The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 10, 1886, Image 6

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    wo BBA
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
AT
—The Mississippi Legislature has
adopted a memorial to Congress in favor
of the Eads Slap Railway scheme,
— Work was begun on the® 23d in
Roach’s ship yard at Chester on an iron
steamship Line. 1tis the first vessel
started there for more than a year,
-— Another cold wave, more severe
than its recent predecessor, has ap-
peared in the Northwest, accompanied
by a snow blizzard, Temperatures are
reported far below zero form Manitoba
to the Upper Lake Region, the mark.
ings ranging from 12 below at Chicago,
to minima of 26 below in Iowa, 35 be-
low in Minnesota, 40 below in Dakota
and 49 below in Manitoba,
his acceptance of the vice presidency of
a bank in New York, and other reas-
ons of a private nature, will make it
impossible for him to retain his present
office after the 31st inst.
—In the Senate of Virginia on the
22d, the Committee on Public Institu-
tions, charged with the investigation of
the management of the affairs of the
Colored Normal Collegiate Institute at
Petersburg, submitted a report. The
committee charge gross mismanagement
and recommend the immediate dis-
placement of the members of the
of the institution and the appointment
of a new board and the reorganization
of the whole management. The re-
port was adopted.
—'The County Poorhounse at Jackson,
was burped about 1 o'clock,
th th. Five of the inmates, whose
ages ranged from 60 to 92 years, per-
ished in the flames—three of them were
insane, one deaf and one blind, The
est of the inmates, about 35 in num-
r, were driven out without clothing
1 a temperature of 10° below zero, and
some of them will probably die from
exposure, One of the
William Mills, “the man who first is-
sued Sanders’ Spelling Book.!” He was
reputed at one time to be worth $250,-
600,
—PDorman B. Ealon on the 23d sent
to the President a letter offering his
resignation as Civil Service Commis-
sioner, to take effect on the 9th of
March.
—James T, Farley. ex-U, 8. Senator
from Califorma, died on the 21st, aged
55 years. He was a native of Virginia,
but removed with his parents to Call-
fornia, where he adopted the profession
of the law. He was elected to the
State Assembly in 1554, and became
Speaker the following year. He was
State Senator from 1860 to 1868,
—1It is reported from Monterey that
General Trevino has been appointed
Mexican Minister to Spain, and ex-
President Gonzales Mexican Minister
to France.
-Joseph Rankin,
from the
Wisconsin, died on the
vO.
yl
Representative in
Fifth District of
24th in Wash.
=~
nerrpeg
- One of the severest storms ever
known on the Pacific coast began on
the 17th, and reached its height on the
20th, There was an almost continu.
ous fall of rain and snow, the storm
boundary of Washington Territory to
and from the ocean to the Rocky moun
tains. The wind at San Francisco
reached a maximum velocity of eighty-
two miles per hour, Fences,
ings were partly demolished, and two
women were dangerously, perhaps fat-
ally, injured by the fall of a dwelling.
the Southern Pacific Railroad.
—The State Agricultural Society in
zession at. Harrisburg on the 20th elec-
ted the following officers; President A.
Wilhelm; Vice President, William M,
Elbridge McConkey;
B. Rutherford.
—The State Fruit
Treasurer,
Growers’ Asso.
the 21st, elected the following officers :
President, Calvin Cooper, of Bird in
idents, Josiah Hoopes, of West Chester;
terthwaite, of Jenkintown; Recording
Secretary, E. B.
Brinton, of Christiana; Treasurer,
George B. Thomas, of West Chester.
-Judge Harry White
on the 21st in
charge of forgery preferred by his
brother, who 18 contesting his mother’s
will, of which the Judge
was arrested
is
served two terms in Congress, was a
member of the Pennsylvania State
Constitution.
—At Youngstown, Ohio on the 21st
an explosion of melted metal in
mills of Brown, Bonnell & Co. scaltter-
ed debris in every direction and hurled
iron through the roof. John Wall
a blacksmith, was badly burned
will probably die. Two other
were slightly burned.
men
- Nine cowboys visited Burlington,
Texas, on the 20th, got drunk and
amused themselves by “firing into
windows and acting like savages.”
Finally, a deputy sheriff, with a posse,
drove the ruffians from the town after
killing four of them, named
Wimms, Trimble, and Hartley.
The Supreme Court of Missouri on
the 26th, rendered a decision which pro-
hibits the Circuit Court in St. Lows
from trying the contested Mayoral
election case there,
for four years from last
settles the case of seven Republicans
who were cgntesting the el
seven Democrats to city off
April, and
ection of
Baltimore Corn and Flour
the choice of the following :
Schriver, Henry A. 1'arr,
Fowler, George T.
Robert S.
Titlow, Charles D. Reid, Joseph DB,
Edward C, Heald, Alexander J, Godby,
George Frame, John H, Girvin,
Democrats who were conte or
of two Republicans, and
Republicans, who claimed seats ir
House of Munici
sembly.
decides that there is no Court in Mis
souri competent, to try a St. Louis con-
2
tested election case, owing to the }
$3
th
wie
ack
for
th
the trial of such cases,
~The New York Assembly on the
26th reconsidered and withdrew from
the Senate its resolution passed on the
John 8, Gittings.
gon's election as Mayor of
dismissed on the 27th, on motion of
counsel for the petitioner.
The Senate on the 27th confirmed
a number of nominations
of Customs, at Erle, Penna,
_-—
r
FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS.
SENATE,
In the Senate on the
tials of I. C. Walthall, elected Sen-
in.
a bill
provide for the settlement of the debt
of the Pacific Railroads.
of Iowa, submitted an
which was ordered to be printed and
it
protection
interests of
may be
and secunty of
necessary for the
the
of any of the companies
the bill, the President may order
the same, and that all such pay-
the United States shall become
subrogated to the rights thereof
paramount lens
Liectoral Count
, and Mr Morgan
addressed the “enate on the
After an execut
adjourned.
pertaining to such
ivi £8S i
*
ing
lic loss in the death of Vice President
Hendricks, After eulogies of the de-
ceased by Messrs, Voorhees, Hampton,
by Secretary Whitney and Senator Gor-
city in the evening.
the 25th, confirmed Charles J. Canda
to be Assistant Treasurer at New York;
John S. McCalmont, of Pennsylvania,
Commissioner of Customs, and William
M. Kimball Postmaster at Lebanon,
Penna.
—The President on the 25th nomin-
ated William H, Parker, of the District
of Columbia, to be Minister and Consul
{General to Corea.
~The total collections of interna
revenue during the first six months of
the fiscal year were $58,549 611, an in-
collections during the same period of
the last fiscal year. There was an in-
crease of $676,673 on spirits, an increase
of $989. 565 on tobacco, and an increase
of $437,801 on fermented liquors,
and a decrease of $74,475 on miscell-
aneous items,
When the resolution 1s back
the House it will be fully discussed,
—'The international billiard match
for 3000 points and a stake of $5000
between Schaeffer and Vignaux,
New York, was begun on the 206th.
in
was won by Schaeffer, 600 to 274.
— An elegant silk album, which cost
more than $500, was exehibited in the
City Hall,
It is a present for Mrs. U. 8. Grant,
bury, Hansom and Harrison, the re
olutions were adopted and the Senals
adjourned.
In the U. Senate on
the National University bill was taken
from the table and referred to the Com-
mittee on Education and Labor, A
was adopted directing
ee on Expenditures of Public
S, the 27th
14s
Rit
Comn
tion of that office,
on of Dakota was discussed
ivocated by Mr. Harrison, of
sna. Mr, Batler took
$ 2 5 fael 4 o & 4 ¥ *
yielded Lo Aamolion og
After half ar
}
a
Session,
éxeculive
HOUSE
in the
ordered
iv
25th wa
reading of the
House, on
that after t
shoul
3 i
be called for bills and resolutd
of Wisconsin
and, after
such cases, the House
the custon
in
journed.
In the House, on the 21st, the Wi
dows® Pension bill was discussed dunng
nearly tho entire session. Pending its
consideration the House adjourned.
26Lh
in the House on the
Committee, reported a bill, which was
the Committee of Lhe
death of General Grant.
to enable national banks to increase
cation and pame; to pension the sur-
vivors of the Mexican war, and ©
abolish certain fees for
to American vessels. Pending consid.
Keokuk, Iowa, on the 25th, Judge
Love remanded a saloon case back to
the State Courts, The decision of
Judge Brewer in a Kansas case was the
basis for this decision, The effect of
this decision on the Iowa saloon cases
will be that the State Courts will have
exclusive jurisdiction, except in cases
of brewers and beer gardens in use for
lawful purposes and built before the
Prohibitory Liquor Law was passed,
1884.
—Dr, Weber, Inspector of Diseased
Cattle in York County, Penna., on the
25th visited the herd of Samuel G.
Hoke, of Spring Grove and found 19
head of cattle suffering from pleuro-
pneumonia, The herd from which the
cattle were bought came from Balti-
more, and the remainder were sold in
Adams Connty.
The Deputy Attorney General at
Harrisburg on the 25th submitted to
Judge Simenton a form of decree of the
Court’s jud t in the Beech Creek
and South Pennsylvania Railroad cases,
with the exception of the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company.’ The matter is in
the hands of the Court, and it Is im-
possible to speculate on its conclusions,
Governor Lloyd, of Maryland, was
installed on the 21st in presence of both
Houses of the Legislature, He sald
in his address that he “‘believed in the
appointment of men of capacity and of
the same political views as the admins-
tration under which they serve.”
~The Senate on the 21st confirmed
Lambert Tree to be Minister to Bel.
gium; Charles D. Jacob, Minister to
Columbia, and Edward H. Strobel, Se-
cretary of Legation at Madrid,
«The commigsion to provide for the
establishment of a Soldiyr’s Home at
Erie, Penna,, met on the 26th in flar-
risburg and appointed Major W. W.
Tyson, of Pittsburg, as commander of
the home: Captain Tunnecliff, of Dorey
was made quartermaster, and W, W,
Thomas engineer. A commitlee con.
sisting of the gov General Beath,
ar Colonel Vaunder-
sointed to superintend = Agnes was
appe ; upenin
the home on Feb. 224. :
»
i
—A singular phenomenon was noted
at Austin, Texas, on the 26th. To-
ward four o'clock from out of a clear
sky a shower of very fine dust began
falling. There was no wind at the
time. The shower increased toward
nightfall, and continued through half
the night. The dust had a peculiar
effect on the lungs and throat, causing
irritation and hoarseness In some
instances. A similar phenomenon was
witnessed there eight years ago.
~The Mississippi river is blocked by
a solid mass of ice from St. Louis as
far north as the mouth of the lllinois
river,and as far south as the Genevieve,
a distance of sixty-five miles, The ice
is 16 or 17 inches in thickness,
— A south-bound passenger train on
the Illinois Central Railroad was
wrecked near Cairo, on the 76th, some
villain having removed a rail from the
track. The engineer was Killed and a
passenger was injured,
~~John C, Kimbrell, his wife and
three children were frozen to death in
a wagon while driving home during
the recent blizzard near Dodge City,
Kansas,
~The U, 8, Commissioner at San
Francisco on the 26th heard the case of
the President and Secretary of the Sam
Y up Chinese Company, who were charg
ed by Port Collector Hager with being
illegally in this country, The commis.
sioner decided in favor of the defen
dants and they will therafore be allows
ed to remain in the United States.
Their entrance was originally effected
by means of certilicates issued by the
Chinese Consul at Yokohama and en-
dorsed by the United States Consul at
that place. Commissioner Sawyer’s
decision twas based on the department
| rulings on the subject.
i
untary retirement of certain officers of
the navy the House adjourned.
of New York, from the Military Com-
mittee, reported a bill to aid fu the
erection of a monument to General
Grant in New York city, Mr. Peel, of
Arkansas, from the Commitles on
Indian Affairs; reported a bill granting
the right of way through Choctaw and
Chickasaw lands to the SL. Louis and
San Francisco Railroad, The ll for the
voluntary retirement of certain naval
officers was discussed, A motion to
lay the bill on the table was defeated;
pending a motion to recommit it went
over. A bill was passed forfeiting cer-
tain lands granted to the States of
Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana, to
aid mn the construction of railroads,
Adjourned,
A Larrre four-year old girl was put
and left, as usual in the dark. A ter
rific thunder storm came up and her
mother thinking the child would be
frightened at the lightning went to her,
On entering the child called out with
delight: “Mamma, the wind blew the
sun up just now; did yon see it!” Fear
had no entrance there,
“AND 80 Mr. Featherly will lead
your daughter to the altar next month,
Mrs. Hendricks?’ said the minister,
who was making his weekly call.
“Ah yes!” replied Mrs. Hendricks
with a sigh; “I don’t know what I shall
do without Clara.”
“Will Mr. Featherly lead Clam to
the altar the same as Aunt Jane says
that ma leads pa?” inquired
“How is that, Bebby?"” asked
minister, pleasantly.
‘iy the nose.”
Before assuming the responsibilities
of life, from which none can or ought to
shrink, all persons should have such
Propagation in their early education as
will guide them in the wise, healthful,
economical use of the materials with
which they have to deal, and in the di
rection ot lives which depend on intelli.
igence as well as on affection for their
waintenance,
We should read books not to quote
them, but to strengthen our winds and
stimulate thought.
: the
Distance.
On softening days, when a storm was near,
At the farm-house have
the gray,
And eaught in
ciear,
door 1 stood in
the distance, faint but
The sound of a train passing
warning bell when
made,
The engine's pufiing of sinoke unseen,
Across the miles between,
And so sometimes on a moonlees night
When th
low;
s stars shine soft and the wind is
{| To my listening soul, in the pallid light,
Come the trembling voices of long ago.
The tender song of love serene,
And the throbbing rhythm of
tongue
Across the years between,
A SRO RR,
"THOU ART THE MAN.”
passion’s
“It's the last straw that
camel’s back,’ sald Lucy, bursting into
| tears,
| The present
peeping into
dairy, where pans of milk and cream
array;
June sunbeams
the cool, stone-paved
were ranged in orderly
stone pols stood under the shelve
ited churn was already placed
justi
| housekeeper
| secretly envi
| and exquisite nealness,
“And it
umphantiy
i “And you
tri-
jellenden.
house
never
18n't the dairy alone,
remarked Seth
may go through the
from garret to cellar, and you'll
| find a speck of dust. There never wal
such a housekeeper as my wife.”’
Mrs. Bellenden was
gcarcely three and twenty.
been the daughter of a retired
delicately reared and
young, Wo
Ble
officer, quite
until she married Seth Bellen.
den.
“It’s very strange,” Lucy had writ-
ten to her father. “The farm is beaati-
ful, You never saw suct
butt por such
roses, full of red
oid onball trees,
and the meadows are
id th strawberies
jewels on the sunny hillsides,
I don’t thunk
in
ie ever
All
eggs the
Clover, as fe
body sketches, or reads,
f
there is a copy of Tennyson
s pelghborhood,
of or Mil
of many dozen
Dore
is how
egos they
* Wolian
how many
And
for wal
and
A Fear
» BAS & New recipe
hi
ay,
in
i
al Hang
Wil
441
vritsla
Tribe
new
they 2
pattern for a
its,’ is
¥
All its,
CTARLY
qui
| society.
But presently voung Mrs. DBellenden
and became on
herself caught the
i { Yer,
model housewife,
powerful, and Lucy
the whole end
thrift,
treadmill of
lieve that
life was domestic
money-saving and the
! work.
“My
thought
Hepsy,
afl rd
crop comes in,"’
“I try,” said Lucy.
After that she rose before day break,
and worked later into the night than
ever.
“What
{ bands, I
dear,” said Seth, “if
you could get along
the maid,
that new reaper
before the oat
is the
os
Aey?
matter with your
Seth asked one day.
as they used to be.”’
| Lucy colored as she glanced down at
| the members in question,
“1 suppose it Is from making fires”
said she.
| And then she took to wearing
| kid gloves at her sweeping and dusting
| and digging out of the ashes,
i “My coat is getting shabby.” Seth
| one day remarked,
| “Why don’t you buy another one?”
| asked his wife,
| Seth laughed a short laugh.
| “What do you think Mrs. Higgin-
| bothaan has done?’’ said he.
| ripped up her husband’s old suit and
| cut a pattern by it and made a new
| one, and entirely saved him ten dol
| lars.”
“1 could do that!” said Lucy, with
sparkling eyes, “I'll try it.”
“You could do anything, my dear,”
said Mr, Bellenden, admiringly.
reward.
Company began to come a8 Soon as
the bright weather set in.
All the affectionate relations of Mr,
Bellenden soon discovered that the
farm-house wus cool and shady, that
Luey’s cooking was excellent, and that
the bed-rooms were neatness itself,
Some of them were even good enough
to invite their relations aus well; and so
the house was full from April to De.
cember.
All the clergymen made it thelr home
Pat Brother Bellenden’s when they came
to Sylvan Bridge for ecclesiastical con-
ventions; all the agents for unheard of
articles discovered that they knew
somebody who was acquainted with
the Bellendens, and brought their car-
petbags and valises with that faith in
human horpitality which is one of life's
best gifts,
Mrs. Bellefiden’s fame wont abroad
wmong the Dorcases of the neighbor.
hood in the matter of butter and cheese;
TEER w
i
| partments of all
| dnd the adjoining house-wives took no
fhe
Lil
Bellenden, ‘‘just as
i borrow of Mrs.
| well as not.’
And one day,
when poor Lucy, un-
{ Uncle Paul was coming to the farm,
‘Another guest!”
! ingly.
And then uttered
| that heads our gketch,
she the proverb
| Bellenden.
| the most
“Don’t fret, Lutie!
peaceable old gentleman in
| the world, He'll make no more trou-
{ble than cricket. John’s
thought she couldn’t haye him because
| she had no hired girl just now"
| “Neither have I I" sald Lucy,
| Hously.
“And
pany.’
“And I am supposed to be
it I" observed Lucy. bitterly,
“And don’t want oid
folks It's too
trout added Seth,
a fo
wi
rebe!
Sarah Eliza don’t
fond
Reuben’'s girls
staving there, much
le, they say,
ner
night have sal
lip to keep back
1, instead
he to sleep? The
} % - $ fo
the front roon
the |
Akad ll
A iss
chamber
occupies th
Pattersons slee
the hir
. and
” ry ¥ ¥ ¥ 3
ial LE FOO,
added
the 1
ot little den openin
r four weeks, vainly ex-
Mrs, Belford to
had never
i
t
ttle baby, bad
ing from
the kitches:
pecting Mr. and dee
part; and that si vet had &
{ chance to Invite Ler father to the farm
3 :
in pleasant weather.
iad
ut she
was magnanimous and held
her peace,
“Oh, you can
him!”
“There's that li
the ball where th
“Bat it 1=sn't
Luey.
“You ¢
gether ous of
Beifords’
for
and, lightly.
1 at the end of
Y fa
Badd
Luna
ys 3 3 }
Bald 3 Lusi
80M
place
i IN
pleaced
y ei 1 ts
all easil vi
room; an
3
11 mr ¢ ryisal ty vy ws # : we # 3 4K
PUL Up 4 musiin curtan he window
There “
in the corn
are
ack a mat-
hitewash the cell
The cow:
1 ¥
ET oe
LYVETVIInRE
ies ]
np laugaing
1sband rau up t
2 Yiehd
sad little
ail by
Lie steps,
laugh,
poor, tired-out ghost would
stone pavements, and scrub
die: I
ghost in a dairy before, but
unk that it might easly be.”
little bed-room was 0
Hie
1p, for all that, as fresh as a rose, and
7s
I were (0 never
| I shoul
i
| complexioned old man, with an
fashioned cravat tied in many
around his neck, and a suit of
| blue, with brass buttons,
He had the polite way of half a cen-
| tury ago, and Lucy thought she should
like him very much, if she only had
i time to get acquainted with him,
But she was churning ten pounds of
butter a day, and there was the baby,
| and the company, and the young chick-
nele Paul arrived, a dried-up, yellow
old-
folds
navy
{ing society, which was to meet at her
| house that week.
She was almost too busy to sleep.
But Uncle Paul was watching her
| quietly all the time,
He came out one day to the barn
| where his pnepew was putling a new
{ handle on a sickle-blade.
“Pretty busy times-eh, Uncle Paul?”
| asked the farmer, scarcely taking the
| leisure to look up.
{| man,
about the reason
I left your Cousin
| Elab’s?”
breathing on the blade and polishing it
| with his silk handkerchief,
“Dorothy died-—his wife?"
“Oh, yes,” said Seth,
fever, wasn’t it?”
| “No! bluntly answered Uncle Paul.
[It was hard work. That woman,
Nephew Seth, did the house-work for
eight persons, Eliab didn’t even let
her have & woman to help her with the
washing and ironing.”
“Must have been a regular golug
brute,’ said Seth, tightening the handle
a little,
“All the sewing, too,” added Uncle
Paul—‘‘the mending and making.
Never went anywhere except to church.
Eliab didn't believe in women gadding
about.”
“Tne old savage,’ sald Seth,
“She was fond of reading, but she
never got any time for it," said Uncle
Paul. “She rose belore sun-up, and
never lay down until 11 o'clock. It
was hard work that killed that woman,
and Eliab coolly declared that it was
sheer laziness when she could not drag
herself around any longer. And when
ghe died he rolled up his eyes and call.
ed it a visitation of Providence.”
“Why didn’t the neighbors lynch
i
i
LT AL SE a ———
to in-
dignation at 1
a
st,
Uncle Paul took off his glasses, wiped
them vigorously, and looked his nephew
the
the
“Why
4 «9 J
your’ said he,
face
don’t the neighbors
Beth dropped the sickle and stared.
Paul,
Are
‘Nephew Beth.” sald Uncle
impressively, **thou art the man!
you not doing the same thing?”
“1 I gasped Seth,
i fo ha uA F .
Aik fhe work ol a
people,”
vr “ :
Tour w 8 doing
Hixtaoer
household of sixteen Ba
HRN
cle Paul,
3 drudging she
rising early and lying down late: she
offering her } on the shri
your farm and its requirements, I has
seen ber grow thin and pale even dur-
| ing the few days I have been here, |
bave carried water and split wood for
her, because there was no one to do it.
I have seen ber carry up Mrs Belford’
breg
Mrs. B
and
up ife ne
daily to her room, because
ford preferred to lie in
cooking dainty {
bed
dishes for Hele
Patterson, because Helen wouldn't eat
he rest liked.
what No galley slave
» ’
made
i hired men
arrangements
a
wy eyey oven
engaged
servant
* Voge
vik
and a
house
he telegraphed t«
*
} BYivan i 1
al once
ridoa
PLIGRE
“she deserves a treat,” he
shall spend the s
SYR TTY
1 mime]
A Miserly Patient
& gous $ ur ald *
gE Tue siOTy 5 na Os
H 8 was
yery
Ww “@
callnd
miserly
Hardpay.
physician :
$ tr att i
bt to atlend
Montreal
‘ ¢
iate al nig a
whom we will
1
call
very
old man,
He found the latter in a
frame of mind, and unable to
a single word, his jaw havi n
The affected member having
been reduced, Hardpay asked the doc-
ter bow much he charged,
“My fee, sir,’’ was the reply, “is $5.”
“Five dollars,” said Hardpay, affect-
ing astonishment ; *'I'll give you §1 ;
not a cent more.”
A bright idea struck the doctor; and
he pretended to waive the question, as
{ if disinclined to bandy works about sc
anxious
articulate
iis-
§
eld MY
ng Deen «
located.
| trifling a matter.
| “Ry the way,” he said,
“did you ever hear that
recovering umbrellas ?"
{ ceeded to rake from the
past this ancient story and all
chestnuls he could think of.
Mr. Hardpay stood for awhile,
without being wisibly affected, but at
last yawned and threw his jaw oul of
place. This was what the doctor an-
ticipated.
“Good evening, Mr. Hardpay,” be
said, pleasantly, rising as if to take his
| leave,
Mr. Hardpay vouchsafed no reply,
| but gesticulated wildly, pointing to lus
{ mouth.
The doctor pretended for a time to
| misunderstand his sigoals of distress
taking a seal,
story about
and pro-
ashes of the
the other
vid
he
#
a
{ relented (7) and signalled the old man
that he would reset his jaw for $10
: cash,
{ The old man looked at (rst as if re-
| solved to allow the jaw to remain where
| it was, but soon saw that the doctor
| was firm and counted out the required
amount. The jaw was then once more
put in place, and the doctor took his
departure, chuckling at the success of
his stratagem.
Carvier Pigeons.
Carrier pigeons in France ave hence.
forth, like horses and mules, to be reg.
istered, so as to be subject to nalitary
requisitions when necessary. A decree
jusued recently orders owners or breed.
ers to wake an annual rotary to the
Mayor of the nunber of their pigeons
amd the journeys to which they have
been trained,
dleested
” pn an AI —s
Eunsilage is good food for
being as sur~ulent aud as easily
as grass