576 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
April 10, 1915. 
THE HENYARD 
^ Epidemic in Hens; Scaly Legs. 
1. I have a small flock of hens, three of 
which have died recently within a short 
space of time. I feed the Cornell grain 
and dry mash rations, and allow the 
fowls access at all times to oyster shells, 
grit and charcoal. The sickness in the 
hens appeared to resemble cholera in 
turkeys. The fowl had diarrhoea, the 
wings drooped and the head grew pale and 
(hen discolored. The bird grew very thin 
and finally died. Can you give me aid 
in the matter? 2. Would you also give me 
the cure for “scaly legs?” K. n. A. 
Massachusetts. 
1. There are various causes for such 
cholera-like diarrhoeas in fowls, and only 
a careful postmortem would reveal the 
source of the trouble. Diagnosis is of 
little value, however, so far as curing 
the sick fowl is concerned; when discov¬ 
ered, they should be promptly removed 
from the flock and their carcasses deeply 
buried, or burned. If the trouble appears’ 
to be contagious, spreading from one fowl 
to another, the utensils and quarters 
should be cleaned up and disinfected, and 
the more severe the disease, the more 
thoroughly should disinfection be done. 
2. Scaly legs may be cured by the use of 
an ointment of vaseline and kerosene, 
rubbing it in thoroughly over the affected 
areas; or, the fowls’ legs may be dipped 
once, or oftener, into a can of kerosene 
and held there for a few minutes. The 
more severe the trouble, the more thor¬ 
oughly will the treatment have to be 
carried out. M. b. d. 
Development of an Egg. 
In killing hens recently, which our 
observation led us to conclude were 
drones, we found in one case eggs from 
the size of a marble down to a pinhead 
and in others eggs no larger than a pea 
or birdshot. Assuming that was the con¬ 
dition in February, when should the hens 
in each instance be expected to lay? 
That is, how long would it take eggs 
of the size mentioned to develop to full 
size? This is the second laying season 
for the hens. Would you consider them 
worth keeping as layers? s. P. 
New Hampshire. 
Probably within three or four weeks, 
but just how long, I cannot say. This in 
case of those having yolks developed to 
the size of marbles The others, of course, 
later. If these hens possess the laying 
type and have been kept until February, 
they should be profitable later; if they 
are true drones, however, they never have 
been and never will be profitable. Drones 
must be culled out earlier in the season 
as practically all hens that lay at all 
are now getting ready for the Spring re¬ 
productive season. Cull your drones in 
the Spring and late Summer. How? 
Note when the pullets begin to lay ; dis¬ 
card those that do not begin to lay by 
the time they are eight or nine months 
of age. Note when they begin to molt 
after their first laying season; discard 
those that molt early. To detect a laying 
fowl at any time, note the distance be¬ 
tween the pelvic bones just below the 
vent, if they are close and rigid, the hen 
is not laying; if they are flexible and two 
or three fingers can be placed between 
them, the hen is probably laying. Note 
color of ear lobes, if they are pearly 
white, the hen has laid out their color, 
as she will also of the shanks; if they 
are yellowish, no considerable number 
of eggs have yet been laid. A high pro¬ 
ducing hen begins laying by eight months 
of age, lays through the Summer and does 
not molt until October or November. A 
low producer does not begin laying until 
nine months of age or later, lays well 
through the Spring and early Summer, 
quits laying and molts in late Summer. 
it. B. D. 
Henhouse for Small Flock. 
I have a carriage house on the north 
side by my barn, so that on the north 
it is entirely protected. The room is 
about 11 by 18 feet, ceiled overhead, sides 
are boards up and down, but well bat¬ 
tened. I wish hens for family use, no 
roosters, and during Summer raise a few 
young chickens to eat and nothing to 
sell. How much window space and 
lighting on the south side is desirable? 
Is the outside as described and fully pro¬ 
tected on the north warm enough 
without lining? What spray or wash 
is desirable to use and its consti¬ 
tuents? Is Alfalfa cut green and cured 
useful for Winter and is dried corn fod¬ 
der of use? About how much roosting 
space is necessary for not to exceed 25 
fowls? L. B. C. 
If this shed is used exclusively for 
poultry, it should accommodate about 60 
fowls, and, if the sides are sufficiently 
well battened to exclude drafts, it need 
not be lined; a lining of tarred paper 
would improve most such sheds, however. 
Three large, double-sash house windows 
on the south side would probably admit 
sufficient sunlight, placing them at a height 
of about two feet from the floor, 
and ventilation may be provided for by 
hinging each separate sash at the bot¬ 
tom so that it can swing in a few inches 
at the top and admit air over the top. 
To prevent air from coming in also at 
the sides of the sash when opened. V- 
shaped boards should be fitted against 
the sides, forming what are called “hop¬ 
per sides.” These windows should re¬ 
main open practically all the time in the 
Winter and may be entirely removed in 
the .Summer. Good lime whitewash is the 
best interior decoration for a henhouse. 
Properly cured Alfalfa, fed dry or 
steamed, is one of the best Winter foods 
for poultry in addition to their grain. 
Gut corn fodder makes good litter but 
has no other use. The small breeds of 
fowls need about six inches each of 
perch room, the larger breeds about 
eight. M. b. d. 
Leghorns vs. Wyandottes. 
I was greatly pleased over the results 
shown by the additional data which you 
obtained, of the two leading pens in the 
last Storrs, Conn., egg-laying contest. I 
felt pretty sure the Leghorns would come 
out ahead when food costs were taken 
into consideration. The Leghorn hen, 
like the Jersey cow, holds first place 
among her kind as an economical pro¬ 
ducer. However, in all justice to the 
other fellow 50.4 pounds of Wyandottes 
are worth when sold at 15 cents per 
pound .$2.14 more than 30 pounds of Leg¬ 
horns. which if added to the Wyandottes’ 
credit, puts them in the lead by about 
53 cents. f. G. ball. 
Ohio. 
The ‘•Four-Pound Leghorn.” 
I would like to tell Brother Cosgrove 
and the others afflicted with Barronitis a 
little egg story. This record was made by 
the plucky little wife of a New York 
State dairyman and shows what a woman 
can do. To use her own words, under 
date of March 10 she says: 
“This month I have sold from 400 hens 
or less, eight crates of 30 dozens each, 
filled an incubator with 200 eggs, sent a 
private customer 21 dozen and we use 
on an average three dozen a day in the 
house.” 
That is a pretty good record for 10 
days and I think it indicates the Ameri¬ 
can hen is still on the map. Yours for 
four-pound Leghorn hens of the true 
American type, and no seven-pound mon¬ 
grels. CHICKEN CRANK. 
Bronchitis. 
Yesterday I noticed one hen in my 
flock of 150 S. C. White Leghorns which 
had a squeaky voice and seemed to have 
difficulty in breathing; would raise her 
head and act as if she had something 
caught in her throat at every breath. I 
caught her and put her in a crate but 
she was over it in about two hours. To¬ 
day about 12 are affected that way, mak¬ 
ing a peculiar high pitched sound and 
have difficulty in breathing. They seem 
to get over it in a short time. Is this 
a symptom of anything serious? I am 
feeding cabbage as green food and let 
them out every fine day. They are lay¬ 
ing exceptionally well—75%. e. f. p. 
The whistling, high-pitched, respiratory 
sounds, with symptoms of obstruction to 
breathing are evidences of bronchitis, 
usually caused by extension of catarrhal 
inflammation from the nasal passages. 
Mild bronchitis, or a “cold on the tubes” 
is ordinarily recovered from if the fowls 
are not exposed to drafts or damp, un¬ 
healthful, conditions. Severe cases are 
sometimes fatal, the fowl dying from ex¬ 
haustion. As treatment, affected fowls 
should be confined to dry, warm, quar¬ 
ters, free from dust, drafts, and dampness, 
with ample ventilation, however, and fed 
on soft food while given water to drink in 
which flaxseed has been steeped. For 
more severe cases, a teaspoonful of cas¬ 
tor oil, to which ten drops of turpentine 
has been added, has been recommended. 
There are other causes of obstructed 
breathing but the above seems most likely 
to account for the trouble in your flock. 
M. B. D. 
Cutting Bone. 
Would it pay me to get a bone cutter 
(I have power handy) and grind green 
bone, feeding same in place or partly in 
place of beef scrap? The bone would 
cost, at butchers, one cent per pound, 
while beef scrap delivered is $2.85 per 
hundred. How much beef scrap would it 
displace and how would one feed it? I 
have 800 hens and pullets, White Leg¬ 
horns, and am feeding a modified Cornell 
ration at present. Egg yield last year 
was 154^4 average, October to October, 
and at present am getting 500 to 540 per 
day. g. c. p. 
If one has a gasoline engine, or other 
power, and can purchase a fairly regu¬ 
lar supply of green bone, I think that it 
would pay him to purchase a green bone 
cutter and make the product displace 
meat scrap in whole or in part. Mr. 
Cosgrove recommends mixing green cut 
bone with wheat bran, middlings, and 
meal, all in equal parts and feeding three 
ounces of the mixture per day to each 
fowl; I, myself, have never fed green bone 
in any considerable quantity and cannot 
advise as to the exact amount that may 
be used. Many poultrymen feed it twice 
a week, alone, and consider that it should 
not be fed oftener, especially to breeding 
stock. You will probably have to do a 
little individual experimenting before you 
learn just how to use it in the place of 
meat scrap. If fed in excess, it will 
cause looseness of the bowels and if care 
is not taken to avoid getting bone with 
tainted meat adhering to it, especially in 
hot weather, other trouble may ensue. 
m. r. n. 
TOM BARRON’S 
WINNING WYANDOTTE PENS 
PA. CONTESTS WINNERS in eRg. »nrt .nine; 
Aver. 236. “Barones* V" laid 282 egfrs ; others, 274, 252. 
CONN. CONTEST: WINNERS in value; aver, 
208J-A ? 2nd Prize in eggs. 
MISSOURI CONTEST: 2nd PRIZE, likely; 
aver, 210. Barron Leghorns. 284: Buff Hocks, 242; 
Vfbert Reds, 257. Brize Ronens. Big Toulouse Geese. 
MORRIS-FARM, R. 4, BRIDGEPORT. CONN. 
Rhode Island Reds 
TRAPNESTED 
Splendid cherry to mahogany rich glowing red, 
thoroughbred, lien hatched, free range, opeu- 
front-eolony house, hardy stock. Scientificall v 
line bred* away from broodiness and for heaviest 
winter laying, on a strictly sanitary plant. 
Heaviest laying Reds in existence, laving rates 
211 to 267 eggs. HATCHING EGGS from mag 
nificent, large, hardy, glowing red hens, not pul¬ 
lets, mated to splendid, large, vigorous, burn¬ 
ing red males, themselves out of trapnested 
hens. Fertile, strong, hatchable, large, unblem¬ 
ished eggs, gathered hourly, shipped daily, safe 
delivery guaranteed. White diarrhoea absolutely 
unknown. FINE BREEDING COCKERELS, early 
hatched, large, hardy, vigorous breeders, great 
stamina; long backs, low tails, short legs well 
spread; brilliant rich glowing red and out of 
trapnested hens. BREEDING HENS, pullets, 
mated trios and breeding pens. Satisfaction or 
motley returned. 
We ship aW over TJ. S.. Canada, and abroad as 
far as Australia, and sell eggs and stock to 
States and the U. S. Government. Courteous, 
straightforward dealings. Spring egg orders 
now booking. 
Mating booklet on request. 
VIBERT RED FARM. Box 1, WESTON, N. J. 
WHITE WYANDOTTE HATCHING EGGS 
This Seasons prize Winners, carefully shipped, 
$1.00 per dozen. Send check or money order, Box 1, 
HESSTAN HILL FARM, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. 
UEAVY LAYING REGAL W. WYANDOTTES win two shows; 
" ten, lsts; six, 2ds: specials best cockerel and best 
pen in show. Also Hondans. Guaranteed eggs and 
cockerels. Circular. Morse Farm, Unadilla, N. Y. 
White Wyandottes—“Regal Strain” 
Eggs for hatching from heavy-laving, farm-range 
birds at $1.50 per 15; $7 per 100. From exhibition 
matings, $0 per 15. Your inspection of my stock is 
solicited ami I will endeavor to satisfy the most ex¬ 
acting. E. B. UNDERHILL, 11 Old Orchard Farm," Poughkeepsie, N. T. 
WII QflN’Q WHITE WYANDOTTES—Are they not what 
YTILOUn 0 you need? “Made in America.” Also S. C. Buff 
Leghorns. Eggs and Chicks ; orders should be booked now. Ill. 
Cir. Our 14th Year. Ownland Farm, Box 497, So. Hammond, N.Y. 
JU|& BBQ HRb Rose and single 
0 SB @T Tf| comb Rhode Island 
1 B ™ Red Cockerels. 
gPEjr Hg B iijj ih Grand breeders 
■ |A 9 jg from heavy layers. 
||| $3.00 and $5.00 each. 
1 t am W& W Doty & Freese 
Route 9, Gonesoo, N.Y. 
White Wyandotte Chicksl*^®^ 
Lenox Strain. Old Rock Farm, Lenox Dale, Mass. 
THOROUGHBRED Buttercup Buff Wyandottes, Reds, White 
1 Leghorns, $1 per setting. W. R. Barry. Rochester, Vt. 
PARTRIDGE WYANDOTTES &F^ G R 
SI.25 per 13, postpaid. E. 8. Thurston, So, W. Harbor, Maine 
COLONIAL REDS 
We solicit the custom of anyone desiring eggs for 
hatching or day old chix from a genuine pedigreed 
strain of trap nested Reds, single comb. Our 
Reds have made good in 46 States of the Union. 
Watch their position in International Egg Laying 
Contest, given in this paper. The Rhode Island 
State College is a recent customer. Write for 
mating list. We guarantee satisfaction to every 
customer. COLONIAL FARM, Temple, New Hampshire 
IA/HITE WYANDOTTE and S. C. White Leghorn Day-Old Chicks 
*■ from heavy-laying hens. Circular. MIDDLEBROOK 
POULTRY FARM, Miss Marion I. Moore, Hamburg. N.Y. 
O T REDS, WHITE WYANDOTTES, Light 
. • and Dark Brahmas , Barred Rocks, S. O. 
White and Brown Leghorns- Show and utility 
quality Illustrated catalog free. Hatching Kggs 
and Chix. RIVERDALE POULTRY FARM, Riverdale, N. J. 
CniinrR’Q ILDUS. POULTRY, HARE AND DOG 
dUUUCII O CATALOG FREE. Hatching Eggs a 
Specialty. Edwin Souder, Dept. It, Telford, Pa. 
AUSTIN’S 200 Egg Strain S. C. R. 1. 
pCf|C-Standard bred high record stock, red to the 
skin. Eggs. $1 5U to $5.00 (15). Utility. 
$7.50 (100). Safe delivery and 90* fertility guaran¬ 
teed: Husky, well grown cockerels, $3.00 to $5.00. 
Chicks. Booklet, Austin's Poultry Farm, Box 17, Centre Harbor, N.H. 
EGGS REDUCED PRICE. 35 varieties best Chickens. 
Ducks, Geese, Turkeys. Big Illustrated 
Circular Free. JOHN E. HEATWOLE. Harrisonburg, Va. 
Black Langshans %£&>£§& 
$2.00; 100, $10.00. ORCHARD HILL FARM, Guilford, Conn. 
THE NATIONAL FARM SCHOOL Single Comb RHODE 
■ ISLAND REDS—$1.50 per sotting of 15 eggs. 
Poultry Dept., . FARM SCHOOL, PA. 
Moftlpfl Anrnnac Eggs for hatching, 75c, 15; Si. 100 
mimmu Mliconas geo. k. I10MIIISI1, Expoiance, N.y. 
White Feather Poultry Yards jS e "*2 a M h d 
Chix at a Discount for April and May. Write for 
Booklet. George A. Kastner, Hainmoiul, N. Y. 
C f 1. Sheppard Strain. Dark Cockerels, 
J. C. AliLUIldh $2 and $3. Selected Eggs from prize 
winners, $1.50—15; Chicks 15c. each. Safe delivery and 
satisfaction guaranteed. Quality Poultry Farm, K. ltomo, 5.V 
WHITE CORNISH 
FOWL—10 to 12 lb. males, 7 to 9, females. Good 
layers. Eggs, $3.00 setting 15. Guarantee 10 fertiles. 
Replacements Free. Catalog. 
Mountsville Farms, Duck Rd.. Mountville, Va. 
J8 Anconas & R. I. Reds 
Very Best Strains 
Illustrated Catalogue Free 
aEwL, Silverton Poultry Farm 
Box 1 E. Syracuse, N. Y 
IITIUTY AMERICAN DOMINIQUES ECGS SI.76 
U for 15; S6.00 per 100. HERBERT D. ROOKS, MILLS. PA. 
DOSE COMB WHITE LEGHORNS and WHITE WYANDOTTES, 
H Great laying strains. ED. HAMILTON, Olegs, N T. 
CILVER SPANGLED HAMBURGS-unsnrpassed for eggs 
“ combining beauty. Kges— $1.50, 15; $2.50, 30. 
Satisfaction guaranteed. H. H. Scott, Sinks Grove,VVVa. 
IMPROVED SILVER CAMPINES-Exclusively. Stock and 
1 Eggs for sale. SHORT & TRIPP, Cortland, New York 
fifl Variptipc chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys. 
OU V dl IClICo GUINEAS and HARES. Stock and eggs. 60 
page catalogue free. H A. Souder. Box 29, Sellersville,Pa. 
For Sale-Silver Campine Eggs ^cks atc fro n nf' free 
range stock. A Iso trios, not akin, $5 for next 30 days. 
P. J. COLYEB, - Argusville, New York 
f 14SMif m/ C|f<c/ Eggs that Hatch, from 
l/Hffiy rir&E White Cornish and Pekin 
Ducks. First Frize Winners at Madison Square 
Garden. Also fine Bronze Turkeys and White 
Guineas. RIDGELEiGH F. & P. FARM, Huntington, N.Y. 
AWEN STRAIN HEAVY LAYING BUFF ORPINGTONS-$2. up. 
w Eggs and chicks. OWEN E. MELI0US, Stanley, N. Y 
klul urtrinuiuno iNui oiiiy iiiosi ue&utitiil, Dul pro* 
u titable. Eggs for hatching, $5 setting, from win¬ 
ners of many First and Seconds. N. B. Hsrlmsn, Granlwood, N. J. 
Eggs, Chicks and Ducklings ~ P erfo a r ny s?iv« 
Laced Wyandottes, Mammoth Pekin Ducks and Gi¬ 
ant Rouen Ducks, Winners at America’s Greatest 
Shows. ALDHAM POULTRY FARM, R. 34, Phoenixville, Pa. 
S.C. Black Minorcas & r p ^^huf^r^n 
opportunity to get Breeding Pens, Laying Pullets, 
Chicks and Eggs. Also Leghorns and Barred Hocks. 
Satisfaction guaranteed. Franck H. Wright, Tnokaboc, N.Y. 
T7'/^t/^t C 1- 'African geese. White Muscovy 
P ,1 tI Ti y ducks. Utility Reds. 
CGGS from thoroughbred Rocks, Wyandottes, Leghorns, Reds, 
t Orpingtons, Brahmas, Minorcas, Hondans, Hamburtrs, Ancon- 
as, 15, *1; 10, $2. 20 varieties. Catalog. H. K. Mohr, Quakerlown, Ps, 
i-t VA VJ U Ruse Farm, - Manchester, N. H. 
niTf'K < S _Faw 'h Indian Runners and Mam- 
^moth Pekin. Prizewinners. Eggs, $1 
per 13 and $3.50 per 50. Satisfaction guaranteed. 
Goo. F. Williamson, Box 1B0, Flanders, N.J. 
yb ARRED ROCK >77 All chicks guaran- 
JjABY chicks , J teed to be the de ' 
1 ,1 ' 1 ‘ r, scendents of hens 
Wt Guarantee® 35^ '■Al! ^ a/vT * with records of 200 
SAFE DELIVERY to 236 eggs in their 
pullet year, and from hardy, vigorous stock. Buy 
chicks that make layers,—chicks bred from layers. 
Also a few WHITE ROCKS^of same quality. 
Immediate delivery. Write for^circular. 
C. E. BURGER. Route 50, ITHACA, N. Y. 
WHITE EMDEN GEESE-&”“ *gJSS 
now. Maple Cove Poultry Yards. R.24, Athens, Pa. 
Mammoth Toulouse Geese Eggs 
For Sale, 35c each, delivered, anywhere in the U.S. Fine 
large birds, imported stock. Crandall Farms, Albion, N.Y. 
BARRED ROCKS 
Business birds; bred to lay, and they do it. Size, 
type, color, layers; a combination you can’t beat. 
Hatching eggs. Write for folder. 
“ FOUR ACRES,” - Nutley, N. J. 
Barred Rocli 
Pullets,bred of superior quality and heavy layers. Eggs— 
exhibition matings, $5 and $5 per 15; utility, $7 per 100. 
MRS. K. SUTTON, R. D. West Nyack, N. Y. 
TIIDIfry rCCC-ll Bronze, B. Reds 
t unne W CUUO Narrngansett & W. 
Holland $3.50 per 12. Walter Bros., Powhatan Point, 0. 
White Holland Turkeys-M^^v^^ 
PORE BREED BOURBON RED TURKEY 
KGGS from Prize-Laying Hens. Delivery guaranteed. 
Settings, $4.00. FLONA HORNING, ULYSSES, PA. 
GIANT BRONZE TURKEY EGGS, S;Wed 0 'i5iS: 
$1.00 per 15. Fawn li. Duck Eggs, $1.00 per 12. Shrop¬ 
shire Sheep. 11. J. Van Dyke, Gettysburg, Pa. 
BARRED ROCKS 
Eggs—$1 per 15: $3.50 per 100. Nonpariel strain. 
IS. H. IIENION, - Brockport, New York 
Wild & Bronze Turkey Eggs 
catalog 2c stamp, showing pure wild gobbler from the 
mountain. VALLEY VIEW POULTRY FARM, Belleville, Pa. 
PARKS 200-Egg Strain BARRED ROCKS SSM 
salt; from high record trap-nested pens. Eggs SI.50—15. 
BEST QUALITY CHICKS, 16c. each. Safe delivery and 
satisfaction guaranteed. Quality Poultry Farm, E. Home, N.Y. 
White Holland Turkeys 
Heavy Breeding Birds for sale, satisfaction guaranteed. 
Eggs 30c. each. H. W. ANDERSON, Stewartstown, Pa. 
“Perfection” Barred Rock Eggs 
from Thompson, Hawkins, Bradley and Riley 
strains. Pens headed by prizewinners. $3 per 15. 
Utility. $1.50 per 15; $8 per 100. Transportation paid 
on all orders of $5 and over. Or. Hayman, Doylestown. Pa. 
Wilson’s White Rocks^lL'S" 1 }™. 
houses, large, husky, day-old chicks. Hatching 
eggs. Circular. WILSON’S POULTRY FARM, Hollis, N. H. 
White Rocks Exclusively - ® is 
from winners State Fair, Buffalo and Rochester, 
1011. Baby chicks ready soon. Mating list free. 
HIAWATHA POULTRY FARM, Dept. R, T. L.Poole, OeWitt, N.Y. 
Merrynook White Holland Turkey Eggs f> r r ?“ 
ners. First pullet. Madison garden; first pullet. Bos 
Eton: first hen, Middletown: first hen, Danbury: 
first Tom, Danbury. MISS TUCKER, New Brunswick, N. J. 
^^^BurnettTurkeys 
Madison Square, 1915. Gold 
Special: 1st. 2nd, 3rd Prizes on 
Cockerels; 1st on Pullet; 2nd and 3rd on Toms; Rhode 
Island Reds and Minorcas; hatching eggs, only $5 and $7 
per hundred. New Book just published. Write 
W. L. BURNETT, - Montgomery, N. Y. 
Barred Plymouth Rock Eggs S5. h ^ h i n r ‘ , s«tt i SK 
J. I. IIEKETER, - _ Gettysburg, Pa. 
HEAVY COIT A R CARNEAUX S5 for MATED PAIRS 
BREEDERS CLARK FARM, B00NT0N, N. J. 
Eggs For Hatching Utility Barred Rocks 
$1.00 per 15; $4.00 per 100. S. H. MILLER, HAGUE, N. Y. 
1 HAVE 10 B. P. R. COCKERELS LEFT, 
I utility strain, from the U. of Maine, at $5 each. 
EUGENE M. ROWE, - Hampden, Maine 
CIELD’S BUFF ROCKS, Somers, Conn. Madison Square 
■ Garden—Boston winners. Cockerels and Eggs. 
on® niCrmiWT on Catalog Prices. 200 breeders, 
0\J' DIJLUU11 I Best Strains. Need room. 
Splendid opportunity. Cl.RABVIEW KARJf, Soudertnn. I'u 
