Fning WOK rf, add waa^ fierce eye, tache, faUe He looked' ard the It_ Eagelbrecht, «- j with a faint y2 )road, bald sjoti tep so catlike ^1 c!i indifference ifei ons, that the Q^i plauded enthnfi[^ III announced th»t e rounds, and «, eart" of the other elude when Q^' the end of fiy^' ordinary fenciB» rcing gloves, a was strapped over )ver the heart vai box, like a blaebg iel(i blood whea A the heart. ened on the left ife, twelve inche» nd padded point Xed Mallahan le public to keep s," and the mea -heir arms and legs Qusclea in working mpcd their feet I row nods of ap. irakichi, who dow lelf. Engelbrecht usly, eying the toniua, when he ped forward and half way, and the iged beneath th* a miuute. Th» :he and the crowd td clashing began len jumped ba r eight feet at a uch strength and bc'xera admitted it. At the end o! sf ere dripping with patriotic backers aia?m. Ned Mal- o bladder bust le men to their 8 like the first, ex- ed at each, other ir knives glancing nded on the men's inful way. This- e finished without ched. Each bad d the honors were beginning to show iman. Hia knife the sting of a- be all ever the ubled up to jab- grar.'), and now trike down and middle .^f the feint and grabbed wris's. A fierce ntcniufl got away e. But Engel- i\ ' urishiDg his le -liirtction, he n, and with a |ii)fe in the mid«- |u, v^ih Engel- ;Tn-.r.iis were wild iso"' jfcted to the |udly advocated who led it, out I's clubs restored begciij. his only hope, Jvr how. But also, acd would |mid the Italian advantage al- :n pierced at the match, cham- |d receipts went The Germans- lore much sur- P no German. |e the dwelling mere lodging Idled at Pekin » 1 greatest math' Iroduced within^ Istern mathemft* â- . 1 that which ha» • -that a point lagnitude. li., I this definition^ lust be an in- I that in grapei i â- Mncticn ofsn-, periphery, and:|, lis the Aatonn^ lie acids to the last J l, where le moment i ad ger greater^ M atQt Aboot Chiir«Iii«. nations we asked » lifKd to krouWa la «J»"|S. is tb*t they d-. not ,1th tbow »" xo attempt to ngn- »« *^* tT-'^Sout the aM af the Umt- '""'l "^rure trying to saU aocoe, tlio omet«';Xur^a/aid of a oompMs. '^^^ me people do churn, and h»ve ^*" H^ne 80. withont a thermometer, '*C do not belong to th.t cU« which i t fhe hSiert prices. To chum pro- 5/Ue wolkshoSld be done at atomp- ""!!'« nf six y-t*o to six!J7-fivedegr«rAs »»°fhi; Undone there will be less c^m- 'So*^h° batter coming. If the tem- «mre istoolo^ add warm water to Sit if too high, ".--Id 'rnk'SmoHem simple matter, use cold wa*^er. It but withouo a tber- 'm«^*'no degree of temperature will "TnowD. Another fault is to cham too vilv Batter requires time, and the S must not be done with too nanch of h It is done when the globules ?a\r and should not be worked too E;f"rt«d, although it should be il separated from the buttermilk. B/ il meaus getad*iry thermometer, which .ill only C0B5 you fifty c ants, and use it ku-niier aid ^nter, even though your Erandmother did not use one. Poultry Susfifestions. If they are cared for, and always have blean wholesome qoarters and not crowd- td poultry wUl always be healthy. If a [owl merely acts a little "cranky," do noi imagine that it is sick, and commence jfoffiQg with drugs simply remove it to C pea some distance from the flosc, and let it alone a few days. If it proves to be very sick, chop off its head and bum I. For cholera, a stron" solution of hyposulphite of soda, given three times a day, in teaspoonful doses, is probably tie test remedy we have. For gapes, dip a leather in turpentine, and Insert it into Ihe windpipe. One application will gen- Wallycare two are sometimes necessary. [)ip scaly legs in kerosene two or three times. A little sulphur mixed with the toc.i once a week in winter, prevents hacking of the crop, and irregularities of Ihe bowels, caused by over-eating, and Ihe constant production of eggs. Gravel bd coarse sand are necessary for the ^i^estion of food. Crushed bones, old jiaster, lime, etc., are necessary for the lormation of egg-shells. Cayenne pepper t small quantities, mixed with the food IcauionalJy d;:ring the winter, promotes ^•laying. Fifty iens will eat and trample down half as much grass, if yarded upon it, \i will keep a cow. A c3op of small chicks I tli9 garden will destroy an en'irmons lumber of bugs and worms. Do not Jermit your poultry to forage upon your Neighbor's farm it ia a mean, contempt- bie trick, and often practised by men y^ij would resent it if accused of petty Diarery. Du:ks and geese prefir to lave their nes's on the gronnd some ili not ky any whore else Place their lesta in rows alone; one aide of the house. ad separate them with thin board par- '.•ns. Live Stock Kotcs. Tbia is a trying month for live stock, rid they v.ill need extra care until the Bsiurcs prcdnces sufficient herbage. All aiinais sUuuld be kept from exposure to te lOLg, cold storms. We have seen |auy tlocks and herds that were obliged oti ui deep mud continuously through [le spring. The yards should be prop2rly rained, and thb floors of the sheds an* leding-ruoms kept dry. Horses have pa y V. ork at this season, and need to be kd and ^r; unicd tccordingly. Mush de- ends upon die driver let him be patient be jeutle. Fr?f.ring horses are never [iin:? 'heir best Mdchcows thrive when !â- - ^lean and fed with an abundance of ..isume food. Let the milking be pj by careful hands, otherwise new pi wi,! be tpoi'ed, and old ones dried E iriy lamba, with their dams, need ^r;u pens. As the days grow warmer, \i liCks get mure active. Dip the infect- 5 "eep in one of the preperations sold :he purpose. For lice en calves, pigs iJ toTis, nothing ia better than grease ierosene. Speak now for June pigs. re brooding hens clean nests, with food pse at hand Be an " early bird " in ' spring.â€" [American Agriculturist. f epave for the Hatching Season. ^fle time is now approaching for the ferested poultryman and the thrifty Qer who thinks, and righly, that fowls ut 1 "^*'^g®'i» are good paying stock [tne farm, to make preparations for the Rai setting of eggs and hatching .of fcicens. It will not be well for those â- 2^ ?° "°* P'ace for the young *\r attempt hatching before the ^^l«ch or the first of April. PuUets gout at this time lay in October, with good care, will continue to lay u! "' T^®° «gg» are scarce and high, I cockerels will bring more for boSri "^ee months old than when raised onr fl ' """'^^ ^°°g«' Keep watch /;ar flocks, so that the difference in « dispositions can be noted. Use only trt^^'t^ "^t®" t^* ««e quiet and ^chned to be nervous, for^they will S mLi!^*^^ "«' hatchers/ and i W«vS^°^*^« "«•* frequently W. •i*'^8' "^^^^^id not be depended rS ft^ 'hole com Imd fceah fowR^^/^P °«»fc wd body of JJ^fwe from vermin, for if the/ an ««»y »iU not sit qutetly, MidtboJ mOki lu«» beaa W|ib j« ' '^N'^MMiBaA'lilbaidiMiMJMuiMfid ii^ ion* dfi^ i' aa^, ief a atonic |»«» flj^ of f^Ja, wiUalvi9«lM wMk •ad nonmit. wt* m the «stMB«. ^^ ACKICVI.TirS4i; REHg. A. two-year-old native heifer, owned by Mr. Jobn Donovan, Ipavid^ Mawu, is leported to haTa gWen milk between January 15 and Dee. 1, 1884, irhioh made 454^ puunds of batter. Duenaaing the numofae'ara of brae- dnat. Prof. J. Konig abowa Uut when bones, previous to grinding, are freed from fata by treataient with betzol, they are purified from ingredivnts which have no agricultural value. ' Neutral Stock" ia the ten a Ohio4go rendering eatabliahment applies to its iard, which is prepared and sold for malting country butter. "Imitation creamery ' we presume, is the name the mixture will take on when it geu to the counter of the retail grocer: Professor H Monk, a worker of some eminence in affrioultuxal chemistry, says that moderate mtueular exweiae on the part of cows increaws the yield of milk, but that violent motion hiaders the pro- cess of milk secretion. D«iry farmers may turn his remarks ti profit. It is now asserted that the ojnunon earthworm is the cause of the g«9e para- site in chicks. In examining earth-worms from a gape-infected district the gape parasite was found to be coiled up in the structure of the earth-worm, and on feed- ing chicks with such eardi-worms the disease was at once produced among the brood. Probably as curious an article of ex- port as Is often carried In an ocean steamer was lately taken out to New Zda- land. It consisted of a consignment of ** bumble-bees." At present clover does not "seed" in that country, though it grows readily, because there are no bumblebees to fertilize the flowers. The importer hopes that the bumble-bees will save him $5000 a year in clover teed. For quality, the Polled Angus for early maturity and size, the Shortliom for grass beef, the Hereford for general utility, the Devon for butter, the Jersey for milk, the Holestein for cheese, the Ayrshire for cold, the Galloway for heat, the Brahma, and for starvation, the Texas. This is the way it was put by an old dealer and breeder to the Texas Live Stock Journal. Dr. Dio Lewis says that some years ago he laid a thousand feet of paper pipe, two inches in diameter, to convey water fro n a spring to his house and bam in the country. It has never leaked, and has never imparted any perceptible taste to the water. This pipe ia made of ctrong paper wound into pipe form and thoroughly soaked in tar. It bec9mes BO hard and strong that it will bear a pressure almost equal to iron. Mr. F. M Wllsonj of Selma, O., is quoted by the National stockholder as believing that the prevailing idea thai sheep require more vencilation than other stcck, is largely erroneous. He especially cautions against such ventilation as will produce a draught. "They had better be out of doors than in a house with a draught through it." And he believes tha^i such exposure is what produces "atiffaess" in aheep that are housed at night The Ayleebury, England, dairy farmers have been sending milk made from cows fed on ensilage, to a milk condensing factory, and the company find so much trouble with the milk that when the time fer making new contracts comes round, milk will be refused that is made by cows fed on ensilage. The New York State condensing factories have had a similar ezpsrience, yet ensilage mil is pronounced by the city milk peddlers as of the very beat quality. From a summary of auction sales of pedigree cattle compiled by the Breeder's Gazette, it appears that 7500 passed under the hammer in 1884, bringing a total of $1,880,000, or, say, $250 a head for all age» Shorthorns brought $200 each Herefords, $376 Polled Angus, $376 Galloways, $312 Holsteins, $261 Jerseys, $314. With all the breeds, the prices, at private sale, were firm daring the year, in spite of financial depression and the outbreak of contagious disease. CraftlDK Frog's Flesh into Hn- man. 'A new use for the frog has been discov- ed. A medical correspondent of the Lon- don Xancet says* that, finding the treat- ment of granulating wounds by skin grafting is in country practice liable to fall into disuse through the unwillingness of patients to part with the 11 tie bit of skin necessary, he has lately been induc- to try experiments with other substances as a substitute for human grafts. As the outcome of these experiments he finds that bits of skin from a decapitated frog make grafts which admixably answer all purposes, foin|ing a sonrce of supp^ al- ways at hand in the country except dar- ing the winter months, and being easfly applied en acooont of their uniform ithiekness, and necwasltating no pain to /taffering humanily. TbesUn of a single frog yittds giafts for an enonnoos oc- tent rf smfaoe and prewrvei ita vitdUj BO long that if the patient i« •t.a dirtwo^ the perfeiflm (rf skm riqnirad^BBa be earned by the siugeoin in lus poeket for an lioar (nrmorawidioirt injoiy, prowded it fa wzi^ped in e a l mpwi e t t is w e to VKntjA d«jiog. •re. ^hei ^#^J gaxd aaddMirfaeaatwiMite sranaatkayliateninaMNiinfal sOeMe to ^wotdaeddssssedtotheab^tlM pn- feet. Aftertheraflhaageafafowvatds, tworft(ie priaonaKB ate kd horn tbe room Thra fire am Miter. These axe the torturers, and nothing mote fell or hangdog than their looks oan be im- a«;UMd. Foar of them aeiss the Arab that ia still stiuiding before the px^eofc, and the potur wretch, as he is c*st aptm the ground, throws at him a glanoe elo- quent with agony and fear but the great plan's eountenanue r^sains fixed and impassive, and he makes no sign of grace. Tile victim was thai placed on one of the alabs, with his ohes( resting on the stone, in which position he was held by two of the exeeutioneM. Two others next raised his legs until his feet were fn a hor z intal position, in which they weoe retained by meana of » cord fastMied to either end of a stick. Each man held the stick with one band, while with the other he kept fait hold of the Arab's legs. In the grip of these four powerful and expert men it wa^ impossibfe for him to move, and almost impossible for him to writhe. On this the fifth torturer, who IumI tidcen no' part in the preliminary proceedings, came forward, holding in his hand a sort of lash consisting of five strands of twisted gtitorhide. The face of this man was singularly hideous and rapidsive. He raised his arm and struck with tbe regularity of a pendulum Uie upturned feet of his helpless victim. At the fourth stroke the Arab uttered a cry of pain, and at every fresh stroke the cry was repeated. But soon the cry became a scream, the flagellated flesh visiUy shuddered, and the aoles were seamed with red and livid streaks. Sitting silently on my crshion, chewing mechanically the tobacco of my extinguished cigarette, I could not help shivering with horror at the sight of so much suffering. I felt as if.I were under th4 delusion of some terrible nightmare. Oiman Bey, '.his secretary, and the five executioners, with their stem and sinister features, looking unmoved on so cruel a sight, seemed for a moment rather the creations of a disordered imagination than being of fl»h and blood but the heavy thud of the strokes and the scrfams of the victim recalled me to the sad reality which I was so reluctantly witnessing. Then the punishment ceased, and the Arab, with a ghastly face and body shaken with a feverish trembling, haA to incline himself respectfully before the man by whose order he had been so cruelly tor- mented. Helped by a guard, for his maimed and bleeding feet refused to sup- port him, he was then led, still moaning with agony, from the torture chamber. The other two Arabs were afterwards punishld in like manner. It was now past three o'clock, and hii Excellency, putting on his usual pleasant smile, gave me his orders C3ncerning the services of the polic â- I then saluted him and hur- ried away from ;,the place where I had seen the practical application of a barbar- ous jurisprudence. â€" HUaire Oay's Book en Egyptixn Tortwts. THE L4W OF FINDINC. .4rllcle Circanistances Under Which the Belongs to the Finder. The law cf finding is this The finder has a clear title against the whole world except the owner. The proprietor of a coach or a railroad car or of a shop has no right to demand the property or pre- mises. Such proprietors may make regu- lations in regard to lost property which will bind their employes, but they cannot bind the public. The law of finding was declared by the King's Bench 100 years ago, in a case in which the facts were these â€" "A prisoner found a wallet containing a sum of money on a shop flior. He handed the wallet and contents to the shopkeeper to be returned to the owner. After three years, during which the owner did not call for his property, the finder demanded the wallet and the money from the shopkeeper. The latter refused te deliver them up on the sround that they were found on the prendses. The former then sued the shopkeeper, and it was held as above set forth, that against all the world but the owner, the title of the finder is perfect. And the finder has been held to stand In the place of the owner, so that he was permitted to prevail in an action against a person who found an article whi(^ the plaintiff had originally found, but aubseiuently lost. ^Hie polioe have no special rights in regard to articles lost unless those rights are oonferred by statute. Receiv- ers of articles found are trustees for the owner or finder. They have no power in the absence of special statute to keep an article against the finder, any more than the finder has to retain an artiiele against the owner. BsoiLED Obocsb. â€" Use only the loeasts, or fillets as th^are called. Bub with batter, broil ouefuUy, season with pester and salt, and serve on toast with a-mt of eonant jelly on each fillet. M. Herbert has sent the Aeademy of Scienees, Paris, a note on the earth- quakes in the sontJi of Spain. He says tnat tiiese dirtvi^lanofla»^ tiie moat aerions thai haVe been neorded widiin the Us- terfe period ofSpala, mast be aMrfbvted uinhisiTinlj to kwd nansna, and enasiat' lv«oth«alie«a|«i» of A* aoQti^qliii ^bm» teoMd of aaeond 4lnta,fiddad, ori ^j|^|gd» aadjaftM^ J* S ^^ ly eld tfiW 'iiiMBl .et iiuti va vpclpk friendeit in die dilK atClBi VMileai btirit^ tfcan wmaL Coi^iez fiak iidntu oiaai^ framtite hawitedd ofearafiify kballed jsm Mid bottles «b the sh^ea aOiHilsd with .the faagraaee of tolnioo sMoke, see o ied to impart » myateiioiiB diann ik the oonvepaatioii. **I have made it a point for thirty yaara," said thedra«^ "top^ ataietaktontiea tog preawipuea whilel am compoondiBg it, and Ihento drop it out of my isiad entoaly. ^Katfa the best W19 to avdd making mistakes." A gill with a shawl over her head came in and presented a bottle a^ a piece of paper on which her modwr had written 'Plete send 6 eents wthorinha for sore throte." Hh qoietiy pomd some am'ca into the bottta, pasted on a label, took the inroffared nickel, and sat down to resume his talk. "As I was saying, I always forget a prescription as soon as 1 fill it. Of eouxce It is numbered and preserved for future reference, but if one of my regular cus- tomers should ask me to pub up some more medicine same as the laat, you know,' I would have to send him home for the bo tie which had the number of the prescription on it. If I had attempt- ed to remember all the medicinea I luad to mix, I would soon be insane. A drug- g St ought to feel that wh'n he fills a physician's order he holds the life of some person in his hand. To mistake one drug for another at such a time may cost a life. Such mistakes result from carlem- nessas a rule, not from ignorance, ss most peop e think." **Dad Wants a poor-house blister," said a boy who had entered the store unob- "What does he want it for " "To put on ma's side where he â€" where it pains 'er " "Do you mean a porous plaster 1" "Ohlyessir." "In nine cases out of ten, I believe," the druggist said, when he had opportu- nit/ to te up the thread of his discourse again, "carlessness and not ignorance ia the cause of druggists' mistakes. A druggist who knows tiiat he is not pro- ficient in the business will look carefully at every jar or bottle which he uses in compounding an order. An experienced druggist, unless he is a caref al than, will sometimes mistake one drug-for another whidi has a similar appearance, because he neglects to look at the labeL Such errors happen more easily when a man permits his counter to become litered with drugs not wanted for immediate use. It ia safer to clear the counter after each order is filled. The worst possible habit for a druggist, however, is to remember prescriptions already compounded. When a man attempts the feat of thinking about an old prescription while he is at work on an new one, h is in a fair way of committing a murderous blunder. 'Good evening, doctor." A man with a long, thin nose, who had entered softly, waited until the druggist had walked from the prescription counter to the front before he enquired in a low tone "Is there any sickness in Mr. Pillboxe's family I see his ' boy came in here a while ago." "If you wish to know, about Mr. Pill- boxb'a you had better go and ask him. I do not make a pracdce of retailing gosiip about my customers." ' 'Ah Good evening ' ' "There is another reason why a drug- gist should forget his work when it ia finished," satd the compounder after the inqnii»iiive man had departed. "Such a practice enables a man to keep the con- fidence of customers without trouble. Nothing is more fatal to the business of a druggist than a well-founded belief ainong his neighbors that he will gossip about persons who buy drugs from him. It is surprising how many persons make at- tempts to get information from druggists about their neighbors. I have given blunt answers in such eases, and, curious- ly enough many of the persons who have appeared to be most offended at my re- fusals to give information have be- come regular customers of mine. In such cases the golden rule can be followed with profit as well as with pleasure." Tlie Gordon Type of Heroism. Gordon's English heart or Eosrlish faith did not narrow or confine him. His msuhood was of the universal type. Place him in China, in Abyssinia, in the Soudan, or among English roughs, this slight, ddicate, and almost effeminate- looking man became a king in whom men trusted. lie is the most striking example of Uie universalism of the hero oharaeber in the whole range of biography. He had some force in him that was intelli« gible to everything that had in it the pas- sions of a sum. The world will wait long for another such career, and longer yet pMrluq;M, for another such example of simpUoity in character and in action. En^and has had heroes who loved duty better than life bat. never one be- fore idio, while he loved life littie and never eared for it at all as an end, crowd- ed its days and nights, in nnpi^fing rig- or, with the serviee wwdi makaa it most worth living. Said that da^er little lawyer, Ambrose H. Pardy, TsstMday **There fa a res- taraaat in Ohatkam str e et where I oaa set twanty-fo«r kinds of mMtt and vege- taUesforfiffesMioaatB." *«How do yoa dothatraakedOolaMlFaOowa. **Io0d«r el#%ill. Kiiii^hl limit wfuLwia easainl ail8atiaa» attd if takan the%oatf||old. Tip is. Alwayi: he earafol to oaa eaxthoaware diahee for pottn^ aiway gwfas, sovpa, •tok Psraona kava been poMoned by care, lassnesa in oaing bx soeh porpoeea metal vesseb wkieh ouatHaed verdigrfa eaoaed by the aatioaapMi the BMtal of vegetabia Bflsda. Roatmi^ be removed fttum steel by eovering the rusted part with oO or fat, fatting fa resBamaevwal hoars, and than wiping off with a soft (doth. Then rab with a mixture tf two draohms eaostio soda and four ounaes opodeldoc Leave thfa on tea minutes and tab off dry. When roasting a chfaken at amaU f oid there fa danger of the legs browning or becoming too hard to be eaten. ToavoU thia, take strips of doih, dip them into a little Bseked lard, or even just rub them over with lard, and wind them around the legs. Remove them in time toidlow the cmoken to brown delicately. The "Boston Housekeeper" mentiona as a cure for nervous headache a mixtiure madeof me quart of cider, three taUe- spoonsfol of white mustard seed, three of burdock seed, and a small horseradish root, well steeped together. To be kept in a well corked bottie and taken three times a day, one wineglass f idl for a dose. nie following formula is taken from the /ScieniiAc Amerioan for the benefit of those who wish to nu^e their own bak- ing-powder: "Powder and dry separ- ately by gentie heat one-half pound tar- taric acid, three-fourths of a pound of pure bioarbanate of soda, and three- fourtha of a pound of potato farina. Mix dry, paas through a aieve, and pre- serve from air and mofature." Kelations of Cholera to Topo- Kraplilcal Conditions. No doult oan be entertahied that the configuration of the earth has a oetain in- fluence. Relative low-lying sites are very favorable to cholera. Where the surface of the earth has an undulating outline, it. will be found that districts and individ- ual houses which are situated on the summit of the undulation vary freqaently have no, or only a very smalt, deposition to the development of an epidemic of cholera, while in the hollow of the undu- fation under like conditions the opposite holds good. The truth of this statement is seen in single districts where par:s or single houses exist on the summit and others lie low. Another feature which is found in every epidemic is the falling off of the diaease in the neighborhood of and on mountain ranges. The Himalayan Mountains,those of Lebanon, and the Alps, have always formed the places of refuge for fugitives from cholera. Now and then an epidemic occurs in the monnl»ins these excep- tions will be dealt with later. The im- munity, or the slight susceptibility of mountain ranges for cholera is wiimessed in India as plunly as it is in Europe. ' A familiar example u the complete freedom from cholera of the hill stations along the Himalayas, in which, through frequent c'langes of troops, the cholera has every C lance of being taken up from the plains. In the severe epidemic of 1869 there were only two cases of cholera in 19 hill- stations. A similar experience is met with in naarower areas. For instance, in Munich, in 1871-74, the frequency of cholera was widely different in tne seven barracks of the garriion. In the low- lying Isar Kaserne (occupied by cuiras- siers, heavy cavalry regiment), out of one thousand men there were forty cases of cholera; in the high-lying Max II Kaserne (with two field-artiillery regri- ments) only three cases, and thia without there being any diffarence in the con- struction of the caserns, the occupation or the diet of the men or the drinking- water. â- »^»»â€" .« â- A New Science. One was a devotee of fashion and pleasure. The other was a pale-faced woman, whose manner displayed great energy. She held in her hand a slip of paper, with which she measured around the neck of the fair creature of fashion. "That wiU do," she said. **What you fi i my dress by measuring my neck " **That u all I want," was the reply. "Dear me," said the lady, 'how strange." "Gynametry fa the name of the sci^ ence," said tiie lady with the paper measure. "The system of measuring the female figure was discovered by me after years of patient study and hard work. I was then dressmaking in Columbia, Ga., and Profa. BarUett and Battle gave the new science the name of gynametiy,' which fa made up of the Greek woras that mean female measurement. The rale*, however, which apply to the female figure apply with equal and abso- lute force M the male figure." **Do you mean to say that you oan make any dress fit by simply measuring my neekr "I do, ifl see you." **And if you don t see me " **Then I mast know the measure of your neck, tiie mesare of your wafat, and whfah toe fa the hmgest " "Dear me I Why do you want to know iriiiidi toe fa the lon^^l" "If your big toe fa longaot, your dhealdOTaaxeaqoaie., If your ascend toe fa longaatyonr shotddara ata drooped, and the waiafe fa ooneapondingly ahorfesc. IHoc^piag ahinildm are those timt slope flw aeok oafawg d ne t afeooped I u7"-|ifriiWM»ilfSiiiiiBfti ^dih mliMik ^^^tuMihuitk liiliiiiiiiiilii