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Show or bleu 1 bead of a piece of bees-waFOli YOUNG FOLKS. the THE HOME SENTINEL. relied into a bail and sharpen a inatib end into a beak, using bright cia-- s U.if p r k i im:l Mtnrm. i;;!.e r A 'JL hy two shorter om-- fur the j the tail'and Youthful Minds- f.i't J . T. JtkYllV 'lna:rr. wings. Cut a large cork in half 1 1, I . T. P. O. ! 57, in the rounded side, making a legs the are Made stand for comical bird, whnii mav I" flaw Rtiiread Tlmr-Tablhe JHfiVrene t Kfittfrn taek var.ed in many ways by the addition ot IIf.sut LAnm rm.uE p nial:y aul i'luck-i:i- fn Ek. feather.. as a perfect General Vi'nix-leof Pextase fctainp or tho World.degas-ba- g Jey Doubled. fi.OuO different Two little giri are luster than one. There are le Ixo s ran ihmlde Hie fun, Two inexistence. Tabuii of Colorado Sloscriptions of s, tage stamps '1 wo lillle lord- - can lonld a line lle-- t, The mu.stuiin of the Berlin posteffi t. 1 wo lillle arms , an love iiioUi r gan life untliT S cretary Iro'tor, workalone contains between 4. INK) and o.' ing for some time in his marble quarare from Two little pomes must go ill a span. specimens, of winch balf divided beries in Vermont. and the remainder Two little piu hets has my huh- - man. Europe Aus-- 1 and Two little ey i s to open and il-America tween Africa, Asia, Two little ear- - and one little no-Count von Mli ke is very ohl, deaf, tralia, Some of the stanij bear a coat ami other emblems impartially of arms lnd a martyr to a bad liver. Yet he Two little elbows dimpled and sweet, borrowed from the heavens above, the WO little shoes on two little feet. lurries himself easily and seems a '1Two earth beneath and the waters under the little lip- - and one liule chin. man. earth stars, eagles, lions, horses, ser- Two little chi' - with roses set ill. other pents, railway trains, dolphins and uiois-oveami Two little should strong. ehlibby One of the youngest men now in wild fowl. There are, "fearful the all littli: Two leg- running day long, the effigies of five emperors, eightWashington is Hannibal Hamlin, who Two In tie prayers dues my darling say, een kings, three queens, one grand duke, J wo tunes she kneels at my si le eaeh day Is not yet ninety years old by conseveral inferior titled rulers and many siderable. Ilis face has a riuldy hue, Two little hands oft fuldn! flown, 1resideiitS. o'er cheek- - so brow n, Two little e md he is having a high old time "with Two liltli angels guarding her bed, A feet Baek for tho Ilraroa. Ho wears an overcoat nowthe boys. One at tin' loot and one at the le a 1. American adays. Queen. The empress of Austria carries a lllira Our ISoy Jleet. (raveling basket fitted up so that she is I got acipi.'iintcd ery (piii'k able to make soup on the ears. It has With iedily Itrown, when lie Sfnved in the lion-- - a ro- the street, silver sauce-pan- s with gold handles, 'idle lieare-- t one, foil ee. arid the empress declares that she can I elitnbi d ami at upon a po-- t make in it better broth than any chef To look, and o did he ; can concoct. I stared ami tan d across at him tik s 11 es al-j- ut 111 I -- b-- H -. e. k- r- r. -- -, -- -- -- And he t.ired -- What purports to he the skull of Parnley, the husband who-- e violent death history charges upon Mary Queen of Scots, has been found in an liiigli.s'u museum. It indicates that Darn ley was a roars libertine and afflicted with a loathsome disease. I I po-e- d he w anted me to -- peak. I thought I'd try and -- ee to Ttihly brown ; said, Hell lie said, Hello ! to me. Prssto. 3 Hit Oi.ivi.u Wkmh ha, k at me, i.r. Hoi.mcs com- plains of the persecutions inllicted upon him by volunteer correspondents. letters in his Twenty or twenty-live morning's mail is considered a light delivery, and nearly all are upon subjects of interest to the writers alone. How Are Jlaile. governing the Time-Tabl- e time-tabl- running of trains cm unv reiul of considerable length, is one of the most important things in tlm management. The preparation of such a table is a very ingenious us well as critcal hit of work. The means employed a.e of the simplest The Ifov. Mr. Spurgeon reeeivos fifty letters a day and employs ttirea secretaries to answer them. They are from all parts of the world. The enormous revenues of his church are entirely devoted to philanthropise movements, as the ample income derived from his books and sermons is sufficient for his own needs. rent common pins and spools of colored breads, in connection with a lig sheet of drawing-pape- r mounted on an easel. This paper is called a tune chart. The chart is ruled either for two, five or tun minutes tune by horizontal lines and perpendicular cross lines. The "time is marked above the horizontal lines and t lie distances or stations and terminals down the lir.st perpendicular line. Eor illustration, Id midnight is the mark on the lirst horizontal line and e each hour is marked until the following midnight hour is reached on the last horizontal lino. Between the hour Enos the space is divided into minutes and graduated as line as desired. On a chart the space between the hours is divided into ten minutes time, and the ten minutes time into two minutes time. The hour lines are made heavy and the lesser time lines are of a lighter sluute to distinguish them. One terminus of the road is marked on the lirst line beside the lirst lime mark, 13 midnight. The other stations follow down the perpendicular line until the other terminal is reached. Then all is ready to prepare for the running arrangement, provided tho pins and thread are ready. A blue thread meansa passenger train, a red thread a freight train, and if the trams of other roads use part of the track they are designated by a diff erent colortd tvventy-forthorth- portrait of Mrs. of the while Hayes in the green-roohouse recently drew from Senator d Kvarts a clever criticism. "Tim i may do a good deal for the pictures, he said, "but there was a mistake made at lirst which can never be corrected. The artist painted the portrait in oils. Mrs. II ayes should ulwnys bo painted in watt two-minut- A KEWsfAfEit in Vienna called the Sehwargelb bus just been suppressed for publishing the follow ing paragraph: for "lrineo Rudolph was political reasons, and the prince of who on the litli of October, in a trip from llitavla to Singapore, jumped ovot board and perished, was net insane, victim of a political plot. A little saltpetre or carbonate of toil. i mixed with the wafer in which lowers are placed will keep them Yesli for two wee ks. The Novel Tints in millinery are English rose, magnolia, anemone , oak f jink, wisteria, and summer opal. Ute sky, leart, uimo colors appear in tirivv and jraid hats ns iu bonnets. but the thread. It is calculated that the running time shall ho say twenty-livnull s an hour, md, for the purpose of illustration, the The rumor that the poet Whittier in- tracing of one passenger train will the purpose of explaining them tended to take a trip to Europe is sot answer all. nt rest by the following note sent to a A passenger tram leaves the first stafriend: As thee i ightfully say s, It Is tion say utS a.m. A pin is placed on scarcely necessary for inn to stamp the the horizontal line at tne 8 a. in. time rumor of an intended visit to Kuropo mark and the end of the blue thread fastened thereto. us utterly without foundation. Tim If the train runs without for w I hen such a trip fifty miles the blue thread stopping time has long passe is stretched would havo been practicable or desir- over opposite the station at which the made, and directly under the 10 able. At iny ago one travels easier by stop istime-mura. in. another pin is stin k and proxy. the blue thread wrapped about it to keep The ba.aar in the old palaee at Ber-li- it Iftaut. of forty minutes this is a stop over which Irlneess Hismarck an- the blue thread is say stretched to the 10.40 nually presides, has just been held and a.m. mark on a clreet bins with the same the chancellor Iftis not disappointed tho station and another pin stuck and blue wrapped. ladies, who hoped licit ho would grace thread The train starts and its entire course . Tor a is thus timed and distributed tho occasion with bis pre-e- a along the whole hour ha remained every after- road. the lias w If railroad mauv noon bile tht' bn, ta was open, passenger and freight trains running daily, the everybody by nis gallantry time chart, when it is completed," looks and suavity. Next to lYinee iUsni like a great spiders web stretched with his tiny granddaughter, age li, was tho puis. Hut little work then remains to persona grata of the baiar, mi I a transfer the time and stations to the timeand the schedule is ready for the golden harvo-- t was pour'd into the lap table printer. of the graceful little Hewer girl. e k n, The new washing surahs that now tome in nil the delicate fine similes a ill he largely used for summer frocks, or ties, for draperies , chemisettes, md will beespecially valuable for hat md bonnet trimming. Dress shoes are slightly pointed at :lie toes and are cut down dep in Yont. They have plain pompadour heels. A narrow strap holds the hoe over the instep, this strap runs through an oblong buckle of French -- The Kreentrle Bird. Tnovivs A. Hi'isox, tho famous inof ago. ventor, is only forty-twye Ilis birthday has just boon C'lebr.ited by his employes 1 n tv in linin' r him with a handsome who set of library furniture tu lie expressly for him. The set comprises thuty-fiv- e pieces, each with his m uo grain engraved upon it. A miniature phonograph made of gold and silver was one Mr. Edison is one of of his presents tho few inventors who ha .v reap : the reward of their labor-- . As a rule, tin1 iuv entor gets nothing hut the glory, Take a cork of size for the body cud that after his do Pii, while tin man of the lard and good two matches of equal tin who bought him out for a fvw do'lars length for the legs. A third match, cut shorter will serve for the neck. Slake reaps the reward. pre-eiite- d 1 BAE;t: Jonn Rogers Story 0f cal Nursery at lnda' Other uu, bal Slu New Y'ork YVmlJ, j Rogers, theatrical nia .hat at Park theater .here is a large room if every conceit uhl It is ill charge of ire supposed to be ud.-,;ieeping children qmet mission is to receive anff the afternoon the infants of ' lending the matinees. A I is given it every instance to" , rr or guardian, numb.. facilitate identification nff,..' formauee. During the plav'.,' amuse themselves with ra balls, Noah's arks, and and one things that are dear fant mind, uutil the curtain Jriee25et the respective owners their checks and reo their property, jus as th-- y Tho" arstnii trtuiy Li nit, cloak, or umbrella. It is a grand idea, but R0z,.p ins its drawbacks. He sacs' r . Yequently happens that "u mcreae iam walk hurriedly down the ! no medicine jut iu a stage whisher, q CoutfQMOLD b fifty-eigh- t! Your baby lias i dolls leg! or, One ninetT-- ' .nl'ant of yours is yelling fotM Jr perhaps the anxious wh.. jo heard across three rows., "Say, you are quite sum 'H lorn Foil hasnt got the mea-lesSome of our corn belt editors are Sometimes one of the niv to go to the mother and bet nr The Great inquiring the value ofcorn bread and news that her darling 1ms jus. rolnew mush as food, now that the sd To cents worth of toys, a pie For the c ler process of flour is in vogue and telligenco which usually dam, STOMAC wheat high in price, and yet they parents enjoyment of the piav NEYS, B Manager Rogers thus L should know that a corn diet has and pithy dialogue tei EASES, been proven to be the cause of the nurse and a fond mother, t ACHE, O decline in vigor and hardiness in herself touched on the elbow b NESS, the attendants iu the middle o!; NESS, FE hogs, rendering them peculiarly liable fornmnee: diseases. Now, BOWE to cholera and other the is "Beg pardon; your baby it corn is not a good steady diet for No. 411? merits of t Y'es. AY hats the matter? animals it is not good for men, and A girl, aint it, about It Vegetable tor recommended he not to ought minerals, them. Wheat fiour, made by the old? PERFEC tell Y'es, oh, yes. Tray rollpr process, has a greater percent, Blonde hair and blue eyes? complishe food than that of muscle-makin- g me for t Y'es, yes. made by the old process and makes piLLS- more wholesome bread, and wheat sake Dressed in blue and white?' bread is far more wholesome than But dont The same. corn bread. Corn bread nnd potaShe is not dead; obtoes are both very common articles is not dead! SICK HI of diet, but do not build up, nnd are the No, madam, Bll replied not proper food for growing chil- coldly, she is not dead or li ACH, avoided, is with eaten Mush dren. generally die, but 1 think you might have milk which helps it out. Corn fed she took castor oil this nioraii; nourishin Here is a possibly freiju-- ii Price 25c people are not a high type, and the corn after the show is over anil the , agricultural papers in the belt dont want to encourage rais- human items of property a a GISTS, II remit to corn-fe- d children. To find corn-fe- claimed: Y tl. come-sen- B ! ai-- ,t S', k ?' . I ; d Indignant mother 8a v, young child! w far-of- f I ( k Word Iuzzle. lathis town, A Xew Scores of people says a New York correspondent, are engaged in driving pigs. They are not setting up an opposition to H. I). Armour. Their pigs are not real ones, but only little round balls that reprepresent pigs, and they are sometimes as persistent in going the wrong way as the leanest of s of in Southern Illinois. The are merely trying to solve the "pigs m the clover "puzzle. Tins puzzle is the most popular thing in town. Two or three weeks ago several street venders came on shouting about the "pigs in the clover puzzle. Tne "haz.cd-splittei- coat-shap- e, to a Wi ft,, In your study to master your husbands temper, do not forget to keep a. firm hold of your own. Women are less selfish and less imperious, but they are more sensitive and hasty than men, and hiove apt, on small occasions to mount into a flame and become indignant about trifles. Of all things in the world beware most of this fault, for by indulging it you lose the grace and vantage ground of four sex. When your "husband speaks harshly to you as even the best of husbands innv do in an evil moment either remain silent, or, if you are pressed hard, give a firm but placid reply in a tone that expresses neither exasperation or contempt. Cassell's Magazine. trtno in Onion M hat is and Beef, the most strengthening food for a convalescent? Well, you know tho beef-te- a theory has been exploded. The most and digestible food that can be given to one just recovering from an illness g is thf. puzzle illustkated. puzzle itself seemed to have little resemblance to real pigs in a clover patch, hut ttie man who invented it seemed to Hiink that was as good a name as anv. the first day or two the street venders d.d a big business with the puz-- z e. It became popular, and it is now almost impossible to walk the streets without seeing a half dozen men offering tite puzzle for sale. The triik to noconiplish is to got three of the little balls into the lentro pen, or "clo-ve- r, bv tui uing the puzzle with one hand. It h"s already made its appear-mic- e m C liicago, and will reach U,e small tow ns in due tune. chopped beef. Just take a pound of the finest round of raw beef, cut off nil the fat, slice two onions, and pepper and salt. Then chop the onion and meat together, turning them over and over until both are redu ed almost to a pulp. Then on dices of rye bread, nnd eat spread as sandwiches. leople talk about celery I a nervine, but let me telfvou t.mt there is nothing which quiita the nerves without bad nsuhsiike anions. The use of them imbues sleep, and much strength isobtnneil rom them. That is the idea! food .or convalescing, or for anv one in e-- to nurse: woman, thi "IIows that; your "Y'es, the number the baby ant. "Why not? "This is a girl. Well. "Well! my Tommy was I left him! Cant understand it, then," the nurse, scratching her head, i Portrait Fru Ph before k duplicate 19 was pinned to the nerer re making fo an 4o ae well dress, but Ill with Here young woman! cries a; together nd Denixtice roa Ino After female, hastening to the front, tana U da given me the wrong kid! This is a boy and my Jennie is a Sides, my check numbers 61 ar Vi boy had 19 on him, hut I tho.: was upside down. Where) child? The two women swap infant: are satisfied. . A Ive e u-- -1- J Dr. J. Herbert Claiborne, jr., talking in the Medical t lassies about insects from the ear, exsweet oil is presses the belief that to keep the perhaps the best thing the first is That insect from moving. thick its The oil, by desideratum. consistence, will so entangle and bedraggle the insect 'slogs and wings be that the intolerable noise will use stopped. H oil be not at hand or poisonous any liquid that is not ater will probably lie corrosive. within the reach of every one. This is also more liable to float out, too, than either sweet oil or glycerine. It has been suggested to blow tobacco smoke iu the ear to stupefy the insect. We cannot endorse this advice; tobacco smoke blown into the ear of a child has been known to cause alarming symptoms. M lien the movements of the intruder have liean arrested syringe the ear gently with warm water. All manner ot insects nnd bugs have been found in the ear, but you can never tell inn given case who the rude caller is knocking at the door of your brain until you have him out. brilliants. To blunder red table linen; Use tepid water, with a little powdered no rax, which serves to set the color; wash the linen separately and quick-y- , using very little soap; rinse in epid waiter containing a litlleboiled starch; hang out to dry inthesliade, in I iron when almost dry. A Disinfectant May be made dieaply by dissolving a bushel of salt n a barrel of water, and with this barrel of water slack a barrel of .ime. This foi ms a sort of chloride oflime which may be used lively in cellars, outhouses and drains. Dont you know it is wrong for little Washing Colored GooTls To preboys to coast on the Sahatli.' vent fading, rinse in salt water, or "Not much? Iks snow coined down 1 guess it ant no sm sleddm soak first for a few minutes in salt an terday. m Sunday snow. water; or, what is better lor some goods, soak in water and ox gall. A I luck im. I, nek. poonful of ox gall to a gallon of waAn exi hange makes the following ter is a good preparation. truthful comment on what is commontermed "I,tick: remove iron rust or ink spots, To ly See that young mail early and late at moisten the spots, and apply salts the store, intent to serve lus employer. of lemon until in Because the for interest caring Why? thy disappear, and lie then rinse well. Stilts of lemon are of Ins firm lies caring for his our, salary is meagre, but lie is determined made of equal parts of oxalic acid to live within Ins income, and he saves something. Ills money is earned bv nnd tartaric acid. Another way is diligent labor and he is careful in spend- to moisten with lefnon juice, sprinkle ing it. Ills habits are otooil and his per- well with silt, and lay in the sun. sonal wants tew: it is not his ambition To cure a Iclon, fill a tumbler with to be a "li.ul tellow well met, among the giddy throng of youth who take life equal parts of fine salt and ice; mix y and spend money freely; his aim is well. Sink the finger in the center nobler, higher, lie looks into the future and finds it holds out no promise of re- anil allow it to remain until it is ing ward except in the strii t performance nearly frozen and numb, then withpeople, go south among the of duty. Crackers. when redraw is and sensation Georgia it, Step hv step he advances in salary, in in position, stored renew the operation lour or influence, in experience, ills character is capital, his reputation five times, when it will he found the A Sneeze at a Climax. the key of success, voui boy to clerk, disease is destroyed. This must be Tho theatre was comfortably filled. from clerk to ak'o.n.itt, front sales, nan done before pus is formed. The two leading players were in the lo junior jaitner, to full partner, and Borax water will instantly remove finally to head of the firm and head in midst of a harrowingtale of suffering capital. These are the successive stages all soils and stainu from the hands, the woman clearly wronged, yet that mark his business career. all scratches and chafes. To He grows in wealth, in position, and and heal loving a nd proudjthe liusba nd guilty, in honor, Ilis business and his fame make it put crude borax into a but loving also, pleading tor forswell beyond local markets, and extend bottle and fill with water until giveness. The audience had become to the wider avenues of trade. Although large so water can the sound could no absorb at last a that quiet hardly the possessor of large wealth he is not but is more, and a residual remains at the be heard. At the most critical point pulled up with w illing to aid young men who, like bottom of the bottle. To the water when the stillness could almost be himself, have the will and ability to in which the hands are to be washed felt, a big man in the rear of the orclimb. from this bottle enough to chestra chairs uttered as startling a Young reader, this is no fancy sketch, pour make it very soft. It is very cleans- noise ns was probably ever heard in hut is actual history. The man and his and healthy. By its use the that theatre. It sounded, in quick success are real to the life. His name ing Kitchy kitehy, barkand fame are as wide ns the markets of hands will be kept in excellent con- time like er ark how wow ee hee ee the world. Once a clerk in a small dition. ee kow on wou. country store one of the members of a Wash dresses for home and coun- It ended largo family, whose boyhood mid youth way up in G and jarred the were spent, in humble surroundings, but try wear are made with helled waist, roof. The response that followed wlio-later years are passed amid the lull or plain on the shoulders, at the could not have been more completestirring events of the great nietiepolis fancy of the wearer, and straight ly timed if everbody had been connecof winch lie is an honored citizen, ted hy an electric current. Every Atliat was it, luck, or pluck that made gathered skirt four and a half yards man, woman and child simultaneousthe linin1 Look within, young clerks in ide. Neither lining nor foundation ly burst into a laugh. The babies some country store, and find the answer. Your own heart will tell you skirt is used. The skirt is some actually crowed. It smashed the that ueic did not do it. l'diy not climb three inches longer at the back and tale of love and the reconciliation the '.line way through duty nobly done? into flinders. Just as the sneeze came Oh, it is r yal to limb through truth, has about half the fullness massed and honor, mid right. There is a glow there into a narrow space. The col- that actress was standing faeing the in this exercise that kindles a new tire in lar is a narrow knife pleating turned audience, her face woebegone and full the eye and a new enthusiasm in tile down from a standing band. The of pain. Before she could turn away slim form was quivering from heart. Life broadens out into high en- sleeves are either full and gathered Jier deavor and the world becomes a theatre into turned-baclaughter. The husband chewed his cuffs elso or for grandest achievements. Younginan, with much fullness at the arm- lower lip nnd tried to keep up a resolve to climb, be brave of heart and show of grief. In vain. He bent his hole. w ill and stong of pause not until you head in liis hands nnd laughed with w in the prize. ek o gr-vn- lily-lea- 1 A railroad j much-discusse- jfresb! fur tin in ner. eii-- g The lllr.t CHECKING state of health. Canners tJazctte. -- Two English servants Ann Ward.) and Eliza Wyldo went to a Salvation army meeting on a Sunday evening, overstayed the time when they should have been home, and for fear of a scolding tied themselves together with a woolen scarf jut I drowned thorns dves in a canal, Senatou Coke, of Texas, is a firm believer In spiritualism. Ho is a large, man in vigorous health, and not in npp"arM)eo a person given to tampering with the other world. Ilut he at tends a great many seances, and is fully convinced that the dead and the living cannot communicate with each other. a weak HOUSEHOLD. x Noticed. fools all egotists is not fools. Ive nolised thet all but is e; I reckon itud make a hcepo feeliu's ef we eood sco see us; but ef others as we see ourselves, it ud biggest surprise party that -knowed. The feller thets ashamed of lidjun, don't need to be, far he generally got enulf of it to be oui,Jciv-other- s cor-u- L WE fc ' 1 , I've notised that them thet a- most qneschuns haint alius tht informed. I reckon it ud bee a heep casv t everybody else. The fun didnt sub- to find a needle in a haystack-iside tor at least five minutes. The ud be to find two human beins ushers looked al out to see if the sneezsaet mates. er was alive. He had vanished. Ive notised that them that i con. caiC Baltimore American. thet thero haint no hell is gkthe ones thet haf the most reesei C js ! Loss of Power. afeard thet there is. surpriiI more reckon theres Naval engineers estimate that of heavens gate than ennyvvhere - ti,cv IVCVP every 100 tons of coal burned at the hull uiiy verse. f sea 93 are wasted, and only five exIve notised that when a conflicts Cj out thethis pended in the work of pushing the interests he opinyon either . u. j changes vessel forward. Of the 95 wasted er mitey quick. tons 40 tons are lost at the boiler in I reckon ef wed never findfauh consequence of unused heat passing a mans work when hes done it f q from the smokestack, from incom- than we cood do it our own selves'- - j is t ud be a heep less fault-findplete combustion, radiation, conducTr tion, and minor causes; that 48 tons world. are lost in heat, at the cylinder, Ive notised thet there's might? ? ? ! which has been conducted from the men thets sharp enuff to disk: ; j live steam and the unused, and from hole in a fellers shoe, ef tlio sher;' i . xw latent heat escaping with the exhaust blackened an polished, I reckon ef everybody ud get' steam. Furthermore, tho analysis they think they deserve in this shows that the loss from friction of cood find standiu room on the engine working under full power at yo o tho Washington Monument furls sea amounts to three and ahalf tons, fokes Wi poor yo cood scrapo up; nnd that the average losses from IB ud git no moren they svv nobody power required to work air and feed ly deserve, the rich fokes wooH O' pumps, nnd to overcome augmented no ways crowded in the same insistence due to slip and friction of City Derrick. screwblades in still water, amounts I to three and a half tons. More Information Wanted Be meJ- r Do you Lawyer (hotly) How She Rejected Him. say, sir, that you do not consider Do Lyre a man of his word? He proposed on the way home Witness I do. from church with a Buffalo Y'ou do, eh? Do you mean girl one Sunday evening. She was too young sinuate that he ever lies? to marry, and did not want him anyThrZs about it. i Now, sir, attention! Do you way. But she said yes, with tiie ' stipulation that he should get her to say that you would xat belie'6 father s consent. The voum- - man under oath? , No, I have not s aid that. was happy until he discovered In the Oh! I thought Id catch yon; Gu next day that his adored ones fathnotbcIwTt you dont say you would er had been dead for several years under oath? le has remoa-cto another city No. I havent heard him Buffalo News. talking under oath yet. Nh Weekly. feller-y-se- ' meor-fav- in . - J 1 |