Newspaper Page Text
NEW NEWS of YESTERDAY IBy E. J. EDWARDS ý I First Standard Oil Probe New York Sun's Inquiries In 1E78 tl Were Met With Courtesy but f Silence, but the Information L' Was Obtained Elsewhere. In the early fall of tFS8 I was sent a for by the I te ('hares A l)Ytna, tdil totr of thei N % York Sun, and when I answere(' the summ)ns I finid iL!m reading t a c.ra:nunic-ation from a (ir respolndcnt in Pe-nns::lvania The et ter ;as vety brief; it sirgg-s ed to Mr Dana that he cause an invriisga- I tion to I. t tde Into the history tnd imethod. of he Standard Oil co,,n Iwty of Clevrilanr . 0., a hich about that time had cr me to be looked upon as a trust, by the oil world especially s As he handed me this letter tMr Dana saId: "You go out there and make al investigation: make It thor a ough no mrtter how long it takes" I first swent to tie oil regions of western Pennsylvania and was there a about three weeks The oil producers gave me every facility for gettingr such Information as was to be had in the oil reg'ons They also called my attention to certain litigation which had ther been begin in Pensylvwnla with In'ent to break up the Standard Oil compiany in so far as It operated In that state Having completed the Investigation at Titusville and O11 City. I went to Cleveland. presuming that the officers of the Standard 011 company would be willing, if not anxious, to furnish me with informa tion which would serve to explain C some of the more grievous charges made against it and its methods by the oil producers Furthermore. I had no doubt the Stardard 011 company would be glad of an opportunity to gain the public ear and to explain the economic principles which had led to the organization of the so-called trust. When I called at the main offices of the Standard 011 company, after an annoying amount of red tape had been unrrveled I was received by a very plsasant-faced and gracious mannered young man He listened with apparent earnestness and sincer Ity as I sated that it was Mr Dana's desire that an absolutely Impartial and perfectly fair report, based upon Investigations into the rise and growth of the Standard Oil company. be printed ir the New York Sun "Have you ever been to Cleveland before?" he asked with utmost polite tess, as I finished. "Only to pass through by train." 1 I replied "It Is a beautiful city." he said: "you should not return to New York without -eeing it" "T cannot return to New York." I Old Coat That Made a Success Garment That Ned Sothern Wore as w Lord Dundreary in "Our American ti Cousin" Was Borrowed From W John Brougham. bi el When Leaster Wallack knew that his d' day had passed as a great actor and lc theatrical manager, he and the late A It St Palher, then coming into proml nence as successful theatrical matna-. er. and later the succesor of lester n Wallack In the management of Wi- i .lack'a theater, in New York. used to make the trip together betwen the me tropolls and Stamford. Conn.. where V each had his summer home it was h during cne of these trips that Wallack d told Palmer the story of the old coat ft that made a great histrionic bit b "It was In 18i8 that Laura Keene P prouuced 'Our American Cousin. with ii Joseph Jefferson as Asa Trenchard b and Ned Sotbern as Lord Dundreary." said Mr Wallack "I know that In a e general way it has passed into tradi tLom that Sothern at first refused to tl play tte part of Lord Dundreary. be- it cause lie thought the part was beneath t him, and that be only consented tc. e play It when Miss Keene told him that she was itn despair and after she bad I conserted that Sothern should gag c the part BIut while all this ins true ! up to a certain point. I have no doubt I, that from the moment Sothern read c the part of Lord Dundreary he saw t the possibilities that were in it for a d delica'e. humorous satire of certain of the nobility of England. and felt . sure that this satire would not ,fiend. but w)uld amuse the upper ^iasses of Great IBritain. If e'er he were per II mlittet to play the part as he aould I like to play it before English a't dieness I "'Wll. Sothirn made op his mind that it would be necessary to dres i New Musical Instrument. In the Hiolland touu.e iNew York) music room has been placed a new music ii :lstrument raled the Choratl celo. hibch was in.enied recentlº by two mnen in Boston alter 20 years of exper n.etting It Ihas the aplparance of a lpiano. and can be played to pro duce the sound either of a piano or of an organ At will one can use the right hand to produce piano tones and use tie left to play organ accompant ment Another attachment permits the imitation of an orchestra w:th strng;s. reeds and brasses This is the first instrumont of the kind to be placed in any hotel in New York city. and t will be, a feature of the after noon and Sunday night concerts at the Holland Built Up Big Business. The first jatunting car was establish ed in Ireland In 1815 by a Milanese. Carlo Blancoui. who settled in Dublin and drove every day to Caher and back, charging two pmeoc a mile, from this smaIh beginning i 1837 he had established siy-seeven oumeyaaces. drawu by amts Mhadred hbrses replied. "until I have learned. froir the point of view of your organiza tlcn, something of its history anct irowth. and have obtained from you. If possible, some answer to tne se rious accusations that are made against your company by the oil pro ducers of Pennsylvanla " The young man continued to smile blandly Ilut not the slightest nld' -ation did he show of a desire in an-: wa;, to serve me 'Can I see Mr. John D Rockefe: ler?" I asked A flitting but intense expression rf surprise and' reproach passed over the young man's countenance Then he resumed his bland smile, slimply saving' "Nobody sees Mr. Rockefeller these days." "Could I see Col. Oliver Payne?" I asked "Colonel Payne is a very busy man; I would not care to ask him to mace an appointment with you." "Who, then, is there, with whom I may talk and who can furnish tie with the information I require'" "I don't think there Is any InfornPa tion. there is nothing to say." "Have you been instructed to tell me this?" I asked. With the most affable smile imagia Million That Might Have Been Commodore Alfred Van Santvoord's Regret Because He Didn't Make a Quick Turn in St. Paul Stock During Panic of 1901. The late Commodore Alfred Van Santvoord. who owed his title to his prominence in the Hudson river steamboat business. (when he died in 1901 he was the largest owner of riv er steamboats in America), but who was also a very able railroad man. having been a director in several big railroad companies, combined a large amount of caution with a very strong spirit of enterprise. He accumulated in the course of his long and hotnor able business career a large fortune by constructive work in the trans )or tation business and by wise invest inent He was worth seven or e ght million dollars when be died But al tl,ough he bad won success and for tur.e ample enough to satisfy the am bitions of most men. his last years. as his friends believed, were made some what unhappy by a single thoug it- the thought of the million that might have been his. Commodore Van Sanvoord was a the part with elongated black tide- I whiskers, which were, in the late fi- r ties and early six ies, the fashion ible way, at least In France. of wearing the c beard He also decided that it was a essential in the firast act, which w.As a drawing room scene, for him to weir a < long-tailed frock coat with sery vo um Inous tails But It sllppeu his rind 3 that he should obtain a coat of -hat c sort from tht, costumer, or have one t made, and because of this slip he was in despair at the time of tle dress re- I hearsal of the play "Jchn Brougham. the playwright. was upon the stage at the '!me. and he told Sothern that he had In his dressing room a long-tailed coat. 'ery l full in its folds, which had been used by me in a play In which I had ap peared some months earlier 'It'a Just the frock for you. Ned.' said Broug Iham "' Produce it, John. returned 1;oth ern "A moment later Brougham brought the long-tailed coat to Sothern's d-ess ing room it didn't fit very well ;ipon the shoulders. but 'he tails were long enough and expansive enough to suit - Sothern perfectly and be said be i would aear It until he could have a coat made. And so in a coat which I had worn in an earlier play and bad t lent Io John Brougham-an emergency I coat. Sothern appeared for the first time upon any stage as Lord Dun a dreary, and the coat was a success " "Iy the way." said Mr Palmer, t "Wallack also told me that Sobhern Iamuse the British aristocracy It did. It ran for tin entire season with fashb d lonable audiences, and the manager made ne.arly $200.000 out of it I that single season " iCopyrtght. 1911. by E. J. Edwards. Ali Rights Reserved.) White and Black Pepper Relative Merits of Each Have Been the Cause of Some Rather Warm Disputes. The relative merits of whtt. and black pepper have caused some rather heated. not to say peppery, dliputes. One set of authorities declare that white pepper has lost some of the pungency of the peppercorns tU1at are treated by the process that evolves black pepper. for both white and black pepper are produced by the same vine On the other band. one of te best. though an early authority, says that the white kind as produced imder the name of Tetlicherry pepper is superior in aroma and flavor to the black pep per, being made from the bee devel oped and largest berries on thfb vines, and there can be no dispute as to the white pepper being preferred Ia those parts of Europe woere the finest splees nae been as steady ase oae able and the utmost courtesy and def erence of manner the young man re plied: "It was not necessary to instruct me. Have you been to the theater?" I understand that Robson and Crane are playing in a very funny farce call ed 'Our Boarding House' at a local theater. I should be glad to send you a ticket" "Then this is the answer that I am to make to Mr Dana?" I replied "that the Standard Oil company has no Information to give?" "As you please." he said. "Well." I replied. "you may say to your superior officers that if I can't get the information at first hand I will get it at second hand." "That, also, is as you please." he said. politely. If the smiling young man read the Sun he must have discovered about two weeks later, in an article cover ing a page and a half, that much of the information I had sought from him Vfad obtained elsewhere. That was. I believe, the first investigation into tI history and growth of the Standard Oil company which was ever made In later years some of the officers of that company confessed that It might have been the better part had they taken the public into their confidence in the beginning of the trust's career. (Copyright. 1911. by E. J. Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) man of large frame and feature. withI smooth shaven face and clear, keen gray eyes, a man of great dignity and al composure, yet most affable and gen- oi lal. It was very seldom. Indeed, that 5s his customary composure and affabil- s5 ity. were affected by circumstances. Iv But at the time of the famous w Northern Pacific corner in 1901-when Ii Hill and Harriman were fighting for s, the control of that system. and the 1 value of Northern Pacific. and ChM- a cago. Milwaukee & St Paul shares b rose several hundred points in a few tl days, causing one of the worst bear tl panics on record-Commodore Van V Santvoord was observed by his friends a to be somewhat * restless and dia- n traught. He hung over the ticker in P the New York broker's offioe where he s usually went when he wanted to buy C or sell stocks. but at this time he C seemed to be neither buying or sell- b ing tl His friends felt sure that he was 14 not caught in the squeeze, and that a he was not threatened with any loss. t, His operatiops were always too con servative for that to be likely Yet b it was evident that something was c weighing on his mind, and that the t stock market situation was absorbing " his attention The panic was as short as it was severe The conflicting Hill and Har riman interests were adjusted and stocks dropped back to their normal i level far more rapidly than they had riven to their sensational high figure. Commodore Van Santvoord. when the calm came. recovered his composure and affability. but those who knew him well detected an unwonted sol- I emnity in his expression I "Is any thing the matter? Aren't you feeling well today. Commodore?" I I one of his friends asked him. in some concern "Oh. I'm feeling all right-that is, . my health is good." he replied "But I'm feeling rather chagrined As a matter of fact. I feel as though I were i out a million dollars by this panic." "How is that? Do you mean that you have actually lost a million?" "No. I haven't actually lost a dol lar But I own quite a block of Chl t cago. Milwaukee & St Paul stock I could have sold it a few days ago at a very high figure. bought it back to day at a very low figure. and made a million by the transaction And I didn't sell it" "Well. Commodore. what do you want another million for?" his friend asked • "A man always hates to miss a chance to make a million dollars." he replied, with a laugh that yet had a tinge of sadness in it And it was said truly, probably, that he never ceased to regret that he missed this chance (Copyright. 1311, by E. J. Edwards. Alt Rights Reserved.) r, Mixed. n The Caller (who has been looking y over her hostess' books)-Do you en. J. joy 'Marcus Aurelius? The Hostess b. (delayed by her toilet and a little r flustrated)-Oh. yes; where is he now? Lt The last time I saw him he was in 'The Sign of the Cross.' Such a man li ly figure, wasn't he?-Cleveland Plain Dealer. before they became well known in this country In comparing white and black pep per the best grade of each should be selected for the test Pungency may be the principal merit of blacK pepper, but the best white pepper mates its best appeal through its superior flavor and aroma Some years ago a spice expert o1 international reputation expressed the opinion that the consumption or white pepper in this country would Increase tentold if the pepper was of the best quality Since then the standards in the Amerit a spice trade have neeo raised, but superior white pepper is probably not as freely sold as it might r be with proper attention given to qual " it, White pepper Is allowed to ripen upon the vines and after being plucked i the berries are decorticated, o de, I prtVed of their outer coat Black pep per is the product o0 the bemrr I pticked before tull rtpening FAILURES OF LARGE TURKEY FLOCKS Excellent Speclm en of Bronze Turkey. Iast year a man asked my advice do about going into the turkey business yo on a big scale, having already been of successful with a small number. I frc said, to begin with, I never gave ad- wc vice-simply grubbed around for facts tei which farmers for want of travel or en literature cannot obtain for them- the selves, says a writer in an exchange. wi Taking advice is simply a way of ad avoldlag mental exertion. It is much en better to get hold of the facts and ar think the matter out. The fact that clh this man failed grievously with his wi venture does not mean that others will nia not succeed, but it is sometimes a ar mistake to risk the almost certain an profit of a side line like turkeys or a tel small flock of hens for the very un- hb certain recompense from a largely !n- ab creased flock. Growing a large num- of ber of turkeys hatched under hens has at the disadvantage that the poults get wi lous1 unless great care is exercised, fe and further that hens wean the brood as too soon. An old turkey hen teaches pe the poults to forage and also to hide better from enemies, although, of of course, the wider range subjects them ix to more attacks If It were not for br vermin, coyotes, weasels and skunks a lu HOUSE FOR TOOLS AND SEED C Size of Building May Be Varied to T Suit Needs of Owner-One Shown in Illustration Satisfactory. In replying to a query for plans for building a carriage and implement ti house with a loft to store small tools n J E. Bridgeman submits the following it plan- it The ground plan shows a house 28z c, 38 feet in size with 12-foot post Of ti course, the size may be varied to suit a the needs of the owner The one here g q Sbr a . 0t 10 Tool and Seed House. a illustrated is a very satisfactory size t Sfor a 400-acre farm It has been the i custom on the farm to erect most any old shed for an implement house but a up-to-date farmers have learned that a · well-constructed building serves the r purpose much better and at the same time adds value to every acre of the e t land The implement house herewith I o shown may cost much or little It may be sided with drop siding, it tay I be boarded up and down or it may be finished on the exterior walls with t shingles that when properly done ia I not so expensive as many think Show I the shingle 6% Inches to the weather I 2 and the cost will not be so much more 4 than 0 O battons Paint with a t e spray pump, using thin paint or stain I ? The roof may be shingled or covered I n with any of the much advertised com- 1 o- position roofing materials r ltat n ter is better for many reasons No windows are shown in the walls of t ir, Di of the implement room In this plan, but hs a half sash is placed in each door as to shown In perspective A tench and 4 an assortment of tools, bolts, nails. st taint. etc. should find a p!ace In some i handy corner of this house where re n jpairing may be done The second is floor is all in one room but if desired hi it may r.e partitioned !,i t d, room 5J for storing seeds. etc made The small lighter too a are stored on this an floor and the heavy tools below ed 1e Keep a Record. Keep a record of your receipts sad iabru-emeaent for the coming yeS. dozen turkey hens would raise enough c young to keep a fair sized farm clear of grasshoppers, paying their cost from this source alone. Perhaps it in would be worth while to pay more at- I, tention to killing off the turkey's en- el emies, great and small. Nothing makes m the birds so strong and healthy as wide range and this they fear to take advantage of if there are too many of enemies about. If woven wire can be ei arranged to keep out coyotes, a few clumps or rows of corn and Junflowers will protect them from the hawks, fur- nt nishing shade at the same time. Minks are pretty closely trapped nowadays, t and skunks, being fearless animals, tend to become much fewer. It is hard to say how many weasels are about, for as long as there are plenty of gophers about they do not make attack on the chicken house, but they will kill a lot of poults out in the field just for the fun of slaughter, and far beyond the need of their ap petites. It is much easier with a small flock of turkeys to know them individually and retain such hens as raise big broods, discarding those that are un lucky after the first year. COARSE FORAGE FOR SWINE * Temporary Grazing Crops Will Do tl Much Toward Reducing Cost of Making Good Pork. (By S. M. TRACT.) While a permanent pasture is essen tial, temporary grazing crops will do p much toward reducing the cost of mak ing pork. There are a number of eas ily grown crops which furnish not only coarse forage, but also a large part of the grain feed which will be needed, and a selection can be made which will give a succession lasting nearly or quite through the year in a region where the ground is so rarely frozen. Oats and vetch, sorghum, corn, sweet potatoes, cowpeas, peanuts,. and arti chokes all make excellent teed, can be grown with little expense, and in nearly all localities will make fields which can be grazed with profit from January to December. Other crops, like crimson clover, chufas, and cas sava, have been found very profitable in some localities, while the gleaning of the corn and other fields always gives a good amount of inexpensive meat. It is always well to grow a variety of these grazing crops rather than to have a larger acreage of only 1 one or two, as the greater variety not only gives a better succession of growths, each of which is grazed when in its prime, but gives better results in meat product per acre. Hogs are wasteful grazers when turned into rank pasturage, and a great saving of feed can be secured by growing the different grasing crops in long, narrow fields, which can be divided into sections by movable trans t verse fences. Usually there will be no trouble in arranging the fields so that I this may be done, wbhile by maintain Sing a succession of plantings, and by fencing the hogs away from such re cently grazed crops as oats, sorghum, t and others whch will make a second growth, the fields need not be large. By frequent changes of the feeding ground, one acre will yield abundant grazing for at least ten full-grown hogs, or for a correspondingly larger number of younger animals and pigs. Fix Bad Roads. While waiting impatiently for the state to repair that mud-bole, wash out or other bad place In the highway, wouldn't it be a good idea to take a few hours off and fix it yourself? If ' every farmer spent a few hours, ocea Ssonally, working oa the road, oar d highways would soon show a decided Simprovement Let us not only talk Sgood roads-let us work bad roads! S Raise More Vegetables. te Make the garden large enough to ia afford plenty of vegetables for the fam ily and some to sell. Now is the best time to enlarge the garden. Now is also the best time to thoroughly pve pare the garden. Make hot beds right now and have everything ready whea the time comes to pot thIe seed aeL PROTEIN IS MOST IMPORTANT SUBSTANCE IN ANY FOODS Composed of Nitrogen. Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Sualpb. and Phosphorus-It Makes Up Muscles, Tendon Ltgaments. Connecting Tissues, and Almost Everything but Fat. • msm am m .eo 6 cBy H. B. M'CLURE.) The nutritive substances in hay or bu feed may be divided into two classes- do flesh forming and fuel or energy pro- sa ducing substances. When the proper in amount of these two classes of sub- are stances is fed the ration is said to ml be balanced. If an unbalanced ration is fed, as one containing more fuel or sti energy producing substances than are co needed and less flesh-.orming mate- bu rial, the ration is partially wasted, and ph such unwise feeding will not bring as eti good results as the feeding of the same thb amount of a balanced ration. Each wc class of substances has different of- na fces to perform in the body. If not enough flesh forming substance is ha oil the thi Diagram showing the relative in amounts of digestible protein and car- h bohydrates In different kinds of hay. m The sectitn inclosed in light line rep- t resent the carbohydrates; those in closed In heavy lines, the protein. a nc fed, the body suffers, because it is absolutely necessary to keep the body fa in good condition. Thousands of ar horses are fed all they can eat, yet ha are poorly nourished because the food he contains little except fuel substances. 7. The flesh forming substances are pc used to replace the waste that goes on pc in all living tissues. Energy produc ing substances are used to furnish the di energy required for the nervous and pc muscular activities of the body, and in when fed in excess they may to a cer- in tain extent be stored up in the form pc of fat for use later, when needed for hi either energy or heat. One of the most important sub- ra stances in any foodstuff is protein. All h: nutritive substances which contain a nitrogen are classed under the general ni term of protein. Protein is composed ni of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, ai sulphurs, and phosphorus. hi EVERY FARMER CAN USE PAINT b Adds to Apeara9 e of Place mand bi to the Durabilttity of Aar - tind of Farm BKeldsa o, Any man can do an average job of painting, and can thereby not only im prove the appearance of his place, but can add greatly to the durability of the buildings. Th" average farmer, if there is such a thing, seems to think that paint is used solely for ornament, and be is of all men most keenly practical, be eschews what he regards as an un- -I profitable luxury. It is, perhaps, the d a p u A Hand-power Paint Mill. 1 rule rather than the exception in some I sections to see houses and agricul tural implements sadly in need of re paint. Of course paint does Improve the appearance of property, but it is far more useful as a protector rather than an ornament The expenditure of a small amount of money and time in Spainting a valuable piece of farm mas chinery or a building will add great Sly to the length of its life. Another. Suseful object accomplished by painting Sis the improved sanitary conditions of buildings and outhosese. The cost of Ssuch work is small, the necessary I'equipment not expensive, and with Sproper care will last a long time. In order to supply information whleh . will enable the farmer to purchase the 1 paint economically and apply it inl S This is Worth Trying. For the window boxes In which to start vegetables next spring take up snow a quantity of loose rich soil and burn it to kill old vegetable life. This can be done by burning wood over the soil before it is taken up or on a piece of sheet iron over a fire. Put this in a barrel and keep in a perfectly dry b- place. When your seeds come up from this Ssoil next spring they will be free from weeds. I Automobile Plow. d The automobile plow has arrived. k You sit on a cushion with a steering gear in your hands, and down under neath the machine tbe blades of a plow are fixed. By this device 12 acres of land can be plowed in a day, and life is made easy for the farmer. S Work of Experlment Stations. et Forty years ago congress endowed is agricultural stations, and experiment a- stations later, for the purpose of help bt lin the farmer, and wonderful things Ia have bees aeomplished during that Urne Protein is the substance w builds up the body. The muscles, 4 , dons, ligaments,. connective tllans' skin, hair, hoofs, part of the bone, ears in fact every part of the body but ° are made up of protein, together $.4 mineral matter and water. The next important class of mb. stances is the carbohydrates, w contain carbon, hydrogen, and o but no nitrogen, sulphurs or phorus; they include starch, su etc. These are used for practijall the same purpose for which coIra wood is used In the steam en namely, to furnish energy and heat. The third important constituent hay is its oils. Small quantities oil are present in all kinds of Ii These oils serve the same purpose the carbohydrates. A pound of thesq. however, will furnish two and gUi fourth times as much energy or hba as the same quantity of carbohydnrte It can readily be seen, when the eheml ical analysis of hay is considered, wlq the price of the different grades kinds of hay should depend, upon the amount of digestible sov4 ents contained, and, second, upona $ purpose for which the hbay is fhd, the concentrated feed-i_ e., the pasl in the ration-lacks protein, thLee I hay that is high in this substaene I more valuable tlan one whleh egg, tains little but carbohydrates, and ui versa. There is quite a range in QW amount of the different classes 4 nutrients in the various kinds oef W% On an average, in 100 pounds of -, falfa hay the digestible pn~tai amounts to 10.58 ands; in eewpgt hay, 10.79 pounds; in allke dsae', hay, 8.15 pounds; in red clover bhg, 7.38 pounds; in redtop hy, 4.';. pounds; and in timothy ha , 3ag pounds. In 100 pounds of redtop haw tb digestible carbohydrates amo it 4 pounds; in timothy hay, 43.72 pound in alsike clover hay, 41.70 pesi; in alfalfa hay, 37.33 pounds; in wcw. pea hay, 38.40 pounds; in red eoe hay, 36.15 pounds. When fed for protein, thimhyr b ranks last, but when fed for easr hydrates it stands next to redta, which heads the list, If the t nutrients are considered there are i4 number of dilSret kiads of hay w are equal, it not superior, to timothy hay for feeding purposes. telligently and to the beet advantag Secretary Wilson caused experts in bureau of chemistry to Inv the subject and prepare harmers B tin No. 474 palling attention to economic importance Of painting buildings and equipment and giving tails as to the cost, purchase, ed of brushes, cost of the needed, how to mix and ap Paint conveys to the eId tae idea of a mixture of linseed oil, but the of the word includes b "o M lte and calcimine, but not agAlll, the bulletin gives several sly able recipes for making both at excellent coatings for both adt side of buildings. The secretary toin addition , lng the proper use of paits i useful and ornamental pirpolse does not think anything toe attractfve for the farm bourte phasized several preentions: use any paint containing of lead about stables or o where the fumes from decs , ganic matter occur, since them are likely to darken the lead Do not use with lead compeol pigment which may liberate pounds of sulphr. IFor eampi marine blue which cotainseat a form in which it may be es is a beautiful blue and may be with ine white, but shbold used with white lead or a s plgments. Prusian blue, 0s trary, does not cottatl a _ph. • may be used with l,d pIigm. "Remember that taIpenl bensine are very insathh Spedal precautlons shoud . to bring pait ceutalisg I stances near say 11gt 0 "Many pigments a. e the workman should be Ir careful to remove all patin l , the ,,a and not under 4 a stances allow any of It to I-g In mouth. A man shoald et atl - same clothes in whle Ib IhAI - painting, and befort etin a r. only change his clothes but I g paint stains from his sknl. t. t advisable to use taVpatine a t in removing palM St bL y hands, but by olla tbeie tb linseed oil, or, In fle with i oil, and then thorouhbly wMS Ih soap, the paint may be r .S& e vided it hba not been Maliev -. too thormoughly on the Ia'. : Good Liberal UEe _l to qne of the best tnvetmimM p any farmer can maks, with a d helping his boys sad girls in tlh is ture, Is In giving thee bo e a good liberal edt etle th e enable them to compete w In and hold their own in the y thousand dollars sad a gUd tion equip a young man mu is for his struggles in la ife WlI tm thousand dollars and no ddHJ1 Horse in the P's I Horses are a' waynh hs IpiWS. d. the spring than in the er g many men sell la the 1 l, r- use for tbeir teams ag 1 a and the farmer who Iels l I1 to dispose of at I .y one who reape the he er. Best for YolU5 Many a young _g ed capital would p nt go east and buy - np j wthl- bstantial gs on it rather than at time as much for. tr clImate of