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? > *_ examine from time to time as hereinafter ])iov idea into the affai.s of ai! (lspensaries and liquor manufacturing establishments conducted In the State. "Sec 40. It shali be the duty of * s?t.eh dispcnsaiy auditor to make a thorough examination into all the books, papers and affairs of the said dupensniies and liquor manufacturir.?' est abli> haunts and in making such examinaticns he shall have authority to administer oaths and to 1 summon and examine all persons connected with the said dispensary and liquor manufacturing establishment. . He shall make a full and detailed report of his findings and file the same with the State treasurer and with the treasurer of the county in which the dispensary or liquor establishment may be located. Said examination and report of each dispensary and establishment shall be made at least once every three months. "Sec. 41. The term of office of the said dispensary auditor shall be four years and he shall receive as compensation $2,000 per annum and all actual expenses incurred by Lira * in the discharge of his duties. "Sec. 42. The said dispensary auditor is hereby authorized to p^ scribe a system of bookkeeping aiRi1 accounts for the several county dispensary boards and to enforce the observance of the same. "Sec. 43. All accounts for salary and expenses of the dispensary auditor shall be submitted to and approved bv the comptroller general and he shall apportion the same to and assess the same upon the seve?al dispensaries in the State according to their gross sales and the same shall be paid by the several county dispensary boards to the State treasurer to be paid by hfta upon the warrants of the comptroller general. "See. 44. Any person who may obstruct or interfere with said dispensary auditor in the performance ? of his duties shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be punished by imprisonment not exceeding one year or by fine not exceeding $1,000, or both, in the discretion of the court. "Sec. 45. If any member of the county dispensary board, any dispenser, clerk or assistant in their employ, violates any of the provisions of this act, he shall be deemed guilty , of a misdemeanor and shall be removed from office. "Sec. 46. It shall be unlawful for \ny distiller manufacturer or brewer f any alcoholic liquors or beverages, any dealer in any of said liquors beverages, or any agent of any h distiller, manufacturer, brewer dealer, to approach or consult sonally, or attempt so to do, any mber of any county dispensaiy ni'd or any cleri; in any dispensary the dispensary auditor, regarding iy^ particular brand or kind of ?uofr or beer for the purpose of reeamending or influencing the porlase of any of said poods, or for rging the consideration of any speial qualities claimed for same, or or any other puapose, or to addness iny personal communication by wire or mail or by <*tihcr means to any member of any of said county disjjen'sary boards or to any dispenser , tor clerk in- any dispensary or to tthe J dispensary auditor ' concerning any a liquors or beers of any braud or kind whatsoever which might be intended or calculated to influence eiof said parties to urge or oee^ ommend or suggest the purchase of | same, or to attempt in any way to influence either c-if said parties to give preference to ibis or their goads, or to present or finggest the preaen" tation of any rebate, gift or thing <of T.aiue whatsoever aro any member ?of any county dispensary board or to ny dispenser or clerk in any dispenry or to the dispensary auditor for >e purpose of influencing either of id parties, or fox any other pisrwe: Provided, That nothing here* contained shall lie construed to event the offer axul acceptance y rebate intended and conditioned be applied solely te the profits of , <county dispensary in any county "he State, said offer and notice of te to be submitted with the bid ,1e distiller, manufacturer, brewfiealer or agent, provided in ficm 7, of thi3 act. Any distiller, inufacturer. brewer, dealer or flit guilty of violating she terms of s ad shall be deemed guilty of a demeanor and upon conviction !1 be tined not less than $100 nor > than $1,000. or be imprisoned (1 labor for a term of not less \ months nor more than two both fined and imprisoned, ^rretion of the court. Any f any county dispensary ny dispenser or clerk in a or dispesarv auditor who .. !ii naiiy consuu mm ?n.y anufacturer, brewer, dealt as hereinbefore mcutionpermits any distiller, ?r or brewer, dealer or pr>xc!i birn in tlie mancntioned or who shall acate. frift or this* of val distiller, manufactures, er or agent, except as led, shall be subject to moral by the governor deemed guilty of a misd upon conviction shall less than $100 nor more or imprisoned at hard ot less than six months ^an two years, or be both imprisoned, at the discrer court: Provided. That it unlawful for any distiller, ^turer, brewer or dealer, or after being adjudged guilty ' ting the provisions of this - - V ' ' y; fiction to do any further business in this State, directly or through the intermediary of another firm, person or corporation or by agent or attorney or otherwise; and it shall be unlawful for any county dispensary board after receiving notice that this section has been violated by any distiller, manufacturer, brewer or dealer, by agent or otherwise, to order any more liquors or beverages of any kind from said distiller, manufacturer, brewer or dealer, or to display or offer for sale goods manufactured by any person, firm or corporation, violating this section after the stock then on hand of said goods has been disjwsed of, and it is hereby declared to be the duty of the dispensary auditor to serve prompt notice upon all county dispensary boards of' anv and ell convictions under this act. "Sec. 47. The State dispensary is. hereby abolished ami all acts and parts of acts inconsistent *ith this act ni* hereby repealed: Provided, that this act shall not have the effect of preventing any violations of the present criminal Jaw relating: to the dispensary being punished as now provided by law for offenses heretofore comitted." "Sec. 4S. This act shall go into > effect immediately upon its approval ' by the governor. ' Sec. 4!h Before selling: or delivering: any intoxicating liquors to any person, a request must be presented to the county dispenser printed or written, dated of the true date stating that he or she is of age and the residence of the signer, for whom or whose use it is required, the quantity and kind required, and bis or her true name, and the request shall be signed bv the applicant in his own true name and signature attested by the county dispenser or his clerk who receives and tiles the requests. But the requests shall be refused if tho county dispenser filling it personally knows the person is a minor, that he is intoxicated, or that he is in the habit of using intoxicating liquors to an excess; or if the applicant is not so personally known to said county dispenser, before filling said order or delivering said liquor he shall receive the statement of a reliable and trustworthy person of good character and habits, known personally to him, that the applicant is not a minfir and is not in the habit of using intoxicating liquors to an excess, such request books shall be provided by the county boards in the manner and form as is provided in section 507 and 56S of the criminal cude. A Proclamation by the Governor. Gov. Martin F. Ansel Sunday night issued the following proclamation: "All dispensers in charge of local dispensaries, by virtue of an act known as the 'dispensary law,' repealed the 16th day of February, -...rt- L._ 1 luu/, are nrrcuv uiucicu close theid dispensaries and are required to keep "them closed until the appointment of the new boards provided for in the act approved the l th day of February, 1907, and until such time as said boards shall have taken stock and shall have made arrangements with the board of t?mraissioners to he appointed under the terms of an met 'to wind up the affairs of the State dispensary,' <?tc., which will issue orders for reopening the local dispensaries." Commirsion Appointed. Gov. Ansel has appointed the members of a eorcmission of business men to wind up the affairs of the dispensary. The commission consists of Dr. W. J. Murray, Columbia, S. 0.; Captain C. K. Hender, Aiken; MoSweenev, Trmraonsville; Nelson IC. Poe, Greenville. Gov. Ansel ha* issued a proclamation and notified all county dispensaries to close until this commission can inoet and pass cpon the bids of the county boards to be appointed. Uht.iUi.li iO A Quaker Couple's Experience. 1 How many persons dread to eat I their meals, although actually hungry nearly all the time! Nature never intended this should so, for we are given a thing called appetite that should guide us as to what the system needs at an? time uau uiftcsi. But we get In a hurry, swallow our food very much as we shovel coal into the furnace, and our sense of appetite becomes unnatural and perverted. Then we eat the wrong kind of food or eat too much, and there you are?Indigestion and its accompanying miseries. A Phlla. lady said the other day: "My husband and I have been sick and nervous for 15 or 20 years from drinking coffee ? feverish, indigestion, totally unfit, a good part of the time, for work or pleasure. We actually dreaded to eat our meals. "We tried doctors and patent medicines that counted up into hundreds of dollars, with littlo if any benefit. "Accidentally, a small package of Postum came into my hands. I made Eome according to directions, with surprising results. We both liked it and have not used any coffee since. "The dull feeling after m?al3 has left us and we feel better every way. \ We are so well satisfied with Postum that we recommend it to our friends who have been made sick and nervous and miserable by coffee." Name giv_cn by Postum Co.,Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pigs. "There's a Reason." . . ,. v'v v akv ! THE ROAD TO SLUMBER TOWN. i Rock-a-bye, rock-a-bye, to and fro. This is the way the horses go. Galloping, galloping, up and down, long the road to Slumber Town. Rock-a-bye, rock-a-bye, very steep Jthey find the Hill of Half Asleep. Now they are taking a good, iong rest, just in sight of Cradle Nest. Rock-a-bye, rock-a-bye, there at last; Dreamy Point is safely past; They've galloped on to Cuddle Down, Right In the midst of Slumber Town. ?Washington Star. ? * ? A SLIGHTHISTAKE. By E ELLIOTT MODE 4 4 4 To say that the day was cold wouldn't express the meaning. It was very cold. The wind came down from the northeast with a whirling sweep, and made those w-ho were out of doors draw their greatcoats closer to their bodies, and turn their heads in such a way as to endeavor to ward off the biting blasts. An old man waited at Plainfleld station. He had come by rail to this place and expected that he could reach his destination by taking the stagecoach which ran down the Plainfleld Valley. Now thfs old man, although quite wealthy, was somewhat eccentric, end although he could have como back to the scenes of h:s childhood looking as well as anybody and wearing as good clotes as any other man, yet he preferred to put In such an appearance as would make his old-time friends that he had got down in the world. He had waited an hour or more at the station when the hack, or stageooach, drew up. **I want to go down the Plainfleld Valley," said the old man. "Yes," answered the driver, "I got a telegraft about you. You want to go to the poorhouse." "Well, I don't know as I do. At least, not on such a day as this. But ! want to go in that direction. You'll take me, I suppose?" "Oh, yes; oh, yes; I'll have to take you?that's the orders. But I don't know how the young ladies inside will take it. I'll have to speak to them about it" He opened the side door of his coach and said. In a low tone that he had orders to take a pauper from this station to the Farmington'poorhouse. I "He Isn't just as slick a 15Ckin' feller as you might want to have in tho coach, but you ladies can take the back seat and I'll make him sit in one corner of the front seat" "Indeed he shant come in here," aaid one of the yoang ladies-*-Fanny Raymond, by name. "Ride with a pauper?never! Let him walk, or wait until tomorrow." "Or he might ride outside with yon," said Ellen Anderson, who seemed to have.more kindness of heart than her companion. "But," said the driver, "it is such a very cold day, and he doesn't seen to be burdened with outer garments. I'd hate to ask anybody to ride outaide. I'm prepared for the coll, you know,", continued the driver. Fan always prepared. To tell the whole truth abovt the matter, if I should refuse to take Urn, or if I should make his ride outside with me [ should lose my plaoe." "Well, lose It, then," said Fanny. "He shant come in here." It was wow the nrooer time Car the driver to lose his temper and speak sharply. "And, madam," he said, "I say he shall come in. I'm running this stagecoach. ( know my duty and I know my orders." Then tnrnlag to the old man he said "Come in. Be seated and make yourself comfortable. I like to be agreeable and please the ladies, but I know my daty, and, knowing, dare perform." The matter was settled, the door was closed and the driver mounted his seat and drove off. "And so, you are a pauper," said Fanny spitefully. "Of course it is very pleasant for the young ladies to ride down the valley with a pauper." "Pity the sorrows of a poor old man," said the new passenger laconically. "I don't pity anybody," snapped Fanny, "who gets away down so law in the world as to be a pauper, and then eomes and pushes himself into a stagecoach with respectable younjr ladies who have respectable homes and respectable families." "Yes, yes," said the old man, sometimes people can hardly keep from being respectable. They were brought up that way, and it follows, as a matter of course, that they have some respectability about them, or, rather the appearance of respectability. But, otherwise, they are dead men's bones, so to speak. They may even be whitened or whitewashed sepulchres. Probably It would be better If they had a little more common sense." Fanny was now quite angry. "To be talked to In this way," she said, "is a little more than I can endure. I believe, I shall get out and walk." "That would be a good Idea," sug gested the old man. "A walk down the valley this breezy morning would, no doubt, be conductive to health and happiness." "Oh." Aaid Fanny, '1 wish we had waited for the next coach." ( . ' ' v: t - t 1 "But," added Ellen, "If we had we j would huve missed the party this evening." "Yes, so we would?so we would," Oh, the troubles of: this life! Oh, j the vexations and anoyances that must come to us on account of paupers and such like!" "Pity the sorrows of a poor old man was agalned walled by the man whom they supposed to be a pauper. "Oh, give relief and heaven will bless your store. I learned these lines when I went to the little school house which stood in this valley about two miles ahead. We spoke pieces then on Friday afternoons, and that was one of my recitations. Pity the sorrows of a poor old man whose trembling limbs have borne him to your door. But I'm not so very old?only seventy-two." "You don't mean that you used to live in this neighborhood?" said Fanny. "I do," the nan answered. "My youthful days were spent here. May I ask your name?" "My name is Fanny Raymond." "Then I am your Uncle John. I suppose you nave neara 01 your uncie John? He went out West some years ago." The picture of Fanny's face at this juncture would have been a good subject for an artist. "I?I?oh, dear:" she stammered. "I didn't know. The driver said you were a pauper and that you were going to the Farmington poorhouse." "But the driver didn't know. Drivers will make mistakes as well as other people. He expected a pauper at the station back there, but as the pauper wasn't there, and I was, he naturally supposed that Inmost be the man he was looking for. I am on my way to your home now." "Oh, Uncle John!" wailed the astonished girl, "can you forgive me? I supposed you were the pauper expected at the station, or I certainly would not have spoken as I did." "Yes, 1 understand. And nobody likes paapers. I don't think I would want to be a pauper on that account n-i. mi Jiki. r T out wt; ii arup luis uuw. a kuuw a am not as smoothly dressed as the people dress here now. But my home Is In Dakota, and the people In Dakota are not quite as particular In regard to their dress as they are here. And In the past sixteen years they have chirked up considerably here. Your father is living?" He asked. "Yes." "And your mother." "She Is dead. Has been dead for five years." "Ah!" exclaimed Mr. Raymond. "I did not know. I am sorry to hear It." And then to himself: "No mother! no mother! No wonder she Is fidgety and rude. I pity the poor girl who has to struggle on without a mother," There had been no correspondence between Mr. Raymond in Dakota and his brother In Plainfleld Valley for something over six years, and the return of the brother was a great ftiirnriaa unri a oroot nkoonro The little scene between Miss Raymond and her unde was apparently soon forgotten, and the young lady did her best while her uncle remained with them to show him that, in reality she was not so ill natured as she appeared on that stormy morning when they came down the valley. As she afterward explained to her uncle, she really liked ail good people, and all nice people, bat she feared that she had an inherent dislike for paupers. The lesson was a severe one, and It was never forgotten by Fanny.?New York Weekly. Five Hundred Marriages for 25 Cents The moral standards of the poorer classes appear to be advancing. Marriage Is coming Into vogue, and the haltft of living together as man and wile without a previous ceremonial appears to be going out of fashion. The American Roman Catholic Archbishop, as the result of a recent mission, performed upward of five hundred wedding ceremonies, mostly for couples who had previously lived together without marriage. The poverty of the people may be imagined from a single significant Incident It is a custom in Porto Rico for the bridegroom, at a certain point in the ceremony to pour into the open band of the bride, a few coins, in vaiue about a quarter of a dollar, I believe, as a symbolical ex* presslon of "With all my worldly goods I thee endow." These peasants had no money for this symbol. They managed among them to scrape up a little less than the customary amount; each brider the ceremony ended, passed the coins to the next bridegroom; the whole five hundred were married with the one quarter of a dollar; and at the end the coins were handed to the Archbishop as his sole wedding fee. Twenty-five cents as the wedding fee for five hundred marriages. I rather think breaks the record.?Dr. Lyman Abbott's Porto Rlcan letter in Outlook. I . French Subsidized Stage. It is not easy for the English mind to realize that the managers of the Paris theatres are as much state functionaries as the beads of the postoffice departments. To be sure, there are free lances, but the directors of the standard great bouses are civil servants. The fact is clearly brought out by the recent appointment of a new director for the Odeon. The Minister of Public Instruction, whose* educational attributes have proverbially been reflected from by the stage of Paris called before him, whea the vacancy had to be filled, M. M. Glnisty, Andre Autoine and Gemler. In the resuit, Amtolne goes to the Odeon, while M. Ginlsty, matured to his office by a life o% "the board," becomes, InspectorGeneral of Ecclesiastical Edifices.? London Globe. . I I SOUTHERN * F <? txg W/CS flf INTEREST TO THE PLANT! K.?? How Much Fertilizer to Apply. , The question, "How much fertilizer should be used per acre?" can not be answered definitely, but In a general way. It is sometimes put In this form: "What Is the most profitable amount that may be applied per acre?" Neither can the question in the amended form be exactly and accurately answered. The soil. Its character, condition, preparation, etc., may be well known, or controllable factors, but we know not what the seasons may be, soys the Hon. R. J. Redding, Director Georgia Experiment Station, Department of Agriculture, in the Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer Almanac. We know that some crops will bear larger amounts of .fertilizers with reasonable assurance of profitable returns than may be expected of other soils. A crop that occupies the soil from the fall season until spring, or early summer, will bear heavier fertilizing than will a crop that is planted in the spring and ripens for harvest in midsummer. The first case is Illustrated by oats, wheat or other small gfain, or grass, especially when sown in the tall of the year. Such a crop occupies a soil during the late fall and winter, and early spring?during which periods the rains are usually abundant ?ripening for harvest in late spring, or very early summer, before the burning summer heat and possible drouths of June'and July. Oats and wheat therefore are ideal crops for liberal fertilizing. Corn is rather an uncertain crop on the ordinary dry uplands of the South. It hah but a short period in which to develop its flowers?tassels and silks?covering but a few days. If very dry weather shall prevail when this critical period is approaching, and for some time after it is passed, tho crops may prove a greater or less failure. There can be no second cffct., no second period of blooming. It is different in the case of cotUn^ which commences to bloom and mako fruit in June <or even earlier) and continues throughout the summer until checked by a severe frost in November. It has .a number of "chances." Cotton Is therefore another Ideal crop for liberal fertiUzlng. A small amount of fertilizers applied per acre will no doubt yield a larger per centage of profit on Its cost than will a larger amount To illustrate: An application of $2 worth of fertilizer per acre may cause an increased yield of cotton (at ten cents per pound) of the value of $6 to $8. or a profit of 200 to 300 per cent on Its enst I have frequently had such result. But it does not follow i'-at twice i\s heavy an application will produce twice as large results, or that throe ' times as much would cause thru? times as great an Increase in the yield. In other words, the rate of Increase in the yield of cotton will not be In proportion to the Increase In the amount of fertilizers applied. Two dollars* worth of fc -tilizer per acre may yield an Increase In the crop of $6; but $6 worth would not therefore bring on Incres.ij of $18. But careful observation has shown that an application of $5 to $6 worth of fertilizers (properly balanced) Is A Sale amount lO apply i-er acre vu cotton. Many farmers In Georg.a hare secured satisfactory returns from an application of so much is 800 pounds par acre. I think <00 pounds a perfectly safe limit on upland in fairJy good condition, Will prepared and properly cultivated In cotton. For corn, I would limit the amount to 200 to 300 pounds jrer acre on old uplands. ' ii * 4 ' Thinning Fruit, ' ? Iff .T H Hale, a r.ionaer n>#rh grower of Georgia, writes to the Inland Farmer, on the s. bject of thinning peaches. Bat what he says will apply almost df quite as surely to any other species of fruit f "It is tho large, fl-.e fruit that brings the profit; pays the mortgage, labor, fertilizer and cost of everything. It leaves the dollar where you Vre going to have the fun out oi it. To have high grade fruit we must thin. Have a thousand peaches and leave them all on the trees and you may have five half bushel baskets 'with 200 in each. You may throw 500 away and still have five baskets of peaches. One may have not over forty-five or fifty peaches in it and yet have It worth $1.5) to $2. The other baskets with 200 in them will be worth fifty cents. Fine peaches will bring from ten to sixteen times on murh ah little reaches, besides not weakening the trees. "You have a law that will not allow you to sell milk which Is more < than so much water. We fruit growers have the advantage over every other product; the mora we water Cheap Enough. "Well, there seems to be one nec- ] essity of life that hasn't advanced in ] New York.'.' "Eh! What's that?" "You can buy a full sised Alder- ] man for only $500." ] Three prisoners under indictment for murder broke out of the jail at Wooster, Ohio, just to show that thiy could do it. o ijjiL'.: ARM * fOTES. || T,R, STOCKMAN AND TRUCK ORCWOU jL : oar stock the more they will pay w for It, and the more solids the lesr * { they pay as for it. Peaches that art flfteea per cent solids and eightyfive per cent water are worth lift? cents, but those only ten per cer^. solids and ninety per cent water a: * ^ worth $3 or $4. I say dose the..' with water; soak them, and this fc f easiest done by thinning and so ting large fruit full of water/^* > 5^ Settlement Time* 1 This is a period of the year tint *. tries the manhood of the average Ik- l'j, dividual, or rather of more average f> Individuals than any other. -JB li IB Beiueuicui. viuiv. There are different settlement times all through the year, and many, * of those that are met squarely as, they develop are postponed until now. Sometimes these postponements.; are made lu good faith. In fact, thin Is frequently the case. Bat alnaos^^ as often these postponements arc- mere pretexts, this particular tilted being designated because it Is ger?^" erally recognized as a general setilsTo meet a settlement sqaarsly n not necessarily a sign of manhood. In the first plac9 It is a plain dutr, ft and in the second place many m? because they have sense enough t > know that It is the best policy. Bu; to fall to meet settlement time sqtaro |ek| is a sure sign of lack of manhood. Men are not always able to saUte, t The best men often find themselves in such a position. But the beet oZ men never try to dodge such an to* I ^ sue. They meet It squarely and make J such arrangements as they are ahlsu /vn The individual who can pay vklflS he owes at this season and doesn't Is not a good business man, and unless he can and does make arrangements satisfactory to his Creditor he Is not a good man. By being depfivfij^$^g| of his own when it is due, the cred- "p, Itor may be ruined, and the maq who seeks to save himself at the expense ~ ? bi b.t* creditor Is lacking hi all the > ,$|| elcn.i-is of tziruas, justice and inWhen everybody does their best si ; ^ settlement time, the result for every Individual and for the entire community. There Is llo good reason tp believe that settlement time is not being fair- , ly met thl:i year, apd for the good B all concerned It Is hoped thgt t&f.; ' ( number ol dodgers will bo lose than j has ever been known before.?Torttrllle Enquirer. Intensive Forming ExeaqHi6^^^^| The possibilities of lettuce growing;, are almost wonderful; especially uuder glass, of which department w<* shall write In a later ^ommnplotlon. Lettuce la to be considered as ewe * '' ' * the Important winter'crops of tfd Norfolk trucking sefctlon. It la one of the very feet crops which has received what maw be termed "Latendlve" cultivation. Whe^ y- / all the t.-ticking and regular fani?* crops of Eastern Virginia and NorEfc ' ' Carolina receive the same care 29w attention that the spinach and letttre*' crop .receives, we shall see ene of: the most wonderful section; ef tSt*' United states. In fact, the fattfiieC' ^ M the "Middle Atlantic Seaboard Bfr Hon" from cn arrienltnrai. ai welt I as commercial standpoint, biu ao parlor, and In fact, no :;ual, tit j things carefully considered. Virginia and North Carolina occupy the "golden mean" as regards climate, and the inside track as regards freight rates to consuming cen . \ tree. In .a few y"ect?S tre shall s^o &1 of the mnny crops grcr'a here r? .c?l7l?? th? same care and attentat the same careful and Intelligent eol* tare given to spinach and lettnee and a few other crops, and there will bo ' no section In the United States, nor oh the face of the glob? to compare * or compete with the seaboard sections ' t?" of Virginia and North Carolina.?-A, , >' Jeffers, Oceana, Va. ' J 'h:la N Formalin For Scours. : On account of the general Impor- >, tance and prevalence of scours among calves fed on skim milk, L. A. Klein, "J of the South Carolina Experiment J Station, tested the value of formalin added to the milk before feeding to . the calves. In these eiperlment#> twelve calves were treated by adding .* formalin to the milk at the rate of one part to four thousand. Eleven calves recovered without any farther treatment?seven on the secondf day, three on the third and one on ? the ninth. In one case it waa found necessary to administer castor oil, creolin and suhnitrate of bismuth! before a complete recovery was brought about In three cases of scours in calves ranniag at pasture and recei'ving grain at the same time the formalin treatment did not prove effective. - % ? If. [f the shadow wasn't there, [f the little homespun care Didn,t try to give us, dearie, eve.^ \faybe we would never know low divinely fair the glow Of the love-light dancing down the fairy way! ? ' Use can almost change the stamp . ^ f nature.?Sbakctpgai^