THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
NOV § 
Wots of i\)t Week. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, Oct. 29,1887. 
There is a report that Dr. McGlynn will 
soon abandon the Henry George party and 
become reconciled to Rome—hardly probable. 
.The Chicago “boodlers" havet»een 
refused a new trial .In spite of the 
efforts of the “Reformers” in the municipal 
election at Baltimore Wednesday, the vote 
polled aggregated 65,075, of which Latrobe 
(Democrat) got 84,840 and Bartlett (Republi¬ 
can) 30,43.% giving Latrobe a majority of 4.- 
205, a Democratic gain of nearly 2.000 since 
the election for Mayor two years ago. The 
newly-elected City Council will consist of 13 
Democrats and 8 Republicans in the first 
branch, and 7 Democrats and 3 Republicans 
in the second branch.Barnum’s cir¬ 
cus has gone into winterquarters chiefly at. 
Bridgeport, Conn. James A. Bailey has just 
purchased the eutire interests of James L. 
Hu'cbinson, W W. Cole, and J E. Cooper, 
and henceforth the firm will be Barnurn & 
Bailey. ..Lisa Weber. Ex Queen of 
Burlesque, died at Buffalo, N Y., Sunday ... 
_ .. The civil suit against Jav Gould and 
Russel Saae on account of that Kansas rail¬ 
road transaction, was •‘mysteriously" with¬ 
drawn Tuesday. The criminal suit is 
ba v red by the Statute of Limitations, the al¬ 
leged offense having occurred over six years 
ago. As the Rural expected. Reriben. 
that, Cuban filibuster, has been surrounded 
with bis misguided followers, near Madruga, 
and killed.. _The •‘richest, rock sal» mine 
in the world” has beeu struck at Hutchison, 
Kansas, at a depth of 470 feet. The veins 
vary from seven to over 100 feet iu thickness, 
being separated by thin strata of shale. A 
veiu over UK) feet yields salt absolutely free 
from the impurities which make rock salt un¬ 
fit. for domestic purposes .Wednesday 
Jeff. Davis reviewed 30.000 ex-Confederate 
veterans, from nil parts of the South, at the 
Georgia State Fair at Macou. Over 50.000 
visitors; intense enthusiasm; much kissing of 
the tattered battle flags: rousing speeches, etc., 
... Robert'Gttrrett, ex-boss of the Baltimore 
and Ohio Railroad, telegraph, sleeping car 
“etc., etc..” system, has gone or been taken to 
the Pacific coast . He accuses Jay Gould and 
his “crowd” of “thieves” of stealing his tele¬ 
graph. which, it is said, Gould got for $2,000,- 
000 less than it. is worth. Garrett is only 41, 
has been a hard worker, and, “better still.” 
the son of a very hard-working financial gen¬ 
ius who left millions. There’s a report that 
Garrett is a trifle insane already, and likely to 
become mad. unless great care is taken of him. 
.Governor Martin of Kansas says that 
in his State Prohibition is regarded as a settled 
question by Republicans and bv “an increas¬ 
ing minority” of Democrats. He (s convinced 
that Prohibition would poll from 75,000 to 
100,000 majority to-day .The sen¬ 
tence of J. L. Stewart, the young drug clerk 
of Wichita, who was sentenced to 17 years iu 
the penitentiary uud $20,000 flue, has been 
commuted by Governor Martin to six months 
in jail and a fine of $000.... . Governor 
Gordon of Georgia, says 100 counties in his 
Smtc out of a total of 137, have voted for 
Prohibition under the Local Option Law. The 
business of Atlanta, instead of being injured 
by Prohibition voted by Pultou County, has, 
he says, been greatly benefited thereby. 
.Saturday last the best statue ever made 
of President Lincoln, paid for by the Bates 
fund, was unveiled iu Lincoln Park. Chicago, 
by young “Abe Lincoln,-’* son of Robert T. 
Lincoln and grandson of the martyr, in the 
presence of au immense crowd. .... 
Since July 23, $25,00(1,000 In foreign gold has 
come to New York .Birmingham, 
Ala. raised the money for a $20,000 Young 
Men’s Christian Association building iu one 
dav. A few months ago Atlanta, Ga., raised 
$75,000 for a similar building in three weeks. 
.... It is estimated that the wealth of the 
following countries is increased annually by 
the sums named: Germany, fi20Q.uOO.000; 
Great. Britain. $825,000,000; France. $375,000,- 
000, and the United States. $875.000.000.. 
At a recent meeting of the Western Union 
Telegraph Company it. was reported that it 
scut, during last, year 47.304,530 separate mes¬ 
sages at an average charge of about 3<>(£ ceots 
each, giviug au income of over $14,380,850. 
_Severe and disastrous forest fires have 
been rugmg for several davs in sections of 
Ohio amt Indiana. High winds have fanned 
the flames to work of greut destruction.. .. 
. .The heaviest locomotive ill the world weighs 
180.000 pounds, and is ou the Canadian Paci¬ 
fic. The next heaviest is the Southern Paci¬ 
fic’s, 154,000 pounds; the third weighs 145,000 
g minds, and is on the North Pacific, and 
razil owns the fourth, weighing 144.000 
pounds.The Pittsburg Baseball Club 
want, to get “Baby” A C. Ansou away Irom 
the Chieagoes and offer $15,000 for the trans¬ 
fer. The Chicago)*, however, fix his upset 
price at $25.DIM) -$15,000 more tbau Boston 
paiil for ihe “only Kelly” .. .There’s a heavy 
immigration from Canada to the Stales, most¬ 
ly far mere .. Representatives of the 
British Pence Arbitration Society, including 
eigtit Members of Parliament and three repre¬ 
sentatives of the largest trades unions in 
England, will be received at the White House, 
Monday. The society embraces 201 Mcmlters 
of Parliament and a multitude of English, 
Scotch and Irish notabilities besides a large 
number of trades unions, etc., etc. It. pro¬ 
poses that all disputes between this country 
aud England shall always be peacefully set¬ 
tled by arbitration ... At a meeting 
of the French Chamber of Commerce at 
Toronto, on Thursday evening, a resolution 
was passed asking the Federal Government to 
fix the rate on Canadian railways at two cents 
a mile fer first-class passengers uud one cent 
for second. The resolurtou set forth that the 
Government had^paid more than $150,000,000 
in subsidies; that they had reserved the right 
to fix the rates by an Order in Council, and 
that the maximum rate had been fixed by 
several of the American State governments 
at two cents a mile. It was also ask' d that 
fares for palace or sleeping cars be fixed at 
one dollar for each berth for each twelve 
hours’ journey .. The United States 
Government has paid $1,095,370 for the educa¬ 
tion of Indian children during the year— 
government, boarding schools, $719,833; con¬ 
tract boarding schools under charge of reli¬ 
gious denominations, $308,299; government 
day schools, $5.,398; contract flay schools. 
$9.847.Disease is prevalent in many 
cities along the Ohio Valley, and is attributed 
to the use of the So wage-saturated river water 
for drinking purposes. Extensive prospect¬ 
ing for an underground supply is being car¬ 
ried on in the large places.The 
“Personal Liberty Party” in this State, want 
to legalize the sale of intoxicants on Sundays. 
It. is composed chiefly of Germans who want 
lager; hut. there are riinuy other members who 
want “fire water.” The “National Reform 
Party’ has just been started to oppose it. 
We’re having the liveliest sort of political 
canvass, there being nine, yes, ten different 
tickets or parties in the scrimmage, in this 
State .. .. . The steamer Britannia with 
a cargo of passenger*—nearly all steerage— 
from Naples, Italy, arrived here on October 
14, and was detained at Quarantine on sus¬ 
picion that there was cholera on board. One 
case was developed on the IfVh. another on 
the 23 and another on the 24th • she is still 
down the bay at quarantine. The Alexia's 
passengers are now all right. No flange of 
the disease coming ashore the officials say.... 
The Women’s Christian Temperance Un¬ 
ions have set apart Nov. 12 and 13, “as days 
of prayer for the growth ami universal diffu¬ 
sion of all temperance works.” .The 
remains of Henry Ward Beecher were trans¬ 
ferred to tb''tr mini resting place in Green¬ 
wood cemetery Wednesday _ Earth¬ 
quakes almost daily on the island of Hayti 
have caused an almost total suspension of busi¬ 
ness ... The Iuter-s'ate Railroad Com¬ 
missioners have assumed the offensive and put 
the question point blank t>o the railroad man¬ 
agers of the country as to whether they are in 
any case violating the long and short haul 
clause.The President has issued a 
Thanksgiving proclamation naming November 
24 .... The Chicago police are redoubling 
their precautions against Anarchist outrages 
about the time of the execution of their con¬ 
victed brethren—November 11. Their case is 
being heard bv the United States {Supreme 
Court. A stay of execution is si night until the 
case can be heard on its merits later on. 
There seems to be little, hope that the Court 
will interfere; if not, the fate of the prisoners 
will depend entirely on the action of Governor 
Oglesby ..The Southern Forestry 
Congress met. at Huntsville, Ain., Inst Thurs¬ 
day. A memorial upon the protection and 
preservation of ttia forestry embraced iu mil¬ 
lions of acres of Government laud will be pre¬ 
sented to Congress in December . 
The United States Supreme Court has denied 
the motion to advance the four Prohibition 
cases from Iowa and the one from Georgia. 
It was sought, to have them decided at. the 
same time as the Kansas cases, The Court 
also refused to hear Attorney-Geueral Brad¬ 
ford, of Kit nsus, orally; but it allowed him to 
submit a written brief iu support of the 
constitutionality of the Prohibition law. 
.On November 1 a new schedule of rates 
will bo presented by the Western Uuion and 
Postal Telegraph Companies, whereby the 
rates will be advanced in equal proportions 
throughout the United .States, Both compan¬ 
ies have amicably Settled their differences— 
the lion and the lamb are lying down side by 
side .The attorney-general of Texas has 
decided that the Matador Land and Cattle 
Company, a .Scottish corporation with Hourly 
$2.000,(XX) capital, cannot do business iu tbut 
State. 
In spite of all European advices, that Cbiuese- 
Amerioan syndicate arrangement is likely to 
go iuto operation. “Count” Mitkiewiez and 
the others maintain it is alt right uud the 
Chinese officials in this country Iinvo heard 
nothing to the contrary. The Impecunious 
“Count" is in clover, and has leased the fine 
bouse -in Washington formerly occupied by 
Secretary Manning.. About oue-flfth of 
the delegates to the K. of L. convention at 
Minnea|tohfl. while returuing home, met at 
Chicago, and passed resolutions bitterly de¬ 
nouncing Powihirly and the present Executive 
Board. They declared m favor of abandon 
ing the order and starting a rival concern. 
Among them are all those who " anted the 
order to petition iu favor of the condemned 
Anarchists...... .. .The Detroit? are now the 
base-ball champions of the world! On the 
new map Bt. Louis, Chicago, New York, Bos¬ 
ton. Philadelphia, etc., lire merely mentioned 
us railroad stations.Mr J. H. Hlagler 
has been elected President of the Cotton Oil 
Trust in the place of John W. Lewis, and five 
directors named by Mr. Flagler were also 
elected. There was considerable ungry re¬ 
crimination at the meeting. There 18 u report 
that the next step will be an amalgamation of 
the Cotton Oil Trust and the Staudard Oil 
Company. It has long been known that, the 
latter cormorant was back of the former, and 
now it is likely to gobble it up. Doubtless the 
unscrupulous means it bus exercised to ruin 
its rivals in the North will now be employed 
to injure the American Oil Company m the 
South . .. 
Miss Josie Holmes, the private secretary 
of E. L. Harper, in the Fidelity National 
Bank, Cincinnati, has been again jailed by the 
United States officers......Hon. Nate 
Fredericks^ of Findlay, Ohio, and two of his 
Children died the other day from eating cab¬ 
bage to which Paris-green had been applied to 
kill insects.. An immense gathering 
of Ex-Confederates assembled at, Richmond, 
Virginia, Thursday, to witness the luying of 
the corner stone ol a monument to General Is'e. 
. ... .The Manitoba Government, is re¬ 
ported to have completed arrangements for 
finishing the Red River Valley Railroad this 
season ....The exposure of the Tortillta 
mining swindle cost the New York Herald 
$1,274.85 for actual outlay for the expenses of 
its investigators; bes’des $000 salary—in all, 
$1,874,851 ! . Ex-Minister Wasbburne, 
died at his son-in-law’s house, in Chicago, last 
Saturday. . 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
Saturday, Oct. 29, 1887. 
The FreDch Legislative Chambers re-assem- 
bled Tuesday, and by a majority of 379 to 155 
tlie Chamber of Deputies voted to appoint a 
committee to inquire into the Caffarel-Wilson 
scandal. The Government, strenuously op¬ 
posed the measure but. was overwhelmingly 
defeated, a majority even of the Republicans 
and all the Monarchists and Imperialists 
being against them. Wilson appeared before 
his constituents at Tours todouytho charges 
against him; but they were not satisfied, and 
demanded bis resignation. Yesterday, Presi¬ 
dent GrCvy resigned his office, bitterly de¬ 
nouncing those who were trying to disgrace 
his son-in-law Wilson. His resignation has 
not yet boon accepted; but the Legislature 
appears very determined to probe the scandal 
to the bottom, whoever may be disgraced by 
the exposure. This trouble engrosses public 
opinion in France just now to the exclusion 
of all other matters There is a rumor that 
the Cabinet will also resign, in which case the 
muddle will be intensified. The character of 
GrCvy’s successor must have a tremendous in¬ 
fluence on the fate of France m the near fu¬ 
ture. The Monarchists expect, or rather hope, 
that the Compte de Pans will become King.. 
... .Little else of interest beyond the water... 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, October 29, 1887. 
A new professorship—of Horticulture—was 
created at Cornell Uuiversity Wednesday, and 
attached to the agricultural department. 
The $15,000 voted by Congress for an agri¬ 
cultural experiment station goes to Cornell, 
and will be expended by this department .. 
.... John Glass, farmer, aged 00 years, a resi¬ 
dent of Loretta, Pa., while driving a pair of 
horses over the railroad crossing at Lilly’s 
Btation the other day, was struck by the day 
express and fatally injured. Both horses 
were killed instantly.... . Wednesday. 
Richard B. Conklin, of Greenport,. Suffolk 
County, Long isluud, proprietor of the Sound 
View Stock Farm, died ot iullauiinntion of 
the bowels at the age of 70. A famous breeder 
and raiser of fine horses among which wore 
Abraliatn Lincoln. It. B. Iluyes, King Wilke*. 
Wedgewood sold for $20,000, and llarus sold 
to Bonner for $30,000 .Tho first ship¬ 
ment of Manitoba flour to China has been fa¬ 
vorably received . Railroad lines 
have given notice that, on November 7, the 
rate of freight on anthracite coal to Western 
points will be advanced 10 per c«nt... 
The President of tho Ontario, Canada, Fruit 
Growers’ Association, says he i< going to try 
the experiment of shipping apples to British 
India via the Canadian Pucilie Railroad. 
.A new cotton-picking machine, in¬ 
vented by Mr. Graves, has giveu great satis¬ 
faction in Texas, picking 85 per cent of all 
open cotton in un experiment at High¬ 
land near Galveston. Hus tho Mason pick¬ 
er. from which so much was expected, 
been successfully used this year?. 
AU the European Powers, including 
Prance, have consented to join in an interna¬ 
tional conference at an early date to discuss 
the question of sugar bounties. .. 
Bradstreet’s estimates that we have 68,000.000 
bushels of wheat which we can spare for Eu¬ 
rope. The Ciucinuati Prices Current says 
55.000,000 bushels.Scotland is now 
sending small quantities of potatoes to this 
city.A Michigan girl surprised a 
thief iu tho baru and chased him with a pitch- 
fork uutil he dropped the harness he had stol¬ 
en. It is reported that she is receiving an av¬ 
erage of 15 offers of marriage a week . .... 
.... The Missouri State Horticultural So¬ 
ciety meets at Bonneville, Mo,, December 6-8, 
L. A. Goodman, Westport, Mo., Secretary... 
.... . The Jersoy breeders of Tennessee have 
challenged tho Holstein breeders of the coun¬ 
try to a milk and butter contest. They wish 
to place. 20 selected Jerseys against 20 selected 
Holsteins. Ho many “conditions” are re¬ 
required that it is doubtful ,f the contest can 
be arranged .... Ostrich farming isn't, 
paying very well now as there has lately been 
a decline from $300 to $35 per pound of the 
best kind of tea' hers—gone out of fashion.... 
_Mouday George Burrs, a young farmer 
of Akron, Ohio, who hud been suffering from 
malaria, took a dose of horse liuinicnt by mis 
take, for his medicine, and died iu intense 
agony.J. Brenkora, an old farmer 
living near Lakctown, Michigan, ullowed two 
strangers to stay at. Ills house over night lost 
week. During the night they bound him, his 
wife, and son, and stealing his team, made 
their escape..George McCarren. a 
farmer living near Port Crescent, Michigan, 
was fatally statibed last week by Frederick 
Peppeek, a neighbor, with whom he had some 
business trouble. .. . Lost Wednesday 
morning James Young, of Woodbridge. New 
Jersey, found that $2,(MX) worth of game 
chickens had been stolen from bis coops the 
previous night. Those out of doors alone es¬ 
caped. . . 
There's a corner in Egyptian cotton on the 
other side of the water, ami last Wednesday 
tho cotton spinners of Manchester combined 
to defeat it .The Montreal Bourd of 
trade will ask legislation to suppress “bucket 
shoos”. Ohio is to hold RK) farmers’ 
institutes the cotningyear to celebrate its“Cen- 
teumul.” The Btate University, the Htate 
Horticultural Society, the Agricultural Ex 
pertinent, Station, the Forestry Bureau, and 
the Educational Department, will all co-oper¬ 
ate. The Htate Board ot Agriculture has voted 
an increased appropriation for the purpose... 
....... .TheTrunk line railroadsrefu-e to give 
special rates for the Fat Stock aud other 
shows to be held in Chicago between Nov. 8 
aud 18.The Connecticut Stale Grange aud 
Board of Agriculture will hold their annual 
meetings together at Hartford—the Grange 
for December 12 and 18, and the Board De¬ 
cember 14, 15 aud 16.The Maine Agri¬ 
cultural College numbers more students now 
than ever before.It is pretty cer¬ 
tain that as soon as Congress assembles in 
December a motion will be at once made to 
appropriate, as a deficiency, the money neces¬ 
sary to carry out the Hatch Experiment 
Station RID, appropriating $15.01X1 for agricul¬ 
tural experimental purposes for each State. 
It would bp too long to wait til! the beginning 
of the next fiscal year. July 1,1888_During 
the American Fat Stock Show at- Chicago the 
following annual conv« utions of live-stock men 
w ill be held, says the Breeders’ Gazette: 
Tuesday, Nov. 8.—American Cleveland Bay 
Society, at the Grand Pacific Hotel, at 7:30 
o’clock p. M. R. P. Stericker, Secretary, 
Springfield, 111. 
Wednesday, Nov. 9.—American Clydesdale 
Association, at the Grand Pacific Hotel, at 
7:30 p. m. Charlos F. Mills, Secretary, Spring- 
field. Ill. 
Thursday, Nov. 10.—American Shire-Horse 
Association, at the Sherman House, at 7 
o’clock p. m, Charles Burgess, Seeretary, 
Weuona, Ill. 
Thursday, Nov. 10.—Victoria Swine-Breed¬ 
ers’ Association, at the Sherman House, at 
7:80 o’clock p. m. Henry Davis, Secretary, 
Dyer, Ind. 
Friday, Nov. 11.—American Hereford Cat¬ 
tle-Breeders’ Association, at the Leland Hotel, 
at 7 o’clock p. m. Charles Gudgell, Secretary, 
Independence, Mo. 
Monday, Nov. 14.—United States Veteri¬ 
nary Sanitary Association, at the Grand 
Pacific Hotel, at 2 o’clock p. m. Paul Paquin, 
Secretary, Columbu*. Mo. 
Tuesday, Nov. 15.—American Alierdeen- 
Angus Breeders’ Association, at the Leland 
Hotel, at. 7 o’clock p, m. Charles Gudgell, 
Secretary, Independence, Mo. 
Tuesday, Nov. 15.—American Cotswold As¬ 
sociation. at the Sherman House, at 7 o’clock 
p m. George Harding, Secretary, Waukesha, 
Wis. 
Tuesday, Nov. 15.—American Oxford Down 
Breeders’ Association, at the Sherman House, 
at 7 o’clock p. M. T. W. W. Sunman, Secre¬ 
tary, Spades, Ind. 
Tuesday, Nov. 15.—American Percheron 
Horse-Breeders’ Association, at the Sherman 
House, at 8 o’clock p M. S. D. Thompson, 
Secretary, Wayne, Ill. 
Wednesday, Nov. 16.—Rpd Polled Cattle 
Club of America, at the Grand Pacific Hotel, 
at 7 o’clock r. M. L. F. Ross, President, Iowa 
City, la. 
Wednesday, Nov. 16—American Short-horn 
Breeders’ Association, at the Grand Pacific 
Hotel, at, 8 o’clock p. m. J. H. Pickrell, Sec¬ 
retary, Chicago. 
Wednesday. Nov. 16.—American Shrop¬ 
shire Registry Association, at the Sherman 
House, at 10 o’clock a. M.. and 6 o’elo *k p. m. 
M. Levering, Secretary, La Fayette, Ind. 
Wednesday, Nov. 16—Convention of Hol- 
stein-Friesian Breeders, at the Grand Pacific 
Hotel, at 3 o'clock p. M.. T. B. Wales, Secre¬ 
tary. Iowa City, la. 
Wednesday, Nov, 16.—National Swine- 
Growers’ Association, at the Shermau House, 
at 10 o'clock a. m. P. M. Springer,Secretary, 
Springfield, Ill. 
Wednesday, Nov. 16.—Western Circuit 
State Fairs,at the Sherman House, at 8 o’clock 
p. m. R. W. Furnas, President, Browuville, 
Neb. 
Thursday, Nov. 17.—Illinois Short-horn 
Breeders’ Association, at the Grand Pacific 
Hotel, at 8 o’clock P. M. A. B. Hostetter, Sec¬ 
retary. Mount Carroll, Ill. 
Thursday, Nov 17.—American Duroc Jer¬ 
sey Swine-Breed era’ Association, at the Grand 
Pacific Hotel, at 7 o’clock r. m. Charles H. 
Holmes. Secretary, Grlnnell, la. 
Thursday, Nov. 17.— French Draft-Horse 
Association, at the Sherman House, at 2 
o’clock A. M James T. Roney, Secretary, 
Bloomington, 111. 
Thursday, Nov. 17.—National Pulnnd-Chi- 
na Swine Breeders’ Association, at the Sher¬ 
man House, at 10 o’clock a. m. W. W. Me- 
Clung, Secretary, Waterloo, la. 
... The first consignmen of C'auadian ranche 
cattle, consisting of 226 head, reached Mon¬ 
treal In good condition last week after a jour¬ 
ney of 2,262 miles from Calgary.. . 
. . The 21st session of the National 
Grauge of the Patrons of Husbandry will be 
held in Lansing, Mich., commencing at 11 a. 
M.. Wednesday, November 16.The 
Plow Trust, composed of 30 Northern plow 
manufacturers, is the latest proposed consolida¬ 
tion . .. The Indiana State Bureau of 
Statistics reports the live stock interest of 
that State a* being in a very satisfactory con¬ 
dition. There are now iu Indiana 533,257 
horses and 00,939 mules, 1,303,150 cattle, as 
well as 470.201 milch cows, 1,394.045 sheep aud 
3,801,248 hogs .The mew elevators 
of the Duluth Elevator Company, ou the 
West Superior side of the bay, are nearly 
completed. No. 3 is ready for and receiving 
wheat, and Nos. 1 aud 3 will be ready by 
November 1. These elevators will have a 
combined capacity of 5.000,000 bushels and 
will make the total capacity there about 
19,800,000 bushel* .. 
....Mark Lane, London, Express: It 
is stated that during the last fortnight 132 
farms, with un aggregate of 20.000 acres have 
beeu advertised to let In Cumberland and 
Westmoreland. Laud is selling in the eouu- 
ties named at half the price current 10 years 
ago. ami in some cases less tbau that ....... 
At their Con veil ion at. Washington the 
other day tho agricultural college Professors 
and directors of agricultural experiment .sta¬ 
tions passed a series of resolutions guarding 
against misappropriation of the $15,0(XJ voted 
by Congress for the support of experiment 
ppMfUatRou.* StttvmWtttB. 
IlIXo.S’X "Carburet of Iron” Stove Polish was 
established In is-*:, and it. to-day, u li was then, the 
neatest an<l brighten) In the market, u pure plumbago, 
giving "if uo poisonous vapors. The site i« now doub¬ 
led and cake weighs nearly half a pound, but the 
uuulitv and price remain the same. Ask your grocer 
for DUoa’s big cufco 
