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2 . GRS 57 / THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 26, 1899 HETTY GREEN, = ™ g™ + 1 She Is Particularfy Happy Just Now Because Joseph Choate Has Gone to Engfand and She Has Made a Strike in Her California Gofd Mine. | B e e e e e e e e e e g ] ‘ 1 they never quarreled. She ale rt of pension from her enor- It suffices sor his modest valid. close manner of livin g se man ving. reau and of a big trust company was er, thou !hlsgiilfrerir; Lold‘uxrne r‘(hazgl?‘l'm Itelfle":;; Old Wall street men tell innumerable Secured. It was necessary to consum- plRk s tor € ipuepoae SRHE] Jedeiel e eits ehoueilis womanmicsesens ana, nate 0w bredafersosiueal an IO o fortune. positively thei she belleves there le & about -her Wonderful success on the erles to obtain the forged document 1t conspiracy among the lawyers of New - was in Philadelphi elf. Secrecy was the only hope of gain- : “They 5 5 k. ing proof of gullt, as the law does not old m _“They are my arch enemies,” she said, d that unless touch the holders, but only the makers Green. ‘and not one of them would hesitats to York before the close of the of forged deeds. war and the gayest of a_very Eay Set. ill me If he thought he could o 8o with- change she would miss a chance to make Attorney Bisbee was to delay fling a He came from Bellows Falls, Vt., and out being found out. I make them toe several thousand doliars. No train would bill in chancery to quiet the titles to the made a fort Manila his time, this tall, quiet s known as “Spendthrift as a high roller before the the chalkiine, and that's the reason they bring her here in time, and she opened property until the thieves were caught. Philippir He liv don't like me negotiations for a special engine. A p the minute Mrs. Green, who was & <, and he had a | Mrs. Green has a desk at s named for an engine and one Rock: 3 1 of rried Harrlet ‘ Bank in New York, & after naggling some few minutc 2 happy every day to look after her va Green made this final proposition ¢ his money spec- ests. The traveling back and f Gff the car andimake 1015 loss rs. Green did not tween the bank and her home is what in the locomotive cab.” She rd him that re- ife to hu but ¢ ride to this city, treet In e to an of busi- i to live un- and that he tha to take “My bodyguard is a nephew of a for er New York Police Inspector, and a IH9C 4D 400040404 00040 409040¢-0-4bg wart young fellow at that. Of cours 3 3 4 % % + ! ! i caused her to get a bodyguard é . @ * ¢ (4 ¢ @ 4 ° + ® + 2 : ad a large amount < > I wouldn’t h hi name published, be- vi she had c 1 ests. Bi Syl T o 3 ¢ cause that would establish bis identity St t e ki iAo B et 3 and some day when it chanced that he Fheabhe e AT Tet BIhE o ot s o Gverhl e : was not with me I might be attacked. to pay the express com- vou ':‘lrp Petre i arding- + “When we are traveling he does not portion to the value of thieves.” Lo 26 stay beside as you might suspect, .s horrified. and we never have any conversation. Ile King that bundie son, Edward H. . has de- ¢ keeps a lookout for me every morning o there ahd back Yeloped into a goo ness man, and 3 1 vs taken a deep in- and then follows me as if he did not foc it and 596 Y » not what m! extrava troduca her 6 know who I w He changes his ap- ered up the securities in her ! notespecialiy noten fc s and to . pearance every day or so in order to ke€p and carried them over to Philac an ! lee. HIS “xewport ns. She _ people from getting to know him. If we herself. L |nj\|r!r-ld while coasting when he 3 WPOT K traveled together my enemles would sim- i 2 2 E 7 ars old and it was PODEOP- ottaad o . Liwalt for i fenanceitor eatchins runcyeonce Whemdobn 7. Cleco was hor baske tended to, Years afterward, when e @ awares. e it R e s too late, Mrs. Green secured treat- rmanent . “As it 1s, my guard keeps his eye on S cral BUdTed LHOHEs g, e oy ment forithe lad fromig,prominent syr: from the P me, and T am sure he would be on hand j SSE (TR, 0, TN TNg g;m;vne‘i;'in Eson ofirhiladeiotis bh e ooy s to her 4 Y homa oc T Thoraandr axastilee e e e e As she grows older Hetty Green does 2nd Was tied. 2 pani stu had attained his majority the amputation » are the four people most directly @ ot Aiippave dn manners: 'She 1s"careresy JVth DEE(Lor her veciiessness In faklng waw performetiTha:cnetation ook place it of . W00 J0—th % e neeh rasonai Hec! Arial @8l anat S0ch e-EE of altacic ahdizphbery on W6 fin | a3 idard (i House Fab st ! e ki i S AR T i uses slang freely. Money making and SUSEt oo Eighteenth street, The Greens have not s M e s . talking are her chief pleasures, and her hy didwt you come down in & car- gtopped that house for some years ot £ main object in life is to leave to her son, ”f‘,i}’- r:“ ,‘iilm"’;:}e‘l; ld amow. 2 KoR) idavey T e e S e e ] Edwnrdl v;‘hr\Tll\'es in a prén;‘e‘l'i' sfiylnsf;‘n T R gl L lg,n"m:n’?nci;érlcli- Orce. 5wl Ned a tall, 1a el : 3 2 s ranch in Texas, a great fortune. o GO BRICT. len e 3 youth, he lived with his mother som Byt s as useful MRS HETTY GREEN, the Richest Woman in America. has proved that, in finance, woman can SDArpIN SIUG ccen :;‘f{:‘;fl ey plate Where in the neighborhood of Fourth L A e e e tha equal of man. Her energy an et = B ate venue and Thirteenth street. He spent a burled treasure. % i From her latest photograph. ‘Copyrighted 18% by Vander Weyde, New York. endurance at 60 years of age surprise all ;‘n”“.-li‘“i’{',’i‘.?“' r?:x:<el(1»fa:h2“c;c;‘;”“‘sd' most of his lefsure time around the Fire o . . who have dealings with her. She is a 1 1% }mmfi e aaa O harg Department 1 n Thirteenth street, mce 4 he would go down, there hd some of t men A bookseller's opinion of and Captain Bre woman such as only American sofl could latest freak is vicinity of New York that has caused all “I always call him Joseph to his face,” and polish up the articles and ¥ o T Thardiae s B e ronbaBas. Al It makes him squirm.” produce. = D e i e S cticg Temember him v well. At that time De asin s a critic’s, thot Then this richest woman in America The accompanying photograph was S Moo Practic® nis mother allowed him cents point ot ifferent; and a letter e : ank. which Literature has re from a for his meals, and he used to eat in a e time past she hag body knew Het y G a ear- TPIUEN L Eppch taken by flashlight in the back parlor of N pTaswiabed e % , stepped into the tiny back parlor and ot flog 2 A £ abduotion, 1eBce; never sconyeyed the Impression <00 cursrutly lowEdAC tho gas! In ithe tinusey (e HonCKen Doeriing hovse. Tt Is ap ex- _Ore dus a report foated around Wall Glcopoaiaurant on Fourih avenue, just correspondent ¢ amount the possession of milllons. But now peo- where she live Green is known act ltkeness and gives a better idea of the Cldco was'In traubls, The Xeit pijow Tnlon Square.” Up fo the tims e oL liht upou thls branch of the subject: ple point her out and look upon her as as Mrs. Dewey. 8 admits, however, character of the woman than any picture port was not \~r“u. but it reached Mrs. oo ars old Ned Green was accu: “For reasons which concern no one but 4 paying thoy would a freak. This notorlety has that sho is a resident of Bellows Falls, made heretofore. With all her fear of N % ..1nf{i-m:!::-1»:;”:‘»-'~n?: ORIPEE2 o take the newspaper which his myseif,’ write correspondent, *“T re- herself to other greatly disturbed the we woman. Vt., where she has pretty summer assassination, she had no hesitation about 1he bank and JEmEREE. TS €l oelt ; ; i'\v:rlur!r'lh:\;;;‘l < in n‘n- me 1tly decide get rid of a certaln Siténlx . front . of-\the: camera, even hSE scconnt Ehe hal STONE SO STRG) o th her was a stranger S gRproNes: 4 S 5 o to’the front: parlor - thongh the pholokTapL " BOT jrawal of such a large single amount in n and ying the fina place to place. At present Hetty ( is ltving in a fter she had finished st after she had finished stu dreatt, fchieif clicapiboarding Nonsofin (Hoboken, pay. time more than 30 years to her. But that is Mrs, Green's dispo- aliof quchis litse Sins : I Cial page. 1g for her accommodation ebout § a Robinson, she was one sitlon; when she trusts people, she does °ne CfY e sai | tm, but this made 5 (5 o el public learned with aston- ticularly want,' he sald, week. She has just moved from Brook- New York soclety. When so tmplicitly. T it 158, 95 jchment that Hetty Green had a husband ¢ 'them over, "5 rbq_books. it ar A S v a e s was he . . G most haj nde 5 Py - R Lot = 7 3 What sort o o asked. n easy .yn, and, it is sald, does not like' the \ce of Wales was here she danced Mrs. Green i now in a t happy TENCd O cabe to carry away all her and a daughter. Mr. Green has dropped «:Red books—t ke it T owa , she lived in En, of mind on account of a big strike > 3 ! niha ea at conrt B henan e to have just been made in e atrdns boxea.: The baik falled;tho next, 0. CompiStely ot of slsht SUens (G red cover Sx-President, summered at mines in California. “It may amount to day. S L e R e o HObiAL o milllon @PLIATE ™ ARG matei “Andsitist i few yeurs ago It was discoversc.In e e T him ed gucst. Then her doesn't reach that sum, why, well and Chicago that_forged deeds to property In WWal Bireet ha fozenctenintus fHon T 1g $7,000,000. good. Whatever it does realize is that owned Tettyd Greents tosiitng ALWCIEh ATl onatl, ren AUCL ARcEpClits has devote : 1s a dollar. amount of §1000,000 were in circulation. 1 a confirmed *club bachelor of our custo has devoted her life to much gain. A dollar o as a_member of the Union Club Drab book ttempt he scheme 3 ¥ ) c 1 he number of years she has been attempt of the schemers to hex/ foxtune;; 1o In the Joiin - the forged deeds brought in a room on West books they to explain: ‘Of eople who know on having the reference to the but the great mass v appearance books and brow: nything to do by fajl- change. a place of habitation.” She But she never refuses to see membe ntly on the and for a of the press and is always r came near to sleeping in a differ- about her lawsuits, several of which she Ehiae Y alv has.on hand. THhat is what thought I came for and all ready crease with her long tale of sion s i e o half & hundred millions. The around the money markets of America < prged dends hougt . Ay s: blue book ! : texminghis 0 8 T ave failod dhe Rty Green Yas changedivery liftls Slel tha plot to light Mre Grech 8 Stommer. g mud S but od books aiways > ? other hat tor $1.000,000 and looks and acts now. just the same as she Mr. Bisbee, set to work to protect her look an h no _idea., oid glving Joseph Choate Her hest friend now, next to did five years ago, when she attracted Interes and bag the crooks. A trap wag Club. 3 o In the trade, what a differ: FoliHer. hnaded: v who lives with her, the attentlon of the financial world by set for the forge nd the assistance o ther. ence it makes to a book to be bound in 0 1t s hie Detactive Bu- It 1s vears since they have lived tog It is t g about in the “Joseph's gone to England,” she said. T e shand Is on Ino the.boldness of her investmeats and her the Chief of Folice and his Detactive Bu- S e b T red 000000000ooo000O-'JoobooooooooeoooooooooooooQceogoe090000000600000000000000OOOO0000000000000000000000000 000000000000 0000000000 SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE WILSON'S ADVICE TO THE AMERICAN FARMERS. clares That the Old-Fashioned Farmer Must Go. His Golden Prophecy of the Coming Farmer. - hungry. Any such action as that on our Ing to the city ulate the raising of wheat “There er was a time,” I— He Says That @dgricultural Colleges Are Just as Necessary as Upiversities, and De with a lot of the tific fact, but it shows the beneficlal re- get "“ cotton from mostly? The Lot sald Mr. Wil oned farmer is doomed. James W. Wilson, did find out, came b z rt stin s methods are worn out. They must give way Tce, and I am having ten tons of it sent sults of Investigation for the farmer in 2 ,You see, that is why I am I *'\~h‘\““_~‘1 asibelit et B 8 ; - . to the wi f 3 th of to-day i e scientific 5 o ough the country now to experi- almost any direction. or € ; 5 : . e e Nile and would give son slowly, “when the boy who wanted to armer youth ot to-dayiisithe scien HAG iyl ot o connsy . Over fh Bouth Afifos mow thers Is a e Wilson if he belleved the the Russian farmer a chanco that-has be a farmer, and was willlng to go about t it the right way, had a better chance 1d starve Europe never come to him. I do not s: we really had they could all do these things mo- than he has to-day, nor as good. He has of the world. ment, over in Europe, but if they had to got scientific facts to aid him now where the truth of get along without us that {s what they before he had nothing but example. 1d. would do. “So far as making the boy stay on the irope mever will get along without farm is concerned, I think it is a great however. She will never want to. She mistake to try ' to influence him. He 1ks too much of us. And there are no should be allowed to follow his own in- ment that we cot we wanted to; t )1 of the food market here 1s no doubt abot t half of your question,” he sa stand to-day we have what or calls th on the rest u world in breadstuffs. We could th ment with. I sent a man to the steppes of Russla man whom I sent ther @ grass there ing and growing the date palm. T being done with the idea of introducing it into Néew Mexico and Arizona. You sce, , who is study 1s i'me this when I called on him the other day. He sald it he fact that something else was needed to make the because I heard there owing the plo People, he sald, that many months of Wwinter would not if they wanted to, but the: re sustained . I got it, experimented with it here, Bow to make his ground yield the most. and found that what I heard was right. I believe in expansion in agticulture, and he familiarised himself with ithe 10 WLl stand all sorts of winter weather why not? I reckon if we had stuck to tl o ueh @ condition that as little old thirteen States we would not have been able to supply ourselves with b Mr. Wilson says. It and yet of a good deal in the farmer's intere 2 : 2 il o M r glven a new impetus to the beet sugar industry. quick as moisture strikes it will grow % & S e Vel ofihE i o Ratio : el at will » Germany pout and Denma Erowns LItiis that That s not a particularly scien- the things we need to eat. Where do we certainly supply the markets of the worl d set of circumstances that could entirely clinations or he never will get to the at i SGerman, "and Denmark ‘frown It i that it it was necessary, i€ they w uld maks stop-the shipping of ment and breadstuffs front. There is just one thing to remem- B B by il G 5 3 oo@!t Worth our while e are not growing to Europe. here can be no laws passed ber alway that is that a boy doesn’t y trog @000ttt OO0 e +0406+04640+O0 3B, (i1 of the wheat we might. Take my in this country that will do it, and if any make a good anything unless he wants to and cheese tt mark’'s dairy products have a. out of the Orient and elsewhere, * 3 £ '8 own State of Towa. Why, the farmers country tries to have an international law Let him stay on the farm if he feels so because they would remain good while ours would spoil. Now it will be dif- ¢ £ & : I | E l & there could raise any amount of wheat so construed as to shut us out anywhere inclined and let him go to the city 1S & B e R e B K o ke L i ey and ? A‘ M06 l Kl D BT wo \] 41f you would give them a dollar a bushel we will have the law changed. You can- doesn't.” = Suoy Lihe cans i 1 States Government is quietly adopting a new'and T J But at the present price it don’t not keep the American farmer down.” “Where do you think the best opportu- jcultural scienc It is the same pollcy that has @ . mo & donrt valsn o b e ey the Gate palm, preliminary to cultivating 4 pay them, so they don’t ralse 1t. Do you believe,” I sald, “that there pity lies for the young man who wishes y If we should stop shipping food prod- there is as good a chance for the farmer to be a farmer?’ I asked. The answer rous n to 8 cts to Europe, although such a thing boy on the farm as there was fifty Years came with the speed of a Mauser bullet: 1 New Mexic 1 the farmers of the fDespemee Adventure of Two California Miners Driven [if5 0 (00 e might not starve them ago? Do you think the hoys ought o bs Ty the United States of America.” 3 Wilson gays ther ‘nited_States, and the f era in store for Mis e 51 o5t . hi\’w\l York and ‘lhv opl Valley in particu- b 1a k. . Eh will be the new-f one: = o will bripg it aboul e is the ? S L 0 ” o S Ltzwill ihaiithe jiaw fashioned favmeriw Hotwillibetos St CEDEE RS HE S ¢ Into a Tunnel by the Ravenpous Beasts. Jout, but we would make them mighty urged to stay on the farm instead of go e ananCon SCELSCEL SR S e e S HE farmer of the future must be of our beet sugar torte: nnmu\nnu;;> UNTERS, miners and ranchers “That sight spurred me on and wo® >0 S P-4 * ROES a practical s st. The man products. Now then, all we have to do in generally agree that wild ani- dashed right into tho tunnel. At this mo- 5 : e 4 orstan ! B ole have been bolder the last ment I am sure the wolf in the lead made this country to make our butter just as good in the tropics as that of Denmark ¢ is to raise the sugar beet and feed the $ wants t0 waste of the factories to the dairy cows.® dry spell and the consequent as neces- There is no heaithier fodder than this, ¢ e rclty of small game are ac- 1o et a few feet in-the lead ‘and grab at an agricul- and it will make the sugar beet a mighty goountable for this, but the extremes to the picks and shovels. v who wants valuable product in a great many way Mok some.of the beasts have gone are’ ‘‘We were about forty feet back to the sctor, & preacher, to CORBE has made an.appropriation to Iy incredible. turn, and as the tunnel is large there was abh help along the cultivation of the sugat @ Up in El Dorado County a few ddys ago iderable light. i A o cultural. col. Deet: In this way not only is our sugar $iwo. miriers, George Nelson and Henry rack the first one that comes along, . = production given a great impetus, but we ®Young, were driven into a tunnel by a gasped Henry. ‘If you show fear we are s who could In- are strengthening our dairy products A "¢ eight wolves, and had to fight gone. Theyil be here in a second if they out in lowa we could send the only way in which they were weak. g%r their lives with pickaxes and shovels. are coming at all.’ 0ad of chemists, Now we will not have to take second & The wolves were. vanquished, but both ~*“And in a second we were right in the ney for them, place anywhere. ¢ en are confined to thelr beds with track of a fight. The big fellow that was who. could +This shows how necessary it is thal Qwounds right behind me only waited for the rest e science of making the farmer should and the science ¢ According to the story told by Nelson of the pack to catch up and then dashed The:Government ol Zof agric what scientitic @ a terrible fight. right after us. Qur running away seemed al colleges all it wants jpvestigat s about. If I h e camp of the two miners {s about to give the beasts courage. more that is done the better. wanted t6 find out why Denmark’s butt Jur miles from Pleasant Valley. On the “The big fellow seemed to have singled not furnish instructors, because would keep where ours wouldn't, if T h iliside several hundred feet above the me out, for he jumped straight for my not been We are Z0iNg not sent a man to Denmark to learn the $-amp is the entrance to the tunnel in throat. I was ready for him and floored to give a few young men a chance at the gcientific reasons, we would not have beer: ? chich the two miners work. It was on him with the pick between the eyes. He 1ent to learn the sclentifle features n the position we are to-day—able to¢ihe way from the cabin to the tunnel went down like a log. g uctiod. In agriculture, but Wwe can enter into competition with Denmarké hat the wolves made the attack. “Then 1 warmed up to the fight and om-ylluy a few. without feeling that she has any advan- “] had no idea that there wers any went for the wolves without glving them e kg Jeootes wpmienC e Snd Rl s "‘; olves close to camp,” sald Nelson. “Of g chance to come at me. Henry did the ough the asticultiral {s in everything the farmer has (o cul- 3 huree I know there are lota of them UP same and we lald about us on Ay A A p;u; tivate and stow that the reason for hix? "(ho high mountalnis, but I never ex- and wherever we saw a wolf one of us e PIRE S Bsingan aguicultral sctentist da fpung @ cted to see anything dOWN OUT WAY 0¥ hit {t. But we didn’t get In another blow 4 i If he knows the reason why things don’i ¢ joger than a polecat. like my first one. Every wolt had to be Sraw, OrdbIsEiw, j0r 1iD CR0DE MXO PISENT. It et ekily MOTOAY, morning When giruck several times. I hit one fellow on or small, he gains a wisdom that willg genry and I started for the mine. There the head and rolled him over, but in a help him the next year to increase his o oo0F% 0 (00 on the ground. Just afe g o p : crops and make his Income greater.{ oo “CC ~ e couple of seconds he was on top of my The sclentl e e hinr:dafter leaving the-cabin our Grall stéxts peck with his: feeth Iu my Ahouldes. of making a big income than a rmegoright up the mountain side. Then It Henry caught him one over the loins with a I man who insis runs over a sort of lower spot right to hg shovel and lald him out, but my left od mmethods. of othe mouth of the tunncl that is at the grm was useless for fighting after that that father { bottom of another hill. and things began to look mighty serious. ot know ing to have trouble to ) ‘He and T had climbed up the steep «part of the time the wolves would mect. ascent and stopped a moment to get OUr crowd us, and part of the time we would . that the farmer $hreaths. Just then I heard a queer bark crowd the wolves. Our arms . and legs winter than ever before in the a biteatm leg. But he didn’t follow me higtory of California. The long in on the instant. The darkness scared him a little, and that gave us the chance nderstand the o business wh does not science of the sofl has on the farm. If the b sary it ural colleg to-be a ts are being ta y what “There ‘methods more @back on the trail over which we had Just. were bitten and our faces and hands than out w igate their land. ypassed. scarred, but fortunately we managed to I am going to have that matter thorough- 4 «Whose dog is that? I asked Henry. heat the beasts off. Iy looked ir Hundreds of acres of fine{ * ‘Wolf,’ said Henry. ‘Listen.’ “After we had killed three wolves and lafld are be beeause the men ® “The bark came again and then several nhad all the others pretty badly battered Wwho irrigate them do not understand the ®barks all at once. There was no doubt up a big fellow got up behind me and selentific facts about it. They let too ¢now but what we were being chased by knocked me down. For a moment I much water run on the land; this brings ywolves and we hadn’t a splinter to make thouyght all was up and expected to feel the alkall to the surface and the result (4 fight against them. the sharp teeth in my neck. But Henry is that there no use trying to grow ' “Suddenly we saw the wolves emerge was on hand. With a swinging blow anything. Now what should bo done 15 ®¢rom 4 little clump of timber and take to from his shovel he caught the wolf under :nce of the sofl S0 a5 t0 $our trail as if they were sure we were the jaw and put it out of the flght tho.water and in What ¢ their meat, They bounded up the hill. I’ Another blow on the back of the head entine reasoning had beeh §eigoq gpeliound, I¢ It haanit besn for stxeiched bim out sood. et bt e I e T would have been eaten right “Then I got up and went at it agaln. 2 g smparatively @ S0 1 e is an old hunter and knows I was badly used up, but so were the re- the sclen. 18 thing or two about wolves. maining wolves. In a few moments there eding of® ‘“‘Run for the tunnel, he shouted, was only one wolf left. He lost courage d was $8Tabbing my arm and almost dragging and started to get out, but Henry cor- ehance. Grab nered him and spiit his head with his P ime along. ‘It's our onl agh the So the picks and crowbars there. Run!" shovel. Then we sat down to rest and otton encd? “By this time the wolves were not more: cool off. . or made fertilizer of. ©than a hundred feet away and coming up “We killed elght wolves, and all of them ) et Ol ¢the hill in long jumps. We ran a race big fellows. We were badly used up, but it had been fed e, heLthat would have broken any track record. with no serious, wounds. We managed use our e eh the farmer 1s that he don't | When we had covered about half the dis- to get back to our cabin, where we found %o that fort kmow hosw to make the best of what he $tance to tbe tunnel the wolves were not neighbors. They went up and skinned our in all other got, and he has got to learn the sci-@more than fifty feet behind us and gain- game after seeing us safely in bed. The eight skins are beauties and I guess we E one clse told h and so. He knows ing and beer rctic T or at pres- g to what he y—because t of Denmark’s g so well in k State and cte with the but Because it won't keep 3id market in the Ori out of it practically be will not stand exportation of a climate. Mind you, hink what it migt places we never had any, troubls, but the ence of agriculture to know how. in aute we struck the troples with but There one way to find these ‘* ‘If they catch us we are gone' sald can sell them for enough to pay us for x erent we are igno of. I heard thatgHenry. ‘Run for all you're worth. the time we have to spend in bed. T am eesc it was v }:’;n a man to De < to find out in Jaj they were growing better I “Th i § 1 was only a short. distance fecling all right now, except my shoul- CSht it Hoojoarned that:tiie DRI irice than we i & rce that was morc $ahcad. A big fellow was just behind me, der. It hurts occasionally. Both of us dairymen fed the ‘ ir cattle food that con- marketable and cheaper to grow. I sent$snapping his jaws as if he was sure of will bo out In a week. Pass me the ar- ” tained the sams substances : : : «We Swung Our Weapons as They Sprang at Us. as the waste a man out there to find out about it. “He §his game, nica. kA