The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, April 05, 1917, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    »
THR MBYRRS?
LGVE INSURANCE
“ BY EARL DERR BIGGERS
§
Minot turned quickly and “caught
Cynthia Meyrick in the act of peering
@ver his shoulder. She had seen the
<¢hauffeur too.
again. In those brown eyes
Minot saw something wistful.
@omething hurt, saw things that moved
$im to put everything toa sudden test.
* $e leaped to his feet and pulled madly
@t the bell cord.
«wWhat—what have you done?” Star-
led, she stared at him.
«p've stopped the train. I'm going
@€o ride to Jacksonville as I rode to San
Marco ages ago. I'm not going alone.”
CHAPTER XX.
“Ono last ride together.”
HE train had stopped a mo-
ment. but was under way
“Indeed!”
“Quick. The conductor will be here
#0 a minute. Here's a card and pencil.
Write a uote for Aunt Mary. Say
you'll mevt them in Jacksonville. Hur-
gy, please!”
“Mr. Minot!" with great dignity.
“One last ride together, one last
chance for me to—to set things right
if I can.”
“If vou can.”
“IT admit it. Won't you give we
ghe chance? I thought you would be
game. Idare you!”
For :a second they gazed into each
ather’s eyes. The train had come to a
atop. :and Aunt Mary stirred fretfully
#h her sleep. With sudden decision
QCyntbia Meyrick wrote on the card
and drepped it on her slumbering rela-
élve.
“I know I'll be sorry—but’— she
gasped.
“Hurry! This way!
‘@bwming there!”
A mement later they stood together
@n the platform of the Sunbeam sta-
don, while the brief little train disap-
peared indignantly in the distance.
“You shouldn't have made me do
that!” «cried the girl in dismay. ‘I'm
always doing things on the spur of the
smoment—things 1 regret afterward.”
“] know. You explained that to me
ce. But you can also do things on
e spur of the moment that you're
&€ad about all your life. Oh—good
gnorning, Barney Oldfield.”
“Good morning,” replied the rustic
@hauffeur with gleeful recognition.
<{Where’s it to this time, mister?”
“Jacksonville. And no hurry at all.”
BMinot held open the door, and the girl
stepped into the car.
“The gentleman is quite mistaken,”
she said to the chauffeur. “There is a
wery great hurry.”
“Ages of time until luncheon,” re-
plied Minot blithely, also getting in.
“If you were thinking of announcing—
eomething-—-then.”
“] shall have nothing to announce,
¥'m sure. But I must be in Jackson-
wille before that train. Father will be
farious.”
“rust me, lady,” said the chauffeur,
grinding aca’m at his hooded music
Box. “I've Leen doing stunts with this
<ar since 1 saw vou last. Been over a
faiundred miles from Sunbeam. Begins
¢e look as though [Mlorida wasn’t going
®0 be big enough, after all.”
He leaped to the wheel, and again
that ancient automobile carried Cyn-
¢hia Meyrick and the representative
of Boyd's out of the town of Sunbeam.
But the exit was not a laughing one.
The girl's eyes were serious, cold, and
with real concern in-his voice Minot
spoke:
“Won't wou forgive me—can’t you?
3X was only ‘trying to be faithful to the
man who sent me down here—faithful
#hrough everything, as [ should be
faithiul to you if you gave me the
chance. Is it too late, Cynthia’ —
“Phere was a time,” said the girl, her
eyes wide, “when it was not too late.
Have you forgotten? That night on
the balcony when I threw myself at
wour feet and you turned away—do
Fou think that was a happy moment
for me?’ :
“Was it happy for me, for that mat
ter?”
“0h, 1 was humiliated, ashamed
Then your silly rescue of my gown
your advice to me to marry Harrow-
Dy’ —
The conductor's
“Would you have had me throw over
the men who trusted me’—
«J—71 don’t knew. I only know that
I can’t forgive what has happened in
a minute’—
“What was that last?’
“Nothing.”
“You said in a minute.”
“Your ears are deceiving you.”
“Cynthia, you're not going to punish |
we because I was faithful? Don’t you
suppose I tried to get some one in my
glace?”
“Did you?”
“The day 1 first rode on this car
with you. And then I stopped try-
“Why?”
“Because 1 realized that if some one
@ame in my place I'd have to go away
and never see you again, and I couldn’t
&o that. I had to be near you, dear
giri—don’t worry, he can’t hear, the
ssotor’s too noisy—I had to be where
§ could see that little curl making a
tion mark around your ear, where
® eould hear your voice.
my heart by marrying you to another
gen. I loved you. Ilove you now”’—
A terrific h interrupted. Dole-
@elly the chauffeur descended from the
amy to make: Dolefully
#
& 1
d » remarked.
<fiay, I'm I'll have to walk
Sack to the age at Sunbeam, and— |
| I'm afra‘d ygu'll have to jest sit
ate © mech, Co CEES
I had to be |
@ser you even if to do it I must break |
ATR COMME 1A1. MEYERSDALE. PA
RETR FT RR ed
s or RY . ren mT : ed he pd cima ——— ————— — —_————
here until T come back? . ry i fe planted upon the trusted foundations
“Cynthia,” Minot cried, “I worship WILSON S AYS NEWEST WAR AUTOMOBILE | of political Liberty.
you! Won't you"— “We have no selfish ends to serve.
i The girl gave a strange little cry.
«1 wanted to be cross with you a lit-
tle longer,” she said almost tearfully.
«But I can’t. I wonder why I can’t?
| er seeing you again.
| cried? 1 guess it's because for the
first time I'm really in love!”
“Cynthia!” y
«Oh, Dick. don’t let me change my
mind again—ever—ever!”
“Only over my dead body!”
With one accord they turned and
looked at that quaint southern chauf-
and the sunshine.
either of them that there was any dan-
ger of his looking back.
And happily be didn’t.
THE END.
KEYSTONE PARAGRAPHS
Charles A. Bentley, former member
of the Pennsylvania legislature, has
offered his ninety-acre farm near Dick-
sonburg, Crawford county, which is
under cultivation and partly planted,
to ihe United States department of
agriculture, with all its equipment and
crops, during the duration of any war
that this country may have with any
foreign couniry. Senator
made his offer in reply to the plea of
the department of agriculture officials
for a speeding up of foodstuff produc-
tion in this country as a method of
preparedness. :
The public sale season in Center
county has been one of the most
unusual ever known there.
kinds of stock brought extraordinary
prices, horses selling as high as $360,
cows $128, hogs, $86, sheep $21, chick-
ens $1.25 and geese, $1. Farm im-
ments brought more than they were
bought for three years ago. Sales
that four or five years ago would
have figured up about $3,000, this year
brought $6,000 and $7,000.
An inquest into the death of four
coal miners in an explosion in the Isa-
bella mine of the Hecla Coal and Coke
company near Brownsville, was held.
The verdict absolves the company
from all blame for the accident
but recommends that Fire Boss James
G. Broderick be censured for not re-
porting presence of gas in the mine.
The presence of gas in the mine at
the time of the explosion is unac-
counted for.
Basil Derry, aged seventy-seven, a
wealthy hermit of Smithfield, near
Uniontown, was found cremated in
his home. Persons on their way to
church saw smoke issuing from the
rear of the house and, breaking open
the door, found Derry’s body lying in
the grate. Derry is thought to have
been seized by an attack of heart
trouble while seated in front of the
fire and to have fallen into the grate.
A near riot was precipitated at
Lucerne when Andrew Rinehart, who
had charge of a moving picture thea-
ter, refused to wear a small Ameri-
can flag or permit small flags to be
tacked on the ticket office window
frame. Rinehart, who was employed
by the Rochester and Pittsburgh Coal
and Iron company, was discharged
the following®norning and advised to
leave town at once, which he did.
Mustering into federal service of
the First infantry, national guard of
Pennsylvania, was completed in Phila-
delphia ; last week. Lieutenant
Colonel Millard D. Brown is in com-
mand of the regiment in the absence
of Colonel Charles C. Allen, who is
acting as mustering officer in the
south. Colonel Brown said the regi-
ment expects to do guard duty along
railroad lines.
Ten widows and twenty children will
receive $35,000 compensation from the
state workmen’s insurance fund as a
result of the Henderson Coal com-
pany’s mine explosion near Canons-
burg, March 13, when fourteen men
were killed. This is the heaviest pay-
| ment yet drawn from the state fund
| as the result of a single accident, but
it in nowise embarrasses it, according
to officials.
George Ambler died in the county
jail at Brockville, aged 103 years. He
was the oldest resident of Jefferson
county and so far as known the oldest
resident in the state. Ambler was
sentenced to a term of three months.
He pleaded guilty to selling liquor
without a license. » Ambler was prob-
ably the oldest man ever arraigned
and sentenced on a criminal charge.
The Vickerman local option bill was
of representatives on its second read-
| ing after a long debate, by a vote of
| 127 to 72. The Tompkins bill abol-
ishing capital punishment for murder
| ana substituting as punishment life
{ imprisonment passed the senate final-
| ly without debate. The vote was 32
to 12.
The Pittsburgh Coal company of
| Pittsburgh has purchased the coal un-
| derlying approximately 4,000 acres
| just east of Washington on the pro-
posed Chartiers Southern railroad and
known as the Glyde block, paying $330
an acre, or $1,320,000. The farms in-
cluded in the deal lie in West Bethle-
hem township.
| New Castle and Lawrence county
have over 8,000 men subject to
military duty, according to returns
made at the county commissioners’ of- |
all
fice. These returns include
( fartv
men
between twenty-one five
years old. Of this numbe 0
jocated within the limits of
| Castle.
§ vas AANA TE JR Cr EERE
I cried all night at the thought of nev- |
1 wonder why I |
feur plodding along through the dust °
It did not seem to
Bentley
All |
defeated in the Pennsylvania house |
THAT CONDITION
OF WAR EXISTS
Congress Asked fo Mest Ger-
~many's Actions Against U. S. |
WA
MEN AND MONEY NEEDED
Armed Neutrality Found Impraoctic-
able, 500,000 Soldiers, Universal’
Military Service, Co-operation With
Entente Allies, Including Liberal
Financial Credits Are Requested by
Chief Executive.
President Wilson on Monday night
asked congress to declare a state of |
war existing between the United
States and Germany. :
| Immediately a resolution to this ef-
i fect was offered in both houses.
The president said war with Ger-
| many would involve practical co-oper-
ation with the governments now at
war with Germany, including liberal
financial credits. He urged the rais-
ing of 500,000 men by universal mili-
tary service. The president made it
clear that no action was being taken
against the Austrian government and
the other nations allied with Ger-
many.
The president said:
“The present German submarine
warfare against commerce is a warfare
against mankind. It is a war against
all nations. American ships have been
sunk, American lives taken, in ways
which it has stirred us very deeply to
learn of, but the ships and people of
other neutral and friendly nations
have been sunk and overwhelmed in
the waters in the same way. There
has been no discrimination. The chal-
lenge is to all mankind. Each nation
must decide for itself how it will meet
it. The choice we make for our!
selves must be made with a modera-
tion of counsel and a temperateness
of judgment befitting our character
and our motives as a nation. We
must put excited feeling away.
“Our motive will not be revenge or
the victorious assertion of the physic-
al might of the nation, but only the
vindication of right, of human right,
of which we are only a single cham-
pion.”
Loud cheering greeted these re-
marks but stillness pervaded the cham-
ber while the president read the fol-
lowing:
“With a profound sense of the
solemn and even the tragical char
acter of the step I am taking and of
the grave responsibilities which it in-
volves, but in unhesitating obedience |
to what I deem my constitutional
duty, I advise that the congress de-
clare the recent course of the imperial |
German government to be in fact |
nothing less than war against the gov- |
ernment and people of the United :
States, that it formally accept the |
status of belligerent which has thus
been thrust upon it and that it take
immediate steps, not only to put the
country in a more thorough state of
defense, but also to exert all its power
and employ all its resources to bring
the government of the German em-
pire to terms and end the war. {
Co-operation With Allies.
“What this will involve is clear. It
will ‘involve the utmost practicable
co-operation in counsel and action
with the governments now at war with
Germany, and, as incident to that, the
extension to those governments of the .
most liberal financial credits, in order
that our resources may, SO far as pos-
sible, be added to theirs. It will in-
volve the organization and mobiliza-
tion of all the material resources of
the country to supply the materials
of war and serve the incidental needs
of the nation in the most abundant,
and yet the most economical and el-
ficient way possible. It will involve
the immediate full equipment of the
navy in all respects, but particularly
in supplying it with the best means
of dealing with the enemy’s subma-
rines. It will involve the immediate
addition to the armed forces of the
United States already provided for by
law in case of war, at least 500,000
men, who should, in my opinion, be
chosen upon the principle of universal
liability to service, and also the au-
thorization of subsequent additional
increments of equal force so soon as
they may be needed and can be
handled in training.
“It will involve also, of course, the
granting of adequate credits to the
government, sustained, I hope, so far
as they can equitably be sustained by
the present generation, by well-con-
ceived taxation. I say sustained so
far as may be equitable by taxation
because it seems to me that it would
be most unwise to base the credits
which will now he necessary entirely
on money borrowed. It is our duty, I
most respectfully urge, to protect our
people so far as we may against the
very serious hardships and evils
which would be likely to arise out of
the inflation which would be produced
by vast loans.
“In carrying out the measures by
which these things are to be accom-
plished we should keep constantly in
mind the wisdom of interfering a:
little as possible in our own preg
tion f our
military f Ww —for it
will be & very practical duty—of sur
| plying the nations already at war with
| i
, field wireless.
| soon be equipped with this “tank,”
USED BY N. Y. GUARDSMEN
® by American Press Association.
We desire no conquest, no dominion.
We seek no indemnities for ourselves,
po material compensation for the sac-
rifices we shall freely make. We are
but one of the champions of the rights
We shall be satisfied !
of mankind.
when those rights have been as secure
as the faith and the freedom of the
nations can make them.
“I have said nothing of the govern-
ments allied with the imperial govern-
ment of Germany because they have
not made war upon us or challenged
us to defend our right and our honor
The Austro-Hungarian government
has indeed, avowed its unqualified in-
dorsement and acceptance of the reck-
less and lawless submarine warfare
‘ adopted now without disguise by the
imperial German government, and it
bas therefore not been possible for
~ this government to receive Count Tar
! powski, the ambassador recently ac
credited to this government by the im-
perial and royal government of Aus-
tria-Hungary; but that government
‘ has not actually engaged in warfare
The newest armored auto also has
a steel tower, which can be raised i
on the principle of a fire ladder and
employed for signaling, observation,
outpost station work and in military
The United States may
which has been tested by the New
York national guard.
* ¥ * *
WAR RESOLUTION
INTRODUCED IN CONGRESS.
* %¥ % ¥* ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥
Chairman Flood of the house
foreign affairs committee, the
administration spokesman there,
introduced the following war
resolution in the house. An
®
#*
*
®
®
*®
®
*
*
®
* in the senate:
5 “Whereas, the recent course
¢ of the imperial German govern-
® ment is in fact nothing less
® than war against the govern-
® ment and people of the United
® States;
s “Resolved, by the senate and
® house of representatives of the
® United States of America, in
® congress assembled, That the
® gtate of belligerency between
® the United States and the im-
* German government
® which has been thrust upon the
®
®
$
$
®
®
perial
*
*
w
®
*
*
*
United States is hereby formal- *
ly declared; and .
“That the president be, and *
hereby is, authorized to take *
immediate steps not only to put *
the country in thorough state *
® of defense, but also to exert all *
® of its power and employ all of *
* jts resources to carry ‘a war *
* against the imperial German *
* government and to bring the *
* conflict to a successful termina- *
* tion.” . *
* % % % % ® ¥ ®%¥ %x ¥ % ¥ ¥ ¥ $ *
Germany with the materials which
they can obtain only from us or by
our assistance. They are in the field
and we should help them in every way
to be effective there.”
* The president said that the people
of the United States have no quarrel
with the German people, commenting
upon the European war as follows:
“It was a war determined upon as
wars used to be determined upon in
the old, unhappy days when peoples
were nowhere consulted by their
rulers and wars were provoked and
waged in the interest of dynasties or
against citizens of the United States
on the seas, and I take the liberty,
for the present at least, of postponing
a discussion of our relations with the
authorities at Vienna. We enter this
war only where we are clearly forced
into it because there are no other
means of defending our rights.”
Defense, Preparations Completed.
Army and navy preparations were
believed by officials today to have
reached a stage answering all immedi- !
ate defense needs and insuring that
the more sweeping steps congress is
expected to authorize can be carried
out promptly.
More national guardsmen were
called into the federal service for po-
lice duty, making a total of more than
60,000 of the state troops now as-
signed to guard against internal dis-
orders. The war department also an-
nounced that, in order not to handi-
cap government construction work, ail
guardsmen who are government em:
ployees or employees of private plants
doing government work will be mus-
tered out.
The guard organizations called out
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* |
are:
identic resolution was offered *
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Virginia—First infantry, First and
Second coast artillery, Battery D,
First artillery.
West Virginia—Second infantry.
Vermont—First infantry.
Connecticut—Second and Fourth
companies, coast artillery.
Another indication of the govern-
ment’s preparations for a large army
was evident in the announcement that
the old Fort Ringgold military reser-
vation in Texas had been restored
to the war department for military
purposes. Since 1911 it has been un-
der control of the interior department.
It is assumed the transfer was made
to provide training space.
Speaker Clark was re-elected by a
vote of 217 to 205 over his Republi-
can opponent, Representative Mann,
‘as the first step in the organization
of the house of representatives.
HOLLWEG BLAMES U. S.
FOR PRESENT SITUATION
German Chancellor Says We Declared
War When Neutrals Were Asked
to Break With Kaiser. :
“Germany never had the slightest
intention of attacking the United
States of America and does not have
such intention now. It never desired
war ‘against the United States of
America and does not desire it today,”
was the declaration made by the Ger-
man imperial chancellor, Dr. von Beth-
mann-Hollweg, in a speech in the
. reichstag.
“How did these things develop?
of little groups of ambitious men who
were accustomed to use their fellow-
men as pawns and tools.”
The spy system of Germany was ar-
raigned by the chief executive. He
said:
“One of the things that has served
to convince us that the Prussian ou-
tocracy was not and could never be
our friend is that from the very out
set of the present war it has filled
our unsuspecting communities and
even our offices of government with
spies and set criminal intrigues every-
where afoot against our national unity
of council, our peace within and with-
out, our industries and our commerce.
Indeed it is now evident that its spies
were here even before the war begun;
and it is unbappily not a matter of
conjecture but a fact proved in our
courts of justice that the intrigues
which have more than once come
perilously near to disturbing the peace
and dislocating the industries of the
country have been carried on at the
instigation, with the support, and even
under the personal direction of offi-
cial agents of the imperial govern-
ment accredited to the government of
the United States.”
The president continued:
“We are now about to accept gauge
of battle with this natural foe to lib
erty, and shall, if necessary, spend
the whole force of the nation to check
and nullify its pretensions and its
power. We are glad, now that we see
the facts with no veil of false pre-
tense about them, to fight thus for
the ultimate peace of the world and
for the liberation of its peoples, the
German peoples included;
rights of nations great and small and
the privilege of men everywh
choose their way in life and of obedi-
ence. The world must be made safe
for democracy. Its peace must be
for the!
More than once we told the United
States that we made unrestricted use
of the submarine weapon expecting
that England could be made to ob-
serve, in her policy of blockade, the
laws of humanity and international
agreements. This blockade policy—
this I expressly recall has been called
‘illegal and indefensible’ [the imperial
chancellor here used the English
words by President Wilson and Secre-
tary of State Lansing.] Our expecta-
tions whick we maintamea during
eight months have been disappointed
completely; England not only did not
give up her illegal and indefensible
policy of blockade, but uninterrupted-
ly intensifird it. England, together
with her @ollies, arrogantly rejected
the peace offers made by us and our
allies and proclaimed her war aims,
which aim at our annihilation and that
of our allies.
“Then we took unrestricted subma-
rine warfare into our hands; we-had
to for our defense.
“If the American nation considers
this a cause for which to declare war
against the German nation, with which
it has lived in peace for niore than
100 years, if this action warrants an
increase of bloodshed, we shall not
have to bear the responsibility for it.
The German nation, which feels neith-
er hatred nor hostility against the
United States of America, shall also
bear and overcome this.”
Consideration For Aliens.
Aliens seeking citizenship will be
given favored treatment if it becomes
necessary to put restrictions on for-
elgners. The state department in-
formed the labor department that in
such a contingency declarations of
intention to become citizens will “be
given due consideration.”
Strike Takes Revolutionary Trend.
volutionary trend of
ST sible for th
+31 Tow in nal
tial law in Spein
, dec
laration of mar
MiB
arrests have been made and the situ:
, tion is now said to be quiet.
I
IN PLOT TO BOMB SHIPS
ACCUSED AS PAYMASTER |
]
Photo by American Press Associatiom.
WOLF VON IGEL.
The former employee of the German
embassy was named at the trial at
New York of six men accused of
making fire bombs to be placed on al-
lied merchant ships as having been
the paymaster in the plot. Von igel
is now in Germany.
A GENERAL SURVEY OF
THE WAR
The progress of the British and
French on the western front evacuated
by Germans has almost stopped. The
fighting is growing more stubborn.
British troops have captured Ruyal-
court, Sorel-le-Grand and Fins, be-
tween Bertincourt and Roisel, on the
front in France, according to the offi
cial statement from British headquar
ters. A German attack upon British
positions south of Neuville-Bourjenval,
it is added, was driven off with loss.
German lines east of Neuville-St.
Vaast were entered Thursday night by
the British troops, who inflicted casu-
alties and took prisoners.
The British hospital ship Asturias
was torpedoed without warning, it
was officially announced. Thirty-one
persons were killed and twelve are
missing.
The report states that the Asturias,
while steaming with all navigating
lights and with all proper distinguish-
ing Red Cross signs visibly illuminat-
ed, was torpedoed without warning on
the night of March 20.
Losses of merchant vessels amount-
ing to more than 420,000 tons thus far
in March have resulted from war
measures of the central powers, Lord
Beresford said in the house of lords.
Lord Beresford expressed the opin-
ion that captures of submarines by
the British were not at all equivalent
to the new submarines/ the Germans
were launching. He believed the Ger-
mans had more men and more food
than had been imagined in England.
The foreign office, he said, had too
‘much power over the navy, to the
detriment of the navy. The losses of
British, allied and neutral vessels for
February, he said, amounted to 281
vessels with an aggregate tonnage of '
more than 500,000.
LODGE KNOCKED DOWN
When Pacifist Calls Senator Coward
Blows Follow.
Senator Lodge was knocked down
in a fight in his office with a Boston
pacifist. The fight, which resulted
from the pacifist calling Senator
Lodge a coward after an argument on
the war situation, was quelled by the
police. Senator Lodge, who is sixty-
seven years old, was not badly hurt.
The pacifist, who gave his name as
Alexander Bannwart of Boston, accom-
panied by a woman, who gave her
name as Mrs. Anna May Peabody of
Cambridge, Mass., went to Senator
Lodge’s office and demanded that he
vote against any war resolution. An
argument followed in which Bannwart
called the senator a coward.
The lie was then passed. A fight
followed and Senator Lodge was being
worsted when a telephone clerk, David
B. Hermann, jumped into the fray
and beat Bannwart. Capital police,
hurriedly summoned, arrested the
couple.
Senator Lodge declares the couple
employed very rough words in their
interview and that Bannwart struck
him the first blow.
GUARDS IN PITTSBURGH
Two Regiments of National Guards
men Arrive For Police Duty.
Two regiments of the national guard
of Pennsylvania from another part of
the state arrived in Pittsburgh to do
guard duty in that vicinity.
labor
Realizing the large amount of ma-
terial used in the manufacture of war
{ munitions shipped in and out of this
district, the state officials, it is seid,
| have deemed it advisable to adopt the
precautionary measure of stationing
troops about the principal bridges,
tunnels and terminals in this district
to ward against any possible hostile
act on the part of German sympa-
izers. :
i
{
It is expected that a number of the
i
lary ia] concerns in the dis
tric rials used in makine
munitions of war are manufactared
will also be guarded.
a]
——
NEW ©
SEE!
Fifieen Ac
in
IMPOSE |
Effort Being
§traighten
it Is Prob
Through B
Fight.
Harrisburg
sult of much
of the senab
mittees, a ne
likelihood be
books at this
The changes
tions are of
and agricult
Though th
either branct
it will have
eommittee 1
time in iror
that were ur
the code as
REP.
Chairman o
The code
sentative M
ty, and he ¢
ef Luzerne
committee,
Miiliron 1s :
ject of hun
ested in tl
and does no
a law for
serve fully
property ov
Powell is
game laws
chairman o
that Penns
best possib
Main
As the
fifteen gam
act. The
go through
tions impo
It will be
or offer fo
ship the bc
»Bird to or
pose, excep
English sg
ling, the
hawk, Coe!
* in fact all
night hawl
and in any
the ravens
There sl
‘ing at or
and the o]
and anima
grouse, CO}
Virginia a
cock, ring
and fox s
Mares, fro
$0, inclusi
‘tember 1 t
October 1!
. from Dece
‘male deer
_ivember: 3(
ber 15 to
‘plover an
‘yember - 8!
The, bay
lows: Dee
as above,
. one: Season
season; I
twenty in
ene day,
; woodcock
8 one ges
Hungaria:
one seas
{combine
son; rabb
in ome ses
fifteen in
The ga
thority
done by «
stock; an
mitted to
aging his
pursué® a
hours of
erty.
The old
of game |
for train