugged of sandstone red wedge Strip cropping stops drifting soil in streaked with layers of chalk, swept race whom the Romans were proud the same way as fences and weed by chill salt winds and incessantly to call allies, Helgoland remained clumps. of Europes great the North sea. Its di- independent Another advantage of strip crop- gnawed by kingdoms for centuries, resisting innotable for are mensions their is be shifted that may strips ping the height; the vasions even of Christianity. In fact, from year to year. The top growth smallness, except sides rise sheer and dripping from its lasting consecration to old Norse and roots are plowed under and the water to a flat top of 200 feet gods, especially Forseti, god of jusadd humus to the soil. This is one sea level. Its importance lies tice, may mean that its name above of the best preventives of "blowof as Germanys "Eye developed from Hciligeland, in its position; Soil with a good content of ing. Holy Land. Natives, however, call over of the the watches it Empire", organic matter is much less likely their island simply det Lunn, The to blow than soil cultivated year equidistant mouths of the Weser, Land. Although German is the offiand Eider rivers, comafter year until most of the humus Jade, Elbe, manding the harbors of Hamburg, cial language, they speak a dialect disappears. Bremen, and Cuxhaven from a van- of Frisian, which resembles ancient tage point 28 miles from the nearHolding Expenses Down est point of mainland. During the Middle Ages it was The good farmer knows how to theoretically controlled from the Shattered by the World War do the various farm operations duchy of Schleswig, the duke even Yet Helgoland, with history pracwith the least expenditure of time, pawning it to a Hamburg merchant, rein its hands, had been tically but actually it was the irrepressienergy, and money, but with effective results. He has a knack, ported by astute observers as re- ble stronghold of those medieluctant to make and more val maritime racketeers developed in youth or acquired in concerned about history pirates, making a living. brigands, and beachcombers. The later life, of doing things well. Its the World experience during He strives for perfection in every Danes once by war that history is easy to threatening to got possession operation, for he knows that failure makeproved hang all the men, to but survive. scant hard Its to do one operation properly will whom they had kidnaped while out pasture land was confiscated to fishing, so that the women overresult in trouble In other operabuild forts. Its rocky cliffs, of which threw the small Schleswig tions later. If the ground isnt garrison broken well before the crop is there was already precious little, and proclaimed Danish allegiance. off and plunged seaward crumbled Thereafter, when improved water planted, cultivation will be difficult during artillery fire. The entire popand harvest small. The good farmtransportation gave it greater conwas ulation forced into four years venience, it has been constantly in er has good habits of work. of exile to make room for the milidemand and in use as a stepping Hoards Dairyman. tary in 1914. When the living rem- stone for larger countries. nants returned in 1918, their peace It was a valuable smuggling headwas shattered by three years of Agricultural Notes More salt is needed by work blasting down fortifications in ac- quarters during the blockades of the cordance with the Versailles treaty Napoleonic wars. Then England horses in summer. sent seven ships to capture it, in and the further trimming down of September, 1807, like "plucking an 1922 the slim islands In sides. heifers suffer and their Dairy usually over a neighbors first serious setback during the first in desperation, Helgoland petitioned apple hanging the League of Nations for neutral- wall"; Denmark finally relinquished summer on pasture. claims to it after seven years. ity. Scheduled for a perpetual bout Helgoland was traded in 18D0 to In certain sections of the United with the sea, it finds any other Germany for Zanzibar, 3,000 times States, Angora goats are used to countrys fight just one too many. as large, and the exchange was r clear brush from land. Green, Red and White compared to an entire suit of Within its diminishing boundaries, clothes swapped for a trouser butBroccoli, known in Italy for more it has three parts: the massive rock ton. But the trouser button demonthan a hundred years, was not of Oberland with its cornered table strated that it could serve a purpose known in the United States widely of town, the shoreline shelf of vital importance when it became tuft 1918. until projecting below like caps visor one of the worlds strongest forta edition of town called resses during the World war. Not It has been estimated that 300,000 with second box cars of weed seeds in a year Unterland, and the wisp of sandy far away, on a misty morning in Dune in tow a mile to the east A August, 1914, occurred the first are eaten by all birds thin green belt of pasturage across serious naval clash of the war, in the United States. the islands top completes the when British victory littered the color triad which inspired the flag; glassy smooth sea with wreckage. Although celery can be grown on any good loamy soil, the best "Green the land, red the rock, Helgolanders acquired the habit the white sand; of soil is a good type of well drained considering themselves fishermen These colors make the flag of at the start of the Fifteenth century, muck or peat when a strange migration of herHelgoland. Like a toy village on the comer ring brought them great harvests Early pigs make cheap gains on of fish for 200 years. An equally good alfalfa pasture and a full feed of a table, at Oberlands southeast of corn. If tankage is added the point huddle blocklike houses, strange emigration of their source of income left them catching only a cost of gain is usually about the square and solid against the recurrent same, but the pigs gain faster. gales. The flat skyline few lobsters. Since the islands popularity as a g is broken by nothing more than the pretentious little summer resort began in 1828 with Probably no subject has taken more space in the bee journals or German postoffice of glazed brick only a hundred resorters, the Helgocaused more study and discussion and the spire added during Queen landers derive their years income among beekeepers than the sub- Victorias reign to the Church of from renting themselves out as St Nicholas, already centuries old. pilots and their homes as boarding ject of swarm controL Around the cliff's edge stands a houses for the season of two weeks. Although A'Y Steps of Despair'- tmf 1HI 1 Week's Supply of Postum Fre Bead the offer made by the Iostum Company In another part of this paper. They 111 send s full week's supply of health giving Postum free te anyone who writes for It Adv. Storm, Then Rainbow There can be no rainbow without at cloud and a storm. J. H. Vincent. KEW PRESSURE LAMP EYESIGHT PROTECTS blue-gree- n boarding-house-keeper- two-ator- n half-moo- n one-fift- h n Providci 300 Candlcpower "Live Natural Brilliance For Only lea Night A new mantle lamp that protects your aight with 300 c&ndlepower light la bringlive, ing to thousands ot homes, especially In rural communities. This lamp eye-heal- gives times vision for sir pressure. Special w.c. column teats laboratory prove its brilliance Is nearest like natural daylight . . . kind to eyes! W. C. Coleman, pioneer Inventor of has appliances, spent 36 years perfecting this lamp. It makes Its own gas . . . burns kerosene or gasoline. It operates for only lo a night! It Is clean, safe, and Is an ornament in any home. Eyestrain Is caused by poor and Insufficient light, and often results In serious damage to the eyes. Now, nobody need take chances with their precious sight This new Coleman Lamp is so Inexpensive that no one can afford to he without It It provides plenty ot light for every home need tor reading, sewing. Studying, playing. Headers of this paper can get fall details of this remarkable lamp, including illustrations of the many beautiful models, by simply sending a postcard to W. C. Coleman, , 'Wichita, Kansas. Dept WU-17- ... New Wonders No age has yet been able to foresee the age to come. 4$ AWARDS AT ONE STATE Anglo-Saxo- cut-ove- 6 more light than any mantle lamp which has no pro- FAIR i ttia record af as exhibitor who has usd any brands bit whs sew sss CLABBER GIRL iKtashfily. LAKES NEWEST HOSTELRY SALT Onr lobby is delightfully air cooled during the summer months seed-eatin- g wind-catchin- HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 Hotel Temple Square hu highly desirable, friendly atm You will always find It immao ulste, supremely comfortable, and thoroughly sgreeable.You can there fore understand why this hotel 1st HIGHLY RECOMMENDED You ean also appreciate why t It's 9 mark of distinction to stop 0 The at this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. BRDSKaMBBHBHBaB |