OCR Text |
Show w toriary to pronounce the longest English grace on record, which la saving a good deal; for even the ordinary' formula as used in England day by day GOOD SHORT STORIES NOW is certainly not characterized by brevFIRST PUBLISHED. ity. It Is true that there are ahorter versions sanctioned by authority for busy people and workingmen, or to be "llolil I p oar IInrt." l'uem f ruit employed under certain condi Ilona. But. Vriulrrsaod Water Girls ef Imlrr-- Tl after alt, those people Who can at times sit three or four hours at a repast enbtorki at xtcrland, Eaglaud joying the good things of life without Contlalat. any sense of fatigue should not consider tt onerous to devote five minutes OLD op your spent In so sacred n function, New York Trlbung. iesfiilsj" Aha cried. And would hv Her Triumph. added this beside, looks coyly from the cigar to Folly Vou who have me, and ba k again to the cigar. She teen to achool at holds It gingerly between Her small finall." as though it were an Easter egg For young and old gers, first then, the tuber. She exand and amines it attentively, minutely, critiemail as though striving to discover Had gathered there cally, when In lies Its charm. She hold tt to near and her from nose, and sniffs tt knowingly, aa she w Ide. has seen her father do. It wae not eaey to divide I look on expectantly and watt paTle hiolley ThroHg, art to deride. tiently. He raised hl voice In sudden call. She selects a match and scratches tt Hold up your hand; Some children screamed, while others on the mantel; it breaks; so does the next. The third flickers for a moment tried and goes out. Beneath the furniture to hide; "Bother!" says Polly, But one jgame Infant, nestr the wall. The fourth match ahe scratches on Bulled forth a "gun" and yelled "By the sole of her diminutive shoe and got! holds proudly aloft; the autphur fumes I haln't no tenderfooted snide; teal up her nose and she - mutters Hold up your hands!" "Ugh" Then she looks at me, blushes charmiFrail Tenders sad Water Glrle In Iralra and bites off the end bf the cigar. ngly. To glide In a gondola along the Oreat She It between her jilpa. holding places Canal from the Church of Santa taria, the match to It. lights It, With hurried, erected in fulfillment of d vow In 1630, spasmodic puffs, and tries to look as to that of St. Simon and St. Jude, ta though she were enjoying it. Then she like a dream or vlaion of In coughs and gives It to me. A that place, neatld cloae fairyland. are And I klsa her and swear by all thl together, two tinea of bulldinga that, aet apart aalnta that it la the best I Hava ever and scattered, would be an ornament smoked silently and " fervently that any kingdom might be proud to wish sheand had not lighted the wrong 1 The transition Raracenlo arch- end. Judge. ' itecture Here assumes the mbst varied and graceful forma. Many, Indeed, The Stock at SnmferUad. England. how tad negieit and barbarous use, "I the old punishment of the stock but the artistic eye restore them as till legal T the question which some they were In the republics day of pride. The canal la full of life. Oondolas glldo of the prominent English Journal are along, the voice of the busy and the asking themselves, but with no prosIdle, the summer sky and the turquoise pect of an Immediate aatlsfactory anwater ail help to till out the picture; swer. The legislature finding themand on the occasional vantage grounds selves unable to stop habitual drunkenbeside the Water will te groups like ness, the Sunderland magistrates havg that we portray; the Venetian glrla sell- undertaken the task, and accordingly ing fruit or flowers, or the sturdier ones they sentenced a young man, seventeen who bear one or two water vessels, pe- year of ng, who had previously been culiar In shape, of metal, and In Itself srtitcnced seven times, to pay a small no slight burden. It has ever been a fine within a week or be placet In the land rtf comparative ease and plenty, stocks. If the stocks are a deterrent by and tf e lower classes show more Indus- reason of their exposing the offender to try and thrift; there la lens to repel and ridicule and shaming him they should more to gratify the eye. The water be used at once not as a substitute for a pecuniary mulct. Besides, when a gti Is blithe, gay contented: an humweek la ble. happy aet. familiar to all who with which to pay a tine haye tt becomesgiven Visited the Queen City of the Adriatic a debt, and a Imprisonment gather at the wells or clsterna, and car- for debt la abolished It would be as well ry the water to their customers with an for the magistrates to consider whether air of contentment that renders the they will not lay themselves open to action If they carry out their expressed scene one of almost perfect enchantment determination. BEAUTY COlIXKIi OF ODDITIES. ' one-way- , larie 1 Weds Instead of Going to he hoot Springfield, III., Special, Ulysses CL Althelmer of Pina Bluff. Ark., met MU Sophia Scharff at the Union Depot In St. Loula this morning and accom- Two Faaeral glories. tv There Is a touching story told of the funeral or SIF Walter Scott The road by which the procession look Its way wound over a hill, whence can be seen one or the moat beautiful of landscapes. It waa bis habit to pauae there to gate upon the scene, and when taking a friend out to drive he never failed to slop there and call the attention of his companion to the moat beautiful point Of the view. Few could refrain from tears when, carrying their master on hts last Journey, the horses stopped at the old familiar spot, as tt were for him to give a last look at the scene he had loved so well. Extremes meet I told this anecdote of Scotts to a friend, who In turn told me a story. A little less than a century ago there lived in a cer-tain New England village a graceless fellow who spent most oDhia lime at the grogshop, to the neglect bf all honest callings, The summons had come for him "To Join The innumerable (caravan, that move To that mysterlos realm where each shall taka Hla chamber In the silent balls of death. Aa hte funeral procession on Its way to the place of burial passed hla favorite1 haunt the bearers inadvertently turned a little aside, at the tame time Slackening their pace. The wag of the neighborhood spoke hastily; "Go on; go on! said he; "dont stop here, for mercy's sake! Hell be sure to go In!" I panied her to this city, where - they at noon by Judge Kane, leaving for Pina Bluff this afternoon. They had met three months ago tn St. Louts Fearing parental opposition, Mias Scharlt left home this morning ostensibly for school at Ilosmer Hail, but by preconcerted airangement met Mr. Althelmer and accompanied him here. The groom Is the son of Louis Althelmer. a wealthy planter of Pine Bluff and a prominent republican politician. The bride la a daughter of Adolph Scharff of the wholesale liquor house of L. & A. Scharff, SL Louis. were married L, Cams Bear llolnf a Crucible. Richmond. Ind Telegram. An Interesting discovery was revealed Hero today with regard to a recent fire at Philomath, a little town to the northeast. It was noticed that M. J. Weber, whose house was burned, kept pouring water on one particular spot It has since been learned .that, after the fire waa over, he raked away the aahea and drew out from that spot an iron box which contained 130,000 In gold. He now haa tt deposited In a bank. j , ' Coronars Jarora of London. In London recently there waa At Inquest tn the east end, which corresponds tn poverty and suffering with certain parts of the east aide In thta city. At the conclusion of the Inquest the jurymen asked for "relief tickets" to be taken to the local municipal charity bureau, on the ground that they were atl out of work and had no food In their home. The coroner gave them the desired rellefo-Ne- w York Mail and Express. cor-one- r's Prison Bar Didnt Stop Him. Thomas Shepherd, a convict In the Indiana prison, south, at Jeffersonville a trusty, fell In love with a Woman somewhere In the town, and In order to see her, manufactured, after months of secret toll, a rope ladder out of bits of yarn, string, and the like, which from time to time he picked up. It was over thirty feet long and very jrtrong. with this on several occasions b made hi way out of the prison, always returning to hi celt after an absence of o few hours. When, during one of these courting trips the rope ladder was dls-eoverttd by the prison official. Bhep- t-' herd treat to the front gate of the on, rang the bell, and aurrendered prishimself. Exchange, Out ef the Ordinary. Ko Complaint, ERock w ood rtcar an earnest TpponenV of and - The late Judge waa always General Butler, because of this opposition Wendell FhlUpaat one time made a very bitter attack upon the Judge. Out of this feeling came what ta. perhaps. Judge Hoara n remark, lifter Phillip's death some one met Judge Hoar and asked Him tf he Intended to go to the funeral. No," answered the Judge, "I dont; but f ap-- prove of it." Another remark ascribed to Judge Hoar In regard to Phillips death -t- hat tf he had Joined the' majority tt waa for the first time-t- he Judge dented making. best-know- Ancient (hrtatlao Custom Goins Out Strange to say. "grace before meals " which recently was made a most solemn custom In England a country houses and also tn French chateau when a chaplain 'was kept. I totally going out of fashion. Een the modern Hebrews, who are enjoined by the Talmud to Pronounce your blessings dav by daw over every species of natures gifts that you enjoy." are also gradual ly Ktvng up doing so. This poetteal and touching custom ts a very ancient sn. and, as far a Christians are concerned, the origin dates as far bac k as the ear! Christian" fathers and to Apostolic times. In London, at ttty dinners and lord may rs banquets, IP Is still eu- - rc ! Rice paper is not made from rice, but from the membranes of the bread fruit tree. In France railway companies are fined by tte government w here their trains are njorit than ten minutes late. The ahrig' of the English male skylark la best when the female la upon the eggs. At such ttmea he soars to great heights and sings rapturously. There are doore In aome old houses of Holland JShk'h. were In former, days never used except for funerals and weddings. After the bride and groom had passed the door Was nailed up to await the next occasion. Jarvis Markham, who wrote on the management of horses tn 15P9, In England, mentions running horses; but at this time there were Only private matches made between gentlemen, who were their own Jockeys and rode their own horses. j There Is a clause In the New Zealand lopst option bill providing that every man convicted of being an habitual drunkard shall be photographed at hi own' expense, and every republican tn the district In which he lives supplied with A copy. Tight lacing, according to Prof. Kus-te- r of Marburg, Is a direct cause of movable kidney In women; S3 per cent of the total number of cases occurring in woman and only t per ctnt in men. He thinks It 1 the pressure on the ribs that loosens the kidneys. Wh! tie Though! of ( hurrh. PapvWSLeU; Tommy, and how did you like It?- - Tommy (who Ijas been takcnjto timet Very, r.iuch. church for the Indeed. Every one had to keep very fi-- vt got- up and talked quiet, but one-m- an the whole time, and at last we atl had to get up and sing to keep him quleL Of THE BENCH. DAIRY AND POULTRY. gat with California ftoprrm i ourt, "Few people are aware that a woman NTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. oace sat on the supreme bench in California. of state said Thomas Beck. A look of Incredulity How turrmfil farmers Operats This overspread the features of his listeners. Drpartuiral of (lie farm A Few Uluts "It is a fact, nevertheless," continued ss to the (are of Lite Stock aed was in well, never mlnq Mr. Beck. ""It I'oultry. the jear, hut 1 was then secretary of was court held and Sac.state, in being 0 THOSE WHO ramento. Judge Wallace was on the buy their bacon I he achy Jhosq, Jn .The cap have Woid iSKy, ital city during the session waa Col, write a corresponShafter and a number of his officers. dent of Rosenberg The colonel was accompanied by his Progress. During the late snow storm daughter,- - a eyy ytwwig, .bright- - and 1 was confined In handsome girl. Houston at a hotel "One morning at the breakfast table where there was a In the Golden Eagle hotel Justice Walnumber of gentleMias Shafter, 1 feel quite lace said. men from the westslighted. Since you have been In Sacern states who had ramento you have not deigned to visit come dow n to Texas to take a look me. Wont you come up this morning at the sunny south, many of them with and sit with us in banc? My colleague. a view to making it their future home Judge Cro ker. is absent, and you might if they were pleased with the soil, i llmate and people. as well occupy hla seat. While there I fell into conversation Oh, yes. Ill come.' returned Miss with a man that I took for a was the and Shafter, subject dropped, from the state of Iowa. He preacher told me and I am sure that Judge Wallace nev- he was a farmer fed hogs, cattle, er dreamed that the Invitation would etc. I asked him what was the best be accepted. breed of hogs to raise. He said they "About an hour afterward. Miss Shaf- had tried all breeds, and that It was the ter, accompanied by one of the officers rule of hts country to raise the bog that of her fathers staff, came to my office would always keep fat. I asked him his reason for that. He said: "We do and said that she wanted to go to the that because we have to shlfTshd sell I Court. Would her? take Supreme to save ourselves as soon as the hog With pleasure. And away we went. A cholera strikes them, or we would In young attorney was arguing a case all probability lose all the hogs we have I asked him if be when we entered the court He did or are feeding. not notice us as we quietly seated our- could find aale for a herd of hogs that cholera. "Oh, yes," he said, "the selves and went on with the most bril- had board of health of Chicago decided that liant eloquence. Judge Wallace laid the meat of hogs that died of cholera his hand on the arm:of the empty chair was all He said that the buy-t- r right. to .and nodded my companion to tgke would take every hpg and pig that it. was alive when they reached the market and pay the ruling prices for them. Shall I go up? she asked of me. " Why, certainly, I responded. It would be discourteous to the bench not A Pretty Girl Onr -- Disregard of this rule Is being seen ectry day In the number of dead hogs sirew-along the unloading .chutes. As the weather gets warm hog must be lorded to prevent crowding. As high as twenty dead hogs have been taken Rom single car this week, because pf carelessness in loading. Give the hogs room. Give them also some good clean straw to lie tn. The government force began Its rigid Inspection May 1. They will throw out all anlmala considered not fit for human food. This wi!l Include calfy cows, PiggJ sows, and lamby ewes that are pietty far advanced; scabby sheep, shelly canners, cholera pigs.- - Jumpy Jaws, badly bruised stock of all kinds; thin, washed Sheep, busted pigs, etc. Everything on this order will be held out, passed upon by veterinarians, and If not passed er condemned may be sent back to the country. Condemned stock will be at once tanked. Live Stock Report, Chicago. Karlf Work on I.lcc, Is the first work of the season that saves labor later on. Lice do not come spontaneously. They are living creat- It ures that multiply, and unless there is a source from which they can come there will be no lice. They do not Increase very rapidly while the weather Is cold, but Just as soon as the warm season opens they become millions In a short time. It Is much easier to destroy a few, and keep lice in check, than to get rid of them after they begin to swarm In every crack and crevice, and on the walls, roosts and floors. Every reader knows what the kerosene emulsion Is. Twice a week give the poultry house a thorough saturation with it until warm weather comes, and the lice will then be about finished, and as a safeguard spray the house once a week thereafter. An excellent preventive la lime. Scatter it freely on the walls. Use the lime, and apply It liberally. Rub a little melted lard well Into the feathers of the beads and necks occasionally, to destroy the large gray lice on the heads. By keeping down the pests that prey on the ed sired; also, to avoll wind. Besides It 4s easier to "shut up a few openings at nights and keep out rats. (grain In tba Cowi Rtdoub In tbs report of a New York farmers meetiEg notice the following: "Prof. Robinson of Ontario Is reported as saying that no cow should be fed more than eight pounds of cotton seed meal a day. The cow w 111 not respond to more than that. If the digestive organa of the cow are strained, she Is Injured permanently. I have Visited several stables In Orange county, recently, and in every one 1 detected a smell that showed 'plainly to me that the cows were It had being fed too much grain. passed undigested and had fermented. One should watch the droppings to see If the grain Is all being digested. Very many dollars are lost by Then, too. one cow pays for her food in the milk pail; another one, turns her foods Into fat. One cow will eat, digest and assimilate a certain amount of grain, another will not, while another will eat and pay for more. Individuality of the animal must be studied by the feeder. In order to rationally feed a herd of dairy cows. All these conditions must be considered when answering the question Just as the price of milk Is considered. The manurlal value of a food must also be considered in calculating the worth of a food for the dairy cow." Now, while the conclusions drawn are quite correct, yet farmers must use care In feeding all grains, especially cotton seed meal. Aa shown by an article in the Farmers Review two weeks ago, the feed should be small at first and gradually increased. over-feedin- g. You show The Cow and Prosperity. a community of farmers who are largely Interested In the dairy Industry and I will show you a community of prosperoua and happy people, no mortgages on their farms, plenty of money, children properly educated and all enjoying the luxuries of life. Hard times do not materially affect them. On the other hand, in a community where the me to do so. "She hesitated a little, but as Judge Wallace regarded her with a smiling nvitatlon and patted the chair provok-nglv- , she arose and firmly and with he grace of a queen walked up the aisle the platform. The Judges arose. and gVavelj bowed. Wallace stopped forward, ami. extending his hand, escorted her to the vacant chair, ani eaclf, Justice was presented to her in turn and shook the tiny hand of their dainty associate. Miss Shafter was quite equal to the occasion, and, bowing, took her seat and let the case proceed. The young attorney, though, lost his head, and afterward lost his cafe Whether he wished to make an Impression on the new associate or whether the strangeness of the proceedings rattled him I never learned, but be got badly tied up in his peroration. What did Judge Wallace do? Why, at the dinner that evening he conferred with the new Judge and insisted upon her occupying the seat on the bench next (lay. After dinner he asked me to take a walk with him. Beck, said he, if you do not bring that girl Into court In the morning Ill haveproefed-lng- s Instituted to declare your position vacant." " TRIED IT ON A FRIEND. Tussled the Frofeosnr Get It. n Bohemian visited hts A friend, prof. Price, at the latters labor-ator- y Yesterday, says the San Francisco Post. The professot was examining a. dark brown substance spread oa a paper. Say, Petle, would you kindly .let me place a little of this on your tongue? My taste "has become so vitiated by tasting all sorts of things. Certainly, responded the Petle, thrusting out hit tongue. The professor took up a little of the substance under analysis and placed It on Peties tongue. He worked it around for fully ,mlnute, tasting It much at he would a fine confection. "Not any effect? inquired the professor. No. none." It doesn't paralyze or prick your tongue? "Not that I can detect. I thought not. There are no alkaloids In It. then. How does It taste? Bitter as the dickens. Um-all right. What Is it, anyway?" inquired Petle,' taste. as be spat out the hold-ov"I don't know. Thats what Im trying to find out. Some one has been poisoning horses with it out in the Mission." Petle rushed to the telephone and called up a veterinary surgeon. "MAIDEN, AN ENGLISH by a Iotaon. retie SHORTHORN FARMERS' REVIEW. to Tost well-know- er t Though! the Balloon the rteYll. Superstition is still very strong in some part of Germany,- -a few days ago A balloon, sent up by the army balloon battalion near Dantzlc. and In which two aeronauts of that corps were studying atmospheric conditions at an altitude of 6,000 feet, happened to pass the district of Tuehel, Inhabited by people of the original Slav race. They toofcrftbe balloon a thing never ieen before to be the Szank lor devil and followed It for miles, intending to slay It w henever It should happen to alight Fortunately for the aeronauts they passed the region sarely and the bullets fired at their balloon dlPnot reach it OtbcrvUseJbey would hate fared bsdly. Adrer.Wint rj. If you Intend to secure the trJe oL. lot ua say, 65 people, $ would t,of be an unreasonable expenditure, would tt? If you appeared to be succeeding, you might put out 1 more possibly $5. The proprietors of Cottolen have started out to gain the patronage 0f They are geti-nit, too! and their xpenditnre for advertising have not yet reached $2,.,Q -000. Thii Is a great country? Lo at the Royal baking powder busing ! 65,000.000 people. and the ones that bad died in transit they paid half price for (pretending they were to be used as soap grease, etc.). This statement of the old man called the attention of western men present, who were disposed to take Issue with him on the fact- .- In other words, bis veracity was assailed, which seemed to mortify him greatly, and he publicly asserted that all that he had said to me was true, and he thought he could substantiate It In the city. I said to the party of gentlemen present, if this fact was known to our farmers they would raise their own meat rather than eat meat that had died or was sick with cholera when butchered. I know from observation, that when a hog dies of the cholera he turns perfectly red, and I further know that I have taken large etdee of bacon out (the boxes of bacon we buy) that waa red, which makes me. believe every word the old lows' man said was true, and such meat as I described died of cholera. I have diverged a little from my story; The old Iowa man was stirred op considerably. In a short time be came back to me with a gentleman of his acquaintance, who said he had bought thousands of bogs in Chicago and that every word he said was true, and Intimated that the dead hogs bought for soap grease went through the same channel that the live ones did, and eventually landed in the bacon box with the others. Now, I appeal to the farmers of Fort Bend county to know If you are still going to buy such bacon as I have described when you have a country far superior to the West to raise your own meat in. We must wake up to our own Interest, and sell instead of buy bacon. -- pet-fect- ly hens the number of eggs will be more eow is left out or is of secondary considthan doubled. Ex. eration, where they keep but a few and those not half cared for, picking their own living tn the winter from corn Barrel for Chicken Coop. Every poultry raiser has used old fields or straw stacks, where they barrels as coops. But most of them make little butter and trade it at the have employed them merely for nests stores for groceries, kick at the creamat night, laying the barrel down on its ery, claim it does, not pay to keep side, putting in a handful of straw, and cows, and I feel sure It does not for them, a brick on each Bide to keep it from and I will show you a community that rolling. This plan is good enough is continually growling about the times, when there are no rats or cats around, this or that administration, etc. Prof. or when the fowls are allowed the T. L. Haecker. range of the farm. In fact in the east it is common practice to fix up such a Poultry Products Last Year. Poulbarrel, drive down g stake twenty or try statistics for 1894 give eggs to the more feet from IQ and tie a string to value of $102,000,000, and poultry the hen, protecting the leg with a or a total of 152 million dollars. piece of cloth. Tbg fowls soon get Oats and cotton are given at " about used to being tied, and thus the hen tobacco about the same as and her brood are kept off the gardens. $200,000,000; eggs, while the whole mining interest But this is not an ideal way, nor do of gold, silver, iron, etc., only aggrewe wish to recommend 1L The Illusand wheat a trifle $265,000,000, gates artration here given' shows a barrel more than $280,000,000. Our poultry inranged to keep In the old hen and per terest is Just in its infancy, and will rapidly increase and become an important source of income for American farmers. - Sugar Feeding. The results of experiments in the use of molasses and sugar in the feeding of cattle made at the sugar factory at Libnowea, Austria, are given by Mons. Vivien in Le Fer-me- r. The trials extended over 30 days. Twelve beasts had added to their usual rations, for 7 days, 21b. 3 oz. of molasses per day; for the following 15 days, 3 lb.-- 4 oz., and for the last 8 days, 4 lb. 6 oz. The average weight of each beast before the experiment was 1120 lb., and after the experiment 1204 lb., being a gain of 84 lb. per head, or a total of 1008 lb. This Is equivalent to a daily gain per head of over 2 lb.-- oz. Twelve other beasts were experimented on at thd same time, and fed in the same way as the former, except the molasses. In 30 days they increased 784 lb., corresponding to 65 3 lb. per head, or-a- n average of nearly 2 lb. 3 oz. per head per day. As to the profits, the net gain was calculated to nearly a dolias per anihead, In favor of the molasses-fe- d mals. mit her chicks to run at will. The barrel ts separated into two parts by nailing down the hoops onto the staves where the separation Is to be made. Then sawing the hoops gives two coops. Care should be taken to make this separation at a point on the barrel where the bottom will split lengthwise of the grain. The pieces of lath in front may be nailed onto the barret or driven into the ground. to Pointer Shipper. The second Illustration shows how to make even a better pair of coops Keep pregnant stock at home. Dont ship in any diseased, from a single barrel. The staves are bruised or emaciated stock. marked on the barrel - about three Dont load your cars too heavily, es- inches from each other, that is. the pecially of hogs or Bheep, though in fact marks on each alternate stave will run of any class of live stock. Watch out and dont ship In any stock that has sores, abscesses or other Indication of unsoundness or unaliole-- ' somencss. The government Inspectors are "the The Grass and Hay Ration A good goblins that will get you if you dont quality of grass, or of the grasses, is watch out and keep back unsound, disx .considered to be one of the best and posed. or far advanced pregnant most perfect rations "Tor milch cows Wl-- r during the summer season; hence, whorieware of the calves you ship In. ever keeps a dairy, will consult his Anything on the Bob-o- one Deacon ow n Interests In securing the best pasweek old or is, less than tures possible by proper Improvement weighing under 75 pounds is pretty forlhis purpose. Reasoning from the sure to be thrown out and Had Its way same standpoint 'the fanner should into the tank. sawto mar- round the barrel In a line. The produce the best quality of Dont ship any scabby sheep ket. as they are very liable to be con- ing of these will give two ends like thg hay for "winter feeding. Especially is desirable where cows are milked demned. Lamby ewes should also be one seen In the Illustration. In sawing this held back, as where they are pretty far these barrels It wouMTiC a til ilOflO a- part or the whole of the winter seaadvanced they cannot be sold, under have the alternate openings all around son. Other crops will be needed for the new Inspection rules, wad will the barrel, as they would let In too this purpose, but hay made from grass either have to go back Into the country much cold at nights, besides wind and wilt continue to have Its appropriate dust. When there are but few openings place. And this should be la quality or bo slaughtered, and In all probabilthey esn be turned to the side to get as near grass aa the condition will ality condemned here. , Dont load too many hogs In oa car. the sun or away from the sun as ds-- low It to be made, Ex-- . . 9 - anl-m-I- VrVi r - |