KifeeifPPlliSS^SM^ P • Li ^ ' s "*' * -' :« ': " „r ^ *" ' '"*; 8\. ' V - ' \ * *1 ' 1 ' -' " /Tr "* **«V* F-v - v1«' - '/r* - * '"' * r, -WW ./•"'>« if Thirty-three Sailors on United States Battleship Missouri % Die v^l lbik,. Posts of Duty -- Officers* Coolness *' ^ ' Saves the Vessel. Vf • NAMES OF THE DEAD. Lieutenants--W. C. Dav'dson, E. A. Weichert and J. V. P. Gridley. Midshipmen--W. E. T» Neumann and Thomas Ward, Jr. Boatswain's Mjite (first class)--J. K. Peterson. - Seatnen-^-W. J. Bogard, 0. N. So ri der «nd E. R. H. Alison. Ordinary Seamen--C. Rico, C* -4* Killen,-J. Gttfris, J. F. Kennedy, J. P. 8tarr, tf.X. Nunn and C. H. M. Franks. Land*rrk®r>---H. S» Cherbarths, B,. J. Mllligart and J. M. Reafch. '• Electrician--T. F. Rowlands. Gunner's Mate (second class)--A. Smith. Chief Gun Captain--T. E. Braun. Double. Explosion. IfAtU aft official examination has been made ft will be impossible to define the exact cause of the acci dent. Briefly, the facts are these: Tke Missouri was on the target range with the Texas and Brooklyn about noon. . The entire crew was at gun stations. Three shots had been fired by the twelve-inch gun from the af ter turret. The gun was being load ed for a fourth shot. Suddenly those outside the turret heard a dull thud. A second later another muffled ex plosion more distant than the first reverberated through the charge han- . dling room. Before the echo of the second explosion had <^ied away the officers and gun crews, in the turret and the men in the handling room were dead, with the exception of one man. cations the first half of the charge had been rammed home and the sec ond section was being rammed home, when gases from the shot previously fired, or portions of the cloth cover, ignited the powder. The breech was open, and a dull thud gave notice of something unusual. No loud report was made, but flames were seen to leap from every portion of the tur ret. A few seconds later another ex* plosion, somewhat more fierce, oc curred. This was in the handling room below, where 1,600 pounds of powder, or four charges ready to be hoisted above, had Ignited. Fire quarters were sourded and every man of the ship responded, and the maga zine and handling rooms were flooded with wate,r. In less than five seconds after (he BATTLESHIP MISSOURI AND ITS COMMANDER. &?• $4 W f v Thirty men, including five commissioned officer*, were killed by an ex Urtiile the ship was at target practice off the coast of Florida. Two other maneuvering, the Missouri collided with the battleship Illinois, knocking a Marine Private--W. L. Shipman. Apprentices (second olass)--J. C. Hardy and P. R. Caatler. John T. Donnelly, ordinary seaman. Orvei B. Moe, apprentice, second W - . James E. Knight, ordinary seaman. Hatbert Edward Elliett, master at arms, second class. f Pensacola, Fla., dispatch: Through an unaccountable accident on the new battleship Missouri, while it was en gaged in target practice off this port Wednesday, five officers and twenty- eight men were instantly killed and two men ao frightfully injured that they will die. Only by the perfect discipline and coolness displayed by the commanding officer, Captain W. G. Cowles, was a more appalling dis aster prevented. Net since the battleship Maine sank fn the harbor of Havana has a greater calamity overtaken the American navy. The Missouri is the very latest of the big battleships of the American navy to go into commission. Re cently it was ordered to the gulf for target practice. Nineteen miles off Pensacola the magnificent vessel had been engaged in this work for two days, and was achieving a brilliant record. To the intense keenness of its crew to excel is attributed the disaster which has suddenly cast a shadow over the nation. OUT OF HI8 ELEMENT. }»>.'v WhV Should a Man Try to Buy Rib- bon, Anyway. entered the shop hurriedly, with tlwf air TDJ a man whose mind was oc cupied with a weighty commission. Those whom he passed at the door re called afterward that he was mutter ing some formula under his breath, as if fearful of forgetting it. He ap proached the counter heroically, yet with the air of one who devoutly wished it were well over. -I want to get." he began boldly, "some--some ribbon for a red baby." The saleswoman's blank stare seemed . to furouse him to a sfense of something amiss. "That is," be hastily amended, "I should like some baby for red ribbed L I* The girl was smiling broadly now, and two cash boys, a floor walker, and several customers of feminine persua sion who bad drawn nearer, involun tarily smiled in' unison. "Jhat is--of course, you know-j--M He -was getting desperate. "I mean IPB4 red ^bbed--that la--some red Captain Cowles Quick to Act. Captain Cowles' first order was to flood the handling room and maga zine chamber. Had this not been done upon the instant it is believed that in the next few seconds a fate similar to that which overtook the Maine in Havana harbor would have overtaken the Missouri. Admiral Barker on the Kearsarge directed that the Missouri be ordered in for report and funerals of the dead, and this was answered shortly. At 3 p. m. the Missouri arrived in t'pnsa- cola bay. Immediately being sighted the official information was spread to all the naval ships and flags went to half-mast. Merchant vessels in the harbor and business houses along the water front followed the same exam ple. Breech is Opened. There have been several ressottB advanced for the accident, one as se cured from the Olympia stating that the breech of the 12-inch gun was opened too soon. Capt. Cowles, completely overcome by the disaster, referred all newspa per men to Lieut. Hammer, the ord nance officer. The latter gave out a statement of the explosion and its probable cause. According to him, about noon the second pointer had fired the third shot of his string. The fourth shot was being loaded, and from all indi- ribs for a baby--some baby--red ribs some--thunder and guns! Where's the way out?" "I wonder," the saleswoman said, thoughtfully, after the lapse of an hour or two, "if he could have wanted some red baby ribbon?" ploiion in a gun turret of the Missouri s probably will die. Recently, while hojle in the side of the latter'ship. fl|st explosion two streams of water were being played in the rooms, and wben volunteers were called for every mlan of the ship responded, eager to g4 into the turrets and rescug the cijew. Captain Cowles gave his com- mjands, and but for his presence of mlind and that of the officers of the sliip, the Missouri would have" gone ddwn. The second explosion oc curred near one of the niagazinfes. jSo hot was the flre that the brass- wprk of the magazines was melted. Siioke and fumes of the burned pow der made it almost impossible to en ter either the turret.or handling room, but officers and men with handker chiefs over their faces made efforts to rejseue the mfen inside. 1 ;I>eadlng the rescuing party was Captain Cowles. The officers en deavored to keep him from going be low, as men fell unconscious as they entered and had to be pulled out by tfcjelr comrades, but heeding not their advice, the commanding officer rushed b^low, followed by Lieutenant Ham- mjer, the ordnance officer, and Lieu tenant Cleland David. Captain Cowles caught up a dying bluejacket in his arms and staggered to the deck with him. The blue- Jacket, with two others from the handling room, bad crawled partly from his place of duty when over come. KILLING DUCK IN AN AliTO. Real Robinson Crusoe. The novel "Robinson Crusoe" was founded on the experiences of a cer tain Alexander Selkirk, who resided four years on the island of Juan Fer nandez, in the Pacific Ocean, says W. B. Northrop in St. Nicholas. Cap tain Rogers, commander of the vessel which rescued Selkirk, related the story, and Defoe afterward worked it up into the narrative now so familiar to alL It was for this reason that Defoe was accused of pilfering the manuscript, and even to having stolen many letters belonging to Selkirk. Defoe is Bald to have made a snug fortune from the sale of "Robinson Crusoe," and out of the proceeds of the book to have built a fine house tor himself in a- suburb of London. So It must have won instant popu larity. It's a Mean Way, for the Blpf Has No Chance. It is a regrettable fact that the gun attracts to its use men who bring dis credit to the true devotee of this branch of sport more frequently than almost any other form of diversion. One of the most wanton examples of unsportsmanlike behavior is re ported from Kansas, where a party recently went duck hunting in an automobile. They found a flat frozen over hard enough to bear the ma chine, and upon the ice were thou sands of pintails. T^ey made a slow, sneaking, circuitous move about the docks until within a comparatively short distance, when full speed was given to the machine and into the flock they went. The poor ducks were too frightened at first to take to flight, and the con sequence was natural--a large num ber of ducks were slaughtered with out a single chance for life that the true sportsman concedes his Vp&T ways.--New York Telegraphr ^ Peril id Africa J "It the blacks should rise." is a sen tence which has not infrequently been Uttered, and nervously uttered, in Africa, says the New York Mail and Express. The whites in that conti nent, even in Dutch and English South Africa, are' In an absurd numeri cal minority. In Cape Colony itself, the oldest and best settled European province, there are but 882,198 whites to 2,118,437 blacks. No such dispar ity as this exists in any part of our American "black belt." In Rhodesia the whites are but a handful among upward of 500,000 warlike blacks of the stronger sort, including the fierce Matabele. In Natal there are 73,095 whites to 806,512 Zulu-Kaffirs. In most of Oerman Africa and, of course, the whole of the continent northward to Algeria, the disparity. Is greater still. In the Warmbad district of Qer- mah southwest Africa, there were, at last accounts 1,G13 white persons, mostly Boers who have trekked therg, to 10,000 blacks. The other day we had news of the massacre of a white missionary and his community of eighteen converts In the hinterland of Liberia. The scene of this deed is significant, if the newi is true, for if the Mack ava lanche is ever let loose in Africa it will undoubtedly be by the hand of some black who has been inspired by thoughts of black rale and independ ence, such as those that prevail in Li berla. No such native avalanche ever hung over the heads of even the few white settlers in the American colo nies In the early day, for the American wilderness was never peopled by such hosts of savages as fill the African veldt and jungle. For the attempt, at least, nothing Is wanting but the Toussalnt l'Ouvre- ture, the determined and able black leader who can organize the diverse and mutually foreign nations and tribes and inspire them with a com mon motive of revolt. No such leader is In sight. Yet a negro King Philip, a negro Pontiac, a negro Tecumseh, the stamp ef whose foot upon the earth may some day be heard in the earthquake, is neither inconceivable nor impossible. We may understand the uneasiness of South African whites over this Hot tentot insurrection. The Hottentots are a widespread nation. A general black insurrection must result in hor rible massacres. Yet there could be but one final result for it, as there was but one possible result for the general Indian wars in America. The thousands of whites, with their re sources and organization, would pro- vail, and more sternly than erdr against the millions of blacks. Fake Antiques Are Many There is such a demand for antique furniture nowadays that thd demand is far in excess of the supply. But it is certain that the supply will never be allowed to fail so long as the de mand exists. Of course, there is very little genuine antique furniture to be picked up, and the dealer must either turn away good customers or else fab ricate the furniture. For example, a man will pick up an antique bedstead in a remote country place which costs him only a dollar or less, and from it will fashion an antique cabinet which will deceive any one except a connoisseur, and quickly find a pur chaser who will be willing to pay him from $150 to $300 for it. With the aid of sulphuric acid and French pol ish he will make it as black as ebony, and a few minutes with a shotgun will riddle it with worm holes in the most realistic and artistic manner. In the same way an old chest of drawers or a wardrobe, the designs of which are nbt sufficiently artistic to find a purchaser in that form, can be converted into a costly piece of furni ture, which has every appearance of a well-preserved example of sixteenth or seventeenth century work. And likewise a genuine antique can be con verted into a number of pieces, any one of which will bring the price which the original would have sold for. An ingenious way of disposing of this bogus furniture is to send it to some remote country cottage, where the custodian, coached for the .pur pose, will explain to the unsuspecting purchaser that "It has been in the family for centuries." The collector has no reason to suspect this state ment, and he adds the bogus treas ures to his collection with joy in hia heart at his good luck. It occasionally happens that a dealer chances upon a treasure house of real ancient lurniture in some out of the w£y corner of the world. The owner knows little of the real value of the what he calis "rubbish," and as a rule it has been relegated to the attic years before. He regards the deal$r who pays what to him seems a fabulous sum for the old furniture as a rich man with a hobby, and, taking the money, proceeds to refurnish hia house with furniture of the mast mod ern design--spring plush rockers, box couches and enameled beds.--New York Herald. Impulse Saved His Life Hank Grlder, a veteran hunter along the great stretches of the Rocky Mountains, made a trip to southern California in 1871, and ascended Old Baldy. Among his reminiscences the following, related by himself, stands out as the most singular: One afternoon, while picking his way carefully along the narrow ledge high up on the mountainside, he came upon a sleeping lion that lay with its nose between its forepaws in a sunny angle of the rock. Grid6r was a dead shot, and raising his rifle softly to his shoulder he drew bead on the lion, directly between the closed eyes. He had killed many ani mals of this sort, and knew exactly where to send the lead into its brain. Nothing was surer than if he pressed the trigger the great cat would pass from sleep into instant death. But, through some unusual impulse as strange as it was unaccountable, Grider lowered the muzzle of his weapon without shooting. Again he raised the rifle, took deliberate aim, and again lowered the gun without firing. He could not explain the reason for this strange act, nor why he backed softly off and retraced his way, leav ing the lion undisturbed. He had nev er done such a thing before in all his mountaineering experience. At length he sat down on the edge of a boulder and cogitated long and seriously over the queer matter. "Now, what in thunder did I do that for?" he asked himself, over and over. "One crack of my old gatlin' here, and that cat would have been too dead to kick, just as sure as the sun sets over that dirty little pueblo down yonder. And to prove it I'll Just drop that eagle that has lit on that point of rock across the canon." He raised his rifle, took quick aim at the bird and pulled the trigger. Only a dull click followed as the hammer struck. The cartridge was a defective one. Common Sense in Illness "Most physicians who have been present in cases where a specialist on the particular' disease has been called in," says the editor of Modern Medi cal Science, "have been struck with' the fact that the man of supposedly more extensive learning uncovered no mysterious aspect of the malady, but merely applied common sense to the conditions before him, and really thought of the significance of things which the attending physician had only observed. "If a physician were limited to the possession of but one personal attri bute of the many supposed to lead to success, common sense would be the one which, were he wise, he would choose if these essentials were in the i power of his fairy godmother to be stow. "Three doctors attending a child with diphtheria saw it growing stead ily weaker, although they were giving it medicine which should have cured. When it seemed near death they call ed in a distinguished specialist They went upstairs with him, and one of the attending physioians opened the door of the sick room. The specialist paused and said: "'Move the child to another room and then I'll look at it' "The instant the patient ceased to breathe that germ-saturated air it be gan to revive. The specialist could only approve the medicine the other doctors were prescribing and go away. All he had brought to that house of sickness was a little common sense." In Boyhood's Happy Days to my loned schoolma'am. When sad recollections present her to view; The way that she'd often as boys with a rule lamm Would make toe full future look terri bly blue. And still In my > fancy I feel my flesh tingle, Time never can quite that sensation de stroy. For when she sot started she made the house Jingle- That old-fashioned schoolma'am I knew when a boy. The Btrong-inuseled schoolma'am, the quick-tempered schoolma'am, The arguB-eyed schoolma'am I knew when a boy. XC you'd jest crook your finger 'twas quickly detected. And follered at once With a fuss that you'd dread. Until all the boys In the school half-sus pected •he could sea jest ae well through the back of her head. There wasn't no use in our try In' to fool her. She'd get an Impression we couldn't de stroy, And then she'd go at it and lay on the ruler-- The old-fashioned schoolma'am I knew when a boy. And yet, notwithstanding her constant en deavor, Them schooldays with Jest lots of pleas ure was fraught, We always went into seme mischief whenever We thought we could do it without get- tin' caught. We threw paper wads and was noisy and > pranky, And did all we could her poor soul to annoy; No wonder that once In a while she got cranky-- That old-fashioned schoolma'am I knew when a boy. The boarded-round schoolma'am. the ua- derpald schoolma'am, Yhe much-abused schoolma'am I knew when a boy. --"Hank Spink" la Boston HeraML Free to Twenty-five Ladles. The Defiance Starch Co. will give SB ladles a round trip ticket to the St Louis Exposition, to five ladies in each of the following states: Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Mis souri who will send in the largest number of trade marks cut from a ten-cent, 16-ounce package of Defi ance cold water laundry starch. This means from your own home, any where in the above named states. These trade marks must be mailed to and received by the Defiance Starch Co., Omaha, Nebr., before Sep tember 1st, 1904. October and Novem ber will be the best months to visit' the Exposition. Remember that Defl» ance is the only starch put up 16 oz,: (a full pound) to the package. You ge( one-third more starch for the same money than of any other kind, and Defiance never sticks to the iron. The tickets to the Exposition will be sent by registered mail September fife Starch for sale by all dealers. •• A . Quay Hard to Interview. Senator Quay's cottage In Atlantic City, a handsome place perched upon an eminence and Inclosed by a stone wall, has been named "Port Arthur" by newspaper correspondents there. They have been besieging the Penn sylvania statesman with the view of interviewing him, but have alwaye failed to reach him. Recourse to the telephone is equally unavailing. •*A*A or OHIO, CITT or TOLSDO, I . LUCAS COUHTT. R FRAWK J. CHENEY makes oath that he la senior partner of the firm of F. J. CHENKV &. Co.. dolna business la the City of Toledo, County and State •foresaid, and that said firm will pay the Bum of ONE HUNDKED DOLLARS for cach and every csae of CATARBH that cannot be cured by the use of BALL'S CATABBH CUB*. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed ID lny pres ence, this 6th dajr of December, A. D. 1886. I --'-- I A. W. GLEASON, I I NOTABY PUBLIC. Hall'* Catarrh Care la taken Internally and acts directly on /the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all DruggiHts, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Looked That Way. Teacher--All birds are bipeds--that is, that have two feet. Tommy--rThe ducks ain't. Teacher--Oh yes; the duck has two feet Tommy--iNo, ma'am. tH bet they are oars. Ask Tour. Dealer For Allen's inot-Ean, A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Easomakes new or tight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac cept no substitute. Sample mailed Fuss. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, Y. A Vain but Generous Hope. .Mrs. Bixby--Mother says that she is going to die and Join father. Bixby--I wish there was some way to give your father warning.--New York Town Topics. A useful little hand-book for those who, through neglect, have forgotten what once they learned pf mathemat ics, Is Spangenberg's Practical Arith metic Self-Taught. Geo. Zeller, St Louis. Insist on Getting It. Some grocers Fay they don't keep De fiance Starch because they have a stork iu hand of 12 <s. biands, which they know cannot be sold to a customer who has on e used the 16 oz. pkg. Defiance Starch for •ame money. Britain's Consumption of Wheat. Great Britain raises 1,500,000 bush els of wheat and buys abroad 161,000,- 000 bushels of wheat and 10,000,000' barrels of flour. Wiggle'Stlck LAUNDRY BI.UK Won't spill, break, freeze nor spot clothes. Costs 10 cents and equals 20 cents worth of any other bluinp. If your grocer does not keep it send 10c for sample to The Laundry Blue Co., 14 Michigan Street, Chicago. Lakonia Excavations. The government of Greece has au thorized the English Institute of Archaeology to carry out excavations in Lakonia. More Flexible and Lasting, won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance Starch you obtain better results than possible with any other brand and on*-third more for same mouev. Not Flattering. "I am a self-made man." "Well, you're safe in saying so, at any rate, for no one else will own up to the job." Those Who Have Tried It wfll nse no other. Defiance Cold Water Starch has no equal in Quantity or Qual ity--16 oz. for 10 cents. Other brands con tain only IS os. "It's like taking wormwood tea-- easy enough if you've been brought up that way."--From "Cap'n E»i," by Joseph C. Lincoln. Lewis' " Single Binder " straight 5c cigar. No other brand of cigars is so popular with the smoker. He has learned to rely upon its uniform high quality. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. TLio Archaeological Society In Con stantinople has recently obtained the Sultan's permission to begin excava- vatlons at Ephesus. Why It Is the Best Is because made by an entirely different process. Defiance Starch is unlike any other, better and one-third more for Id oenW. Many a poor man would not change places with a millionaire if hia tired old digestion were thrown in with the deal. Rheumatism, the destroyer of blood, muscle and bone, speedily conquered by BO-KO BALM. Don't stain. 60 cents. Ask the druggist. The people of ilaly eat the octopus. Over here the positions are reverted. Pise's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affection* of the' throat and lun^s.--WM. O. fciiDSLST, Vanburen, Ind.. Feb. 10,19UX Character is not determined by a single act, but by habitual conduct AU TTP-TO-DATB HOCSEKKKFNM Use Red Croes Ball BIUBL It makes clothes clean and sweet as when new. All grocers. By the way, can you give us, off hand, the Mikado's name? Mrs. Wlnalow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens tha trims, reduoM |» AaBmatlon,allays pain, cures wind collu. 23caboMs, Protestant Christian communicants in China number 112,808. Old Sofas, Backs of Chairs, etc., can be /dyed with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Tubercle badWl"wlU Mve fbf thirty days in butter. Many who formerly smoked lOe * now smoke Lewis' "Single Biuder'Vafcrlfffht? Sc. Lewis' Factory, P&ri£ HL * * The sailors will not Twiaa their i < pocket* so far aa their pay is cerned. They soon deposit that 8BD CROSS BAtiX. BLUB Shoold be in evevy home. A «k your m for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents. There are only abottt ninety dally papers in Russia. Young women may ovoid much sickness and pain, s&ys Miss Alma Pratt, if they will only have faith in the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Judging from the letters she f» receiving from so many young girls, Mrs. Pinkham believes that our girls are often pushed altogether too near the limit of their endurance now adays in our publie schools and semin aries. ^ Nothing is allowed to interfere with studies, the girl must be pushed to the front and graduated with honor; often physical collapse follows, and it takes years to recover the lost vitality, -- often it is never recovered. Miss Pratt says,-- "DKAB MBS. P INKHAM: -- I feel it my duty to tell all young women how much Lydia E. Pinkliam's won derful Vegetable Compound has done for me. I was completely run down, unable to attend school, and did not care for any kind of society, but now I feel like a new person, and have gained seven pounds of flesh in three months. "I recommend it to all young women who suffer from female weak ness." -- Miss ALMA PRATT, Holly, Mich. -- $5000 forfeit If original of aboot Itrovlnpacnulnenatt cannot be protueaA It Cures Colds, G'oushe, Sore Throat, Croup, Into* enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. • certain one for Consumption In first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excelli-nt effect after takine tha first dose. Sold by drapers everywhere* yf bottles 25 cents and 60 cent* LOOK in YOUR MIRROR What would you give to be rid of those pimples and blackheads, that sallow com- f>lexion, those ustreless eyes? No doubt you would give 50 cents to be cured of constipation, liver troubles, indigestion and dyspepsial Get rid of these troubles and your complexion will clear up like an April day after a shower. Take Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin troubled wit.i biliouenyas cauaed by inactivity Of the Itver. I had dizzy epeHs at times, paint across nay back and a tirt'd, beavy feoliii£. vrita loss of appetite and nervousness. Our famtl/ phvsician prescribed some liver tablets whlcfc certainly did not help me in the least. I took Apollinaris and other mineral waters, but mt complexion became more yellow and my gentrd health worse. Reading one of your little booklrt®, 1 decided to give Or. Caldwell's Syrup Pep»ia m trial stud am so clad 1 did. On? bo??i« unoft for me than ten dollars' worth of other remedt**. I knew at once I had the ritfht remedy. I taking it for several weeks, when I con»idef«a myself completely cured. My skin is WfciM Ui smooth M a baby s and I feel in exceiloot MStti •a4 ipirits, th&nJcs to your remedy." Your Money Back If It Don't Benefit Yoa PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Montlita*, & Wisdom Soap (Granulated) Do next week's washing with it You'll be surprised* All Grocers MEXICAN Mustang Liniment cores Sprains and Strains. A FREE TRIP TO CALIFORNIA; Cati y >u Intercut ten of yonr friends tu aa lavwl1 mem we aro offering? All they need Invest la 9S • month. If you cau we will pay your expenaea fc California and your hotel bill there for ona ~ Write atouce for particular*. California Dairy IOIO Hartford Bids. id Plantation. " CHICAGO, IUt I.