75W ~. - 'maevm-«mmamm - . A. _ u ,.m.¢._, .1..r-.p~:..-..-â€"‘_., H A _ N nyl- :* «a.» 41- J;nf‘;flv~..m.ï¬ .. Ant .. ;) W GREAT BRITAIN'S MISSIUN. AN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER’B OP. ‘INION OF THE SITUATION. “to Only Deni-cs Commercial Expansion -â€"Prererc to Remain Isolated in Euro- pean Aflnlnâ€"She Will Keep the Trade Highways Clear. Referring to the German Emperor's tnterference in the Transvaal affair and the so-called isolation of Britain. the Chicago news says:â€" The mystery of the whole business is that no sensible man can discover What theobject of the German Emperor “'88. what he proposed to accomplish. and on whom in the nature of allies be im- agined he could lean. He may have been impressed with the idea that he could isolate Great Britain. But Great Britain has for years. so far as Con- tinental European Governments are concerned, been isolated. She has steadily refused to join the so-called Triple Alliance. Her statesmen know full well that she is not so much a European as a worldâ€"embracing power. Her mission. as well as her duty, is to colonize, to extend the markets for her manufacturers. and create as many agricultural communities, more or less dependent on her as she can, so that she can have a choice of markets, as re- spects both what she produces and what she consumes. This duty and mission are to her THE VERY ESSENCE. the necessity of her national existence. She may or may not enter into an European Continental alliance. But she must kee lthe road on which she is now traveling to the end of the chapter. And she also must see that that road is kept clear for her.- So far as_Continental Europe and European af- fairs_are concerned. Great Britain can “go _in" or "draw out,†as is best for her interests. So far as her worldâ€"wide road in the direction of colonization of which the rest of the world is so ab- normally jealous, and at the same time ever .in process of imitating her dazzling example, she _ cannot “draw out†and "go in" again; so far as that road and its tendencies are co - corned, she must. always be ready "£0 play or pay." \Vhy could not the young German Emperor see this? His rejected and despised old counsellor, Bismarck, who was the mentor of his father and his grandfather, saw this clearly. His ad- Vice was and is that Germany must rely on the sustentation of her national autonomy and the preservation of her internal peace as against the machinaâ€" tions.of which Bismarck looked on as a “reptile press," some sixty or seventy of the leaders of which are now incar- cerated for offences against his im- perial llajcsty’s person and the politi- cal infidelitics of Socialism. lf,mea.nwhile, Great Britain isisolat- edasa European power, as the admir- ers of the too previous young Emperor contend, ,what shall be said of Ger- many itself? That nation has for years been_ com elled to enter into an alliance \vitli ustria and Italy as against Russui and France. Supposing it desires to enter into an alliance AGAINST ENGLAND, swhat has it to offer either of those ! _owers as a quid pro quo? In such. alâ€" ; iances as these the theory of “nothing gfor iioihing"â€"â€""do ut dos,†as Bismarck . ‘uts itâ€"docs not count; and thus, while 3 tngland has something to offer Rus- sia. which Russia very badly wants, IGermany has literally nothing in the ehape of an exchangeable piece of di- fplomatic property with which to bait ithe. northern bear. ; Similar conditions apply to England ;and l‘rauce. The latter wants her lost ,provmccs restored. England can say: 1" \Ve will help §\Ve Will also see to it that Italy will 'be on.your aide in the event of war with either Germany or Austria." Thus, if En land is isolated in Europe. she is ma or better position to make bar- gains in the shape of either "staple goods" or "job lots" to any power whom she chires to propitiate. dust at present Lord Salisbury is prepared to strike one of those tre- mendous_ strokes like that England struck .in Egypt, and at which Eu- ro cried. "Who would have thought it †Those who have read his speech at the London Mansion house some months since must have seen that. between the lines of it be doomed Turkey. In our opinion all that prevents hiui at present from. making an arrangement with Rumba. on the subject of Turkey is that the Russian Government and people de- testthe Armenians. Possibly the late British Cabinet meeting discussed this very question of a stable Government for Turkey. Possibly, also, if this fiasco of the young .Emperor of Ger- many had _not interposed. Salisbury could by this time have settled the Ar- menian question to the satisfaction of both Europe and America. â€"_â€".â€"â€"_‘ QUALIFICATIONS OF A NURSE. .â€" ‘ShoJld nave Five Senses. Sight. nearing, Pooling. Slurll um ’i‘nsic. A physician. in speaking of the quali~ fications of nuise. said, among other things. that she ought to have her five senses, sight. hearing. feeling. smell. taste. in a healthy, active condition. Sight. that she may be able to read directions or read aloud to the patient. and watch the change of countenance. A quick-«sighted. nurse will not need to wait until the sufferer has asked for anything in words. She will. from the motion ofan eye, or the lips. or a fin- ger. all in a moment know what is wanted. H . that she may catch lthe faintest _ whisper. and not oblige wool: patient to can che ‘06. 13nd rapes every mqu . cc . l at she may detect any change in heat or dryness of the skin 0 the float. 1 not any a licatlon wh ch will ther d or t or cause a chill With cold. Smell. that she my detect the least Impurity. in the atmosphere of the room. or in giving medicine. noises If there be any mistake. Taste. that she may not offer food unfit to he used. or good in itself. but cooked in such a way as to be (“gusting to the patient. She should be an experienced omit. so as to prepare such food as the piticii. requires. you to recover them: 9 PRACTICAL FARMING. 9‘ ECONOMICAL FEEDING. The best food is usually the cheap- est. The best ration is composed of sev- eral kinds of food as a. rule. Certain qualities are lacking in corn for pro- ducing the best marbled meat. It is rich in fat, but lacking in the constit- uents of muscle growth. The average feeder has much to learn about the prop- er mixture of the ordinary products of the farm in furnishing the right com- bination. . The animals are not of uniform con~ stitution and general health. The di- gestive apparatus of one is unusually vigorous and will handle to advantage the richest of rations. Another more del- icate will demand lem of food in quan- tity and a mixture of different consti- tuents. The proper adaptation of the rations to a. number of cattle or horses calls for close observation as to the ani- mal's capacity to appropriate a given ra- tion to the best purpose. Muscle and sinew are needed by the horse. and such food as'oats, clean clov- er and corn blades, with a small per- centage of bran. corn and new process oil meal form a ration that with vari- ations should be desirable. The horse is intended for work and strength in the frame work of the creature is the first consideration. Fat is but an inâ€" cident in the make-up of a. horse. It adds to the appearance of the equine if in moderate quantity, and, as a rule, there is enough of the carbonaceous fat food in the various constituents of mus- cle forming grains, provender and con- diments to furnish that quality in ade- quate proportion. This latter proposi- tion applies to horses kept on. a farm where they are turned out to graze in summer and winter upon blue grass. clover, rye, corn stalks, etc. Horses kept in dry yards,and fed everything by hand ï¬outo Speak, must be dicted more careâ€" u y. Cattle and hogs, as well as mutton sheep, are heavily fed for the purpose of producing meat. The sort of meat de- manded by the market must determine the plan of feeding. Formerly, when tallow and lard were not in competition With petroleum, electricity and cotton seed'od, the simple question of fat pro- duction was in order. Corn mainly. With a slight variety of other grains seemed adequate to the situation. The new era. of the manufacture of meat, is a. much more complex problem. The Village as well as the city person- age, who works within doors of office, shop or factory, demands more lean meat. The farmer, too, performing his labor by modern machinery and. in win- ter often within the doors of barn or shed has not the vigorous appetite that relishes fat meat. It is safe to estimate that. three-fourths of the people of. our country, no longer care for the overâ€"fat food that was required by the masses fifty yearsago. In fact the health of the people is better and their ability to perform manual and mental labor isen- hancod by the use of more lean meat for food. Modern food for the meat producing animals is more economical if it em- brace at least three-fourths proportion of muscleâ€"forming constituents, during the period of development and maturity of the frame of the carcass. During the period of fattening to the finish, even, it is wise, we believe, to provide that twoâ€"fifths of the food should be protien (muscle-forming food , and during the summer months the t rec-fourths ration is a safer one, even for the finishing months of the feeding period. Knowledge of the right ration for the domestic animals is the greatest need of the time. As a regulator of digestion for meat producing animals the old pro- cess oil cake, ground, is probably safer in small quantities. W'e venture ex- ression of the belief that in combination with an almost exclusive corn diet with plenty of rare, bright, fresh clover or timothy hay. or ensilage. that it is safer to use the new process oil meal, in very moderate quantities at the first: By close study and experiment, the in- telligent feeder may learn to realize good results in feeding exclusively the products of the farm. Root crops and ensilage, if rightly managed, in combi- nation with bran, shorts, oats, rye or barley, corn, winter pasture, new cured hay, bright corn fodder, millet. and al- falfa, adapting the food best for one's locality. These succulent foods do much to establish and maintain vigor. Brains duly exercised see how to feed the cheap farm products to better re- sults than in exchanging at the town for others. PROTECT THE LIVE STOCK. A common winter sight. is a. herd of cattle exposed to severest kind of weath- er. browsing in fields or standing hump- ed up in chilling winds. Food is fuel to the animal body. It requires more fuel to keep up steam in a boiler. when the weather is intensely cold,_than it does when it is mild. In the same man- ner, other things being equal. it requires more food to sustain an animal freely exposed to the chilling blasts of win- ter than it does for one given protection. In experiments conducted at the Indiana Agricultural Experiment Station, milch cows exposed to all sorts of weather in winter, but provided with night shelter, made a very unfavorable showing as com red with those given the shelter of t stable. excepting for a brief airâ€" ing when the weather was suitable. The exposed cows ate the most food. lost sli htly in weight and also in milk yle d. The she tered ones gained in weight. and otherwise made a better showing than the exposed lot. At the Kansas Experiment Station, hogs. kept in conditions of winter exposure did not produce pork so economically us those given reasonable shelter. although the same kind of food w .fed to each lot. In reporting the {(3-de experiments with steers at the same station. Prof. Geor say?~ that steers to we the best returns when bein fed or beef should be rovided with s elter. Warm low, n beds in the feed lot ive coin- fortab e shelter to steers. “ ile live stock should be protected from the in- clemcncy of the weather. it is important that the stables should be well ventilat- cd and not too warm. Disease promi- gates easiest where the air is stagnant and lmlpeurc. hence special efforts should be ma. . to keep the smbl' ir pure. Without doubt, tuberculmis is more re- valsnt among cattle closely confm to stables where the ventilation is bad.th&n itiswheretheairisgood. Live stock should certainly be allowed outdoor ex- ercise when the weather is mild and comfortable, but if it snows or rains and the air is chilling. the animal should. be given stable protection. It is also im- portant that the stable should not be 0to Warm in winter. A temperature of forty degrees is a. very satisfactory one. When it is as high as Sixty de- grees in the barn, stock turned from this into a freezing atmosphere to water are very apt to be severely chilled and take cold. \Vhen the stable is forty de- grees animals are not so easily chilled when turned from the stable. Every stable should have a. thermometer to guide one in keeping the temperature of the room as uniform as posmble. TO SET BROKEN LEGS. The Poultry Journal gives the follow- ing directions for setting a. fowl's brok- en leg: To set broken thighs in fowls take a strip of old cloth about 12 or 18 inth long (according to size of fowl) and one inch wide, and a. narrow strip to tie around this. Have some one to hold the fowl firmly, with the leg in the right position‘(be sure to get ll‘. right before beginning with the plaster. as it hardens rapidly), Take a teacup half full of plaster of Paris, add enough water to make it like thick cream. dip about two inches of the strip in the plas- ter and wrap firmly, but not too tight around the leg, going above and below the fracture, applying the plaster all along, and cover the last winding of bandage, also the end. Tie the narrow strips around this, and hold in same‘posâ€" ition until the plaster is thoroughly hard, then put the fowl gently in a quiet coop, so it will not be disturbed, and it will heal in five or SIX weeks. if the fowl gets the plaster off, renew at once. Feed sparingly for a few days to prevent fever. A SPECK OF ROMANCE. â€"â€"â€"- Dr. Jameson saved the Life of Paul Kruger in South Arricn. - Surprise is manifested generally over indulgence shown to Dr. Jameson and his marauders by President Kruger, of the South African Republic. Were Sal- isbury or Chamberlain in Kruger’s place, J amesou’s grave would long since have been dug and filled. Instead of bringing him to summary punishment President Paul Kruger, a, Dutchman,has treated him well, and instead of takâ€" ing his head off is going to send “him over to England, where everything will be done by Salisbury and Chamberlain to keep his head on. The reason for Kruger’s clemency has been disclosed in an obscure corner of a Cape Town paper. .Tyvo ears ago Kruger was ly' critically ill of fever at Pretoria. Suc medical help as was accessible had furnished no aid to the sufferer. Jameson had not wholly laid aside his medical practice, and in re- sponse to a. telegram traveled Without rest from Kimberley to the Dutch cap- ital to take charge of the president of the South African Republic. Through weary days and nights he nursed Paul Kruger back to convalescence and health and the Boer chief has not forgotten- it. _ A man's a man even in the interior of South Africa.“ â€"_â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"'â€"‘ Unhappy Financer. It is said that Nathan Mayer Roths- child, the third son of the founder of the banking house, who established the London branch at the beginning of the present century, lived in fear of assas- sination for years before his death.and slept with loaded pistols close at hand. In reply to a man who said, after seeâ€" ing the luxuries with which the banker was surrounded,‘that he ought to be a happy man, he exclaimed, " What, happy? when just as ybu are going to dinner a letter is placed in your hand, saying, 'If you‘do not send me five- hundred pounds, I will blow your brains out I’ ' One day two tall, dark men present- ed themselves at his office. They bowed in response to his bow, but said noth- ing. Their hands, however, began to fumble in their pockets, and the great banker instantly took alarm. “ Here are the long-expected assas- sins." he thought, and seizing a ledger he hurled it at the two strangers and shouted for assistance. When it appeared that the men. were two bankers rom another City, bearing letters of introduction to him, for which they were nervously hunting at the time of his unexpected onslaughts, his mortification knew no bounds. _ " Poor unhappy me 1" he exclaimed. " A victim to nervousness, and fancied terrors, and all because of my moneyl" Expensive Ocean Greyhounds. Few people have any idea of the en- ormous expense of keeping the ocean greyhounds in ship shape. It costs one company on an average $10,000 amonth for repairs to the various vessels. They are thoroughly overhauled every month and the amount of small repairing neâ€" cessary would astonish even the old voyager. In the shops on the Amerâ€" ican side there is a uplicate of every bit of machinery used in the make-up of an ocean liner. from enormous pieces of shafting down to the smallest bolt. The International Company has topay. among its other expenses. for a pro- fmsional rat catcher. who clears the ships of the little pests. About fifty rats are caught at the end of each voy- age. _._._._._._.__â€"â€"-_ Bad Error. That was rather a serious mistake the t h“ made in speaking of young Go- y. n what way? ' . Changed a. ‘u' into an 'a' and said he was a ragged specimen of athletic manhood. He‘ll Need a File Shall you build your new house with bricks? No: with rocks MOTHER. GAREY’S 0111sz FACTS ABOUT THE UNCANNY BIRD THE STOREY PETREL. Eâ€"' Some Sen Superstitions About Themâ€"The “In: Arc Full or on and Are Kiiied and Used as Lamps [71) Northâ€"Their Nesting Habits. It is no wonder seafaring men all re- gard the stormy petrel as a forerunner of disaster. Not only to the queer.- lowâ€" flittiug, dusky birds seem to love the tempestuous weather but the.v 001118 out in the greatest numbers just before and during the particularly violent hur- ricanes. \V’hen no other bird, large 01‘ small, is in sight these weird fowl, like so miny im, s, sk’m low co;oss the white- caps and hover close to a ship until its sliperstitious crew are well-nigh frantâ€" ic‘ with dread. Many of the older jack tars, indeed. believe that the petrels, instead of com- ing with the storms, actually call them up or still them at pleasure. They weave many wild yarns about “Mother Carey's chickens," and tell you how they never rest and never fly to the shore. The English Channel Islanders even contend that the eggs are held under one wing until hatched, and that the young learn to fly the instant they emerge from the eggs. THE REAL FACTS concerning the petrel’s life and ways are full of interest even if in accepting them we must rudely shatter the fondest tra- itions of the fo’castle. One reason why nothing of its nestling habits was known until about forty years ago was because it chooses only the remotest and most lonely strands for its home. On the deeply indented shores of Nova Scotia. thousands of them nest every year. Cape Sable and the Mud, Tusket, Shzig, Gannet, Johns and Negro Islands swarm with their clumsy young in June. A cleft in the wave-washed rocks. a watenvorn niche, the deserted burrow of a. rabbit or a. woodchuck or a musk- rat,‘any sort of a. scooped place. is good enough for the petrel. It is abundant- ly able to dig a suitable cavity, for it- self, however, if no lazier way out of the difficulty presents itself. Only 12 or 14 inches deep are these hollows, just deep enough to hold Mother Petrol. and her babies, and protect them from the gales that sweep the coast. The mother lays but a. single egg of a. dull, lustreless white. very large for the size of the bird. She sits on it al- most constantly for three weeks, while the mate brings her food from the sea. Only at night does he feed her, and after the young one is hatched it, too, only receives her nourishment after dark. . I _ All day long the birds are Winging (tiger tthe sea. searching for something 83! . OFTEN FLYING MILES eff shore. Carefully do the old birds watch over and feed the cottony, tumb- ling, weak little baby petrel for four or five weeks. Nearly Six months elapse ere the youn ster can shift fordtsclf. The parents eed them with a rich ml which they secrete in their own stom- achs, and so thick and fine is this fluid that the savages of the far north use the poor birds .as lamps. Killing them, they thrust a. hempen wick into their throat,anrl,pushing it as far down as posâ€" sible,-light the loose end, which will burn for hours with a. clear, bright flame. In reality. when the seamen fancy the poor waits are followrng the ship to brin her bad luck, they are really look- ing Ior the things which the cook may throw away. Any sort of refuse is eagerly gathered up and taken home to' the lonely babe. Silently thcy_pursue the vessels for a. whole day. waiting in patience for a morsel. Only at night do they cry, and amost weird and plaintive note is theirs. Pili- fully it rises above the low .roar of the wind and the booming of the breakers on the shore. The solitary lookout in the bow at night often draws his oil- skin closer and whistles loud when he hears that fateful wall. He shades his eyes with a big rough hand and peers more anxiously into the blackness ahead, for it bodes his ship no good to be fol- lowed by Mother Carey’s chickens. __+â€" A Butcher Boy's Rise. The only son of a butcher who became Archbishop of Canterbury was the fam- ous Cardinal, Thomas \Volsey, whose father was a butcher at Ipswich. In 1514 he was appointed to the Sec of Lincoln, and the year following to the Archbishopric of York. Insatiable in the pursuit of emolument. he obtained the administration of the See of Bath and “Tells. and the temporalities of the Abbey of St. Albans; soon after which he enjoyed in succession the rich Bisbilip- rics of Durham and \Vinchester. y these means his revenues nearly equal- ed those of the Kin . The arents of three Archbishops o Canter ury were in comparatively humble life, namely: Geor e Abbot (1611-33), son of a cloth- ier; ilbert Sheldon (1603-77), son of a menial servant; John Moore (1783-1805), of humble parentageâ€"some biographers stating that his father was a grazier. others giving his occupation as that of a butcher. Hard to Please. Mr. Snaggs was accosted on the street the other day by a beg ar who Was covered with a very remar able mass of patghed and rugged garments. and who sex : Mister, haven't you some old clothes you could give a fellow? Snaggs surveyed the beggar from head to foot and tlmn asked: Are not the clothes you have on old enough for you? It’s All Right Here’s a bill from my wife's dress- maker. I hate to fry dressmaking bills. don't you. Lat in? . No; I'm very fond~ of my Wife's dress- maker. It's a positive pleasure to pay her bills. Good heavens. Larkinshtbat wouldn't go in my family. Who is your wife's drossmalterl My Wife. THROUGH SPANISK EYES. What Prof. Adela: Ponds. of Ends-id Says About Canada and Canadians. Quietly and unostentatiously. but none the has effectively, the great Do- minion on our Northern fmntler is takâ€" ing its place among the foremost nu- tions of the world. says the Literary Digest. of New York. English writers have described it as the home of the rejuvenated AngloSaxon. Germans point to its stability. which makes it specially valuable to investors who «are more for certain than for large returns on capital. But the most flut- tering recognition of Canadian work comes from Spain. Among the Span- iards, who are just emerging from the lethargy of centuries. Canada is re- garded as an instance of what. a colony can become under proper management. and many writers of note advise the re- constmction of the government of Cuba on Canadian lines. Adolfo Pos- ada, Professor of Political Economy at the University of Oviedo, has a paper on this subject in the Espanii. Modems. 0 Madrid. \\ summarize his article as follows: . “Hasty persons persist in believing that. social ills can be cured by the ap- lication of some political 8.118008, some orin of government whic they judge only by the excellent results obtained in the country of its origin. We have a typical case in the Cuban question. The difficulties of the situation in Cuba. in a great measure caused by our tra- ditional errors. and our backwardncss, naturally call for a solution. "\tht is to be done," is the universal cry, ."to furnish Cuba with a )rosperous policy? \Vhat kind of rule wi l insure rogress and peace effectivel 3" Pee e are gradually convincet that On a must have some prudent. measure of anions omy, with more or less liberty. But the idea. of autonomy, easy enough to express in a. theoretical way. is far less easy to carry out; practically. In prin- ciple, political autonomy is expressed by the English self-government, andineans the right of a. certain social entity to administer its own affairs, while yet it remains within a larger and. _ in some respects, superior organization. Our eyes are naturally turned toward Canada. Rightly or wrongly, the im- pression has gone abroad that the Pearl of the Antilles must be governed like Canada. The idea is seductive enough The Dominion is certainly a strong argument in favor of autonomy, abeau- tiful case in point. _ "Canada has passed throu h terrible crises, has had its internal issensmns, has not been free from bloody uprisings, and looks back upon periods when its political existence was in great .dan- gar. But Canada has now established herself as a state within a state. has become a. semi-national power. is strong, rosperous. and a veritable school 0 parliamentarian usagesâ€"all under autonomical government. Cana- da's progress dates chiefly since 1867, when its federal autonomy was estab- lished. Clearly, all this prosperity is not due solely to reforms inpolitical or- ganization. It could not have been accomplished without the brave spirit within the race, fit to raise great em- piric). Much is due also to Canada's geo- graphical situation and no less to the general progress of the world. But it can not be denied that a government accepted by the people as satisfactory to their ideals, a government that sets no limits to the expansion of human activity, and whose establishment clos- ed a period of dangerous crisis, sub- stituting a time of harmony and peace, seems very favorable to human pro- gress." ‘ \Vhile thus the writer showers praise upon us, he warns his countrymen and the Cubans that they must not expect to see all the outward benefits. of Canaâ€" da's autonomy in the case of the Hava- na .13 soon as that. island is give self- governzinent. Canadian prosperi y. as well as Canadian autonomy and federa- tion, are solid and stable because they are of slow growth and the result of much patient labor. He also explains that Canada, the semi-independent, is a. source of strength rather than weak- ness to the mother-country. _... *â€" TAKE CARE OF THE CHEST. aâ€"n-v And the itcatnrtlie Body Will Take Cure of Itself. "Take care of your chest," says a. physical culture teacher, “and the rest of your body will take care of itself. The chest is the chief thing to be re- nzembcred. Keep it well raised and your head, spine, shoulders will revolun- tarily assume their proper positions without any effort on your part. The cry from parents and teachers used to shoulders back I" be: :"l'lil’OlV your But. this mistaken notion is now com- pletely exploded. 'l‘hc shoulders have nothing to do with correct posture. It is all the chest, and its elevation or depression will regulate the rest of the body. The chest is the seat of all things spiritual. elevated and ennobling. Bring it into prominence and you bring into prominence the test, qualities of your nature. It has been said that whatever psychological attribute is most marked in a human being is «irrespond- ingly most marked in his physical being. It he's a glutton his stomach is muse in evidence; if a. scholar or brain-work- er, his head is sure to be thrust well forward, but if he reserves a pro or intellectual balance ic walks with [his chest in advance of the rest of his bod . It is curious, too, how one may real y influence his own mental wndition in this-way. Just try and see how im- posmble it is to say: ‘Oh. how happy I am!" with sunken chest and spent breath. One involuntarily lifts his chest and takes a good long breath when he says anything optimistic and brave, for if he doesn't he might just as well say 'Have mercy on us miserable sinâ€" nens.’ The effect is the scenic. There is no surer cure for the ‘blues' or like maladies than merely lifting the chest and taking a good. long breath. It scares away all the bugaboos of pr- sumsm.†.__.___._.__.â€"_ Why the Oat Crop is a Pailurer Farmer Hardcoreâ€"Fate is always agin' the farmer. Mr. Cittimanâ€"that is the matte Mr. Hardcore. v Farmer Hardcoreâ€"“my. I've got a bustin' big crop of oats for the first time in four years. and there's nutliin' to {(2421 'cm to any more but bicYnleO anti trolley airs. .11)“