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CAMDEN, S. C.. FRIDAY. JUNE 24. 1892 SaBP, J ATff SCHOOL ATIONAL LESSON fOh. JUNE 2Q. 1892. - Tfc.r ludgment*. ' > God. righteousness ^nr.o *he king 3 sod." penned by a km^. dedicated t a concerning the King of Kings. So! 8. type of ( 'bri$t in wisdom and in and prosperity of bis kingdom, gtecan be a typ* "of Christ a*.*o His tutonly a* to Cbrist" is divine ao'l human, and v i^nlen^ *8 ?'ven tj? ^'rn v, 22j. ~ 'i^^?*sball judge thy people with righte tod thy -poor with judgment-'' .-; ^3a- xi.. 4, 5; xxxii , I, I7. W hen .' be made King over all the^artb, 2***tht?ous branch of David reigning and ;lj^2p*T,J1g, executing judgment and justice "iartb, in the days of fardel's resto lEP^then shaii all. ?"tbout exception. benefits of equitable judgment ' ;i^^|*W,teousnes,:- Zecb riv Je> rr-i! , ?J^a "The mountains shall bring pear.- to 'PjJOple and the iittl- hill- by righleou^ Compare Isa. xi., 1. S. 'v.. 12. Peace Atl":ousri?c ~.Uali aoound. and things ter^y brought terror and dismay ?? ~~ *8^1 ued and be employed in tb? hR?"16 km'* VBe shall judge the poor of the people. the cbillreu of the neeuy.and ^^^akin pie<^ the oppressor Con the oppression of the poor in Aoia ii., and the time of the kingdom when *jmk sfiall inherit the earth, and ?bill _ 3^ themselves in the abundance of xxxvu., 11, Math, v , 5>. - ''They shall fear Thee as long as the moon endure, throughout all genera - laJer. xrri., 35. '??*}. xxxiii., 20. 21, 'M 416 7tr^ plain to the restora and ber continuance as a na 1 sua and moon endure. Some 'lay reference to this also in Gen. fatt that the light, in rb* ., *T2, ^6fe appointed for sign.-. fkrnmJml come down like rain upon L?"?*a grass. as showers that water the ? Compare II Sam. xxiii.. 4. Hosea EC notice in each passage the . to the morning? the morning ootids, the morning when Ho will **$ Israel (P*. xlvi 5. margin*. AH . ^2^ 7 ff,!ng now 1s ^'lt a foretaste of the 1 ""'inl 1 when Jesus shall cotne to - *thT q *? rhe Mori"ng Star and to ftrael AO-iT^^nn pi. Righteousness (Rev x.x??_ 1H ' .K?-^s<^a^s 3^*a'l the righteous flourish, ? of P*are *> k>ng as the moon ? 2eV^i. i. WJ" be the true Melohizedek, ^Kih r r bot*1 ot Righteousness and ce Saviour teaches us that ifmy~ prgseaT world, instead of flourishing, must expect hatreil and persecution and so a'so teach the apostles bv the *v2r2? *^ohn xv- xvi.. 1. Jas. !. & *r2' a-' I0; 11 Tifu "'?> llK ' i " shall have dominion ako from sea yd from the river unto the ends of '1 Solomon's kingdom embrace*! *2-.^!, a'^ Pronj'se Kings iv.. JI. 21); true ^.o^ of T)avid shall have dominion .tali the earth (Dan. vu., 13. 14; Rev. xi., &T;&; ****** '-14K t.fe.;2r v.,9. ^ /They tOajWl1P'e|i m the wilderness .shall Dwor? i^^/Jpd Ifis '.tiemies shall lick f .y at His second coming >that He shall smite His ball return bringing His The^-s. iii., 13; Col. iii.. Rev. xix., 11, I5>. There till tbe King returns 15>. im king*, of Tarshish and the isles lbnngpre*b^, the kings of Sheba and neb* shall offer The mo3t distant tad most opulent ^em to ^represented hero, >Wk the previous verse suggests the most ^uncivilized. The_ visit of tjje <^ueen of Kneba to Solomon and of the w?s?.> nien of tl^- nast to th? child Je- us ate suggestive of thf time ^ phec the glory of ;th'^ T.ord having 1 sen 5 -vpot Israel the Gertti!??s shall come (i> h?'t* l%ht and kings to t%e brightnef?s of h^r : ?* ? Hkg jl sa, lx.. 1-3). t Uu. "Tea, all kin^> shall fall down before all nations .-hil serve Him." L'orn Ps. Ixxxvj . !>1 That this shall be j He is King ot tnVJews is evident from where it is vnntten that th'" na and Kingdom that will not serve Thee , teeconTert* shall perish. It ia the Israel, truly converted, that i? to Jiand bud and rill th^ face of th? earth with fruit Jsa xxvi.. t'?. f 19 "Por fie shall deliver the needy when |h?cmth; the p><?r also and him that hath |y helper.'' (.'onrpare Isa. xli.. 17. Is. _\n ?Bi relief, both ph/Sirel and spiritual, [wiich He brought toy the poor ami neeJy He was here in humiliation, was but a ;*unpleof the fullness of blessing that shall wh?* tbe kingdom copies . ; * ~H "He shall spare the poor ao i nee iy, ?ad shall save the souls of tb? needv ' See Jar. xxxlx , 10; /.eph. in., 12, a ? (ore itedo^ing of goo-1 times. Th ? rich eoetrol things now, but it shall not !>-? -o m 'tte days of His kingdom. Ther^ 1 very <>i!ltle encouragement for the poor and needy fette churches to-day. but, such h-.v-? not Hhe spirit of Christ i 14. "He shall redeem their soul fr < n de csrt tod violence, and precious shall rh^ir jWoodbe in His sight. They may la . *iowu Sir lives for His sake, bn^ He will rvneiv? 'their souls and in due time redeem their bodiei. Deceit and vi?dence shall end when ?Be corner , 1&, vind He shall live, and to H m shall Wpna of the gold of Sheba; prav^r also iiu bemad? for Him continualiv.aod dailv gtall He be praisetl ' He was dead, but is ritofbteverm ore tRev. \H\ The church MU to have hard work to ra i<e n?onev to canrou her work, but in kingdom day* wealth sha-l pour in from all quarters (Isa. V.> e may be said to prav for Hi m when we pray for His members "A, "There shall be an handful of corn in earth upon the top of the mountains.th" rt thereof shall shake like Lebanon, and r of the city ^hall flourish 'i k? era -s of 1 earth." There shAli he srea' ,r^uits j ?antly small cau>\ . "A little j ome a thousan''. and a >rea!l j m nation. I th? f^or l wj?| ha->->n ! ^Mme (Isa lx.. 22). 1 "H? name shall en dur- f v-v^r .His tahall be continue^l as lone a-* the *un. the men shall be blessed in Him. all shall call Him blessed." The great - 1 on earth, the sweetest n?'m> jn j See the power and bb>sedne>-i of ! in aich passages as Acts i>i.. ]?> i Ilia, 30; ix., 15, 1^, x., 43. "'! r j| ''BlatH be the Lori OoJ, the <-o.j of | who (Hily doeth wondrous things.' ^E^MWiariy said that thi-^ vers*, aud'tbe : Mrt flh for adoration, not exposition } Smp?r#E*- 1U Jer. x? ? 7. 10 l9^*Jknd bless^ i be His glorio?is nam* ' 1 giiJf and l^ the whole earth be tilled ; rrth Hfe gk>rj Amen and amen " The ' lM hooks of the Psalter end with xii.. r 1 K'l 01 H AS rl SL CrHt iftlxxxix.. 52, cvi.,_g?, d k ]t Cyth while to compare the"*c!o.-e ot' ea<-b ' ; 1Fbf**thU T*5alm shall l>? faifiried Ijjgvtd snail have no more o-.-ca-ion tn f Xbe premises that the wb ;- earti; fwIDe-i with His giory ar? found in B. xiv., 21: Isa. xi.. !>. Hab. ii.. ji . ^jould inspire us. to work might iiy to ift.? Lesson Heh>?r. ' -r JfEWSY CLEANINGS. Wmm ? \ ? 4 * a*"1" tofpUL bonztess is on the m?atl 527 missionaries in Japan, so crops by root are reported sacrificed by Western corn. are very much at sea in toe future. dalned colored cler gr Episcopal Church. State report on cotton siiows acreage of twenty- two per cent, desertions from British warv are going on at. Halifax, Nora Scotia. has granted a subsidy of t*> the N rbern Railway Com goortacms increase is reported in irntnl from Upper Alsace, Germany, to at Berlin, Germany, bayoneted who had thoaghtleedy stopped TO RELIEVE DEPRESSION. K Plan For Converting Land Into Bankable Seennty. Edbeard Atkinson, the Boston Politi cal Economist. Weaves a New Scheme For Getting Money. Tiwforicwing interesting communica tion from Edward Atkinson to the Man < ufacturers' Record presents a novel plan for increasing the value of real '-state an security for loans : Boston, Mass. Editor il^nvjU' f" rtrd Retwd: I observe that an article which i lar.c-lv wrote in the Century magazine upon the Torrens system of registering land titles has attracted the attention of General Alexander and othei of my Southern j friends. I may ventuit to call attention ? to a matter whereby land may be con - | verted into a securitv on which money ! ran be borrowed from banks and bank - | ers without the necessity of making a conveyance of the land as securitv fur each loan. It is a plan which has not yet been adopted, and to which there may be objections unknown to me, but | in ail but one respect the suggestions | that I make are a part of the common practice in many places, especially in ! Philadelphia and Baltimore. What "I ! suggest is this : i The conveyance of land by th* ordi i nary method is by registry of" deed, un : der the guarantee of a "title insurance | company and on condition of the pav [ ment of a ground rent without any | promise to pay a principal lump sum se j cured in part by mortgage in the usml way. T do not promise perpetual ground rents, but ground rents terminable at the option of the buyer or lessee on given j notice, not terminable at the option of j tlffe seller or lessor. It is the common J Mortice. notably in Philadelphia. In sell ! Aad convey land" subject to a terminable rent under an insured title t" capable men, who. being in good health. also get their' lives insured for an amount equal to the valuat;on of the land. The lessees then join a building society, ami thus procure the means for building house on the leased lot, becoming ulti mately their own landlords bv paying up their assessments in the building* socicty and by ultimately compounding the reut | by payment at a valuation in one sum [ either in installments or in one pavmcnt The plan which I suggest is "to add j one single element to this method, name j ly, that the obligation to pay rent upon j the >an:l should be represented by w hat may be called rent or rental certificates, to be registered at the office of the title insurance company, containing provisions j both in the conveyance and in the rental | < ertifioate that on a given notice at a cer | tain period in advance of a payment of I rent at such office of registry the "lessee of j the land may become entitled to purchase j eich or all of these rent certificates bv | depositing at such office of registry a given sum of money for each certificate, j ^ Example: Let k be assumed that John Brown buys or leases from James Brown j a !<>t of land of which the valuation is j H.0W, upon which he builds a house I valued at IM'O. The ground rent is to i be a year. I his rent is represented j by ten registered certificates of rent, each ; ??f per annum, provision being made that at anv period three months in ad vance of any part of the rent becoming due, John Smith may file a written no i ticc at the registry that, on the payment : of *100. together with the rent then due, he desires to become the owner bv pur chase of reot certificate No. 1. and so on through No\ >. 5 up t-? 10. When he has purchased all the rent certificates at $100 each he will have become hi.s own landlord. ^ These rent certificates consti | tute a lftn'upon the land as good to him, i John Sm-th, us they are to the original ; holder, and lie need not cancel th? n^ Or let us suppose that John smith. be i ing the owner of land free of encum i brauce. upon which his house stands and which constitutes his f tnu. executes rent . certificates recorded upon that farm with a trust company, title insured. and him j hims.lf becomes the possessor of such j certificates^ would no; these become the j first 1 en upon the land, not as a mort : gage, but as a lien, subject to forced-sure i if tJSl rent is not paid. \\ ould not these transferable lent certificates then become ! available to be deposited with banks, j bankers or trust companies as securitv for | temporary loans from season to 'season? I am not a lawyer and cannot tell what techni- al difficulties there mav l>e in the ' way. but this seems to me to be the easi est way. under our present form of resris i try of title by deed, to put land info a form iu which it can be assigned as se- ! curity for temporary loans without going through an examination ?>f title! and ' I without the execution of papers of con j veyance and mortgage each time that a I [ loan is made. In presenting this subject, permit rne to I ! call attention to t ie fact tint the < ra/.e , for more depreciated money in the' foim of depreciated silver coin or for govern ment papci or for government loans, has about run its sh"rt aud dangerous course I The South, of a]J sections of this count rv. t being dependent neon the sale of its ex cess of product for foreign export, has a greater in'eiest in maintaining the present standard of value on t i ??* unit of a t'old dollar than anv other section of ^this : country. Its lack has not been want of money, but want of credit? want of bank- ; ing iostitur ons. and want of facilities ; for borrow nig money even on tioodsetur | ity. The South, of all sectioub of this j countrv. ran lea>t afford the discredit of j debused silver, and al'-o possesses fhe j surest control ov>i the gold ^f the world. 1 [ if it chooses to maintain th> standard of value. It. therefore. s.*m-> mobable that ! the movement which is now being made j for taking the tax the circulation of . State banks, supplemented by rn- :hod< which may render it easy to borrow true ' morey of the be*t kind ->n the V-t kind of security, will presently pl^ce the South ern States again on the r<?ad to progress and to greater and sreater development. In is with thi*end in view that 1 pre sent these soruewl atcrude suggestions for ; readily converting l?qd into a lanktblc | security on which loans ni.iv I*- negotiat fd. jK*abl" in ? "sndard eoin <?f the t est kiod^fhat is to say. in coin which i< worth a> much after it is mvltc 1 as it purports to be worth in the coin itself s That ts the onlv kind of coined naonov that is good <>ur present ?ilver dollar* are bad raoney bectuv they do not meet this rondit 'Xt. _jThty arc worth but seventy renW they are melted. "t"-urs tn:!y. Edw ;nn ATKTSS05. A. TVW Phi'a lelpuia clergyman re cently receive J :?>? ?avei<>f>e c-m;n uin j . -n oH f^hione 1 t T::''r ? <-? >u .-i> ;?ts fee > - or perform:;:*; 3 cs:&incuj, f , ? ?J*- ? \ < r ! MR. MORGAN ON SILVER The Aiaoama 8enator Speaks for the Stewart Free Coinage Bill. ! WAS!ti5GT05, D. C.-Mr. Morgan XDera. . Ala.) who had given notice thit he would address th<< Senate on the silr*r question, cilled up the unfinished busi nes.4 -Senator Stewart 3 bi!! for th* fre* homage of gold and silver. j} Mr Morgan prefaced his remarks by stating that he did not irtend to make a I silver speech, bat simply wished to sub ; mit :-ome preliminary renmks Hev, wanted to hear from the Minneapolis ' J Convention before doing ?o. It w-.s like ly that the Senator from Ohio (Mr. Sher mau? would b' a conspicuous figure there, at whhh manv darts would b*> ; fired, and he; foy. would like to fire a | few darts at him Mr. Morgan said he had something to ! say to hi?- friends on the Democratic side. : The State of Alabama he said, had always been Democratic except once, when it J cast its vote for General Grant agai; st Horace Gree r With this exception that State had been Democratic until yes terday. ^Whether it w ou'd h* Democratic to-morrow he did not know. Yesterdav j somcth ng happened that brought to him j a mournful suggestion of the future. I j There was going to be some difficulties i w i smoothing out the tiuuble? there, j These difficulties were not personal of { polit cal, but came from dissatisfaction I of the farming community, in that State. ! whcf had felt^tbr pressure of want amid ! great abundance. They dreaded the visit# j of the tax gatherers. The people of Ala- i I nama had done all they could to uphold ' | the Democratic party, which they believ- I ; ed was in favor cf broadening the money I j system of the country. They relied on j I the Democratic party to relieve them ! ; from these difficulties, because they be . neved the Democratic party was for sound ! j money, ba*ed on the equal free coinage ; of gold and silver. Mr. Morgan brieflv j reviewed the formation of the Farmers' Alliance, noting its obie< :ts and scoring it for its alleged fallacious doctrines. It i j had in its ranks, he ;>aid. a lot of schem | mg p 'litieians, who presented a number I of wild schemes to the people, including I i the Oeala platform. He would inform ' j his Democratic friends that if they could j do without the vote of Alabama in the neit election they need not listen to him. The j trouble in thai State was traceable direct b to the fact that the Senator from Ohio j (Mr. Sherman) had been able to demone : tizc silver, and the Democratic party had I not enough courage to remoneti&e it. i he Senator from Ohio (Mr. Sherman) said j it was not a political question. The Senator from Missouri (Mr. Vestl said it ! was not a political question. He (Mr. Moigan) said it was not a political ques I j??', They sa^ ^at because in the divisions of the houses of Congress on the silver question they had not divided on p irty liues. No political party." there fore, was responsible. but both parties [ were afraid that in the existing political | condition.- they could not do without the aid of the men who controlled the gold | of this question. He wanted to take : it out of politics. He believed we could j serve our country better now by coming ; together, irrespective of party, and dein? ; what was best to lestore silver as a money metai as it was in 1873. Mr Mo gau concluded with a referen e i to 'the deplorable financial situation of | the country. Hardly had Mr. Morgan been seated when Mr. Hale (Rep Me.) called up the I Pension Deficiency bill already passed by the House, and it was passed in a per I functory manner in less than throe minutes. , Jones (Dem., Ark.) addressing the ; Senate on the Stewart Fcee Coinage bill j reviewed the political aspect of the silver question as shown by the votes on Hint | subject in Congress during recent years anahting the standing of" each political I pHtfy- V At the conclusian of^Mr. Jones' re marks the Seoate, at \:f5 o'clock art i jouvned. UNCLE JERRY IS PLEASED. i Germany's Consumption of American Corn Quintupled Within a Year. Washington, D C.? Uncle .Terry ; Ru>k is greatly pleased over our increas j rd exports of corn to Germany. Figures j ; from German sources show that in the tirst quarter of 1891 Germany took 1.111, 424 bushels, and in the first quarter of j 1*92 5.847.852, an increase of 4.736,438 ? j bu-he's. Referring to this showing, the Secretary observed that it was extremely j i gratifying as indicating the value of the w?rk on behalf of American corn in j Germany, and thut it was, indeed, more 1 than any one could have expected in so j -short a time. Col. Murphy having been ( transferred from Great Britian to Ger- j | many only in Octobcr. 1891. "Measuring the results." said the Secre- ' t.?ry. "by the appropriation provided , therefor by the last Congress, we have increased sales of nearly ?'3,000.000 bush- | els of corn, as the result of $625 expense, j j The truth of the matter is. -r he added, j ? that this work ought to b; pusheJ | j euuestly aod simultaneously in all the | i "intrie^ of northern and central Europe." - ? - New Industries in the South. The la.-t ot n?w Southern industries in | thi> wetk's issue of the Baltimore Manu facturer^ Record includes the following 'u>?r? important items: \ $50,000 salt company at Clifton, W. \ . a $30.0 '0 manufacturing company at 1 < 1 i lott^sville, W Va. ; a $50,000 mer | ch* diss company at New Orleans, La ;a $12 ti-W manufacturing company at Mid i rileaborough. Ky. . a $5,000 lumber com puny at Little Rock, Ark. ,\a $100,000 manufacturing company at Grand Rivers. Kv . a $10:>.000 electric-light and pjwer company at El Paso. Texas; a $40;00<T ice. light and water works company at Orange, Texas; a $50. 000 grain couJ^any at Sher man. Texa> ; a $100,000 coal and coke i turn pa ny a* Dates. Texas; a $300, 000 - phospate mini^Prompany in Florida, a . $10,000 lumber company, a $100,000 sad dlery com f any. and a $500,000 abattoir and pa king company at Pallas, Texas;* ' $250,000 coal mining and coke making company in West Virginia: a $10,000 ex celsior manufacturing company at Besse- J mer. Ala., and a $500, 000 copper raining company in North Carolina. i Breach of Promise 8ult. Chi? v;o. Ill ?Mrs. Tesse Hale, a for* 1 mer actress, has 6iied in the superior court here a suit to reco^t-i $950,000 for bre.'n tf of promise to marry from James W. Pa'se. the manufacturer of the Page j Tvpesettin<i Machine, of Hartford, Conn., j where ho is reported to be worth two or i tlnct: million dollars. It is alleged th&t 1 M r<i H*le lived in Hartford for a year or 1 ?or* as the wife of the manufacturer. j ' - v , ".j ' | \ ? J'..:!*' POL. POLK'S FUNERAL. | The Alliance Chieftain Laid Away ft Raleigh. j Impressive Ceremonie? at the Grave. Senators Peffer and Irby Present. I ! Raleigh. N. C.--The largest private i fuueral ever he'd h^re was tliat ef L. L Polk Th<- Fust Baptist church, in which the services *ere held, could not contain half *he peop'e. And yet it was a city i funeral. 1 he e were very few Alliance men present The ne'vs did not reach them soon enough. Many of them | thought the body, if brought here at all, j nroul'l he brought later. It was 3 o'clock in the afternoon when i tbe special ca! from Washington arrived. In this was the body and the following I 1 dies and gectlexeu- Sena'ors Peffet j and Irby. Hep esentativesv E. T. Stack - j house, of South Carolina. J. G. .Ot's, of Kansas. \V A McKeighm, of Nebraska; W A Brand, and S. B Alexander, of N'Mth ( arolhia. 0. M. Kerr, C. W. Ma chine. ( 3. Moses. Mr. Rnd Mia. W. A. Bakci, W. F Wynne, J. H.Turner, Hugh Smith. Dr. W. C. Murphy, Mr#. Jerry Simpson. M?s Ben Terrell, Mrs. N A Dunning, Mi. and Mrt. J. A. Al britton. Mrs. F. A. Dwyt and M s? ?t 0. Otis. Theie were fully 500 people at the station. A piocession wasf. rmed. The pall-bearers were of the Washington par- i ty The remains were at oni:e taken to | t.-e First Baptist church. During the | passage of the procession through the j meets the bell of the city ball was tolled At the chur- h the casket was opened and w.-s banked with flowers, many of which were brought from Washington Id the audience was Gov. Holt and the officers I of the State Alliance, 'save President Marion Butle- who could not reach here iu time.) the major of Kaleigh; Vice President A. B Andrews, of tne Rich mond & Danville Ra lroad; Grand Sire Busbee, of tbe Odd Fellows, etc. Rev. Df. .1. W. Carter, pastor of the church, read a passage of Scripture, Rev. Dr T. E. Skinner prayed, and Rev. Dr. J. J. Hall, pastor of the Baptist Tabernacl", read another selection. A short sermon was preached by Rev. Dr. Carter, from the text: ' Thou knowest not what a day may briug forth," in the course of which he alluded to Polk's earnest work for the church in the State ancl country. A quartette choir sang, "Abide with mn," and Dr. Carler announced that the body could be viewed. A thousand peo ple passed in single file by the casket and took a last look at the face of the dead. The expression was calm aud natural. The pallbearers took the body out of the church, and it was then taken in charge by other pall-bear ers appointed here. These were J. M. Heck, N. B. Broughton, Jno. E. Rae, G. W. Sanderlin.W. S. Barnes. W. J. Peele, G. M. Allen. S. Otho Wilson, A. J. Dalby and H. E. King. These, represent the church, the AKiance and ciPiztns. The procession, which was a very large one, then made it? way to Oakwood Ceneterv. In a carriage was Mrs. Tolk and her three daughters. The burial place was on the slope of a hill and when the procession arrived theie more than a thousand people were found on the spot. The three preach ers took their positions at the head of the grave. Rev. Dr. Carter made some re marks. Rev. Dr. Hill prayed and lie v. Dr. Atkinson pronounced the benediction. The party which came from Washington left at 6:15 on ifce return. There was much curiosity to seK Peffer and Macune, particularly. There were no Alliance ceremonies whatever, although the order has an impressive burial service. Alrea ly there are. of rou'se, specula tion as to who will take up the work which Polk was doing for the Third party. It is said a Minnesota mau is prominent. Of couiscit is not yet known what will be done with the Progressive Farmer. ' He left no fortune; He was a member of no ordei save the Ro\al Arcuunm and the Alliance At a meeting ol a numbei of friend* of the late Col Polk, held here in the even ing. it was determined to call a public meeting here June 22nd for the purpose of organizing the Po'k Memorial Associa tion. looking to the erection of a suitable monument to his memory. THE ALLIANCE TICKET. I Talk of Nominating 8enator Stewart of Nevada for President. Omaha, Neb -The new> of the death of L L Polk, President of the Farmed1 Alliance, was received with many man ' ifestations of regret among the party lepK ' ers. It seemed assured that Polk w<4uld ! be either first or second at the Omaha i Convention. I' was apparently generally ucde' stood that the independent/ nom ! ioees -hould be selected with a view to concentrate the West and South, as the I | latter section should receive the j second I I place Tn day a new plan developed * which seems to me^t with much favor among i the leaders of the new party in this sec | tion It is proposed to nominate United I State? Smator William M. Stewart of I Nevada for President and Thomae E. | Watson. Representative in Congress from i Georgia, for Vice President. It is now i said that Gen. Weaver. ^ ho has been most ! j prominently meotiomd f"V the tirst pj;tce, is strongly inclined to faT-or this ticket. World's Fair Exhibit. | Raleigh. N C ? The first bulletin to i the people of the State regarding making collections for the Chicago exhibit i9 out. I It < all? for choice shears of grain of this | *?-af? crop, for minerals or crys'als; for j ? i lustrations of the State's sthoof interests" j - tc. There will be a jjaap of the State, ; 1 4 by ? feet, od whicll will be shown all I the public school houses and all the pri j vate schools, colleges, etc , in North Car | olina. To the ..forestry of this State is assigned the task of preparing a mono graph ou the yellow pine and to also il lustrate. practically, all the phases of its | development and all i s relations to the i industries. This will be the centrepiece I j of the great display from thi3 8t*te. Th?r lumbermen and w?od workers are asked to co-operatc iu making this particular j exhibit. The names of many ladies are : being secured to furnish articles fr?r the ! culinary department \ j ?enor Montt's Return to Waahingtom, i * Washtngtom. D. C. ? It is said in of*; ficials circles here that it is probable tMt \ Sen- r Montt will return to Washington as 1 Chilian Minister to the United Sta e>. His departure is sai-d to have beeneaus<-d by personal 'lis^irr^ernenta with S*rr*t!tr* Blame | I ' . ? NOW COMES THE TONE RISE, j The Missiseipi- Levees Are Crumb-' J ling Away. New Orleans, LA.? the river Mon- > day morning reached the highest, point ; known here for the past 4-5 years, and in | consequence New Orleans is to-day. lit- f erally speaking, an island. Crevasses \ above, crevasses helow, the raging river i in front and the rapidly rising Lake j Pontchartrain in the rear, have hemmed j the city in and traffic on three roads has been suspended. At midnight : the gauge read 18 feet above high water mark. People who knew well what this j | riaejaeant hoped that by morning there j i would be a decline, but when daybreak j came and the gauge was scanned old- j timers were staggered when they read j 18 2 10 At six o'clock the first break was re- j ported. It happened at Belmont place. j about twenty miles above the city on the Missisai pi Valley road . 75 feet of the levee gave Way at one clip and the water wiihra an hour's time had dug a channel twelve feet deej). The Valley tracks were quickly unde^|wo feet of water and all traffic was stopped. ? \ Following closely on the reports from j Belmopt c =me the news of three breaks elcven.miks below the city, all within one mile of each other. The first break occured at Ston?y's near where a crevasse occur* d a month ago but now closed. It started at a fifty fvot race, but widened so rapidly that by noon it was one hundred feet "wide and ten feet deep and still breakings The second break was at Villere's planta*iftfiv a half mile away Fifty feet was its width. Two hours af terwood the levee gave way. The third break is at the Merrick place, a mile below Villere. It was twenty feet wide and hopes are entertained of closing it . The three crevasses have tied up the fouthern Railroad;" which rum. from the city to the Gulf. V\! Hardly had the engineers recovered from this disastrous news when a tele- j phone message was received from Wag gaman, thirteen miles up oa the other I side of the river, stating that the ent:re levee at that point, several hundred yards in length, had toppled into the lushing waters. The Texas and Pacific trains arc just behind the levee and the swish of ; the water washed the tracks up for a j considerable distance. The Texas and ^ Pacific people have shut down on ti attic. I The last break to occur wa> at the Sui*s py Prospect plantation on the Vallew road a few miles below Belmont. It is tweoty-five feet deep and five wide au<l will assist in wideuing the Belmont bre;tk and also worry -the Valley officials. All J of these crevasses following so closely on | each other have occasioned considerable , alarm throughout the city. BLAINE~AMlTT^ESENATE. Talk in Maine of Electing Him to the Seat Occupied by Mr. Halt. Augusta, Me.? The question as to whether Mr. Blaine's political career is ended has begun to attract the serious at tention of his most devoted friends in this State, and it has been discussed by many of his townsmen who do not want to see him retired from public life. Next winter the Maine Legislature will elect a United States Senator in place of Eugene Hale, who will have held that office foi twelve years. Mr. Blaine's name is be ing mentioned for the place, and it is said that a movement will be started in his interest. Mi. Ha'.e is a candidate for re election, and his plans have long been laid to get it. In Maine they have a cus tom of returning men to both branches of the Legislature for a second term. Two years ago Mr. Hale started his Senatorial fight for securing the elect1 on of men committed to his re election. These men will be returned this winter with others, who will be pledged to the Ellsworth statesman's support. If Mr . Blaine should consent to be a candidate, Mr. Hale would have an advantage over him at the ovit aet. j Mr. BlaW is ignorant of the talk. He would undoubtedly have the influence and suppo/t of Tom Reed and Captain Boutelle. Dinglev would naturally grav itate to Blaine, but he would do nothing to imperil his chances for Frye's place in 1895. A fight between Blaine and Hale would shake up the Republican party in Maine. It is not unlikely that Gov. Burleigh would jump into the arena as a candidate. Mr. Blaine's friends are in earnest in this matter. At the coming Portland Convention, when the Republi cans nominate their candidate for Gov ernor. it is said that a resolution <m!1 be S resented recommending Mr. BlaiiK 1<m [r. Ha'cs place. The Picnic Director. Oq a little side street i?j?t off Union (8i|U8Te an office ha? been opeDe j by a man who styles himself a picnic director. Despite the oddity of his calling b* did a good business last year, having -enough ! money to pay all his personal expenses I and something over. The picnic director is an actor during the season, but; in summer time lie is generally idle. Last spring he happened to think of his present business and carried it out with success. # "I take full charge of picnics and re lieve the promoters of all responsibility," he says. "Most of my patrons are wealthy or well-to do Xew Yorkers who want to take a day's outing. 1 give them a list of pleasant places in and around New York and secure the neces sary carriages, boat or railroad tickets. At the grounds I look after the provis i ions, see that the servants atten-l to their business, give information as wh^re the prettiest views of the country ran be seen, sing a son# or two if necessary, and render myself generally agreeable. It is a pleasant way to spend h summer vacation, and it brings me in enough money to pay for my board and inciden tals until the theatrical season opens ? again." ? New York Commercial Adver tiser. Cut His Throat in a Hotel. CiHCWKvn, 0. ? The dead body of J. i-W. Woodbridge. of Austin. Tex , was 'fotjnd in his room at the 8t. Paul hotel He ^ad cut his jugular vein with his penknife some time during the night. In the dead man's packets were id cash and several letters addressed to M C. Mill r, cashier of thfc1 City Nation*' i Ba-'k, Austio. Tex. Judge? "What extenuating circum stances can you give?" Counter. eitrr ? ! "Please your honor, L made the money to pay my board bill." Judge ? Vt.-ry good; it. will pay your board and lo-.<-; j ings for fifteen years."- ? Princct-M Ti?er. ALLIANCE INFORMATION. t)r. Houghton, the Poet of the Ord?r, Ih Rhyme, An Official Statement of Gold and Silver Coinage For One Month Shows Their Market Value. Washington. D. C. ? Coinage exe cuted at the mints of the United ^'tate* in the mouth of May aggregated 5.380. 900 pieces, of the total value of $o.'?79, 2T0 Gold pi?ccs numbered $37,200. value $4,115,900; a I vet phcj*'s 9*. 9. 700, value $916,170: and miuoi coins !,*72. 000 pieces, value $47.20^ OVK CIRCCLAllON. ? T DS 4. S HOV6HTO*. : i. "Old Una e Sam." a farmer man. Set out one summer dav , to work upon hi* rot aflow land v And cut a loa'i of bat. His sun-browned Ifrce shone clear ?t?h heal'h His trunk an J limbs were lithe. And wjth his bran ny hands be Mtunit Thf swath producing bcythe. It took a pretty lively man To follow him that dav. As through the ripened tlm-Mbr He cut a light of vrav; But as be neorcd the upper ectl His scythe, turned by a stun". Cut through his co*hlde boots an?l clov# His flesh clear to the bone The blood poured out. a raging streaifl. . T1U stanchrt by thoso around. And Uncle Sun, a helpless matt. Lay prostrate on the ground. Hit face all blanched, and like the dew The perspiration stood Upon hie brow, and trembling now And faint from loss of bloo . This stalwart, brawny man of toll. As helpless as though dead. Was carried to his lfome and plated Upon his downy bed The doctor came and at a glance Told what he needs must do To build bis circulation up. And make him good as new; He left an Iron tonir, pills. And said to feed him well. And soon old Uncle Kam would ha As though no harm befell. . II. ' Old Uncle Sam." our Government. Set out one summer day. N And from our wide and rich domain To winnow want^-vav. The sltop and factory, farm aud mine, Alive with healthful toll. As busy hi *es of industi v. Enriched our fertile >*>11 it took the world to then compete With us so rich and free. Our commerce reached the orient. Our flag adorned die sea; 6ut ere we reached our hundredth year An accident befell Our currency, and hemorrhages The bankers' caverns swell Now faint and trembling, Uncle Sam The doctors will consult. If wisdom guides their treatment then a. We'll welcome the result, But If dissension mars their talk We'll quash them one and all. And treat the caae with common sens* At 'lection time this full. The blood he lost must be restored. The circulation needs !>plenishlng with currency. As does the man who bleeii^ Require feedla* r<"h t*nd?.trong. T<> restoratfonra n?s- - 1*0 we both gold end slhV? "oln Would freely mint by la<*> If Uncle Sam aoicmlc grows On gold and silver food. We'll "amlte tlje public credit rock" Aud feed him on the flood; tf private corporation- can \vltl? watwr *talT their etock Wliy can't the people <lo 'he saute, is Moses smote the rock ? For all the dlfferewe between A dead andlMna man. Was that the blood v. availed In ~ne, Put In tb?' other r.in. \ V* *??**? + The man who has no money, and finds himself compelled to get some, with no place to get it except from those who have no more than they desire . themselves to use. must make concessions to get it . He frequently sacrifices some ?.?f his prop erty for les> th*n cost when iti this di lemiua. Yet th s is exactly the couditiou of the farmer every year when the crop is dumped on the market demanding money ?o pay debts. There is not over one bill ion dollars in circulation scattered out among sixty tivc million of people for a basis of one hundred aud thirty billions of dollars exchanges in a year, and it onlv does about 8 percent, of tbe business, and yet the farmer demands two and one hall billions in s'Xty days. Theie is no money for him, aud he must and does make sacrifices to get it. ? "National Economist. *??** + The Marion Independent, <Jud.) says: ! Forty years ago tarmcrs owned a greater j portion of the nation's wealth than now. : Farmers owned of the wealth of the j nation? in 1*00. live eights. In 1*60, I less thau otic third. Iu 1S70. a little j over one- third. Iu l*rt0. a little over ' one fourth. In 1890, less than one-fifth, j This, too. wlrlc farmers compose over 50 * per cent, of the population and piv ove; ; 87 per cent, of the taxes, from which (if you will allow the digression I it will be seen that the application of the Henry George land tax scheme would not s? -ri - ously affect u> if we paid thc|othei 10 per cent., and let the "woi Id go lice.'' These peculiar hardships to the farmers will l>e further aud better undeistood wheu we note the fact that while the total wealth of the natiou is given a? $0-\<MH),000,000 in round numbrr>. onl\ 1 1 7.oimm>Oo,000 is taxed, and of t hi-. $11 00o.000.000 i? char ,cd up to the farni'tv W A>niNt. ion. D. Senator t'ock- i rell has introduced thy request of ;i formt r citi/.eu oj Mis-ouii. now a?<?ideut j of Washingto vi a Itill "for the anil unlimited coinage of a tempoiaiilv correct i silvc; dollai.'1 and it w:i? teterrtd to the i finance committee. 1 he put port of the i biil i? to haw the Pies d?'nt designate j every year the amo-int of silver e.jn va- j lent in market valce to the gold dollar, and to have silvei dollais minted at that rate. J The Omaha Tocsin. (Neb ) says1. Whcie did the people ever get the i?ica ; ! that it is to their inter -? to pay tribute , to railway manufactuiing. bridge and I other monopolies, in th?. way ?> f subsid es. ; taxes . bonuses and ?>th? r source?*' ,Iu?t how it pays a people '<> u>v?: away a pai'. 1 j of theii wealth. un!*-- tin. v do it '?u thr theory that it pa\s to ?_ri,'( :< iruard toi the return of a lo?t. . i vit. ?lcn j right, is a mystery tha* ??al v a female ; clairvoyant, ot h H<>h< mian ^ . would tackle. The Boatd of Trade <d Columbia, j SC.. recent It held a meeting, at which it was decided to t ?k?j active steps toward the advancement of that city as a busi ness center. A 1* tte.r from C'oDgress man G. W Shell was read, in which he offered tQ a*;iet them in securing an appropriation for opening up the Con garee river. To Meet Interests and Rontala. New Yokk ? One of the officials of the Kichmond Terminal Company said tl^L: he cxpected the Savannah and American I Company's stock turned ovei to the Georgia receivership would be hvpothecat fl in order to obtain fuDds to meet iu t-iests and rentals due July 1<-?. arnount ir ? to a '.out $350.0^0 .1 G. Carter, of Savannah, claims to : have discovered a process whereby cotton- j se?d oil oan be converted into a high i ?jtadeoi vanish. or into a material te- ( ketobling India rubber. HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. A DUSTER OF MANILLA ROM . One of the latest caprices in fancy work i is a^doster made of maoilla rope. A piece of rope eighteen inches long u used, the rope being of any size thai the maker may fancy. Double the rope midway, and with a strong waxed cord tie it about half the distance trom the looped portion to the off ends. Wind the cord in carefully, making it ver y tight, and then tie in a strong knot aud cut the ends off close. Then fringe out the cut ends almost to the tied portion. Beat them on sfcme hard substance to get out the lint looee scraps of mantUa. Tuis makes a very useful and durable brush. ? Chicago Herald. HOW To WASH CLOTHE?. The following is a Western lady's methDd of doing her own laundry work; Place your boiler on the stove contain ing fire pails of water, and when the water is boiling hot ad"d saluoda and eoap sufficient to make good suds. Put the clothes that you wish to boil first in a convenient tub, and as soon- the water is boiling pour enough over the clothes to thoroughly wet them and -let' them soak for a few minutes. Now add more water to the boiler, and as soon as it is boilipjg hot wring out the clothes in the tub and put them in the boiler and boil for twenty minutes. While this first batch is boiling prepare the second let as you did the first. At the end of twenty minutes transfer the first batch of clothes to the washing machta^ and ? rub them a few minutes while tbe second batch is boiling. They will then be ready to rinse. I wash colored clothes the same as white clothes, eigei?t new. ginghams 01 calicoes. Heat the first rinsing water for the flannels; also rinso them in warm water. Borax, salts of tartar and salsoda makes a good washiug fluid. I find the secret in washing is to have the water hot. Wringing the clothe* tnrough the wrin^e* several times with boiling hot suds will take out much of the dirt and will help very materially. ?New York Herald. MUSLIN CURTAILS. Very few women like to use their best lace curtains during the summer. The curtains get dusty, and after they are washed they never look quite as nice as they did before. Besides, laundrying lace curtains wears them out more than a year's wear at the windows. ? And so, sooner than run the risk of spoiling her treasures, the good housewife puts nway her lace curtains in the spring and sub mits to bare windows during the sum mer. ?'x _ A very pretty substitute for the lace curtains may be found in muslin oheT.> The muslins may be white, with colorei dots in it, or it may be plain, white dotted muslin which b familiar to every one. Tie colored muslin h, however, more artistie and will not so quickly show the dust and wear of summer. Fasten the curtains upon the pol?? or cornice and then cut them off just long enough to touch the floor. Now take the curtain of the cornice and gather on all sround its edge a narrow rutfk or a side plaiting of plain white muslin or mull. Tin ruffling should be of very thin ma terial, so that it gives somewhat (he ap pearance of lace. Tie back tbe curtains with strips of the muslin, edged with the same ruffling, and turn a bit of Piffling over the hook which holds the curtain back, so h> to make a neat and pretty finish. ? New York Commercial Advertiser. RECIPF,*. Jellied Chicken? Boil thoroughly so that the bones will drop away from the meat, then return it to the water and keep it there over night. Next morning chop the chickcn into very fine pieces, and to it add salt and butter and a little pepper if needed. Mix thoroughly and turn into molds to harden. ('ream of Kicc Soup? T ?-o quarts of chicken stock, oDe teacup of rice, a quart of cream or milk, a small onion, * stock of celery ^xsalt and pepper to taste. Cook slowly tw<| hour?: put through a sieve, add seasoning and the milk or c.reatn which has been allowed to cornt just tea boil; if milk, use also a table spoonful of butter. Apple Plums ? Wash, seed and stew j a pound of raisins until they swell it l? tenderness; then add a quantity of apt>HM cut in quarters and cook until soft, min^ honey or sugar t<> sweeten them, and lomon peel, nutmeg and cinnamon loi ! flavor. Dried apples or peaches, soaked i over night are just as good a? green J fruit. It is u?ual to have three times as i many apples as plums, but this i? a mat- I ter of ta*te and expense. t Bilked Potatoes With Dumplings? ? Pare and wash the potatoes make some J good pa^te into bills, about the same sire a? the potatoes, and theu place them alternately with the potatoej in a pie dish, previously buttered; add a little onion, finely chopped, and sufficient water to about half till the dish, season with pepper and salt, which should be' mixed with the water; cover with a flit ! di*h and bake tbem. '^u'ree .lelly ? ^mal1 quinces of tin* equal sizes may be use 1 for jelly, but they should be fully ripe; wash them, cut them in small pieces, removing the cores, and put tor-m in a preserving ket tle over the tire in just enough water to ? over them; keep the kettle covered htH gently dimmer th? fruit until it forms i soft pulp; pour thi* pulp i"t.n a j^liy has and let the iai run from '' <?il ni^ht Measure th* juice. put i? in"> the pre scrvi?)^ k?'ttle. nd-j * pou-i I "t sugar to ea'-h pint ?,f pii?-*?. nn i stir tbera togethef ?irtil the c,i^T'ir !> dissolved; then placfl ?h< kettl< over th?* tire and boil the jelly for twenty minutes, or uotil h little of it cooled on a saucer stiffens at once Pul the ieby into glasses while it i* w irm, and when it i* quite cold close it ail ! tight. losutance Ayent?41! came to call your Atten'ioti t-? the fact that your police e\- ? pir? - to day and beg you to renew i? ' Economist? "Very sorry, but this w' e tenth year that I have msur^'l in "< t company and nothing has happen': J. o I have made up ray mind to try aotbet company. "? Fliegende H! tetter. A gorilla i? s<? rftrc in ???pti vb v 'in biiuii* i-'O.'JO'J. FIERCEST OK CREATURES. ; THAT DISTINCTION BELONOS TO THB LITTLB HOLE. BeildM Ita Ferocity, It it Without Few and Lncredtbly Active? It t Wonderful Home. a"T T(Tf" HAT Lb the flercertlai. \ A " mal in the .w^rldf Y Y - asked a Washington 8tar | ! writer of a toologiat. , "The mole, "he replied. ''You are tor prised, but such, in m? opinion, is the faot. People ordinarily look upon the mole as a sluggish and harmless creatute, spending its life in groping blindly uU- ! detground. As usual, the popular idea s is a mistaken one. The tnolaig in reality : the most "ferociou3 and most active of animals. Imagine it magnified to the ? sire of a tiger, and you vt<o?ld fcave a more terrible beast than the-^pefld has yet seen. Though with de fecit* e pow ers of vision, and therefore ipcapeble of fallowing its prey by sight, It would be agile beyond conception, springing this way and that as it went along, leaping with lightning quickness upon any creature which it met,, reading it to pieces in a moment devouring ^ the y*t warm and bleeding flesh, and instantly seeking with hunger insatiable, for a frwb vfctim. "ThJj creature would, withput hesita tion, devour a serpent twenty feet in length, and so tremendous would be ita voracity that it would eat. twenty or thirty such snakes in the course of a day . ^Tith one grasp of its teeth and. a .tingle cluch of its claws it could, disembowel^ at ox, and, if it ahould happen to enter a fold of Bheep or an ihclosure of cattle, it would kill them all fay the mere lull of slaughter. Let two such animals . meet and how terrific would be the battlft Fear is a feeling which the mole seem* "never to entertain. Iff conflict with an adversary of its cwn kind its efforts' at? exclusively directed to injuring its op poaent, without regard for its own pr?* tection. An examination of the akela- , ton of a mole will repay your trouble, m> wonderful is its adaptation of itructUPO. to its manner of life. It looks likes veritable tnachiuefor digging, and ithta . several accessory bones which are not found in any other living beast, being discovered only in certain fossil forms. .< "The mole is gifted with incredible activity. It pursues the earth woruas on which* it chiefly feeds with au energy that is untiring, and, when it has caught , one, it devours the prey like a starving tiger, rending it with its powerful clawp, , and teeth, Occasionally it will c&pt<tti a bird and tear it to fragments, devour ing eagerly the bleeding flesh. During the. latter part 01 June Mr. MoleTajU io iuit, im* *rfT attachments he is fu rious a3 in ?U othef piiases of his At that period' male ol his kind witoBliW^fi^r*?*^^ often to the diatto. He constructs a bridal chamber for his chosen spouse at the intersection of two of his tunnels, so that there is more than one cape tor herself and the young. in case dauger threatens. This chamber jt partly tilled with dried grass for tfCOUtfu and it is always at some distance f?om Mr. Mole's dwelling proper. "The tubterrau??u dwelling, of Mr. Mole is a wonderful labyrinth, mau being could very well^y^Hf^fr"" about in it, jupposTTTgffliwsoJnfensi^ni werfe sufficient)* magnilied to -admit hif pafesage througliMhe ina?e of tunueli. The latter compo&e^ network as compli cated as that of the sowers of a metrop olis. It must not be imagined that tht animal burrowfc at random. On thl contrary, it works on a well-defined Ijs trm, though how it forms its burrows in such admirably straight lines, alway* laboriug io the blackest darkness,' is t mystery. 'The home of the beast is in a hillock under the shelter of some tne 0* bank, so as to be inconspicuous. Hers ? is it* center of operations, from which regular roads lead off in different direc tions to its feeding grouuds. If Jou dig into the hillock you discover a very eltb? orate and wonderful structure; ,4The central apart ineut of the dw< ing is a nearly spherical chamber, aroi which run two circular passages, one i level with the ceiling and the other some height above. The upper circle is! much smaller than the lower one. Five short and nearly vertical passages con^rjr neCt these galleries with ca^h other.)'. ? When Mr. Mole enters his house trora one of the tuuiiels he has first to get into " the lower gallery, thence to a*cend into the upper gallery aucf so descend into the chamber. Ho wever, there is another en- % trance to the chamber from below ^by a * passage which dips downward from the middle of the spherical room, theu curv ing upward and finally openiDg into one of the bigger tunnels or highroads. Of the*e highroads there are seven or eigh'. '?Owing to the peculiar habits of the molo comparatively little is known about the aDimal and its ways. The useof this labyrinth and complicated nystem of tun nels, the latter usually extending over, , or rather ? uuder, a very great apace of ground, is in some degree * mystery. One object of the arrangement is doubt-1 less that the owner in ease ?"?f alarm shal be able to make bis escape. By theconj tinual pressure of ;be creature's fur tl walls of the ehamber and passages a] rendered stnoo'li, hard and polished, that the roof will not fall in even thf toost +;vere torm. The mol swim excellently and it ofteu sir for <,h' purpose of obtain nJT'wj ? I r i r? k . In fact, it possesses ,.r " {"jt'lMimeuts, and I cossj point of ferocity, activity i? superior tven to the great' lab' :3 tropics." Jk i? Their ftontVg. Wal? trhtcu batch their -y-r-? T . ? .. -* ?? UAvV '.I \ I **?? in thew lioaths. Certain fishe* be longing to j the penius Ariui allied to the cat-fl&be* have this very pecutinr iiabit. Tli^ rire carried l?y the fishes in 1 htcir mouth}, an 1 appear to be safely 'luring the jeriod of hatcbfnjr.il th?; Inr^^ a*??l caftacious pharjox, or* hinder part of tb^f^moutii ( Hvitr, . AiMjtn?*r wcll kuc^D inHaace of h like h'aDif is furnished l>y the Ashe* of the genu# Chronois, from the Set of <.i*li!ee. rfc?.**e tisliei h> the v?oae wat ..arty their ozys iu their mouth, and chut hitch their j'-un^r. A similar or analn. u-jus pract;t-e is witnesttd in certain frogs. ?Yankee Blade. T^c ^i'?it >te J* 00'.VX"J? H it'it C::"V? will COif-J V A: