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I SIGN NEW TREATY - VNITBD STATES TO PAY COLOMBIA FOR GA11HINO OFPAN AM A. : MUST NOW BE RATIFIED ^tentative Agreeeinnt is Tlint This w Country Pay Twenty-Five Million p Dollars for the Participation of Panama and tlie Acquisition of the Canal Zone. Twenty-Jive million dollars is the amount the United States agrees to pay to Colombia for the partition of . fan am a ana the acquisition of the canal zone in the treaty signed Wednesday in Bogota by American Minister Thompson and the Colombian authorities. No rights for a new interoceanic canal across Colombia by the Astrato river route and no coaling: privileges on Providencia Islands of the Colombia coast, it was added, were contained in the treaty. Tho boundary between Colombia and Panama is to follow the lino laid down in an earlier treaty which was signed but never approved by the Colombian congress. One important demand which the South American country had been insisting upon, tho free passage of her merchant vessels through tho canal, was given up because of President Wilson's attitude In favor of repeal of the tolls exemptions. That had been a stumbling block in the way of final agreement. The Colombian congress will ,be called in special session to pass on the treaty before it is submitted to the United States Senate. Acceptance of the latest, treaty will end 10 years of negotiation and friction between the United States and Colombia and relieve strained diplomatic relations which have been watched with tho keenest interest by UatinAmerican republics. Colombia has insisted that the United States either pay a lump sum for the canal zone it acquired when tho Republic of Panama was set up over night with guarantees of integrity from AVashington, or that the whole question be submitted to The Hague for arbitration. The last negotiations took place at the close of President Taft's administration when "Minister Dubois under instructions or Secretary Knox offered a settlement on this basas: Ratification by Colombia by the soij&llod tri-partie treaty of 1909 by which Panama agreed to apportion with Colombia the annual payment of $250,000 which she receives from the United States as rent for the canal UBone for a suflicient period to liquidate any claim of Colombia's up to $10,000000. Payment of $1 0,000,000 to Colombia ,by the United States for the option on the Atrato routes and military sites at St. Andrews and old Providencia. An offer of the friendly influence of the United States to bring about a settlement with Panama. An offer to arbitrate reversionary rights in Panama. Before going out of office President Taft transmitted a letter to Congress containing Secretary Knox's report of the negotiations, saying that Colombia by refusal had "closed the door to any future overtures by the United States". Secretary Hay had previously declined to submit Colombia's claims to arbitration on the ground that they were political and not justifiable. The text of tlio treaty is not to be published officially until after Easter, Representative newspapers declare the treaty is very concise and contains the following1 provisions: I. The restoration of friendly relations between the United States and Colombia. II. An indemnity of $25,000,000 to bo paid to Colombia six months after the ratifications have been expanded between the two countries. III. Certain privileges for Colombian commerce by way of the Panama canal. IV. The Colombian Panama boundary to be based on the law of Juno 1855, demarcating the former SoloWbian State of Panama. V. The United States to lend her {good offices for the settlement for pending questions between Columbia and Panama. Drop Dead at Seeing Fight. Patrick Eagleton, 70 years old, and Mrs. Dennis Arsenoault, 60 years old, of Spencer, Mass., dropped dead from fright in the street late Friday t as they witnessed a fight between three men. ? ? Schoolboys Fight With Knives. At Sandersville, Ca., Ernest , CSrobbs, aged twelve, 1b expected to a* a result of a pocket knife stab Inflicted by another boy In a school feoy flght Tuesday. J Gets $20,000 Verdict The widow of one of the victims ftn the wreck on the L. and C. railroad, last summer, has been awarded Srag $20,000 damages. Fireman Killed in Wreck, ^ohn Rogers a negro fireman, was H WBed at Spartanburg Tuesday whon ?c %c>e cam crashed into his engine. AMERICA COMPLAINS DELINEATIONS MADE TO CAP ItAXZA FOK SPAIN. Villa's ltecont Order of Deportatioi Issued Against All Spaniards o Torrcon Causes Diplomatic Actior Vigorous representation went fror f lift A morioon rfl. . vnv fiui^uvaii ui uiiiUlll A UUbUiiy V Gen. Carranza, tlio Constitutlonalis chief, urging him to modify the or der of Gen. Villa expelling Spaniard , from Torreon. The situation is glv ing grave concern to authorities a Washington. The United States hat undertaken to extend to Spaniards ii Mexico the same protection it afford Americans resident there, and Am bassador Riano has been assured tha nothing will bo left undono to assun for the unfortunates at Torreon ever: right to which they are entitled undo international law and usage. Spain proposes to exhaust ever: resource to protect her people, it wai made plain Tuesday, when Rear Ad miral Mayor, at Tampico, called tin navy department that the command ing ofllcer of tho British cruiser Her moine had been instructed to cart for Spaniards at that port. Tho State department, as well a: the Spanish embassy at Washington is embarrassed in dealing with the Torreon situation by a lack of exacl information as to the extent of the expulsion decree and how far it has been executed. It is understood Villa, in a public speech, told the Spaniards of Torreon they were to be deported en masse; that a commission would he appointed to examine intc each individual case and that such of them as could establish tho tact that they have rendered no aid to 1 IllOrf O Xtf Alll/1 h A rvrvv^ 1 * * ^ d 4 ^ , .X V*vt lU. II VUiU UU 111 1 LIUU IU Ifiuru | to Torreon. The gravity of the problem has been increased by unofficial, but credible information, that this policy ol expulsion of the Spaniards is to bo oi general application; that as rapidly as the Constitutionalists extend their control they intend to drive out the Spaniards and seize their property. Foreseeing the gravest international complications if the Constitutionalists should undertake to apply this doctrine of wholesale expulsion ol aliens to other than Spaniards, the state department is expected to laj this subject before Gen. Carranza sc plainly that he will exercise his fill power to prevent further interfer ence with all foreigners. ? ? QUIET IX RACE. Senator Smith Has Nothing to Sa; Concerning Opponent. United States Senator E. D. Smitl did not discuss his race for re-electioi while in Columbia Monday en rout to Washington from the Pee Dee sec tion of the State, where he has beei speaking. The junior senator was ii conference with several of his politi cal lieutenants while in the city am appeared confident. He gave out n< statement relative to the candidacy o his opponent, Gov. Please. Senato Smith's friends are encouraged ove the good news ho has been receivini on his present trip through the Pe< Dee, they say. They state thy ar< confident that ho will defeat Gov Pleaso by a good majority. The sen ator himself, however, while smiling ly confident, will not discuss his op ponent's chances, but is leavimr tha until the joint debate this summer Senator Smith's cotton bill is wel on its way to passage through con gress and the immigration commit tee, of which he is chairman, has tha bill before the Senate. On both meas ures the junior senator has put ii hard work and is anxious to got then through. ? ? PROHIIHTS DRINK. + Secretary of Hie Navy Will Not Allot Any Wines in U. S. Navy. Absolute prohibition will provai in the United States navy after Jul 1 next. Secretary Daniels Sunda night made public a sweeping order which not only will abolish tho tradi tional "wine mess" of tho ofllcors, bu will bar all alcoholic liquors fron every ship and shoro station of tin navy. This order, constituting om of tho most notable victories ove won by phoribition forces, was issue< at the recommendation of Surgeoi (leneral Braisted. It was brief am to tho point: "The use or introduction for drink ing purposes of alcoholic liquors 01 board any naval vessel, or withii any navy yard or station, Is strietl prohibited, and commanding ofllcer wiU be held directly responsible fo the enforcement of this order." ? Limits Man's Liquor Supply. According to a law enacted by th legislature of Mississippi, one galloi of whiskey and one case of beor i the maximum quantity of intoxicant that one person can legally order eacl 30 days. ? ? ? Joke Causes Trouble. An April Fool advertisement toll the unemployed of Chicago that i local railway wanted men. Five hnn drad applied and began rioting whe: not employed. " CARE FOR FORESTS , ?" THIS STATE IS ABOUT TO LOSE ITS VALUABLE TIMBER. ? ?SHOULD BE REGULATED I. ? 11 Large Tracts of Land Are Denuded of t Their Natural Protection Against g Floods by Indiscriminate and Carc~ less Cutting of Young and Iniuia1 ture Trees. :i I g It will bo a question of only a few years more beforo the timber prob- J ^ lem of South Carolina is serious in 3 I the extreme. Great traces of tiniberI hirwl linvn ' ' * ? ?v.v7i. vui uu uunug uie last | r ten years and the operations of many sawmills havo made great inroads into the available supply of timber 3 in the Palmetto State. There are several large tracts of timber now on 3 the market in South Carolina and if _ these are cut off, as they are quite . likely to be within the next two years, 3 South Carolina's timber interests will have boon considerably lessened, j Some of the largest tracts in the State have been purchased by north[ ern and western capital and the L dressed lumber shipped outside the , State to markets where it would 5 bring the highest prices. If you keep . in touch with conditions and events you will note that when forests are . cut down by these lumber operators, L the small trees, which are valueless, ( are also swept away and the ground , made desolate, so to speak, instead of cleaning out the larger trees and , leaving the young saplings to grow and bring later revenue. This is one of the evils of the "timber hog", i South Carolina has for years re garded her timber rights with little ! regard. These seemed to be enough ' in sight and ample timber to take ' care of immediate needs. So, why worry? The average man paid little s heed or had no concern in the future cost of timber for construction pur. poses fifteen or twenty years from . now. Wood sufficient for his flre? place seemed the only issue when f considering the timber question. 5 But not so the men who have the r interests of State and nation at heart. ) The question of forest reserves has \ become of paramount importance. _ The problem of conserving our natural rpsmirnaa ia i* i vvu ?.-? IIU1, IIUIT. 1 Cl> 11 IB pounding on the front doors of our legislative halls for recognition, and crying out against the shameful wastes of timber lords and hogs who y recognize no man's rights but their own personal gain. Our pine forests have become dei pleted and by carelessness, many vali liable tracts have been almost de0 stroved by fire. In some parts of the - State where long leaf pine yas plenli1 ful five years ago, there is hardly a i hundred trees visible. Forest fires - over uncared-for tracts of timber 1 land prove costly. One woman in d eastern North Carolina had a large f tract of long leaf pine for which she r refused $75,000 and six months later r a negro, after ho had been discharg5 ed, set fire to the forest and it was 3 sold later for $5,000. 0 This only illustrates the extent of . damage by fire possible, and further - emphasized the importance of caring - for valuable tim,ber tracts so that ex tensive and damaging fires will be t impossible. By proper trimming hero and there and cleaning up or burning 1 debris the amount of fire risks would - have been reduced to a minimum. Of course, in thousands of int stances, land has been cleared of - trees and stumps and converted into a profitable farming acreage, whereas it a produced nothing beforo but a thirdgrade of lumber. But the point is, not enough emphasis of importance is placed upon the value of restocking our forests or providing for the fu v lure. In Germany, for instance, a certain area is replanted with young trees every year to replace the natural yearly consumption of timber through regular channels. If a man \ desires his son to be a rich man, at - the child's birth ten or twenty acres ' of land arc planted with bland walnut and at the age of 21 years the young * man is indeed wealthy. This is a 1 system of conservation or providing 0 for the future entirely foreign to the 0 average American. r Our farm journals and agricultural papers aro filled with column after n column devoted to tlio subjects of good seed, moro power for the farmer, county fairs and such subjects, but not a line do you find as to the 1 value of timber to any State and the 11 need of restocking our waste areas with some good quality of timber. h Prof. Charles A. Koffer says: "The farmer man or boy, woman or girl, who knows only the work of the farm, can not be as happy in his or her living as the one who knows well 0 tllO life surroundinc him* wild hlrda 11 and fishes ought to ho very much a 8 part of the society of him whose home 8 is in the country." Prof. Keffer is right. Every farmer, and his boys should study trees, the different wood, park, branches . and development. With nursery :1 stock so cheap and the possibilities of a orchards becoming moro and more - apparent, ihere is no reason why proi fitable orchards could not be planted on the acreage loft by woodchoppurs. i > tea*: Bookkeeping, Hanking, Shorthand, Typewriting Oui couraea are thorough and our College ta tl always preforred because of the thorough tralnli If Interacted *rlte for HTUC CflllTI particulars at once. IIIC OUw I CLASSIFIED COLUMN Anconas Eggs-?$1.50 per 15. R. E. Wagoner, Altamaliaw, N. C. Barred Rock Eggs?$1.50 per setting. R. M. Spearman, Piedmont, S. C. Japanese Seed Canes?250, $3; 500, $5.50 delivered. H. Hallock, Live Oak, Florida. Pure Prize Winning White Wyan(lottes?Eggs 18 for $1.25. G. B. Domiuick, Neeses, S. C. For Sale?Pure Georgia Cane Syrup; 35c gallon in barrels and kegs. W. H. Dairs, Savannah, Ga., Box 45. Pons For Sale?All varieties. Iron and Running Special a specialty. Write for prices. W. H. Franks, War then, Ga. Rancocas strain S. O. White Leghorns ?Hatching eggs, $8 per 100; $1.50 per setting. Red Briar Farm, Hendersonville, S. C. White Wyandottes?Yearling stock for sale at sacrillce. Eggs for hatching. W. P. Causey, 1315 Dickens St., Columbia, S. C. For Side?Mixed clay peas at $2.2 5, ? iron peas at $2.50 per bushel f. o. b. Sumter, S. C. J. H, Myers, Sumter, S. C., R. F. D. No. 4. For Sale?Eggs for hatching, from thoroughbred S. C. Brown Leghorns prices on large lots. R. W. Chaplin, RantowieB, S. C. t Reds?Large, healthy, bright red, inoculated. Heavy layers; 15 eggs, $1.50; 100, $6. Mrs. Addle E. Pat terson, Plneland, S. C. For Salo?-One Flanders 20, two new cases, top, extra beat. Car In ex cellent condition. Price reasonable J. F. Burbank, Union, S. C. Special?Pure white and Exhibition Fawn and White Runners, $5; trio Utility, $1 each or $10 doz. Mrs. J. F. Carroll, Hohennald, Tenn. For Sale?"Lookout Mountain Seed Irish potatoes. Write for price, stating number of bushels wanted. B. C. Sloan, Cass Station, Ga. Agents Wanted?To sell monuments, outfit furnished free; references re- < quired with application. Denmark Marble Works, Denmark, S. C. For Sale?Pure Georgia Cane Syrup, 2 5c a gallon in barrels and kegs. Cow Peas for sale. Write for prices. W. IT. Davis, Savannah, Ga., Box 4 5. ? Malari, Chills Jaundice cured or money refunded. Rigor-Tone 50 cents post paid. Stamps or coin. Rigor-Tone Co., Petersburg, Va. Indian ltunner l)urlr _ --r*rv ?* ^??.v i layers, easily raised. $1 per 13. Express or parcel post paid. Mrs. R. S. Kirk, Lancacster, S. C. R. 6. ? Wanted?Ladies, $1 dozen making aprons at home. We pay you. Send stamped reply envelope for particulars. Globe Supply Co., Ilornel, N. Y. For Sale?Eggs from single comb White, Brown, and Buff Leghorns, Anconas, Biuff Orpingtons, 15 for $1. . Carolina Poultry Farm, Reldsville, N. C. Men and Women earn $3 daily addressing letters in spare time. Send 10c for outfit and beginner. Address Morgan, Box 5 5 6, Salisbury, ' N. C. :i()0 Silver Campine Chicks at 2 0c each, ready April 1 6. Eggs selected from my entire yards. Place your order at once. T. L. Hilton, Lancaster, S. C. For Sale?Kellorstrass Crystal White Orpington, prize winning eggs, 15 for $1.50. Baby chicks 25c each. Mrs. W. A. Huff, R. F. D. No. 2, Milledgeville, Ga. Engraved Visiting Cards are neatest and best. 100 cards In script and plate for $1.FS. Stylo card mailed on request. Sims Book Store Orangeburg, S. C. For Sale?Start right with Young's strain single comb White Leghorns. < Best layers, best show birds known. I | Eggs, setting $2 to $5. J. Walter! Rerry, Greenville, S. C. O. T. Pigs?From matured stock not akin, Silvers strain, petigree furnished; best litter I ever raised; 8 to 10 weeks old; $10 each. F. P. Hinnant, Ridgoway, S. C. White Orpington Errs for Hatching ?Say! Would you be interested in, a special egg proposition? If so, answer quickly. Mention ad. L. C. I Lawrence, Henrietta, N. C. : For Sale?Tom pkin's and Langford's Crnmuiklp, ArlWj>??llr and lludifM L?tl*r W r>e most highly rttcommtnded. Our Kruduttts ar? th?y rocolvo hum 11SS1 ITS BEST" 8oucT?nL^t?NA. > high class Single Comb Reds. Fine breed. Select matings. Eggs, $1.50 $2 and $3 per 15. Young chicks. Mrs. John Kerr, Durham, N. C. "Perfection" Potato Draws?(J, Q. Padrick's) $2?$1,000; unexcelled; April delivery; book order.now by depositing $1. Cabbage Plants, 1,000 $1.10. J. L. Padrlck, Tifton, Qa For Salo?4 0 acres, 20 acres cultivated; good soil; small orange grove; good house; main road; telephone, etc. Price, $1,700. Address owner, H. G. Gates, Arcadia, Desoto Co, Fla. For Sale?Registered Hereford cattle, best of all beef breeds for our Southern conditions. Eighty breeding cows; young stuff for salo. Extra good breeding. Evans Lunsford, Covington, Ga. Automobile Contact Points, 75c? Why pay $1.60 or $2 for new points. Wo put new platinum on for 75c each. Send them to us and get them by return mail. Wiesepape Mfg Co., Columbia, S. C. Single Comb Blue Andalusians? They lay and pay. Eggs, $1.50 per 15. Golden Lace Wyandottes are beauties for all round fowls; none better. Eggs, $1.50 for 15. T. H. Knox, Bear Poplar, N. C. Hatching eggs from out past season's prize winners. Reds, Orpingtons and White Leghorns. Our birds have excellent records as egg producers. Write for our catalogue. Riverview Poultry Farms, Savannah, Ga. Kellerstrass White Orpingtons? Reared from $100 pen. Aldricb ofxnln *? ? "?* _ J1 " ~ Duuiu Hum mauisoii square Garden blue ribbon winners. Fifteen eggs, $2, $2 and $5. Orders filled with care. W. S. Stansell, Easley, S. C. For Sale?Entire stock of general merchandise valued at $1,500, more or less. Will sell at reasonable figures. Stock In good condition. Also one desirable lot on Main street. Address A. Q. Rice, Fountain Inn, S. C. Yokohama Velvet Ileans?Earliest and most productive variety in cultivation. Thirty to fifty bushels^ per acre in less than four months from planting. II. C. Young, Georgiana, Ala., R. 3. Eggs?Prize winning Rose, Single Comb Rlack Minorcas, Pape, Northrop, Mlshler strains. Dark Cornish Indian Games, $2 to $3 fifteen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Paul Houston, Greenville, S. C. Hester Tompkins strain of scingle comb R. I. Reds. Martin and Fishel White Wyandottes, the undisputed and undefeated champions of the world. Eggs, $3 per 15. Wm. Rosemond, Pickens, S. C. For Sale?Ruff Plymouth Rock eggs, $1 and $2 per 13. Fawn Indian Runner Duck eggs, $1.50 per 11. Day-old chicks, 10c, 15c, 2 0c each. itiverview Poultry Farm, D. C. Hol-| land, Anderson, S. C. ! Sweet Potato Plants?Nancy Hall, I Porto Rico and Early Triumph, ready for delivery April 1, $1.75 per 1,000; 10,000 for $10.50 f. o. b. Florida; tomato plants, $1.50 per 1,000. F. E. Hull, Rock Hill, S. C. Young Strain Single Comb Wliite J Jjcghorns?Breed no others, years of experience; buy the best; free range; eggs from selected breeders. $1.50 per 15; $8 per 100. Pecania I Poultry Farm, Davis Station, S. C. Wanted?Kodak developing. Am in I position to give prompt attention to all orders and guarantee satisfaction. Will develop first roll or film-1 pack for each new customer free. I We pay postage on all out-going work. Address P. A. Ilodge, Alco-1 lu, S. C. If you want Cntaloupe seed careful-1 ly and personally selected in Rocky I Ford, Colo., last season from per-| fectly netted Eden Gem cantaloupes, | send to W. P. Henley, Johns, N. C. | Price by mail 3 ozs. 25c; 1-2 lb., I G5c. By express collect 3 pounds oi | r\ ifA r? ? 1 wiui ?pi per pouna. Everything for the Poultry Keeper? Buckeye Incubators and brooders The International Sanitary Hover. The Six in One Exerciser and Feeder. Otis and Moo's Metal Ware. Conkey's Poultry Remedies. Sunshine poultry feeds. Sprayeis, supplies, etc. Send for catalogue. Mcintosh Seed House, Department "C", 268 King street, Charleston, S. C. Dady or gentleman, fair education, to act as our representative In home town. Exclusive territory given. Selling experience unnecessary. We furnish capital. Show how to build permanent business that should pay $2,000 first year. Staple line. Our booklet, "How to Start In Business fcr Yourself," explains all. Free on ? GOVERNOR IN TEARS GLYNN REFUSES RARDON TO TUB NEW YORK GUNMEN. ? Puts Aside the Sympathy of His ^ Heart in Order That Justice May K~ r? - l?3 J JO lit?. ' ^ An impassioned and dramatic appeal by five Jewish clergymen of New York for a stay of the execution of the four gunmen convicted of killing Herman Rosenthal was denied by Gov. Glynn late Thursday. The convicted men now must die in the electrie chair at Sing Sing next Monday. ? The plea, which was made in the executive chamber, was based on the A possibility of new evidence develop- ^ j ing in the second trial of former Police Lieut. Becker. It so complete- I ly unnerved the executive that he had I to retire to his private ofilee for a J time before ho couid resume his duties. The clergymen are all officers or members of the Union of Orthodox 4L Jewish Congregations of America. Each was permitted to make this plea. The governor meanwhile stood, nervously twitching his watch chain ? His face was drawn and white, his lips quivered and tears were in his eyes. At times the governor interrupted, tlie evidence beforo him did not warrant a change of his decision not to grant the prisoners' plea for executive elemonov "If it were my heart alone that < was considering (his case," ho said, "you know what I would do. If It was a choice between sentiment and justice and I had to side with jus- ^ tice, I would have given every cent t * possess hot to have had to pass upon this case finally." The governor summed up his decision thus: "I am conviced that it would ho a miscarriage of justice to grant a commutation and an improper exercise of executive power to . grant a reprieve." M Declaring himself "unable to discover any reason that would justify the granting of a reprieve," Mr. Glynn quotes the unanimous opinion of the court of appeals in sustaining the verdict against the gunmen, as well as District Attorney Whit- . ^ man and Trial Justice Goff, to subEtantiate his contention that the gun- H[ men's case "does not in the least depend upon the result in the Becker case." Until late Monday night, when Gov. Glynn had finished reading w every scrap of material bearing on the trial and conviction of the gun- % m men, the belief prevailed he would grant a respite. The governor several times declared to newspaper men that if he followed the dictates of his 9 heart he would put off the execution until after Becker had been tried again. Mr. Glynn seemed to fear . that something might develop at H Becker's second trial that would put ? an entirely different aspect on the part played by the gunmen in the * murder of Rosenthal. v The matter of deciding the fate of the gunmen was the most nerve- 1 racking task that the governor has I had before him. "For four days," said one of his friends, "this affair * has been on the governor's mind during every minute of the day. A man of generously sympathetic nature, the governor found it hard to bring wt himself to sign an order that would VM carry out next week the death sentences of the gunmen." J * / * HOMICIDE NEAR TjEXINGTON. * ' School HoKlnrf i cn .... ...m . . . V , Ml .11111 1 III f Fatal Duel Between Men. ' Levi Rish, a farmer and trustee of the district school, 20 miles from Lexington, known as Smith's branch ^ school house, was killed in a gun^B 1 fight between himself and James 1 Clark and Elliott Cant on Saturday A night. The three cornered duel followed a quarrel which was supposed to have arisen at a school celebration. Risli and the other men met 4 later and shots were fired. Rish fell 1 with several hullet wounds in his <J| body and expired immediately. |, request. Address Box 1599. Phil- . adelphia, Pa. iK 7SO Acre Farm For Sale-?One of the M best improv d and most fertile Ail farms In Georgia. Within three flti 1 miles of school and railroad; mallP delivered. Contains one 12-room? dwelling with all modern conven-%k ienccs, including gas and phone. Nine tenant houses'; 4 barns, and all other necessary improvements. A vvtti.wr Bupjuieu uy rum rrom spring. L Easy terms. J. Eockwood Murphy, j Charleston, S. C. Eggs from the best strains of puff, white and black Orpingtons; Puff, 4 White and Brown Eeghorns; Barred Bocks; White Partridge, Golden / 1 and Silver Wyandotte; Black Minor- I cas, Anconas, Silver Hamburger, Dark and White Cornlsn Games Golden Sebright, Buff Cochin and Japanese Rilacktall, Bantams, White and Fawn and White Indian Runner Ducks, Tulouse Geese, $1.50 per setting and up; $8 per 100 and^jup. L Also stock of most of above breeds, at $2 each and up. Show ^trds matter of correspondence. ?olleg Vine Farm, College Park, Gai Mil