iff? jrg-L-.-)' Extemporized Grain Bins. It is no small job and requires nol ft little lumber to make a grain bin for the stables, having four compart ments. The cut shows an easy way of securing the same accommodations. Four empty sugar barrels are set in a row and secured by a few narrow strips of board. A cover is hinged either to the wall or to this frame work and the bin with four compart ments is complete. It may even be made by setting the four barrels In a SUGAB-1IA1IKICI. GRAIN Illy. row and hinging a cover to the wall behind them. A sugar ban-el is very commodious and easy from which to dip meal. , StifTtcestion to Buyers. The obligations of the advertiser of live 'stock to his prospective patrons are well understood. He must be hon est In describing his stock, prompt and courteous In his correspondence, and faithful in carrying out his part of a contract with a distant customer. The breeder who neglects such things as these cannot meet with success, no matter what advantages he may seem to have In other respects. But the other party to this business, the in quirer or prospective buyer, Is also un der obligations. He should know what he wants, carefully describe it, and having secured a price on It from the breeder promptly accept or reject It. Where catalogues are sent and prices do not suit no further correspondence, of course, is necessary. But when a breeder quotes a price by letter he should have a prompt answer, and It should be just as prompt If the offer Is rejected as It would have been if ac cepted. Stockman and Farmer. To Keep the Heat In. Many poultry houses become ex ceedingly cold on winter nights be cause of the rad iation of heat from the interior through the win dows. The best plan Is to have double windows, but where these are not practic able, arrange a curtain as shown in the cut, with a draw cord run ning straight up from the win dow, then over head and down to the door or al leyway, If the house has one. It "WINDOW PiiOTEO TION. Is then an easy matter to pull the cord tight on going the rounds at night, dropping It in the morning. This Is an Inexpensive arrangement and will greatly aid In keeping fowls warm. Shrunken Wheat for Poultry. There is probably no better nor cheaper food for fowls than shrunken wheat. It is better for them than the plump grain, ns It contains all the gluten and mineral nutriment that the plump grain does, the difference being that the latter has more starch which poultry has no use for except to make fat. Shrunken wheat free from weed seeds ought to be the main feed for laying hens. It makes condensed nu triment almost equal to the fresh bone which should bo used as Its supple ment, and which serves not only as food, but to help digest whatever else besides Itself Is In the fowl's gizzard. Boil Inoculation. The Alabama Experiment Station has made tests In soil inoculation, and It Is announced that the dust blown from a field over another will fit the land for a leguminous crop If such a crop was grown on the field from which the dust came. The result Is a con firmation of the theory of German scientists that bacteria from certain crops may be bottled for transporta tion with a view of Inoculating soils, and thus adapting them to the crops desired, but which previously could not be grown to perfection on the land. Setting a Hedge. In setting arbor vltae for a hedge let them be small, and set them about two or three feet apart Keep them well headed and trimmed low until the bot tom Is well filled, or they will never look well afterward. If kept free from grass and occasionally manured there Is no reason why they should Dot last a lifetime. Heat for Hothouses. The old-fashionetl coal furnace with flue Is now out of date for cheap and safe production of beat for hothouses. It Is almost always used by beginners, Jk0 because its first cost is less. But the coal fire Is not always reliable, and the heat cannot be regulated so as to pre serve an even temperature. Sooner or later pipes with hot water will be used, and in this way the hothouses can be saved from either extreme. Too many forget that in growing vegetables in winter under glass an excess of heat may prove as serious an evil as a frost, as it Is harder to recover from. Economy in Hog Killing. For those who have but one or two or even three hogs to kill, it is far cheaper to take these where a larger number are to be slaughtered, and where there are all conveniences, than to kill the hogs at home. Heating the water and getting ready generally take a good deal of time. When this Is done the work of killing and dressing re quires comparatively little time. It Is far better for farmers to co-operate in this work. Every farmer who has only a few hogs to kill eau have this job done for him much cheaper as well as more easily than he can do It for him self. Worrying the Cow. A rough, quick-tempered man should never be tolerated around the cow sta ble. The cow loves quietude. Any dis turbance which excites her lessens, If It does not stop, the secretion and flow of milk. It is very easy for an em ploye, by kicking and beating a cow just before or while he is milking, to lessen her milk flow by one-hnlf. This Is called "holding up" the milk. It is really a prevention of milk secretion, and the milk thus lost does not come down at any subsequent milking. Corn Cobs for Kindling. Corn cobs are often used for kindling fires. But while they light easily, the cob being solid does uot create a draught of air and the fire soon goes out. Finely split kindling Is much bet ter, as It gives more heat,' and thus sets lire to the heavier wood. But If dipped In kerosene and placed under the wood, the cob will furnish heat enough to light dry wood in large pieces without using any other kindling. It Is the only way In which kerosene oil can be used with safety in lighting fires. Double Walls for Warmth, In building for warmth it should never be forgotten that tight double walls, enclosing a dead air space, are much better than a solid wall of any material. These are equally useful to keep out cold In winter and the exces sive heats of summer. Air is one of the poorest conductors known, and when It is confined so that no current affects it, there Is greater uniformity of tem perature than can be secured by any other method. Timber Grown in Europe. Valuable as is land In France, Ger many and other portions of Europe, timber Is grown on portions of each farm In some localities or in large tracts by the governments. It is known that the growth of timber is beneficial to agriculture, In tempering the atmos phere and regulating moisture, and the lesson taught by Europe, with her cen turies of enterprise, should not be over looked In this country. When Apples Are Best. There Is a particular time in the ri pening of every fruit when It Is at its best for eating and that with some va rieties is very short. So when you eat an apple that Is highly praised for its flavor do not lose confidence in human testimony if you do not find It all that It has been cracked up to be. There la great difference, too, in apples of the same variety grown In different locali ties. Dispose of Bnrplus Stock. Though food is cheap for feeding stock, it Is never worth while to win ter what even after keeping is sure to be worth little more In spring than In fall. The young growing stock make a positive gain In size and weight. If any other stock does not do this, see to it that It produces something to pay Its way, or else dispose of It at once for the best price to be bad. Marketing Honey. At a German bee convention a large dealer of Berlin advised that beekeep ers should dispense as far as possible with the services of middlemen, deal ing directly with the consumer, sell to customers at home, at the market of the next town and in groceries. For retail small glasses are preferable, hold ing one-third, one-half, two-thirds and one pound each, with elegant labels. The Cow Pea. The National Stockman says: "Just why the cow pea is not more widely grown Is hard to see, for It certainly Is one of the most valuable leguminous plants that we have for restoring the fertility of the soil. And as a money crop they are not to be despised, as the seed la generally as high as beans." Beardless Barley. Beardless barley Is not a new variety, being grown to a limited extent in the East, and rather common on the Pacific coast, where It Is used for producing hay. The fact that this barley has long been grown and has as yet made little headway seems to Indicate that Its yield Is In no way remarkable. World's Largest Creamery. The creamery at St. Albans, Vt, la said to be the largest In the world. The milk of 12,000 cows Is converted Into butter dally. About 10.000 pounds of butter are made every day. Steatite Daniel Webster when In full practice was employed to defend the will of Roger Perkins, of Hopkintou. A phy sician made affidavit that the testator was struck with death when he signed the will. Webster subjected his testi mony to amost thorough examination, showing by quoting medical authori ties that doctors disagree as to the pre cise moment when a dying man is struck with death some affirming that it is at the commencement of the dis ease, others at its climax, and others still affirm that we begin to die as soon as we are born. "I should like to know," said the opposing counsel, "what doc tor maintains that theory." "Dr. Watts," said Mr. Webster, with great dignity. "The moment we begin to live we all begin to die." A week ago a major of the Victoria Guards died and was given a military burial. The regiment is a crack one, and we went to see the procession. When the mournful pageant was over we stood thinking of the solemn scene those sad-faced men, ' the reversed arms, slow tread, sad music, and touch ing sight of flag-draped cotlin, and un used helmet. Some one touched my el bow and said: "Was the dead glatie man any thin' to ye, ma'am?" "No," said I, smiling in spite of myself. "Ye looked so gorryf I was full sure he was somethin' to ye," she continued disap pointedly. "He was a human being, and a brave soldier; that should be something to all of us." "Vis. Vis, to be sure. But wouldn't It be grand, ma'am, mournin' for a man like that, supposln' he was somethin' to ye." When Joseph Jefferson's oldest son was a child the family lived iu a quiet, exclusive neighborhood in New York City. Master Jefferson, being a time boy, joined in play with the other boys in the street One lady who was very particular as to with whom her chil dren played admonished her boys for playing with a stranger, saying: "I don't know that Jefferson boy. Who is his mother?" "We don't know who Sis mother is," was the reply, "but his fath er works in a theater." Two Irishmen were cleaning a win dow in a tall building. To facilitate their work they had stuck a board out of the window and Pat stood on the end of it which was outside and Mike on the end Inside to balance. Sudden ly Pat shouted: "Molke, I've dropped me sponge." "Thot's all right. I'll go down and git It." When he got to the street he found Pat In a heap on the sidewalk and exclaimed: "Well, well! How did yez git down here so quick, Pat? I ran all the way down, but be dad yez hov beaten me." ' Sir Walter Scott had his share of cu rious experiences shortly after being called to the bar. His first appearance as counsel in a criminal court was at Jedburg assizes in 1703, when he suc cessfully defended a veteran poacher. "You're a lucky scoundrel," Scott whis pered to his client when the verdict was given. "I'm just of your mind," re turned the latter, "and I'll send you a maukin" namely, a hare "the morn, man." On another occasion Scott was less successful In his defense of a housebreaker, but the culprit, grateful for his counsel's advice, gave him, In lieu of the orthodox fee, which he was unable to pay, this piece of advice, to the value of which he (the housebreak er) could professionally attest: First, never to have a large watchdog out-of-doors, but to keep a little yelping ter rier within; and, second, to put no trust In nice, clever, glmerack locks, but to pin his faith to a huge old heavy one with a rusty key. Scott long remem bered this Incident, and thirty years later, at a judges' dinner at Jedburg, he recalled It iu this Impromptu rhyme: Yelping terrier, rusty key, Was Walter Scott'B best Jedburg fee. An English paper tells of a clergy man who had two curates, with the old' er of whom he was at swords' points. On being appointed to another living, he decided to take with him the young er curate, whom he liked, and when he came to preach his farewell sermon he chot e as his text: "Abide ye here with the ass, and I and the lad will go yon der and worship." MOTHER LOVE IN SNAKES. A Marked Exhibition of It Seen by a Naturalist. Even the cold-blooded and clammy snake evinces maternal affection, and I am fortunately able to produce evt dence corroborative of this statement that Is fresh In my memory. On March 21), while seated on my front porch, I noticed one of my dogs, a yearling P"lpy. acting In a peculiar way on the lawn. He was circling around a small, clrcumscril)ed sixrt, every now and then thrusting his nose towards the ground, and then quickly Jumping back. On approaching the animal I discos ered that the object of his playful as saults waji a bunch of snakes, a three or four year old mother and her last year's brood of young. The day was very warm, the sun shining clear and bright, and those creatures had emerg ed from their old den or nest In the ground, a foot or so away from the spot where they were lying, and were sunning themselves. When they ob served me they made an attempt to re gain their nest I killed two of them, however, before they could enter. 1 had read somewhere that If a snake's young were taken and their bodies dragged along the ground, the mother snake would follow the trail, and If found alive she would conduct them back to the nest. I took two which I bad killed, and, after dragging them along the turf, deposited them on the pavement some fifty feet from the den: I then resumed my seat on the porch and awaited developments. In a short while the mother snake emerged from the nest and, after crawling about for a second or two, struck the trail and at once followed It to the pavement and her dead young. Fortunately I had a witness In the person of my Ice man, who was delivering lee at the time, and who was dumfounded at beholding such high intelligence In a creature so low In the scale of animal life. I killed the old snake (for these snakes garden moccasins become harmful after the third year, eating young birds, etc.), and ten of her pro geny, leaving two pairs to carry on and perpetuate the race. A VERY QUEER CLOCK. Made of Willow by a Basket-Maker Ten Years at It. It Is a common experience, says the Jeweler's Circular, that In many branches of industry, outsiders with out any acquaintance with that partic ular branch sometimes compose works of unusual artistic character. This Is quite frequently the case in the art of horology; Ingenious men, who under stand nothing about watch making and Its fundamental principles, suc ceed In constructing, aided only by their ingenuity, an artistic clock that chal lenges the admiration of the world. The latest addition to this list has just been made by a simple basket-maker, one Schulz of Aichach, Upper Bavaria, who manufactured a clock of willow braiding, perhaps the only one of Its kind extant. The clock on which he worked for about ten years, is seven feet six and a half inches high. The going work contains thirty-four wheels. the teeth of which are of hardwood pegs, braided in. The pendulum, of willow braiding, Is six feet six and a half Inches long; the principal dial, also of braiding, has a diameter of thirty-three and a half Inches. It indicates central European time, while four smaller dials around Its circumference point New York, St. Petersburg, Mad rid and Athens time. The big dial also has sixty-one small (.ls, each with a separate index indicating the date with day stated ou a little plate In the center of the dial. Over this calenda rium are represented the different phases of the moon, which are visible upon a silver disc of the moon. The work is crowned by an automatic fig ure which motions away each escaped minute by a polite flourish with its hat. The movement also has a chime of 32 bells. The clock Is actuated by a weight of twenty-five pounds, and the chime of bells by one of fourteen pounds. The latter Is also regulated by a fairly large windfly. The move ment has a free escapement without balance wheel and has no case; each wheel is visible. The whole clock weighs 248 pounds, and Its price i $1,250. Attacking a Wildcat. How savage and wanton a wildcat may be Is shown by an experience with a miner In Josephine County, Oregon, had last summer, and which is report ed in a local newspaper. The miner, whose name Is George Fendall, has a camp on Beaver Creek; and one even ing he happened to return to It just In time to see a monster wildcat entering the hut, evidently bent on rapine. The cat sneaked In, peered round, and not finding a man, pounced with great fierceness on an overcoat which hung on a nail. Whether the animal had some notion that a man was within the coat, or attacked It because he knew there was not a man in It, no one will ever know; but he certainly bit and tore It with fur, and being of great size, while the hut was small, presenteu a most formidable picture to the man crouching at the door. Fendall, however, was far from lx lng awed by the animal. He proiosed to avenge the Insult to his wearing ap parel. Watching his opiortunlty, he picked up a long and heavy Iron bolt and attacked the wildcat from behind. One well-directed blow laid the mon ster out, stunned; and before he 'could rally, Fendall had finished him with an ax. This was a bold feat, for if the first blow had failed to stun the animal, ren'iall would have stood, with the lolt as his only weapon, but a very poor chance of escaping serious Injur. Queen of Scrvlu's Jewels, The Queen of Servlu, who spent the summer at Biarritz, was so unfortu nate as to lose some more Jewels. It will be remembered that she lost a dia mond riug last year. This time It was a parure of diamonds. A few days lat er an advertisement appeared in the local papers to the effect that If the jewelry were returned to the Queen she would present It to the poor of Biarritz. Two days afterward she re ceived her lost or stolen diamonds by post, accompanied by a sheet of coarse paper, on which was scrawled In print ed characters; "I shall be curious to sec If a Queen can keep her word." The Queen did keep her word, and present ed the restored trinkets to the Sisters of Charity, who started a mammoth subscription list, and a poor little seam stress in some way became the fortu nate possessor of the jewels. Burglary at u l'riiton. Burglars broke Into Holloway prison, England, recently, ate up the remains of the Governor's supper, emptied his larder, drank his beer, leaving the tap running, and carried off such of hU household effects as they enred for. The burglary was not discovered till the women servants arose In the morning. Whither Are We Drifting? It Is a curious fact that water Is sell ing at five cents a pint In Arkansas, and yet a Southern brewery had to make an assignment. Louisville Courier-Journal. A banana peel on the ride walk l a nuisance, and the man who tex on It usually tumbles to tha fact THE FULLNESS THEREOF. Among the discomforts of life and the fullness thereof, reaching to every family, there is that which can so easily mitigate or entirely cure, the wonder is why we endure and suffer so much. From big pains to little aches, which are the wear and tear of the physical structure of man, there are always remedies good, better and best. The choke should always be for the best as the surest and the cheapest. In chronic or acute suti'eriug with rheumatism.neuralgia, sciatica or lumbago, or with the minor ail ments of sprains and bruises, orof soreness and stiffness, the eltlcacy of St. Jacobs Oil and the fullness thereof in so manv com plete and perfect cures make it stand out as the best remedy for pain. Why then should we stand on the order of going for it and not go at once? Iu numberless eases the aggravations of discomforts and pains are from delay. Why should we sutler? Poe has immortalized the raven, Whittior the robin and Longfellow the snow bird that sung to the monk Felix, THE CUBAN SCARE. Although the diplomatic entanglement with Spain over Cuba is to some extent Influencing the stock market, Wall street expects no seri ous complications. Nevertheless serious com plication with other maladies may bo expected to iollow an attack of biliousness which is not checked at the outBi't. The most effeotual means to this end is Hostctter's Stomach Bit ters, an admirable remedy, moreover, for dys pepsia, malaria, kidney trouble, constipation and nervousness. Among the natives of Mexico there are, according to Lumholtz, about 150, 000 survivors of the Aztec race. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS. Wc are asserting in the courts our right to the exclusive use of the word "CASTOklA," and "i'nXHER SCASTORIA," as our Trade Mark. I, Dr. Samuel Pitcher, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of " PITCHER'S CAS rORIA," the same that has borne and does now bear the fac simile signature of CH AS. H. FLETCHER on every wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA" which has been used iu the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. Look Carefully at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought, and has the signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER ou the wrapper. No one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. March 8,1897. SAMUEL PITCHER, M.D. I know that inv life was saved by Piso's Cure for Consumption. John -A. Miller, Au bable, jmcuigiui, April zl, lsuo. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ( Lucas county. ) Frank J. Ciiknky makes oath that he is the senior partner of the lirmol F. J. Chkney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that the said firm will niiv the sum of ONH HUNDKE DOLLARS for each and every case of Catahkh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cvji:r. NIAAK J . CHliiNEr. Sworn to before me and subscribed in mv presence, this OtU day of December, A. D. 1881). A. W. OLKASOS J seal I Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, 7c. Hall's Family Pills are the host. A Aer being swindled by all others, send nsstamp for particular!, of King ISulomon's Treasure, the ONLY reiu-wer of manly strength. MASON CHEMICAL CO., P. O. Box 747, Philadelphia, Pa. A Boston genius has invented a fire machine that will squirt out fires with sand instead of water. UEWAKE OF HOEPHINE. Special forms of Buffering lend many a woman to acquire the morphine) habit. One of these forms of suffering is a dull, i irsistont pain in the side, accompanied by heat and throbbing. MB8.LUC1' Peabley, Derby Con tor, Vt. , says: "I was very miserable) was so weak that I could hardly got around the house, could do nothing without feeling tired out. " My monthly periods had stopped and I was so tired and nerv ous all of the time, I was trou bled very much with falling of the womb and bearing-down pains. A friend advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkharn'sVegetableCornpound; I have taken five bottles, and think it is thn best medicine I ever used. Now I can work, and feel like myself. I used to be troubled greatly with my head, but I have had no bad headaches or palpi tation of the heart, womb trouble or bearing-down pains, since I commenced to take Mrs. jVinkham's medicine. I gladly recommend the Vegetable Cora pound to every suffering woman. The use of one bottle will prove what It can do." ' Ml I ON 1RI1L To Any Reliable Man. Marvelou appliance mid on month's remedies of rare power will foe nnt on trial, without tuiy ad vance payment, by the torttmotit company in the worm in ne treatment or inn, wpuk, broken, nm- cuuraifpa from enectM of x:nn, worry, over work. fco. Happy nutrrlaKe ewureii1, complete rtH- torauon or nuteinpmeiii or an roouHt corumiuin. Tha time of thin oltur la limited. No C O. 1. nrhme, no riweptloh, no eJfpoMiire. Adore ERIE MEDICAL GO. RWVttr." American Type Founders Company Cor. - -3- iM J JJJ .. .J IU II II t n 1 I DA AO lr!w,n "fl locating (I. ,ld or HUrrf I i Beat Cough Hyrup. Tuu. Good. IJa r ,.,.T fy" In time. pi.ld y drugglM. kf , HOME PKODUCT9 AND PURE FOODJ 'All Eastern Syrup, so-called, umiallv verr light colored and o( heavy body. Is made from glucose. "7'm (Vnrdtn ltrtvr" is made from Sugar Cane and is strictly pure. It is for sale by first-class trrooers, in cans only. Manufac tured by the Pacific Coast ByrcpCo. All gen uine. "Ten (jtirilm Wiui" have the mauufac turer'i name lithographed on every can. Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 60 cent bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 10UISVIUE, K. AW Y0RK.tl.t- Dr. Sanden's Great Invention No tno-e rhcumntlsm: no more lame back. klkuey trouble, nervous debility, elo. The caime 01 all ntsease aim weaitneH ia over come by Oils great Ufa renewer, Dr. Sanden'l Klectrlc Helt. It ponrseloc.irieliy hunt he body lor hourat a time, building up vitality ana restoring all theorganato their naturul health; oondltlon. Send ior free book. SANDEN ELECTRIC B.ELT CO. B3 Want W Hublngton Mt. l'ortlaud, Or. Ple.iut mtntiun thi tiper. In buying seed! "rronnniy U cxtrHvnaiMAc." beoauiHi theeoit orcultlvi.tlun wasted mi Inferior nwia Iwuyl lurgaly Moeeda tb original coat of tbe best and deareat amda to be had. 1 be boat ta nlwnra tha ebeapeau Pay a trifle mora for FERRY'S 'SEEDS and aluHiui get your money'! worth. rxwB cents per paper everywnert. Aiwnyi me neec. oeeo Annual rree. k D.M.FERRY CO., Detroit. Mich. a 1) For Accidtnti or Sickness, for Klon- diker, Traveler, Rancher or Family. Price S5.55 WaGDARD-CLAKKE & CO., Portland, Or. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGS $ Buell oo Lamberson 130 FRONT ST PorTLAND. Or, WHEAT i Mate money by aucceaful peculation in Chicago. Wa buy and Mill wbeat on mar. tlna. Fortunea have buen made on a small beginning by trading in fu ture!. Write lor full partioiilara. Kent of ret erenr.e given. Heveral yeara' experience on tha Chicago Hoard of Trade, and a thorough know ledge of the bulne. Bend for our free refer ence book. DOWNING, HDl'KlNS A (Jo., Chicago Hoard of Trade Brnkera. Oflicea la Portland, Oregon and Seattle, W aah. YOUR LIVER I It Wrong? Get it Right. Keep It Right. Moore'a Revealed Itemed y will do It. Three) doaea will make you feel better. (Jot It from your drugglat or any wboleaale drug home, or from Utewart & llolmea Drug Co., Healtle. w V.i Winhijiw. Kimi uiva H unp .liitultl alwiivi t.,i.i,N..nuiifnii,i;ii. -I.i.i.l.l .!. h 4 i umhI fr chllnl-i'ii uwUUiitf . It MiolhfM tti flilld. loft- 4 cm Ihu gum., allar- Pttia, curni wtml rollr.anil la I . th. h iwnmlv tor dlarrhuaa. Twenty At. ciiu a lttl.lt lthMwiU Uj tA EVERYTHING FOR TtW PRINTER.... We lead and originate fashion in.... TYPE Second end Stark Sts. PORTLAND, OPrrrov 1 i t r i Mill. 0 COMPLETE CROWN j