jgyjl Who Retained a Fundamental Reverence for Their Creatoi* X*i f'M -hf: fey ki••'£ * By B. A. NESTOS, Governor of North Dakota. ||^^ocys?ff«gfi?5?ff5?S?«ff.'i?P'S?g3g?<??gsasa52Sasa5ES2S2SBSiaKSa5il55s The men who founded the University of North Dakota were largely the sariie as those who six years thereafter established the state, adopted our constitution and enacted the main body of our laws. I am speaking now with all sincerity and on behalf of the fathers and mothers of our state, builders of the commonwealth who still share the faith of their fathers. It seems I can see and hear these stern pioneers of the prairie state we love. Some left their eastern homes, where culture, learning and simple faith, inherited from colonial ancestry, prevailed; others came from foreign lands to breathe the air of liberty, bringing with them homely virtues of honesty and truth; but all were men who through the privations of pioneer days, when sometimes the only code was the code of honor which generations of virtuous ancestors had cultivated in their hereditary character, retained a fundamental reverence for their Creator, a reverence which the freedom of the frontier never lessened. I can see them, hear them as they meet in their legislative assemblies to write the law;.I see the seamed faces. I hear the rough words, as one by one they write the statutes that insure liberty and education to their children. They, the founders, call to us through the mists of the past. There •hall be no sectarian instruction in our free schools, imposing upon the rtrinds of our children doctrines and dogmas distasteful to them; neither •hall there be in the name of that liberty we prize above possessions and within the walls of these free schools we have established any insidious undermining of that reverence for God and His inspired word which through all the tribulations of frontier' life we have found the only safe rule of life and conduct, upon which we seek to protect from the sneer of the one who "in his heart has said there is no God." May we heed this-call, hear its and carry it with us through the yeartfc His Raids tin Cornfield.'Art Mrgsly Responsible for Hit ^ Unsavory Reputation ATTACKS OTHER WHO BIRDS Doti Farmer Big Favor, Howivtr, by Devouring Grasshoppers, Cater* : , White Grub* awt<;.«;r-| Other Insects. SZS252525Z5g5gjB555Z5H5S5H55jSS25Z525g5S5S5Z52555BS2525H5H5g52Sg5Z525Z Things Often Overlooked Yet at the Bottom of Many Farmers'Troubles ByD. L. BRTSON, Farmer, Elizabeth, IH. £^H5i5E5325H5S525HSH5HSZ5H5H5H52re5e!5ESE5E525Z5ES25125E5BSZ5a525;252S Here are some thing? that are often overlooked and yet are at the bottom of many a farmer's troubles. Many farms are too small to be* profitable, owing to the fact that the outlay for equipment, buildings^ in- •OTance, etc., is as large on 80 acres as on 160 or 200 acres. Crop yields should be much larger per acre, and often the extra ten or twenty bushels represent the profit above cost of production. Too much <of the live stock on farms is of the scrub variety, which means a low retail on live stock investment. > Addition of limestone, crop rotation with legumes, and the use of proper fertilizers will on most farms mean larger yields per acre, and the nee of pure bred sires in all branches of live stock will mean a better grade of beef add pork at lover cost of production and higher price* for breeding stock. t Poor management in regard to labor, both horse and man, is found 99DJ times. Failure to do the odd jobs in slack times means delay in the bttsjr season. Unnecessary machinery, carelessness, and waste are other factors which spell defeat. S85Z5H52525g5gSE5g525S5H5Z535H555Z55Sg5H5g5H5S5Z5SSg525Z5Z5H555Z52SZ5g II: The Formula for Making Boys and Girls That Are Fit to Live With E. A. ROSS, University of VWk&vrisfn. || 2feSES2S2S2SESHSESS5BSHSZ5SS2SSSE5BSHSHSES2SZSB5E5HSHSHS2S2SBSES2S2SZ5 "Vformula for making boys and girls that are fit to live with is as understood by sociologists as the making of soap by manufacturers; ~ the formula must be extended to the vast majority of America's youth, Instead of to but the favored few. - First comes supervised play--team and antagonistic play. It estab- : ^ liahes the child in facile co-operation with his fellow and teaches him selfcontrol and how to keep his temper. A good sportsman is a valuable - pattern. h * oome* co-operation in school work, the co-operative investigation of subjects, and the fitting together of results. 'J After this, the establishment of ideals. The boy scout movement is * clever example of this. It rivets ideals of conduct to the boy's instincts * outdoor life. Ideals should be established by the 0f great :;.iBfn--Lincoln, Washington, William the Silent. # Religion is the crown of the formula. Discipline, ideals, association S1®** men> are not enough. Beligion furnishes a philosophy of », goals. It gives a comprehensive outlook upon life. It should come to the • Jhild at the age of seventeen or eighteen. % the United SUttt' PefHrfWMat of Agriculture.) Like most outlaws, the notorious Jim Crow has sdiue points that are commended among law-abiding citizens, but when he Is a bad bird he is a hard-boiled egg. His springtime ravages ou the cornfield are largely responsible for his unsavory reputation, but he lias added to it by occasional raids on the poultry yard, depredations on wild birds, and attacks on crops other than corn. At certain seasons and In certain localities he becomes such a nuisance and a detriment to farming that he mast be warned by making an example of some members of his gang. Jim is only about half bad, and because of his better half, which does not mean his wife, who is just as black as he is, it is not advisable to treat him too harshly. Nearly onefifth of his food is made up of insects, and he includes on his menu some of the farmer's worst enemies-- grasshoppers, caterpillars, and white grubs and their parents, the May beetles. • • Been Going Too Far. Probably we could not get along go well without Jim Crow as with him. Killing off the whole family, if that were possible, would be a sbort-sighted policy. So, when the United States ^Department of Agriculture recommends the poisoning of crows, this measure should be looked upon merely as a warning to Jim and his family that they have been going too far and that they can't get away with everything. They are wary enough not to need many repetitions of the lesson. Every spring farmers revive their old feud with the Jim Crow family, carrying on a desultory battle by means of scarecrows, epithets, and the more effective deterrents of coal tar and poison. Coal tar, which may be secured at gas plants and some paint shops, is not a poison, but it imparts a disagreeable, wissy odor to the seed grain that is distasteful to crows and other pests. It has the advantage, not possessed by some other deterrents on the market, of not affecting the germination of the corn when used In limited quantities. A tablespoonful is used to half a bushel of seed. The grain is first heated by an application of warm water, and then drained. The coal tar is added immediately and a thorough stirring will give each kernel an even coating. The seed is then spread out to dry or is dried by the addition of sifted ashes, pland plaster, or powdered earth. Strychnine le Favored. The best deterrent, however. Is strychnine, which may be applied to corn in a paste made up in the proportion of one ounce of powdered strychnine, two tablespoonfuls of starch, aad one and one-half pints of water to 20 Quarts'of corn. The starch and strychnine are put into the water, which is heated to boijlng, and stirred well when the starch begins to thicken. Tliis paste is poured on the com and stirred Into it until thoroughly distributed. The corn Is spread to dry and is then ready to use. This method Is better than the old one of steeping the corn In a strong strychnine solution. Because of their wariness it will not be possible to kill many, of tfie crows, but a little of this ."V* •. - v L^ Troublesome in Some Cities Than Others. 5 »8feg5g5g5c!SgS25g5il5Z5ig5SSg5aS25H5g5g5gSg5a5g5Z5g5g52525g5a5g5ZSZ5ig5ZSg5 k : the Soviet Has Brought to Russia Danger r| - of Peaceful Germanization By PROF. ALEXANDER PETRUNKEVITCH, Tale University. . |^SZS2S2S2SlSS2S2S2SHSHS2S25EEHSHSHS2S2S2SSSansZ5iL5iZSE5HSa5a5E£naSESE' The present government in Russia is just dragging itself along, and tcm&ins in power for the simple reason there is no one else to whom the |Hle may be passed. But it is bound to fall--how soon no one may say this time. The ultimate result of the revolution will probably be the - Splitting up of Russia into a number of small states. If this happens, it j? eventually possible these states jrould be bound together by some sort Jr union. Under the rule of the soviet the youth of Hussia has degenerated Mentally, physically and morally. As a result of the war and the revolution, the great intellectual leaders and the educated classes have vanished. To whom, then, must Russia turn for teachers for her schools 5S To Germany, of course. There is the great danger to Russia and to the entire 'World, for trade and commerce wiU follow such an intellectual invasion, ^pnd the peaceful Germanization of all Russia will be complete. The present Russian government should not be recognized by the ies and trade relations with it should not be resumed. That would be ft terrible mistake. How can any government guarantee its citizens prop- M commercial protection in dealing with a government protect its own citizens in their private property? •% Wm S* Hay8' SeCTetai7 National Federation of Construction Industries-- {• -Traders in the construction industry realize that the country is in a cycle ©i declining prices. Competent observers of business conditions are of the ^pinion that these declining prices will not soon reach the prewar level and ttat the general average of construction costs will remain from 50 to 60 per cent above the level of 1913 and 1914. Inollnation to Swarm le Reduced Where Coloniee Have Ample Brood- Chamber*--Good Cambists ^ ^ of Importanoe. ; ^ (Pr*p*r*4 by th« United States Department of Agriculture.) 'Honey production on an extensive scale makes It necessary sometimes to distribute the colonies of bees in several apiiirles to avoid overstocking. Then comes the serious problem of controlling the swarm. Swarm control is less difficult In producing extracted honey than with comb-honey. It is less troublesome in some locations than In others. The reasons for these differences are important in devising measures for swarm prevention. These, and other problems relating to swarming are discussed in Farmers' Bulletin 1198, issued recently by the United States Department of Agriculture. This bulletin may be had, free, upon request addressed to the division of publications. ' Some strains of bees, the Department of Agriculture says, have a stronger tendency to swarm than othmm v. Control of Swarming is Difficult Problem. ers. So, to some extent, swarming may be reduced by careful selection in breeding. Colonies having large brood-chambers are less Inclined to swarm than those lp quarters too small. Strong colonies having good queens may need 60.000 to 70,000 Cells for rearing of brood, during the period of extensive brood-rearing in the spring, in addition to the cells used for storing honey and pollen. Colonies having good combs throughout are less inclined to swarm than colonies having poor combs. Inferior combs may greatly increase the swarming tendency, both by reducing the amount of available brood-rearing space and by acting asbarriers In the way of a free expansion of the brood-nest. The bulletin gives a dozen or more swarm-preventive measures to be taken by bee owners. EXERCISE GIZZARD MUSCLES At Certain Seaeone Jim Crow le Decided Nuisance. poisoned corn scattered over the field of sprouting corn will get a few of them and the rest will take the warning and leave. Using whole corn for bait lessens the danger of poisoning smaller seed-eating birds. Care should be taken not to distribute the poisoned grain near the farm buildings where domestic animals might pick it up. The crows usually do their corn pulling at some distance from the buildings. .Before going ahead with poisoning operations which Involve the spreading of poison It is alw ys advisable to look up laws and local regulations regarding the distribution of poison. Local conditions may modify practices a great deal, especially in thickly-pop* ulated regions. Soft-Feed Idea Can Be Overworked by Poultryman--Time of - Feeding Will Vary. Many of the most successful poultrymen feed a part of the dally grain ration ground. Many of these feed the ground grain moistened with milk or water, although more feed it dry. • fowl's gizzard can grind all kinds of grain, but it is considered more economical to have a part of the grinding done by steam or water power. However, the soft-feed idea should not be overworked. Beginners often reason it is cheaper for the miller than for the fowl to grind the grain; but the powerful muscles of the gizzard, are there to be used, and experience has shown the balance of power of functions in the fowl's economy makes the vigorous exercise of the gizzard beneficial. When feeding moistened ground feed, have it a comparatively dry, crumbly mash, and not a thin slop. Give what they wttl eat readily in 15 to 20 minutes. Poultrymen do not agree as to the time of day when soft feed should be fed. Some say it should be fed in the morning, others at noon, and still others at night. Many give the ground feed In the morning, a large number at noon, and a few at night. The number who feed at noon, however, is becoming larger. In the^jgg-laylng experiment in West Virginia reported to the United States Department of Agriculture, the egg production was practically the same whether mash was fed in the morning or at night. "Tell Us Every thing." GRASS AS BALANCED RATION Cost of Production of Milk and But. terfat Can Be Lowered by Use of Succulence. Pasture grass Is considered as near a balanced ration of any one f«jpd as we can get. With an abundant supply of nature's palatable. Inexpensive, succulent, nutritious and well-balanced food we can lower the coet of production of milk and butterfat. CHIEF VALUE OF SANDY SOIL Roots of Plants Are Permitted to Paee Through Readily, but It Dries Out Qulekly. The chief virtue of sandy soil Is that the roots of plants can pass through It readily; its chief fault Is that It dries out tpo quickly. Clay soil holds water well, but It tends to pack and harden. Both types of soil need stable manure--it loosens up clay and being mini to hold moisture. ^ - ANO'VHKft TRIP I Tve had another nice trip," said the Fairy Queen, at she came back to F a 1r y 1 and and took ofT her starshaped crown and laid down her best wand. "I do enjoy the beautiful things I see when I go a - t r a v e i i n g , " s h e added. "Tell us everything you saw," said the Fairies. "You know we always l i k e to liear.M "Oh, I saw so many l o v e l y spring gardens. I saw lovely purple crocuses being picked and some were being pressed so they could be sent off in letters to those away from springtime gardens. "I saw people counting how many they had and one person said that in their garden there were eight which showed that it was an early spring, for last year at the same time there were only two out! "I saw lots of birds' nests, oh so many of them, both In the country and In the city. "And I saw many birds building their nests, working so hard. They were carrying sticks and bits of mud and all kinds of little bits of odds and ends they thought would help with their building. "I saw a clock which was weary and which would not go until It was put down on its back so It could rest. It had behaved the same way some time before I heard and that after a time it became* all right! "I heard a little girl say that they had so many calves on their farm that she didn't have names for all of them. "And I saw some flower beds made in the shapes of diamonds, and lovely pansies and hyacinths and many other flowers were put in them. "You see the people said diamonds were valuable and so they wanted to show that their flower beds were valuable and made them diamond-shaped. "flowers to them were very valuable and I quite agfte. There aren't many things much nicer than flowers. "I heard some boys talking about a circus and they said that the lions and tigers and leopards now did tricks in the circus. "That sounded very astonishing even to the Fairy Queen! "But it was quite true, of course. "I saw a kind fhan who was taking,. the usual order of eggs to a lady. Shqf was very sad, for she had had much, trouble. And he went out into ther woods and gathered some lovely littler trailing arbutus flowers for her. Wasn't that a sweet, kind thing to do?" "It was a lovely thing to do," the fairies all said. "Then I took another hurried trip to the zoo. And the cooland creatures were much excited. M,I had my picture in the paper,' said the baboon named Chacma. He is a South African and has a face very much like a dog. " 'We had ours in the paper, too,' said two orang-utans. " 'And I had mine In,' said the Adjutant, or East Indian stork. 'And they told about my marabou feathers, too. Yes, they spoke of how handsome they were!' - " 'They had my picture in the paper,* said Leo the Lion, 'but that makes no difference to me. I do not pay any attention to such things. They're not enough to flatter me.' "'I thought it was rather nice to have my picture in the paper,' said the crocodile. "They told, too, of how famous I am for my teeth and my skin and they spoke of crocodile tears, which Is an old Joke, but perhaps they can't think up another one!' "Yes, the zool a n d a n i m a l s w e r e much pleased about having their pictures in the paper. "Well, I had a fine trip and saw many things and now that I am back I am going to plant a Falkland garden for all of the Fairyland people and while I am working in my garden I suggest that all the little Fairyland people go adventuring for awhile--wherever they wish." So the Fairyland people went adventuring, some this way and some that, and scattered all over the land. But the Fairy Queen worked In her Fairyland garden, for she had seen so many gardens on her trips lately that she wanted a little special one of her own, too--and Bhe wanted to work ttf It rather than have It come by the wave of a wand. "I Had Mine In." Dr. William S. Bovard, Board of Sunday Schools, M#,E. Church-- -One of the surest ways to counter the tendency toward secularizing the Jabbath is to Christianise the six da/s of the wodt through work in the " * le» tuid wcwriii. . . Hogs Need Dry Pena. Slogs will need dry peas if they ere to he comfortable and yet on flesh as i rapidly as they should. If the ground has a tendency to be inuridy after every rain, floor tluj pen and keep the bogs above the ground; It wiii pay. Good Reeulte With KafBr. In order to get good results with kafflr, It Is absolutely necessary to balance It with protein feeds, for even kafflr does not supply growing material ' for the pigs in sufficient amounts. "r ; •>- v • • Should 'Have In regard to a farm repair shop, there ix no excuse for a fanner not having a place in which to repair his tools. He will find that thereia much 'Wvinir «»f dollars and time Why Called Silver Mootfe^feS "Why do they call It the silver moonf" "Because it comes out in qpartffia 'and halves." - - 'A3; Jumped on Hti Neok. "Now, Edward," said the Sunday school teacher, "can't you tell me what the prodigal son's father did when he returned?" "He jumped on his neck and kissed replied EdWard. - . v v' M a k e s E n g i n e T e n d e r , . ' - ' a. «%iis," said the young man, "ft lhe engine boiler." "Oh," said the girl, "tell me, why do they boll the engines?" " ^ "To make the engine tender," J* • > tike JJEW YORK.-- All the world of horse-lovers Is talking about Clover, a Hambletonlah trotting horse. Why? Because Clover is alive and hearty at fifty-one years of age-- which is believed to be a world record. Clover's owner is the Rev. Dr. Uriah Meyers, seventy-five, former pastor of St Matthew's Evangelical Lutheran church of Catawlssa, Pa. The reverend gentleman, retired on a pension, had become so poor that it looked as If be and Clover would have to part. The New York World got hold of the story of man and horse, Financial and other aid for both man and horse was the immediate result of publicity. And how the horsemen are talking about Clover 1 "I bought Clover in 1884," said Ed- Win J. Walker of Philadelphia. Four years later I sold him--practically . Save him -- to Doctor Myers, m cousin, who promised him a home for „ ' w hfe and used him In bis pastoral ; work. Clover is a dark bay, 10 hands, '^0^ l)f Hambletonlan stock. He's a doublegalted horse--trots and swings into a ' * .'f* pace. I often drove him over the •" ' Wlsahicken drive to wagon or sleigh v-vS'lS! and used to win the basket of win offered In the old days to the first to reach Falrmount Inn. He could. ' trot in 2:17, and when he was forty-, two I drove him a quarter in 36 sec--^*-t;,^ onda. He was always "babied"; that Z accounts for his age, I suppose. He stlll has his teeth and his eyes are^,*f#5|« good; he knows me every time I flslt; ' * Mr. Myera. I had Clover's pedigree, \ ? but lost It. He raced under another name." • ' Horse experts the world over agree *" that fifty-one years t* an unheard-of' „ >' ^ age for a horse--any kind of a horse, * * ou four legs. Kingston, the famous i % A m e r i c a n t h o r o u g h b r e d , a c h i e v e d a d - 4 - dltional fame by living to twenty-: ^ eight. A Canadian horse is known to •; have lived t o the age of at least ^ thirty-eight An English' pony la stated to have lived to be thirty-nine. Common-Law Widow Wins $50,000 Estate T~\ ENVER.--Frances Ryan was dedared the legal widow of the late N. D. Danlkas, former Qreek restaurant owner, and as such entitled to control of the $50,000 estate of her husband, in a decision given by Judge C. J. Morley in the District court. Judge Morley held that a commonlaw marriage had. been consummated between the woman and Danikas during the course of a three-months' trip she accompanied him on tq French Lick Springs, Ind., and Rochester, Minn., where he died last March. When Danikas died he left a will under which the then Miss Ryan was given a bequest of $1,000 and the rest of the estate was given In trust to establish dowries for the poor maidens of Danikas' native city, Dibrl, Greece. N. P. Calgeros, the local vice consul, was appointed executor of the will, and he has been resisting the efforts of the widow to get the estate of the husband as his sole heir. Judge Morley In his decision held that the marriage had been consummated by the mutual consent and acknowledgment of the coaple at~d that evidence offered had established the^t X-;? fact that they" were known and be-|jfc M lieved to be man and wife by all the?.^'5* ; acquaintances they met on the trip§j^.?-> which Just preceded Danikas' death. The trial of the case had attracted * - * wide attention among Greeks in this1'**'" country, witnesses having come to V •= testify fcr the administrator from Tennessee, Georgia, Illinois and other distant states, while others had come . ^ from distant towns in the Rocky f' Mountain district merely to attend the* " : hearlnga. "" Wife Charges Triangle; Odd Features; WFE HUJBAHO OThEK WOMAN CHICAGO. -- I>r. Florence Fowler, resident alienist of the Cook County hospital, has been named in a divorce suit that charges a triangle out of the ordinary. The bill was filed In the Dupage County court at Wheaton by Mrs. Emanuel H. Kuttner of Lombard, wife of the wealthy secretary of the Illinois Ballast and Improvement company. With the bill on file in the Dupage county records is an injunction restraining Mr. Kuttner from disposing of any of his property--real estate In Florida, the Lombard home and stock In the company of which he Is secretary, or from entering the Lombard llome. The bill charges the maintenance of a "love nest" by Mr. Kuttner fbr Doctor Fowler at 1053 North Austin avenue, In a fashionable district. Mrs. Kuttner, at the Lombard home, told how, after sixteen years of married life, her husband had left her and; gone to live with Doctor Fowler. ^ She told how, as she believes, her':?' husband planned to charge her with r ? being insane, and of visits of Doctor r'* Fowler to her Lombard home with Mr. Kuttner, which, the wife believes, V • gS&'f * -i" : were to have been the basis for the. insanity charge. "All the charges are absurd and un-, 4?.: true," said Doctor Fowler. "Mrs. ^ ^ Kuttner is a strange woman--a be-; liever In spiritualism, astrology, and £ a l l s o r t s of o c c u l t i s m . She c l a i m s t o / " hold communion with the stars and p says they always guide her right. ^ !3These charges against me aref^".^?v.jf merely the product of her imagination, f, Once she said she was the reincarna- ^ tlon of Cleopatra, and once she said she was the queen of Sheba." J:'A Widow's Evidence Doubln Juj^s Award £•: JERSEY CITY, N. J.--Damages of $55,000 were awarded to Vincent Earl Lembeck, twenty-seven, of Easton, Pa., by a jury In the Hudson County Supreme court, which found that he was the Illegitimate grandson of the late Henry Lembeck, millionaire brewer, and entitled to a share In the estate. According to testimony at the trial the plaintiff's mother, Mrs. Josephine De Cartier Coughlln, was employed thirty years ago as a cook in a residence near the Lembeck mansion. She became acquainted with the brewer's son, Victor, who is alleged to have entered into a common law marriage with her. Just before the child was born Victor is alleged to have confessed that he already was married and to have pleaded with the woman not "to wreck his life." She went to Easton and raised her son, unknown to friends of the Lembeck family until the suite was filed a few months ago. Testimony as to Victor's relationship with Mrs. Coughlln was supplied THANK • In a spectacular manner hy his rt^ht-^'**^. $ before he died Victor confessed that 8 her the letter's baby clothes, embrold- ^ he had an Illegitimate son and gave / Mike' Will Get a Free Hinting License F>KT COLLINS, COLO--Michael Mahlan, a northern Coorado farmer, has written to state game warden for a free hunting license and says he's the victim of more kinds of hard luck than he can shake a stick at. His letter says in part: "Last week, for Instance, a badger eame along one night and got into my henhouse and killed 41 full-grown March pullets outright, and eat parts of six--a t^tal loss. "We can't keep any house cats any pxtre to keep down the mice, rats, (round squirrela, chipmunks and the ered with the boy's initials, to keep. This widow produced theee garments In court and the mother collapsed at! the sight of them. I While Vincent sued for only $25,000* the jury returned a verdict for more.^'v •»";!> than twice that amount on the ground %- A-^ that Vincent had lived hi obscurity all f"\, his life and had been deprived of j-jN*;; rights which might have been hl« years aco for tfae aakia*. t' ' .-V "3v • like. Coyotes come around at night, f and besides cleaning us out of chickens, they walk off with our cats. ^ "Now we have about seven kinds of If mice. They eat roots and feed of all! - f kinds. They clean up a space In an«- -- alfalfa field of thirty feet In diameter/^ « and they make four to alx placea on[.>„ ^ r - each of my acrea "The prairie dogs keep down every-' , *•" thing before it can grow an inch**' above the ground. "Now when a man has eighty or^'f ninety acres to cultivate and buy ammunition, poison and traps for, be-Upsides the time it takes to fight these pests. It's like committing slow suMcide, by working eighteen hours out 11^ of twenty-four, the whole year around and throughout. "Me and the old lady le a^ettlngP* ^ tired of tlds kind of fancy living, and^J^ unless you do something for me right- - j* now and right away, Tm pulling out.^^1 I'll pull out for nothing. It wouldn't^U;;; take long to pull ont and leave my land and let the justs have U> 1 whole chabanc." «fp C.-k /'