OCR Text |
Show WHALES DEFEND THEIR YOUNG. TENT TREATMENT FOR TUBERCULOUS INSANE Dying In ths Shell. I suppose that everyone has had trouble with chicks dying In the shell. In some years the trouble Is greater than In other years. I have been told that where by one poultry-raise- r chicks die In the shell the fowls had been fed too much lime and the shells were therefore too strong for the chicks to break. On the other hand I have been told that It was due to lack of moisture in the air; that the chicks In developing In the shell had so little moisture that they could not expand themselves and break the shell or had not the vitality necessary to do so. I do not know that 1 can tell why the chick dies In the shell, but I cant help doing some guessing. One of theso guesses Is that the chick In the shell Is a weakling and It may be that a weakling would have less ehaneo to break out of a thick shell than a thin one. To that extent the shell that has a lot of lime In Its make up would he an obstacle to the breaking out of the rhlek. Hut In that case would it not be a benefit anyway to have the chirk die In the shell? If It succeeded In breaking out It would perhaps become a poor breeder, producing chicks that would he of little use In the world because of too small vitality? So i think It Ir Just as well to let the weak chirks die in the shell. Thnt la a theory that I hold, hut do not hold very strongly, bemuse who shall know the ways of life? Another theory I have Is that the fowl that produced the egg was not properly fed or the male at the head of the flock was not sufficiently well fed to he vigorous. This would mean a lessened vitality of the germ In the egg or of the substance of the egg Itself, which substance comes front the mother. I um Inclined to think that this matter of feed Is at the bottom of the matter, and that when we know more about feeding poultry we will know more aliout why chicks die In tho shell and how to prevent that. I am the more Inrllned toward this theory beruuse In some experiments In the feeding of a partial meat ration to fowls It was found thnt the fowls that bail meat were so vigorous that none of them died, while other flocks under the same conditions except that they were fed no meat suffered the usual losses of developing flocks. Estello Harper, Carroll Co., 111., In Farmers Review. Chinese Incubation Methods. The Chinese have been practicing Incubation for centuries and do not have patent Incubators either. They use the methods, which It Is old-styl- e M5CEHMNZ Beef Calves from Poor Cow. I am not engaged in the production of beef myself, but I have neighbors that are and their work furnishes me with an object lesson and a text. Some of my neighbors have good Shorthorn cows and feed them well, while some other neighbors have and make equally as good Shortho-n- s them rustle for a living. They perhaps do not see the difference In their herds as much as does an onlooker that has nothing particular at stake. One man that I know of has always followed the practice of making his cows get along on grass In summer and hay In winter, putting onto corn only the cattle he Is fitting for the market. In the main he tries to sell his calves before they are three months old, for he has come to the conclusion that for some reason hr Is not able to make money out ol them. The other man feeds his cattle In the j summer some gluten meal and other forms of mill feed, besides succulent food cut from Hie corn fields. As soon ns the pastures begin to get short In the fall he puts them on a partial grain feed, and this Is Increased In the winter when they are on hay principally. The result Is that bts cows nro always In good shape, and when the calves come they are not only vigorous but strong and have appetites that seem Insatiable. They make a rapid growth under almost any circumstances while the calves from the cows owned by the other man are thin and seem to have the tendency born in them to remain so. The buyers of calves always try to pick up the calves from the cows that have been well fed, and If they buy tho other calves at all it is ut a great discount. It may cost something to feed cows well, but I believe it pays in the end to do so. Henry Edison. Campbell Co., Ky. Latent Fertility. An average of the results of 49 analyses of the typical soils of the United States showed per acre for the first eight inches of surface 2,600 pounds of nitrogen, 4,800 pounds of phosphoric acid and 13,400 pounds of potash. The average yield of wheat In the United States is 14 biushels per acre. Such a crop will remove 29.7 pounds of nitrogen, 9.5 pounds of phosphoric add and 13.7 pounds of potash. Now If all of the potential nitrogen, phosphoric add and potash could he rendered available there Is present In such an average soil, In the first eight inches, enough nitrogen to last 90, enough phosphoric add for 600 and enough potash for 1,000 years. This Is what Is meant by potential soil fertility, and yet such a soil possessing this same high potential fertility may, under certain conditions, be so actually barren of results to the farmer as to lead him to believe It absolutely devoid of plant food. A soli at Rothamstead, England, which had beon successively cropped to grain for 60 years without the addition- of manure, and which consequently had become exhausted, especially In available phosphoric add, still contained a total of 2,880 pounds of tho latter per acre In the first foot of depth Hdaware Station. doubtful If an American could do much with. One of the common methods employed In China Is to take a pile of horse manure and allow It to heat for a few days, turning It over to regulate the heat. When the Is at about 100 degrees tho Chinese put In duck eggs or eggs of other fowls. Recently the Chinese In Hawaii have taken to raising ducks In this way. The climate Is admirably adapted to the work of Incubation, as the temperature seldom falls below 70 degrees and seldom rises above 75, Thla very uniform temperature makes It easy for them to regulate the heat of the manure In which the eggs are being Incubated. The eggs In the manure pile are A Theory of Egg Moisture. watched carefully and turned from A writer on poultry subjects in an day to day. When the allotted time exchange says that the egg gets rid for Incubation has gone by the little of Its moisture more by reason of the chicks or ducklings as the rase may pressure from within than by reason be are seen coming out of alt parts of the evaporation from its surface. of the manure pile. They are care- He says: 'As an evidence of this. Infully tended for some days and are fertile eggs do not lose much In size kept In a box or pen in which the or weight, while a fertile egg loses temperature is high enough to prevent one sixth In weight and one sixtieth In them from being chilled till they be- size." gin to get some feathers. This theory docs not appear very Bound. The fact seems to be that tho Capes. Infertile egg loses more moisture than Tho presence of gupe worms In the the fertile egg. One of the ways of windpipe of the (hick Is what causes testing eggs that have been incubated gapes, which In turn cause numerous for some time is to put them In water deaths among the broods of half and see If they will float. The inferThese worms are tile eggs float and the egga with grown chicks. round, small, and have a forked chirks In them sink to the bottom, appearance due to the permanent which is strong evidence that the InJoining of the male and female. Fre- fertile eggs have lost more moisture quently these worms collect In such than the fertile ones. numbers in the windpipes of the chicks that strangulation Is caused. Fiber In Feeds. Tho chicks succeed In coughing up There Is one Important point that some of the worms and theso are some feeders lose sight of and eaten by other chicks which In turn that la the value of fiber In feed of become affected. For this reason rows or in fuel of uny animals adaptchicks that appear to have the gapes ed to the consumption of fresh and should be separated from the others dried grasses. Fiber 1b coming to he or rather the others should he separ- recognized as a very important conated from them, as they may have stituent of the feed of cows. Where It already coughed up some of the has been Ignored, as In the great feedworms and thus Infected the ground. ing yards connected with distilleries, Whon gapes are present do not perthe results have nut been good. Just mit the chicks to cat angle worms, as how mm h fiber the cow must have in tho gape wurm Is a parasite of the her food to do her best Is not now angle worm. knowu, hut the more It is luustlgutcd the more does tt appear that the Tuberculosis of Fowls. c have heard much amount is quite large. We can easily This disease overdo the matter of feeding concenabqut, but It U one concerning which trates. we know very little. It has not yet been worked out, though It is reported Sheep and Run Down Farms. One good way to bring up abandonthat one ol tho professors connected with the University of California is ed farms Is to go into sheep raising, at present working on the problem, covering the land ns fully as possible hoping to determine its true character with sheep. The quality of the land and vbothcr It Is the same as the will ha Improved by the droppings human disease of the same name. from the animals and at the same Illrds affected with this disease cease time the weeds will ho kept down. Usto lay and lose flesh rapidly. It Is not ually bind that Is run down must reknown that anything can he done to ceive some treatment conuocted with cure fowls so affected, hut as soon as tho keeping of live slock, and there eymptoms appear tho sick birds should seems to he no kind of live stock that be disposed of. If more than oue has Is more easily put onto such land than been sick It is letter to remove the the sheep, as generally the owner of a flock from the yard they have been run down farm has small capital and cannot Invest heavily In stock and occupying and give a thorough cleau equipment for cattle or horse raising. Jog to the pens. e Hospital Has Superintendent Demonstrated Its Efficiency of Large Eastern A. E. Macdonald, L. I B., M. T, medical superintendent of the Manhattan State Hospital, East, gives a graphic account of tent life as tried under his direction for a large number of Insane consumptives. The following extracts are from his paper in the Directory of Institutions and Societies Tuberculosis in the dealing with United States and Canada: That consumptive Insane patients may he kept, and treated, to their advantage and incidentally to the ad, tn vantage of their canvas tents, and throughout the several seasons of the year, has been demonstrated In the recent history of the Manhattan State Hospital, East. The experiment upon the success of which this claim is advanced has covered a pt riod of forty months. In all hospitals for the Insane the inmates are according to the To take form of mental disturbance. from all these classes any suffering from tuberculosis and put them together In one tent was a serious problem. This, however, has been very successfully done. The original plan was to use the camp only about live months during each summer. The camp flrsi established consist od of two laree dormitory tents twenty bv forty feet - each containing twenty beds, with smaller tents of different shapes, about ten by ten feet, Tor the accommodation of the nurses the rare of the hospital stores, pantries and a dining tent for such patients as were able to leave their beds and tents, and go to the table for tlielr meals. Running water was secured by means of underground pipes, and the safe disposition of waste and sewatfo was also provided for. As has been said, It was expected to continue the camp only through the summer and as far into the autumn as favorable weather might render Justifiable. But when In the late autumn it was found that the favorable experience continued, It was decided to attempt to carry the experiment, on a moderate scale, Into, or even through, the approaching winter. The camp, as first established, had been placed upon an elevated knoll adjacent to the riverside and purposely exposed to the full force of the summer breezes. For the winter experiment Its alte was removed to the center of the Island, where trees and buildings to Interposed to act as a wind-breathe severe storms from the east and northeast which are to he expected in that locality. The number of patients wax reduced to twenty, those In whom the disease was most active being retained and the others being returned, for the time being, and much against their will, to the buildings. One large tent suffices for the housing at night of the reduced number of patients, and one was set apart as a sitting-roofor day use, with the accessory tents before mentioned, and large stoves were placed In them, here and there, with wire screens surrounding them to protect the patients, and a liberal use of asbestos and other fireproof material and arrangements for the prevention of fire. To make a long story short. It has remained In continuous use. not only the first winter, but throughout through the two succeeding winters and Intervening seasons, up to the date of the present writing The scope if Its employment has been gradually nlarged until all patients In whom there are active manifestations of tuberculosis an average of forty-threout of a total census of about are Isolated therein, and there 8,000 has been parallel enlargement of the elements of the plant. The Isolation of the tuberculosis patients has reduced to a minimum the Ganger of Infection of other patients and of employes. The patients themselves have suffered no Injury or hardship, hut have, on the contrary, been unmistakably benefited. This Is shown, among other ways, by a decrease in the death rate from pulmonary tuberculosis, both absolute and relative, and by a marked general Increase In bodily weight, amounting In tho case of ore patient to an actual doubling of the weight-fru- m eighty-threto one hundred and sixty six pounds In four-toomonths of camp residence. Mental Improvement has as a general rule been the concomitant of physl-jnl- , not only among the patients In tie tnbciculotds camp. Imt also in he others, and In the former class this ha he.-somewhat of nn anoma'v My experience, and 1 think that of other, has been that when phthH's xnrt Insanity coexist they nro apt to alternate as to the prominence of their several manifestations the mental Symptoms being more pronounced whilst the physical are !n abeyance, and vice versa. Under the tent treat meat wc have found a general disposition toward accord In the nmnlfis-tatlensImprovement In both respects proceeding concurrently, and some of tha discharges from the hospital which gave most satisfaction to us at the time, and most assurance for the patients future, were of Inmates of the tuberculosis camp. It was apprehended that not only might the patients themselves resent their transfer, hut that similar objection might come from their relatives and friends, since Innovation, even progressive ones, are apt to he frowned upon by those who constitute tho majority In the clientele of a public hospital In a cosmopolitan city. fellow-inmates- cbiM-lfle- e e n , Even at the outset, however, the protests, whether from patients or their fripnds, were surprisingly few, and latterly they have been more apt to arise, if at all, over the patient's return to the buildings when that became necessary. The question of medication may In the present writing be dismissed with a very brief reference. It has been found unnecessary to extend It greatly, and it has been limited mainly to the treatment of symptoms. Stimulation-alcoholic and the like has been found of hut little demand or use, and the quantities consumed always under individual medical prescription have been insignificant. On the other hand, the dietary has been made as liberal as the imposed restrictions of the Slate Hospital schedule have permitted, both iu the way of regular diet and extras, and in the leading essentials milk and eggs private donations have supplemented the regular supply. But dependence, after all, has been mainly placed upon the rigid ami disinfection, and upon the unlimited supply of fresh air. As an interesting incidental fact It may be mentioned that not only the patients, hut also the nurses living in the cusp have enjoyed almost complete ini in til y from other pulmonary s. Not a single ease of pneumonia lias developed in the camp in its existence of over three years, though it causes 131 deaths irt the hospital proper in that time. The "common colds so fieqmnt among their fellows living niton the wards, or in the Attendants' Home, have been unknown among the tent dwellers. The popular idea that the consump five is a doomed man unless he can at once abandon home and family and business and betake himself to some remote region would seem to lie negatived by our Wards island experience. The Ward's Island camp is but a few feet above the level, its site Is swept in winter by winds of high velocity, coming over the Icebound waters of the rivers and the sound which surround it, and It suffers as much as, or more than, any other part of the city of New York ftotn the frying changes of temperature and humidity which are so characteristic of its climate. If, In spite of all these drawbacks, what has been done can be done, and that for insane patients, what may not be hoped from the extension of the same methods to the ordinary consumptive of sound mind, anxious for recovery and capable of giving Intelligent assistance In the struggle? dis-ea- tide-wate- r SOME HEALTHFUL RECIPES. Soup Cream Hurley Entree Savorv I.entlls Vegctntiles Mashed Potatoes String Roans Lettuee with Nut Rutter Pressing Roasted Sweet Potatoes Rrcudx Salad Sandwiches Corn Puffs I, 40! t Bananas in Syrup 1 Cream Barley Soup. Wash a cup of pearl barley, drain, and simmer slowly In two quarts of water for four or five hours, adding boiling water from time to time as needed. When the barley Is tender, strain off the liquor, of which there should be about three pints; add to it a portion of the rooked barley grains, salt, and a cup of whipped cream, and serve. If preferred. the beaten yolk of an egg may be used Instead of cream. Savory Lentils Take equal parts of cooked brown lentils that have been rubbed through a colander to remove the skins, and bread crumbs. Moisten with a little cream, season with salt and a very little powdered sage, pour into a baking dish, and bake in a moderate oven until well browned. A meal prepared by rubbing chopped English walnut meats through a colander, added to the savory lentils In the proportion of one cup of nut meal to a pint of lentils. Just before putting Into the oven to blown, makes a very palatable dish. When tho i.ut meal Is used, water may he used to moisten the lentils. When done, slice and serve with the following: Cream Tomato Sauce Rub stowed or canned tomatoes through a colander to remove nil seeds and fragments. Heat to boiling and thlcktn with a little Hour. Add a half cip of very thin cream and one teaxpom-fill of salt to i nch pint of the liquid. Lettuce With Nut Butter Dressing. Prepare the lettuee as for Rub two slightly rounded tables; ooij! fuls of nut butti-smooth with of a cup of water. Let this treat, bod up for a moment. Remove from the stove, add teaspoon-ftt- l of salt and two tnhlespooufids of lemon Juice. Cool, and it Is ready fir use. If too thick. It may be thinned with a little lemon juice or water. More lemon Juice may he added If desired. Pour over the lettuce, and serve. two-third- s om-hal- f Th Spring Pageant. Mine tmtlenri- si 111; stMlt mi her joyful dpi imt - t ,u t.irtiuH ta-k- ti ful- - loiift, ' bird knows his 'I,,,!; Each flower Imx not In heart Its fair or fi.iui.oo given the Kni'h Inn) nn-- l PI,, i Mill piml.llv hi lug the Invo poller, re, HWr,'t,rf' 0n Long hnpeil-for tieasure are h T1,a,v;iii,,rw.r -- Kits Fuller Maitland. t "" -- LeviaStrong Affection Exist Among thans of the Sea. Whales like so many other anl mals are brave In defense of their little ones. A young whale was once disharpooned; Its mother, In great tress, came, and seizing hold of It, dived with It to a considerable depth; then she rose to the surface and darted this way and that, as If vainly seeking for some other means of escape Though closely followed by the boats she made no effort to get away herself; her sole thought was for her child. At last she was harpooned, hut even then she clung to her little one until, In the course of an hour, both were dead. Whales are affectionate companions. Two whales were one.' swimming together, and one of them was harpooned. The wounded animal, sshisted by her friend, made a terrible resistance, and sent a boat with five men in It to the bottom. At length the Injured one died of her wounds, when her companion, rather than survive her, stretched bis heat? over her dead body and allowed himself to be killed. "Llttlp Folks. Triumph of the Will, r The story is told of a who wrote a glowing eulogy of his employer Just deceased making ue His of this remarkable estimato: will indomitable and keen perception led him Into the grocery and feed business, and subsequently induced him to embark In the coal business. book-keepe- Secretsd His CohT t An English laborer arrest., I 4, charge of theft, which false, was found, on being .L6? M the police station, to and bronze coins In various'"4, 1 i his attire to the amount of W0.J weight of them was forty i POUfc' MILK CRUST ON BA8Y, Lost All His Hair Scratchy. Blood Ran Grateful Telia of HI. Cure by CuT cura for 75c. When our baby boy W1 months old he had the milk oub badly on bis head, so that aUTl came out, and It Itched so would scratch until the blood got a cake of Cuticura Soap and 7l of Cuticura H f rvfnvAn I appiij,, Cuticura and put a thin cap o, I before and had used hiL head, the box it was entirely cured, hitv commenced to grow out nicely and he has had no return of the k ble. (Signed) Mrs. H. p. r0iy Ashland, Or. Th On KenosI Jr Vi A I I We are for Veh a.ni I Sheep Has No Wool, ' The sheep that has no w ool from Barbados. How it got therell body knows, but It Is suppose have come from Africa originally tJSE TIIE FAMOUS Red Croxx Ball Blue. Large The Russ Company, South beu iu Sneezing Competition, sneezing competition bet half a dozen old women took pj, Thought She Couldn't Live. recently In a certain lncasv 5. Mr. BenjaMoravia, N. Y., June min Wilson, a highly respected resident (Eng.) town. The competitors use any means of br:t. cf this place, came very near losing at liberty to a sneeze, a Hu of the his wife and now that she Is cured and ing about restored to good health his gratitude snuff being actually provided for ti purpose. Everybody present m & knows no bounds. He says: went Into convulsin' contest unique wile has suffered everything My feats of the corner at the sneezing with Sugar Diabetes. She has been of the old dames keepfc sick four years. She doctored with ants, one until she f two good doctors but kept growing up the performance She was aarie worse. The doctors said sho could down exhausted. not live. She failed from 200 pounds the prize, consisting of a soverelg; down to 130 pounds. This was her and a silk handkerchief. weight when she began to use Dodds Question Still Open. Kidney Pills, and now she weighs 190, Francis Sir Jeune, the distinguish is well and feeling stronger every started a cycIctR jurist, English day. She used to have rheumatism so when he was hearing a divorce can bad that It would raise great bumps by remarking from the bench that was the peculiarity of women noth all over her body and this Is all gone too. be able to love two men at ones Dodd's Kidney Pills are a God send whereas, a man can love two nonet to those who suffer as my wife did. at the same time. For tills remarl They are all that saved her. We cant he brought upon himself a storm (j feminine criticism which lasted f praise them enough. some time. The question has new KNEW WAYS OF TURKEYS. been settled to everybodys satisfy A BOV CEO. Hon Texas Hunter Got His Sleep and Game as Well. Hows This? "Some years ago I was the guest of Vit offer One Hundred Dollar Reward for r i CMe of a friend who owned a ranch away CftMrrb atarrb Unit cuuit bo curud bfici Cur. F. J. CTIEXE Y CO..T ft down on the Nueces river. In the We, tbe vodendKoed. have kornra K. Jammt I south, west of San Antonio, said Mr. for tbe liut 16 veer. and believe biui perfect k I toil Id duIum tnoaurtb-H. J. Rice of New Orleaus. The re- Onxbie ftblo to carry out toy oblltfilm mode by hutrv Marvii, Kinnan gion abounded In game, and wild turJ Wholei DrugtfUu.TuNfeft keys were especially numerous. Never Bill's CiUnh Coro I taken luteroenj, muh bjxm tbe blood od mucous surfBcwtfite having bagged one of these birds, 1 dlreetiy system. Testimonial ent free, Frtoe 7ft wan pc was keen to go after them, and my bottle. Bold by Druggist. Take Hail Family 1111 for ooastipeUoil. host promised to take me. We started out on the hunt, and I could alGlrla Keeping Their Freedom. ready see a magnificent gobbler fallThe London girl, says a correspond ing to my fire. After walking several ent, seems In less hurry to marry thu miles my friends remarked that it was her provincial sisters, for the goo4 well to rest a while, and threw himreason that she has plenty of amtut self down under the shade of a ments, as often as not a club of he bush. This did not suit me at own, and as much freedom as Is all, for I was eager to go on, and I married friends. She certainly seem remonstrated with him about losing to marry later and naturally expeca valuable time. For answer he rolled much more tLan those who have lint over ou the grass and went to sleep more quietly. at which I was fired with anger and half a notion to go back to the bouse. Important to Mothers. It was well along In the afternoon beExamine carefully every bottle of CASTORU, fore he aroused from his nap, and a safe and aura remedy for Infant and cbtkiM, then, with au apologetic smile, ts and aee that It said: We won't have to wait long Bcsntke now, for this Is the place the turkeys Signature of come to roost, and all we will have to do Is to hide and shoot them down.' la Um For Over 30 Year. Tho Khtd You Have Alway BoughL It was Just as he said, and about sundown there came a superb drove cf Sheffield Heavy Coal Consumer. wild turkeys. Unconscious of danger, la proiKirtion to its size Sheffiril they came almost upon us before ws onjumes about eight time as inacb let drve at them, wth the result that four of the largest were stretched I do not believe Plxo'a Cure fur Oomuimptlot upon the ground. After that 1 never criticised the methods of a Texas ban un equul fur coughs and colit. Jos f Botzk, Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 13. 1W9. hunter." Wash In glon Post. His 8ymptomi. FEED YOU MONEY. A Ixmdon curate the other day rs Feed Your Brain, and It Will Feed reived an astonishing answer to u You Money and Fame. Inquiry after a parishioners health. Well, sir, aald the latter, lone Ever since boyhood I have been times I feels anyhow; soraetimei I especially fond of meats, and I am feels tlmrt convinced I ate too rapidly, and failed when Inohow; and there be as feels as a stiff himmldge! to masticate my food properly. "The result win that I found a few year ago. afflicted with ailments of the stomach and Kidneys, which interfered What is this newspa seriously with my bustnesn. for? At last I took t ho utlvirt of frtonds and began to eat Grape Nuts instead To tell what you want of tho heavy meats, eu-- that luj con. stltuted my former diet. know; here it is. I found that 1 was at once benefited our by tho change, that was soon relievreturue your noatjr If ymt 4Je1 Tkajtohtnintf ed from tho heart-burand tho that used tu follow mv s Wives of tho King of Aasam. that tho pains n my bark from my The King of Asxnm has 20 wlvea kidney affection had ceased, showing who aro divided Into nine gradet hat those organs had been and When one of them dies her body that my nerves, which usedhealed, to bo and my hialn. which wax slow Is lowered from the roof of the pal aen to be hurled; the law tn Assam and lethargic from a heavy diet of meats and greasy foods, had', tho carrying of a corps not In a prohibits through the doors, moment, hut gradually. nd one lhe lm surely been restored to normal efflUenry Now evry nerve is steady thl,,kln toultlw r s quicker andtntX tm.ro arms than for Won't every careful wo years past. 11 11 mes-qult- e TEA my-sel- f, , 1 lndl-cestio- n m.-al- TEA i 0,(1 nxBfler I'akfnsta I Buffer during u,o forenoon f om a feeling of weakness whlrh bln dored mo seriously m niJr orK b ilneo t have begun Nuts Grape food I ran work till dinner tlma with U ease and comfort Nmo Rlvcn INsttum Co.. Rattle ernnk, M, eh. Them a reason. llt'Hcl hi) littlo 4inb W.u,lll,- - in a I Tbjk t a nian buy Jj lb of nil four kinds Schillings I3cst and try them Teeryiwwr return ymirntnn? you Uft Ths Return Trip, . up to the skies piomtxe thnt alums In hsf W then and mnrrled, .. The moet happy of men 8hs bruusht down again wllh her pit lifted fj'e vilth M ! th tn We . ! |