The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, November 17, 1881, Image 4
To mj ourtly tn wh»t alto, ahapo
and in annex ohoeae wan anrred up to tha
tables of tha most anoiebt Chaldeans,
Egyptians, Hindoo* or Chinamen would
be dUBoutt, bnt we' hare abundant evi-
denoa that it waa there.
Of tha mode of manufacture we know
as little.
In those days of primitive idena and
rude instruments, butter was generally
churned by placing the cream in a akin
which two women ahook, much in the
same manner as a housewife would
shake a carpet to-day, or the more ad
vanced method was sometimes resorted
to of placing tha skins on the mule's
back and trotting tha animal along a
w sT fu r ', v m' 1A
stony road.
The manufacture of cheese must have
squally rude.
Cheese of some kind is made in all
countries. 1 The Chinese from time re
mote have made anti consumed cheese
made or peas and beans to an enormous
extent.
In Saxony the fair-baired rustic often
(area tom ptnonaly on ehaese muda from
the potato, his rye bread and pilscncr
lager beer.
In the green oases of Arabia—those
islands of verdure in an ocean of aaud—
that'nomadic tribes, the Bedouins and
Arabs, gather the fruit of the date palm,
that tree which they believe tha angels
transported from paradise, which serves
them ss food and raiment, and, with tha
addition at several ingredients, make
therefrom s cheeaa which forms a princi
pal article in the fund of the caravans,
who, either with tlieir fleet bones or the
••ship of the desert," wander 1 from phioo
to place ss trad, rs or thieves. The
difference betw.wa either is not vary
gnat
Several district in dilTMwnt countries
ha vs bsoome noted for their chaw, a hih
owes its peeuliantm often to the milk
to tha secret in the man-
IL
U Iswlrhstet Ih. sl..w M mate
la Holland, st>srt from the ordinary
Oumte ch i sas, which owaa 1U pendisi
IV 4 flam te tha
• TutrmtfM nr saw. -
It has bsaw prsnooaly stated
thirty years rubmqasnt In
description of the oapeute by
and some tweoty-flve
hlentiflcation of the parasite
maa, stae same were looked upon aa macs
harmless curiosities, and that, although
Leidy discovered the parasite in the
fterth of the swine in 1547, still U
not until 1A60 that the odbuection
established between them, appearing, as
they had, in two totally different specie*
(man and swine). The honor of this
imjKjrtapt discovery belongs to Dr.
Zenker, of Dresden, Germany. The
disease Was discovered in a servant girl
adm tied as a typhus patient to the City
Hospital iu Dresden. Hhe died and her
flesh was foumlTo be completely infested
with trichinm. Leuckort’s and other ex
periment* have shown that a tempera
ture of 140 degrees Fahrenheit is neces
sary to render trichinm inert. Direct
beat applied to the slide* holding speci
men* of trioliiuons pork, by mean* of
the Schultz heating table, has demon-
strnted under the microscope that a
temperature of 50 degrees centigrade
(122 degrees Fahrenheit) is necessary to
the certain death of the trichinm. Leis-
orug's experiment* with trichinona
pork, made up into sausage meat and
cooked twenty minutes, gave positive
results when fed to one rabbit and nega
tive by another. He sum* up hie ex
periment as follows:
1 Trichina* are killed by k>ng-eoutin-
ued salting of infected meat, and also by
*uhj)ctjQg the same for twenty-foor
hours to the setion of smoke in a heated
chamber.
2. They are not killed by mean* of
cold smoking for a i>enod of three days,
and it alao appear* that twenty minute*
cooking frsahly-prepared ss usage-meat
i* siifttoieot to kill them in all caeca.
The varioaa kinds of cooking, howev.
er, are qaite different in their effects on
tricbuMjQS pork. Frying and broiling
are m-et effkieot. Masting eotning nest.
IVnliug pngutelee the all umen on the
outer aurfare sad allows the beat to pen
etrate Uwe readily ; it ahnwhl be kept op,
ibervf <e, for at least two boor* hw
large pterr* ut meet. WbrtbeT iwttel.
br.sUd or fns.1, pork ahn«U alwavs be
ttawteigbly r»ioAe«l fYartioaliy epoak-
tag. II>e nukuv. aalbag
te« wbUkpteklatte v*
wvee te Um Famed Hte
the vast msfW ty of W
kill U.
I log like tb mm
A t>tWV*A A*
k dteaar lav thirty two
eently provided at a cost of $2.22. Tb*
tell of far* teoladed pea eonp, Parker
Hoorn roils, I rial) stew, potatoes, pork
aad beans, veal croquettes, cold alaw.
macaroni, nee padding, apple,, dum fi
ling* and coffea, . This, is Hkaly tb make
the master at the house wonder why he
cannot bar* a greater variety on his ta
ble at a leaa cost It is bnt joet to the
housekeeper to say that in order to moke
this meal so abundant and cheap requires
a great deal of time. A few yean ago
we sat down to a delicious dinner pre
pared at an incredible cost, so far as the
materials wore concerned, by Miss Cor
son and her assistant cAe/. Five .hours
were consumed by Mis? Oorsqh, the c7oJ
and an assistant in the preparation of the ,
meal, which was not very elaborate. The
woman who is doing washing and iron
ing and dusting and sewing for a family
of five or six, at the same time oaring for
the wants of the little children, which in
the l>est-regulated families are many,
perhaps added to these the care of two
or more cows, looking after the chick
ens and doing other outdoor work, can
not take five boon to prepare a delioion*
meal from a bit of cold mntton left the
be bought in a city market A great
deal may be gained by the leeeou of
numerous cooking school*, but it must
not be forgotten that many women * re
without the time necessary to the prep
aration of other than the simplest
dishes.—CArleftew Union.
A. uuoiaa dry-goods merchant of
New York states that be never kaow
such heavy trading in Angnst aa doting
the present year, and that the moat
noteworthy feature of basinwu is the
Urge number of Waiter* buyers who
have Item attracted by ebeap fareound
low freight rates.
Tn Dee Moines (Iowa) Tri-Wmkly
Tribunt aaya:
Journal i
No. 4
“A Haaitebutg,
that Mr D. ~ ‘
tint city
el r
jnors rmATwmm.
. In tb* akin el a Ued when a
leather te to grow there te a httte
and at tb* bottem df if
or pyramid; extending np on* aide of
this pyramid U « groove or furrow, deep-
mt at the bees and gradually growiag
shallower until it disappears near the
top; from each aide of this furrows.
great many amaliec' grooves extend
aronnd to the other side of the pyramid,
and these alao decrease in depth, and at
last disappear just as they are about to
meet on the side opposite the Urge fur
row. The whole pyramid is covered
with »kin and UMUnulacnia madeof the
«amc scale*,-or flattened oelte, that are
fettmLorer the rest of the surface of the
body; but instead of falling off when
they are poshed out by the new ones
below them they lieoome united or weld
ed to each other, so aa to form a horny
coat over the surface of the pyramid,
with ridges on iU lower or inner surface
corresponding to the grooves on the
pyramid; and as new cells grow at the
base this coat or cast of the surface is
pushed upward till it breaks at its thiu-
iiest part, which is, of course, tlie smooth
part without ridges opposite the large
furrow ; and then, as it is poshed out-
and flattened, it assume* the form
of s feather, the ridge formed in the
main furrow being the shaft, while the
casts of the side groove* form the sepa
rate barbs of the vane. When all of the
vane has been formed and poshed for
ward the pyramid loses its grooves and
becomes smooth, and the wall now
fooaed on jU surface, being of the aame
thickness in all parts, does not break bat
remains tubular and forms the qnil;
which attadies to what is left of the
pyramid. A finger nail or a hair is
be asm* kynd of scale# in
Way, the process differing only
tn those features which give to each or
gan its special characteristic*. Feath
era, aealsa, hair, atew* aad sails are all
mad* alike tom lhadea
te tb* surfer* by
d that
tha otiteet te
te IMt II
*7. *
1879. The
of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan. Ill-
note, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and
New York. The total quantity of Ash
taken in the lakes wu M, 742,000
pounds, valued at $1,652,900. Of this
amount there were 21,483,900 pounds of
whltefUk, valued at $778,100 ; 6,804,«00
ponnd* Of kraut, $221,700; 15,356,800
jKjttod* of herring, $117,100; 7,012,)00
pounds of sturgeon, $116,300 ; 6,772,000
pounds of “hard” flab, such as pike,
bass, musk allonge and dressed catfish,
$182,900 ; 7,086,700 poand* of “soft”
flab, such as white boss, suckers and
ake shad, $90,600, and about 4,000,000
pounds classed as miscellaneous, valued
at $250,0d0. Sturgeon ham yielded
about $40,000 worth of caviare, isinglass
and oil. More than one-third of the
wkitefish and trout war* caught i» Lake
Michigan, while Lake Erie furnished
nearly all the herring and email fish. “
- Tan Boise City (Idaho) StaUtinmn
heard of the death of*'o' friend "and
blocked out % half-column obitnary that
threw the offlee devil into * fit of weep
ing and drew snob a flood of tear* Ir^im
the eye* of the cose-hardened composi
tors that the floor of the office had to be
mopped np three times during the set
ting in ^typ* of the article. The next
day the editor received a communica
tion from the dead man denying that he
had meandered np the flame as stated,
and asking for a correction. Hie letter
was published in full in the next issue
headed: “A Card from a Corpse.” This
la Westftru humor.
PERILS OF THE DEEP.
te vary
term » aa V wtearfly a
ilw «arvwiy mt Um gr
la 1
J in><
aad deem ft te UM el
rafwra, wteteb emw
teeaa *4 the pimaaal
[•rlttev waa J bm
te have UmM
ir<a—**«
Ml* w«r
«f M Jae-kaOd
Mr aM«*«r a I
a- #»•'* a a* l a Sa i t**rf
•• • »*.•*•! •*-#*» *#'
• ••• •*•
rSv* • •#• •* a»a*te<aw 4-4
Y*#~• *» ■■•>< ar - -b* *4*
■llffe "rib - a-V far 4 • g.«* tea* tea
•mt tee * * waa egs*a, el bw** war m
yw**alt
i w n. m w m. _
Mi FACTftT
M
(TkU I,(r*rla«
i stiHDUD mm
Ft
IN MANY HOMES.
Mronrhltla •b4 >11
I.I'.Vtel
p«t.Uoa.
IN CONSUMPTIVE CASES
•IhV of Ih. Tfcraal aad I.C'HVa. ilMMid*
■orAal** r'ad vturlj Wjaad >11
wot. i
•tnetly <
(r>d:»Ut
tkW "niMtT-iv*" p>r
-~ - J “ diri ^
>r> p>nn»mUy •»>*, «Ktr> tk> mfmmlmm >r>
I? complied wtth. Th>r> h n>«haadWt-«Mfc>r ta-
»u to hum lk> rraas or aid.
S*M. MlUMNtS •
■ Mntt, Louavau, n.
florr, I'lovinr-Room Floro. rvrj no70, waao^w
Thwtnwl niw pr*p>f3ba«, Jortij r Wo* W*ht, W\m,
Brwdt, McurtoaSw, ewabw, CUnim mt r^m
S&J&zvxGgxsgsatsJt
«* fe. t*«n fau. new Te»%. ~ -r-
assaarTsit soo* co. u w. tm w.. m.t. r.m. tamm
Parfifllii tr'rsas.tta.M?
«S AN EXPECTORANT IT NAS NO EQUAL.
IN ANT FORM.
J. N. HARRIS A CO.. Proprletora,
(incinaATi. a.
4 *' ______
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
ph#r,Col.Coow»)l. Book.ollrwdyford^
liYtry. Au eUgautly illuflirRUd foIuid#. ftfedor*«itdlUoM.
Liberal igrina. AivuU tak# ordara tor from 20 toOBeoplt
clgilt. Out»**Mi Any oibgr book 10 tfr|> AftentoRteW *•"$
mon«y »ofut. Thg book t^UaiURlI. ltApRrUo«#»olM0RR
atei T. Kbilurg unknown. AU mfek® proitA
Uiiad frgfe. . Aim gTUH9k ^ Co.| Piftlfend, «a
If tom toJoy R Unffb hMitlly
Theorriuioai
OUT thMtNcita l
> vow to f>«f mto »#w». «*ram waa* mMIJ
lytit) a>>. add wo *. nuwtvec*.. r>fii*sd, a* ,
vmiitu 4aism. Tw-Mroaom
T ft U in mi,-- rw. aiotra >»• o~>
I . t ml < •**.»' tmm no aw
m tm. til—4 f —‘
>, • r m mo wrow ar
O-a a-l fl«.
r awe' eg*
■ »W w I
tt mm. mo .ms >■
*— m mtyt. mtt MMMO. M MMMMM.
£
a.*** Acrots Wawlr4 far 141# af
GARFIELD
I !*• i
Mitt #eM#4/*f Feeer te fAe Wi' a < ' r»-m«wota>an vmmn ^— 4 ^
r I 1.1 IJJIII i‘r himiIt••fgkra ir«feJRRrfei, 4mkb.
Bright, iBdfpendfnt, IbHrM- j
and (’onserTbtlTe. |
The Methodist i argjgafigffSll
~ RTaum.-^srara’g
ISS'i. IvictstsJ—raiAxsv
_i * vivwarwa toahf I
~ ^ UkteteB^K
' *a^M m mIITmom •>.
Two Dolloro ft Yoor
^ 1 ■ 1 i gyoMMHHft ■ " ■ ■
. Fteaf • P**te laaabap' te Oa stem te ]iia«taw MferaB wtil Ui
MB. •-
ml %mi
i» o
-■Ml I
\R UrtaTitV
N T, Ik
te <■. a*.
tb* tefewh
Iff aw ttfU
teat*
«etema» tea a bmte
ImM aw tea ba*4 I
•<«■ WMte mnJ aa temum fl^m m* pom ma m
B law rn^rn
< gall m* tei aa
-Z- -
u rmrr■
*»■ • mt* >
1 * • tea* «4 «
TV ^ NT —
> ter* mad |
% te •
Mtewy i (te* tew. LmI a lia t>m> fl^ai
aa4 teAiaa R aa* <4 kas «*~aa< te 4*vai
■4 a sate lam fmmU mm >4 $1 j ted gite
Um maa*i a *>• b> pmA lb* $1*1 •> 1 u>
am terlmd. bml ta Iks karry m-J r\
Baal uf Um • nrmmmm te pml Ite fU |«i*
la lb* aastei. saad a tea Ite reblmva a-m-
“Ite
**•. U-m
tee a leva by *B rattw
aw fete* lamaw M ■
I Ite tparbrn a a#
W' a*«.
wtm mm ||>
U. \lf
rw
lantida Uaudrf A geatltaii, la ite
alwpr, ted Um vate*. teaUuauag $175,
andrr Ite r«alui« uf Ite xml. WIm a
ite rofdirra ratev-d tte Imta Itey
<rjrml all tte paweayt* to staiMl
dean toward Ote Mai uf tte alr-r^mr.
while *tey srairted tte car. Ti e first
cushion they raised wa* tte oae uud-r
wtet-h tte $175 had tmte planted. The
Uadrr uf tite train-robbers apprand iu
be very angry at each an exhibition of
want inf o-mfl leuee, and ms<le inqitiric*
uf tb* psseer g»ii* as te who had eon-
sealed the money in snch a place, but,
~befeg onakle to ascertain, he oaid that
'H was a d d good thing for the man
that he could not find out, fur he would
teve killed him “ too quick.” Another
ffceenger hid hie money and watch in a
■pittoca, and attempted to get clear by
taming over $2.50. The leader told him
that first-class passengers in the sleep
er* always carried more money than
that, and that he could take his choice,
to hand over hi* money or lose hi*
■west life, while the mnxzlee of two re
volver* were held in close proximity to
his head. He decided to take hi*
chance* on the former, and gave up hi*
money and watch, which were fished out
of the spittoon and turned over with
profuse spologic
.•it w.
Mi
I* .ite *• »• a aa ttey
(••■-tm. it Ilk Ikm mi.i
ruasar, .lifft -ult Um tte pwr Hnbam
who r*md tte I>w»tua {»(> ra to daride
lirlw<«u »tarvata« at koaw and the
pania id flrv, Um tmiagw saal|«ng kut^s
and lirtgaiMUg^ is Amartoa. Tha far*
tl.st so msny of tlum clioiwa emigiatuw
Uiimt bo c«w»idrr»-d, undrr the ouvum-
atances, good •Vl.lruo# liiat they art
conrtnrrd any rhange must he an fan-
prurniu-nt ii|Kin th ir prewnt eontlitiou
and any country, however barbarous,
better than England. If tiicy should lie
perMUnded bj the labor* of the Hritinb
preas to stay at homo, however, Amorice
w ill lie able to bear the privation. There
may be too much of a good thing, and
the cx|>erit nco of the pretant season in-
dicates that even tlie immigration busi
ness may be overdone.
•Be*
I Isar I I# «v> as th**
«/ gvWiag basttpfde
tha «U mumrnmj #a4
tiuag a r
Mmmmmi
'•*m rmmmm *4 I
Ite 'ufeawT tT^te^wM tas^ewwtea b# wwa^t
m - .. was^ft Ites't y*m th«afc k
»"* “I
Rtiw -«•• ta ylte* t m. 7 *
fe am itkb ftefeM mad waw»w sate
TV,# waw
fitly
a mi
Pbb4 ftwAjp
* •mse •« a be all **»•'•• •m~m
Ifeiiiips* • •• w rwte fa* iw .mi
ml tte A •mmm ml tfete. 0*4 • ea*ta** A
>*a>yer «4 tbr trwtbAr th*r>A kw twtmsi
eatamg 4rw$ (bat mweemmaa* oa waa*
• seavtwsemi*. tfepn** a drwab
>»• mt ht* 4.ami tm* tbtve 4ey> aw4
ml Hmrfc
•aamyi ftea*t yarn tbtafe H'a wmrii
•retag •« If ^nw 4a. 4mp a
v-aynm a aervornwru
M: -
To th« Peoples, South.
f e
#•»* a»— •* *•! te taTJfR mmmwM *d I Z
.. i-« - **40* * - vammwm m wa »M*a iweMma Saw I
Will
IteW imxmrnm I ns 1 ►—T*-
. *w<4 te amy tewL ml mm. m amy
a> lSat ttev ar* al»va hwk am4 fate
Tn oldest German opera, a musical
(day, composed by Johann Gottlieb Bla
den, of Nnrnberg, has been published
for the lint time by a firm in that old
Bavarian city. Bladen was organist to
the Grand Duke of Brandeubmfe in
1 «* LUM "i>
A BRUiUX DOT.
An editor ol an Illinois paper took a
boy to learn the printer's trade. He was
careful to impress upon hi* mind the ne
cessity of obedience and of doing every
thing thoroughly. After preliminary
instruction the lad was given a stick
and rule and was token to a case to
wrestle with a piece of copy. The ed
itor went off to a political convention.
The other boy* in the offlee paid but lit
tle attention to the new recruit, and'
when the editor returned half's day later
he found the boy down noon his knee*
searching for something on the floor.
“What'll the matter, Johnny ?” said he.
“Why I dropped a type before I got
the ftrrt Him set," replied the boy, “and
you told me before I west to work that
whenever 1 dropped a type I moat stop
and ptok U wp before I did
ala*. Fr* bean looking for that eon-
114 a
funty of doctrine a
cnag to live'in tbr
fnraity with th* letter of the
No member i* permitted to
{iroperty beyond the frugal
tateuoa. Purity and chastity are among
the first requirements. It sufficiently
describes the brutal character of the
surrounding population to aay that th*
followers of this sect have l>een subject
ed to much Buffering and persecution
by them. - -
Ir I nm any «kin or blood diseases, like tet
ter, itch, icald head, pimple#, sore eyes, nerof-
nla, etc.. 1 would take "Liudiey's Blood
Searchersure.
K. Y., with tmky 5*A' j-
I JrrWwd te be worth fete
eael h. flO.OQU.flUO epeeea, which
eomm-
AlQllTMfrO CRITTERS.
"I wonder," said a native to a North
ern traveler on a North Carolina rail
road, “ did you belong to a critter regi
ment, or was yon a footman? We
didn't mind them so much, bnt them
'ere critter soldiers were lightning when
they got arter a fellow's cattle, pig* and
chicken*. I have seen many a one of
’em who oonld milk * cow in the mouth
of a canteen on a keen run without spill
ing a drop.'*
. t!et out Door*. ,
The rlos# coofitieufiit of alHactory work
rive* tbs op^rstivsi p illnd fitc#*, poor sope-
tite, Imipnid, mleerabl* faeliorvv*’"' blood,
ii active l.v-r, kidney* amhurn try tumble*,
sad >11 the p 1 y.icimi* and medical men in
tha world esauot help Ifceu valeis they get
oat of doors or waa Hop HitUis, tha pares
s*d b*>t remedy, espeoisHIy for i*ch esse-,
havieg sbnn si>ee of hedfh, yaestiue snd
ro y oaioks la taam. Tbev e ■#- ‘-el a trfl*.
floe aaothar <• In- n [Ooristias Bagist
Lrou B
I,t rs is divided into three
which waa, which is and which will be.
Let ns learn by th* past to profit by the
present, and from the present to live
tetter for tha fntaim
A PI’LL bead sml s bite»i« stomach can be
bast coaquwad by Kidnsy-Wart.
A portion of Jhe Mammoth cave in
Kentucky is bvreoflcr to lie used for the
pur;>oee of raising mushrooms, an rnler-
prihjng Frenchman having suggeeti-d the
idea to the manager of the property.
* t j •■ •—n—- i • *
Itevwrfy aa4 Dlslrcaa.
Thst poverty which produces tb* greatest
hatreds is not of the purse bnt of the blood.
Deprived of its richness it become* scant and
watery, s condition termed anemia in medical
writings. Given this condition, and scrofu
lous swellings sod sores, general and nervous
debility, loss of flesh and appetite, weak Inngs,
throat disease, spitting of blood and consump
tion, are among the common results. If yon
are suffering from thin, poor blood employ Pr.
Pierce’s ‘'Golden Medical Discovery, which
enriches tbe blood and cures these grave sffec- ’
tious. Is more nutritive4han cod liver oil, and
is harmless in any condition of tbs system, yst
powerful to care. By druggists.
DfBULL’S
COUGH
SYRUP
HOSTETTE^
dyspepsia. Indigestion, depression of
and general debility in their vauoas
Fo*
apfiils
forms, also as s preventive against fever sad
egne and other intermittent fevers, the Fraser
PsorriioBATaD KlixisovLIaliAata Bask, made
by Caswell, Hazard A'Co., New York, and sold
by all drngg.sta, is tb* best tome ; and for pa
tients recovering from fever or ether liokneae.
it has no equal.
_ STOMACH
bitter 5
• One ©I ilie Kci»m»Mi»to|e PjAMumrea
Of life w profsrly eook wl n eni, hfiord.- ittle
or no pfeieiit eiijoyraeni, and n uoh iniise
qnent tortnre to s coritiraBid dy-peptic. B'it
when the etrronie indigestion i~ ''om ! >alt«il
with Ho'ietter’s Stomach B t'ers, the food i*
eaten with relish, and most important Of all,
is assimilated by and nourishes the system.
Use this grand.tonie and corn otive r.Iso to
remedy constipation, hillioniuer, rheuma
tism. fever and siiue.
For sale by all druggists and dealers gen-
orally- ’
$325SS^
»t* *20 r&zzz. “rr’
.iUNS
iinnpi's MsmAttSrsJSSi:
•S WATCHES =2 -
tete mm JsW’te mSuilTauVraLsTu
mm
• Yft
Kb
// r m/cm
' Po. iteXmSCS^B
ISttreil II Tit Of. MANTf ft LflOICitiK CO.. •
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Bookwalter Engine.
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A* A N T K 14
Who ruaa s OaOem Olm or OormMiB should have ooa
power is moch baiter and cites par than horse power.
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Address Manufacturers for descriptive pamphlet,
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ear# most wwaderfulty In a ', jr t
stert time both RICK and T.'EItVOUR HEADACMKi and white noting c
tte narrows system, cleanse tb# otonanch *f sasos* of bite, prodnelag
tagateT boattby aotten of tte bwwals.
HEAD/yCHE
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IMPR 0VE ME MTS MEW STYLES MFW T 1 J T A LOG UE~
THE MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN OO.