Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / Dec. 25, 1908, edition 1 / Page 3
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iipiip w THE SEASONS, Ten little toes find their smoth'ring walls unclose. Releasing to the sun and to the air! And they squirm and wriggle, pert; they dig the fresh, moist dirt; And “Oh, it’s spring! AVe’re out of prison! ” they declare. Ten little toes, where the mighty ocean flows. Frolicked with the ripples and the sand. And they blistered and tney burned. And a golden brown they turned. “Hip, hurrah!” they cry. “Now summer is at hand.” Ten little toes were so crowded, goodness knows. Back again within the prison wall! And they found it rather cramped. ^ As to school their master tramped; And they said among themselves: “Ileigho, 'lis fall.” Ten little toes on their way one mom ’most froze. No matter tho’ their prison wails were stout! “Phew! We’re mighty glad,” they cried, “That to-day we’re not outside— ^ For ’tis evident that winter is about.” —Edwin L. Sabin, in St. Nicholas. i-THROUGH LIMESTONE FALLS-;- By FRANK LILLIE POLLOCK. We ran the canoe ashore at the head of the rapids, and landed to ex amine the condition of the trail. The rocky banks of the river were over grown with clumps of hemlock and spruce, interspersed with larger trees, and we were uncertain on which side of the river it would be best to make the portage. We -walked hurriedly down almost to the foot of the rapid without en countering any serious obstacle, and had come near the lower landing place when Abbott suddenly gripped my arm and pointed ahead and up ward. Looking where he pointed, I saw a dead cedar leaning heavily over the tail of the rapid, projecting its top into clear moonlight, and among the skeleton branches perched a man. We could see him distinctly; he had no gun, and seemed to be looking earnestly in the opposite direction. “That’s one of the gang. I’ve seen him before!” muttered the ranger. “I can’t malce out what he’s doing there, but I’ll have him down and find out.” Going a little closer, Abbott hailed i the tree at the top of his voice. { “Kello!” he cried. “What—” i The words were cut from his lips by a tremendous crash among the thick underbrush, and with an ear- shattering bellow, out of the darkness charged a giant black animals that looked in the gloom almost as huge as an elephant. Abbott and I jumped away to right and to lefc. My sole idea was to get bacit to the ca::oi where we had left the guns, and I ran desperately, stumbling and tripping. Then I heard the brusli crash behind me, and fancying the brute was at my heels, I seized the low branch of a spruce and swung myself up with a desperate agility of whicli I did not know that I v.as capable. I had been deceived by roy imag ination. The attention of the big moc£9 was directly entirely to Abbott, who was scrambling into another tree close to the river. The bull charged into the trunk Viith a force that should have stunned him, and then drew baciv and glared sullenly at Abbott cn his percli above. Then, after circling ihe tree three or four I times, he stalked back to the cedar I overhaDging the stream, which was perliaps thirty yards away. I called to Abbott and succeeded in attracting his attention, but the noise of the water was too loud to permit conversation. It occurred to me, however, that the bull did not seem to have observed my refuge, and that I might slip to the ground and get to the cance -anobserved. 1 made the attempt, but had not reaf.'hed the lov.er branches of the tree before the v/ary old warrior es pied my maneuvre, and came smash ing through the shrubbery with a roar of defiance. I scrambled back to my original po sition a3 he charged under the tree, his shovel-pointed antlers brushing I was making a lonely canoe voy age from the railroad to a point forty miles distant, on Vermilion Lake, in the western part of the Nipissing dis trict of Ontario, where four of my friends Ticre awaiting me in camp. I had been told there was a clear cRuoe route through the Eldorado and Bix Axe Rivers, and so there was, al lowing for the phraseology of the country, which calls a clear canoe road one which has no portages of more than a mile and a half in length. I did not know, however, that the Big Axe River in its windings took me into that vast forest preserve known as the Algonquin National Park, until I wss unpleasantly informed of the fact by a park ranger who overtook me ono afternoon, and cross-qiies- tioned me sharply cn suspicion cf il legal deer hunting. Tho affair might have been still more unpleasant had I not discovered the ranger to bo a former Muskoka guide witli whom I had gone twice into tho woods some years before. Kis name was Abbott, and although still a young man, ho was oue of the keenest woodsmen I ever saw, and an excellent follow besides. Ke recog nized me about the same moment, and as our former acquaintance v\'as enough to establish my innocence, Vve raddled down the river together to his cami', where I accepted his in vitation to spend the night. He explained his first aggressiye- ncs3 cf manner by the fact that he vas beiug greatly annoyed by the inrcada of poachers in that portion of the park. Shooting is forbidden inside the park limiis, where game cf every sort, from rabbits to moose, swarms in conssquence. These in vaders not only killed, but killed by the use of the nefarious jack-light and similar devices. Abbott was morally certain that they belonged to a small settlement of French-Canadian trappers near Vavasour; he even thought he knew the guilty individuals, but he had never caught them inside the park witii Vveapons or outside -'f it with desr caicasss?. As this portion of the preserve was under his charge he felt himself respcnsible for the safety of its contents, and he had moved his camp the day before, and v.as “lying low” by clay and patrolling the woods at night. We sat up rather lato that even ing. There was ficst in the air; the sky was cloudless, and a half-moon that was just topi;ir.g the pines shone Tvitii the diamond brilliancy of an clectiic lamp. I noticed a peculiar uneasiness in Abbott’s manner, an air cf expectancy, and he frequently broke off in the middle of a sentence to listen. But the forest was absolutely still, except that just after moonrise we heard the distant deep-toned bellow ing of a buil moose. It was the mat ing season of these animals, and the Eouiid was no uncommon one in the 5>ar!r. 3c was perhaps half an hour later when Abbott suddenly ceasad talking, and held up his hand for silence. I leaves at my feet. He seemed to listened; I could hear nothing, but a lev/ seconds afterward the faint sound of t'vo ri3e-sh6ts came struggling up lf*rough the forest. “There they are. That’ll be on Big Ax'j Pond. Come along!” exclaimed tlio ranger, picking up his rifle. Infected by his excitement, I fol lowed him down to the river, without stopping to reflect that the arresting <^f deer stealers was none of my busi ness. He had already put his canoe afloat, and Viras kneeling in the stern. I look the bow, and we shot off down the rapid current in the darkness. I was never a very good canoeman, r.nd the midnight perils of the river made me nervous, but I found that Al)bott's skill at tho steering-paddle amply compensated for my de ficiencies. The double vrall of forest slid past in alternation of black darkness and silvery moonlight. The river w’as badly broken by rough water, and twice we had to make short portages, which were the more unpleasant as a recent storm had choked the carry trails with fallen timber. Other rap ids we ran, but a quarter mile above the pond we came to one we could liot run. Ihis was Limestone Falls, which in reality was merely a very bad bit of I’apid, perhaps fifty yards in length, J'nd with a fall of six or eight feet. As the worst place on the river, it had attained the distinction of an indi vidual name. We were nearing the place whence the shots had come, but he roar and dash of the cascade ef fectually drowned any noise of our approach. a monster there in the moonlight; I could see his black mane standing erect, and his wicked eyes glittering in the flashes of moonlight. From time to time he threw back his head with an impatient movement and licked a spot on his shoulder, where I could distinguish a darker patch on the hide—undoubtedly a bullet wound inflicted by the man In the cedar tree. He walked about, grunting, be neath me for a few minutes, and then returned to his first enemy, against whom, very justly, his rancor seemed to be chiefly directed. I could not help laughing at the queer predica ment we were in. We formed three parties, each arrayed against the other two, but there was no doubt that the bull had the best of the sit uation. With the passage of time, however, the affair grew less humorous. It v/as cold; I shivered in my cramped position, and it seemed not unlikely that the brute would keep us there till daylight. If we could have talked together we might have formed a plan for circumventing him, but the roar of the water made this impossi ble, and indeed I felt sure that Abbott would refuse to enter into any league with the poacher which might In volve letting him slip through hia fingers again. The moose was moving energetical ly about the base of the drooping cedar, and as I watched him he seemed to be making a determined and systematic effort to uproot it. He stamped and butted and pushed, and I could see the tree waver violently at each attack. He would certainly bring it down if he persevered, for it was already half-fallen, and its dead roots had no strong hold on the rocky earth. I directed Abbott’s attention to the movements of the animal, and as the moon had now risen so high that all the ground round the river was in clear light, we watched the progr^s of the drama with intense interest.'' The tree drooped lower and lower, and began to sway heavily as-the bull pushed it. The end, which might be tragic, seemed at hand. ' Glancing at Abbott, I saw that he was coming down his tree, undoubtedly contem plating a dash for the guns, and not to be outdone, I prepared to follow him. The moose, on the verge of suc cess, was too intent to notice us as we dropped noiselessly to the ground and scampered at the top of our speed toward the canoe. As we ran I heard all at once above the rush of - the water a sudden rending crash, a yell of dismay, and a roar from the bull. I knew . what was happening, but when I glanced over my '"shoulder I could see nothirg. Abbott gainel the canoe a yard ahead of me, a:. .1 instead of seizing his rifle he jum: sd aboard and knelt in the stern. “Take the bow!” he commanded, sharply, and I obeyed blindly, too astonished to dissent, although I did not comprehend what he was going to do. The canoe darted out; I dipped my paddle mechanically, and the swift current above the falls picked us up. Now I understood, and I had a bad attack of fright. But the fact was that in no other way could we get back to the foot of the rapid in time to be cf service. Now we would be there in a few second—dead or alive. I did not believe that we could run the rapids; I did not think that any canoeman in the world could take his craft down that roaring and rock- staked chute that in the moonlight looked like a caldron o! foam. But I saw that I was committed to the at tempt, and mere shame kept my mouth shut. A splash of froth struck me on the cheek, and in another instant the water was boiling under the bows. The canoe dipped and plunged into a sluice-like current, all but collided with an ink-black boulder, and under a sweep of the steering-paddle veered off into a swirl of eddies and a smoth er of spray. I can never sufficiently admire the skill of the ranger in that all but sui cidal dash; indeed, it was beyond all admiration. He seemed to choose the open passages by instinct, for he had never been through them before. A dozen times we escaped w'reck by the breadth of a hair, and he had deftly sheered aside from the danger before I had recognized its presence. Our passage could not have lasted eight seconds, and to me it was a mere blur of breathless speed through white leaping water in the daric and moonshine, savage rock-tops darting past, a deafening roar and dash of spray, and an intolerable strain of muscle and nerve, that made me for get everything except the very pres ent moment. With a swoop the canoe cleared herself and we shot into the tail of the rapids, where the water, altlicugh turbulent, was not dangerous; and I remembered our object again, with a gasp of breath I had not until then had time to take. We had run the impossible falls but whei*e was the moose and his victim? Then, as we jumped down the c'jr- rent, I caugh.t sight of a black mass crossing the stream thirty yards ahead, and recognized it is the head of the swimming bull. Before we had gone three lengths nearer a man emerged from the water near the bank and drew himself ashore, and almost at the same moment the long- legged animal seemed to find footing, and sprang forward with a terrific splash. He v/as not twenty feet be hind the man when a long jet of flame spurted past my head, scorching ray hair. Abbott had fired from the stern. Another shot, and the moose squealed shrilly, like a wounded horse, but continued to charge for ward. He was already upon the bank when he staggered, and plunged head long forward, slipping back into the shallow water, where he lay half- aficat and making ineffectual at tempts to rise. The mighty bull was dead by the time we beached the canoe beside his body, and went to look for our pris oner. We found him just abandon ing an attempt to climb a tree, very cold and wet, and douVtful whether to be grateful for his rcscue or angry at his capture. He was, as Abbott I:*’'! declared, one of the French-Canadians from the trapper settlement, and he told us rather sulkily that be had been making the portage whe*i the moose had come out on the other bank. He had fired at him twice and been treed, wuth w^hat result v:e had seen. But when he came to speak of our passage of the falls, he was full of admiration. I left Abbott and his prisoner the next morning, and reached the camp of my friends in the evening. Tho poacher was delivered over to justice. But when I next saw Abbott I found him much disturbed by the fact that whenever he had mentioned hav ing run Limestone Falls at night with a green hand in the bow, he found no one to believe him.—■ Youth's Companion. Too Serious For Sport. In Canada business dominates sport. Figure it all out, and you will find that Canada’s motto is: “Sport for boys, business for men.”—Can adian Courier, Toronto- WE MAKy PROFIT A Favorable Cliaracteiistic of the Forcisu Tr?>dc cf the United Siatcs for 1C03—Decline in Value of Im ports is General and AccuTits i*or Decrease in Total Value Friccs of Fccdstuff£: Eemain Stationery— Gaiiis in Prices cf Ccni, V»?heat and Eaccr. Eiipcrted. W'ashingJciJ, Specif:!. — Falling prices for im|x»rts rising prices for exporis, are cleclarcd by the amr.ial report of the Chief of the Bureau of Statistics of the Department of Com merce and Labor, to be a characteris tic of the fcreis’n trade of the United States in the licr.l year 190S. This is especially true, he says, as to the manufacturers’ material imported and fcodstuifs exported. In manu facturers' materials, whither raw or partly manufactured, the avera?;e prices for the year are, says the re port, materially lower than those for the prqpeding: year, and were also much lov.er at the end of the fiscal year than at the beginning of the year. The average price per ton of hemp in June, 1908, was but $141.02, against $174.78 in June, 1907; of ma- nila, $137.74, against $202.01 in June, 1907; of sisal grass, $106.20, against $152.57 in June, 1907; of goatskins, per pound, 24.5 cents in the closing month of 1908, against 31 cents in the corresponding month of the pre ceding year; of hides of cattle, 10.9 cents in June, 1908, against 15.4 cents in June, 1907; of India rubber, 56 cents per pound in June, 1908, against 67.1 cents in June of the preceding year; of raw silk, $3.23 per pound in June, "1908, against $4.63 in June, 1907; of'^^ig iron, 27 cents per pound in June, 1908, against 39.1 cents per pound in June, 1907; and of clothing, wool, 17 cents per pound in June, 1908, against 25.7 cents in June, 1907, w’hile other classes of '.vocl also show a similar reduction in price during the year. The decline in the total value of imports, v;hich occurs in nearly all of the principal articles forming tho great groups, foodstuffs, manufactur ers' materials and manufactures, is due in a considerable degree to this falling off in prices, though in many eases there is an actual decline in quantity. This is particular true in manfacturers’ raw materials, which shov/ a marked decline in prices p°i unit of quantity, the decline in value being thus much greater than that in quantity. In fibers, for example, the fall in value is from 42 million dollars in 1907 to 35 millions in 1903, a decrease of 16 per cent., while in quantity the fall is from 312,983 tons to 303,848 tons, a decline of but 3 per cent. In Indian rubber the fall in ■ vnlue of imports is from 59 millon dollars in 1907 to 361-2 millions in 190S, a decline of 3-^ per cent.; bui the fall in quantity is only from 77 million pounds to 02 million pounds, a decline of but 20 per cent. In hides and skins llie. fall in value of imports is from 83 millicn dollars to 55 mil lions, a decline of 34 per ecnt., while in guantity the fall is fjom 371 mil lion pounds to 283 million pounds, a decline cf but 24 per cent. In _D:fr cop})sr the value of imports fell from 39 millons dollars to 24 millions, a decline of 40 per cent., and the quan tity from lOvS million pounds to 145 millicn pounds, a dt\cline of 27 per cent. In pig tin the value of the im portations fell from 33 millicn dol lars 10 2(^ millions, a decline of 2-0 per cent., v/hile the quantity fell from 96 millicn pounds to 77 million pounds, a decline of 20 per cent. In law wool, the value of the importa tions fell frcm 411-2 million dollars m 1907, to 231-2 millions in 1903, a decline of 44 per cent., Avhile the quantity fell from 204 million pounds to 126 mJllicn pounds, a decline of 38 per cent. Thus in practically all the principal articles used in manu facturing the falling off in the value cf imports as compared with those of last year is due in a greater or less degree to a reduction in prices per unit of quantity, though in most of these articles there is an actual reduction in quantities, much less, hov.-ever than would be indicated by a mere consideration of figures of value only. Food stuffs do not share, as a rule, in the decline in values, cith,er as to imports or exports, Avhich is charac teristic of manufacturers’ materials. The average import price of coffee in 1908 ^was 7.6 cents per pound, against 7.9 cents in the preceding year; of raw sugar not above No. 16 Dutch standard in color, 2.38 cents per pound, against 2.11 cents in the preceding year; and of tea, 17.3 cents per pound, against 16.11 cents per pound in 1907; while in manufactur ers’ materials fibers show an av^erage price in 1908 of $117 per ton, against $135 per ton in 1907; hides and skins, 19.3 cents per pound, against 22.5 cents per pound in 1907; India rub ber, 58.8 cents per pound, against 76.6 cents per pound in the preceding 3’ear; raw silk, $4.13 per pound, against $4,20 in 1907; clothing wool. 22.5 cents par pound, against 26 cents per pound in 1907; combing wool 27 ccnls per pound, against 30 cents per pound in 1907; and carpet wT-cl, an average price of 14.5 cents per pound in 1908, against 15 cents per pound in 1907; all of tho above being import prices. On the export side, corn- shovv’’s an average export price of 64.7 cents per bushel, against 53 cents in 1907; wheat, 99.3 cents per bushel, against 79 cents in 1907; bacon, 10.5 cents per pound, against 10.6 cents per pound in 1907; and lard, 9.1 cents per pound in 1908, against 9.2 cents per pound in the preceding year. riG STUFFED APPLES. A-pples stuffed with fgs will bo a pleasing variation from plain baksd apples; the recipe is taken from Har per's Bazar: Pare soms lavge'apples and core them; fill the centros v/itli chopped figs; cover with sugar, put into a deep baking dish and add a little water and bake, basting well from time to time; servo with colj cream. APPLE AND TOMATO CHUTNE5. Remove the seeds from two green peppers and a cup of raisins, add six green tomatoes and four small on ions and chop all very fine. Put one luart of vinegar, one cup of powdered sugar and two of brown sugar, two tablespoonfuls of mustard seed and two of salt to boil. Add the chopped mixture and simmer ono hour. Then add a dozen tart apples, pared, cored and quartered, and cook slowly until soft. Beat thoroughly bottle.—■ ^ew York Telegram. SWEET PICCALILLL One peck of green or ripe toma toes, six medium-sized onions, twelve green or red peppers, three cups of sugar, one teaspoonful of .white pep per, one tablespoonful of ground mustard, one tablespoouful of ground illspice, one tablespoonful of ground cinnamon, two quarts of vinegar. If ripe tomatoes are used scald and pare; if green, chop small, with on ions and peppers, first removing the seeds from tho peppers. Cauliflower and cabbage and cucumbers can be added, but is nice without. Put in large kettle, pour on the vin-egar, add sugar and spices, cook slowly till soft. Seal in .iars or put in stone crock.—• Boston Post. BAKING BREAD AND ROLLS. Bread to be baked in individual portions requires a hotter oven than full-sized loaves. The general direc tions are the same for both bread and biscuit. Divide the time of bak ing into quarters; in the first quar ter the dough should spring, or grow light, a little, and should color in spots and ccase to rise. By the end of the second quarter the bread should be of a delicate brown; dur ing the next quarter the baking is practioally finished; the heat should be lov.'ered during the last quarter. Loaves of bread of the size indicated should bake in about one hour, bis cuits and rolls in about half an hour. ■—American Cultivator. [•V M4* rfn . Maukato's Cood Ror.il. Mankato, Mir,n., has solved the problem of a durable pave ment at small oxpi;n52 a.aJ one that c?sU be used cn steep grades as read ily as on a level surface. First, the driveway was narrowed to thirty feet, curbed, guttered and boulevarded. Then it v.’as excavated to the depth of six inches and surfaced. Five inches of dry crushed limeston9 one and a half to tv/o inches in di ameter was put cn and rolled down with a ten-ton roller. Boiiing'tar from the local gas works v/as applied until the entire surface v:as covered. Then a layer of broken stone an inch to an inch and a quarter in diameter, mixed with coarse gravel, was applied on the eurface in the proportion of three parts of stone to one of gravel. This was first mixed dry on a plat form and then thoroughly mixed v;ith hot tar and applied cn the sur face two inches thick and tamped into place to conform with the sur face of the street. Dry domestic cement was then ap plied to the surface and the street was again rolled. Then a coating'of sand was applied, and the roller again used. The pavement was al lowed to stand for two weeks before the street was thrown open to travel. The cost was eighty cents a lineal foot to the property owners on each side of the street, or rather would have been had the entire cost been assessed against them. The street has a practically waterproof pave ment six inches thick, and it i3~im- possible for the elements to attack the surface. The pavement has now stood tv.'o winters and shows not the slightest wear. It gives off no dust in summer, although it is not sprinliled.—Cemc-nt Age. If the silverware is placed in glass jars and tightly sealed up it will not tarnish. If lamp-wicks are soaked in vine gar and dried, the result v.'ill be a bright clear light. Flies will not bother gilt frames that have been washed in water v/here onions have been boiled. , A good grade of ink can be made by splitting a shoj*t indelible pencil and placing it in a bottle of v/ater. A small paint brush usod in black ing the stove will save t'.-o hands, as well as reach all troublesome place? in the stove. For grass stains on clolhlng, apply a liberal solution cf cooking mo lasses, rubbing the molasses in well; then p'focecd to vrash out in soap suds. The kitchen window box is very at- trp.ctive as v/ell as useful. In it sev eral tilings may be grown to be used in cooking and decorating, such as parsley and mint. Hang a small slate in the kitchen on which to write down the needed articles. Tie a slate pencil to the string. No need of forgetting the household neceEsities. Make a,n oilcloth pocket and hang in the kitchen. Put a few old worn out rags in it occasionally, and use these to rub off the 'cook stove. It means a great saving of the dish cloths. Carpet sweepers should be freed from dust and threads before being put away, and, as tho brush w’ears off, it should be lowered a trifle. A very little oil will stop the squeak ing of the v/heels. Cut glass, water bottles and vases are easily cleaned by putting a small handful of egg sh«ells in the suds and shaking vigorously. They will also be much clearer if rinsed in water to which a little blue has been added. Very pretty bedspreads, can be made by taking the tops of old v/orn out lace curtains, and joining-with insertion through which is run some dainty colored ribbon. Bolster cov ers and sash curtains can be made in the same manner. Damp shoes are difiacult to polish; try i)utting a drop or tw’o of paraf fin In the blacking and you will find they will polish at once. Leather that has become dull and shabby looking may be improved in appear ance by being rubbed over with tho WoU. beaten white of an esS- A Tvrofold Object. Wo hope the day has come when with the intelligent use of convict la bor in the only cliannsl of nsefulnssg that is free from the charge of being in Competition with free labor, is about to give the State a good system of reads. The v/orking on the public fcigh- ways of the lazy jailbirds who have been for years accustomed to eat their heads o& in the county prisons will, unless we are grea.tly mistaken, less en the number of petty crimes and lower the criminal expenses of the State, while the labor of those con victs who are sent to the roads will do w’onders tov/ard the improvement of the public roads. ' This twofold object should be at tained'very shortly now that the sys tem of road v^'^orking is fairly under way. Convicts have been sent from this cicy and from Norfolk County to the roads elsevv'here in the State, and v,^e hope the work will be extended to this section in the near future. The Newport Nev/s TImes-Herald is on the right track, when, in dis- cjissins the question of good roads, it says: ‘'In most of the Virginia counties enough money has besn expended since the v,*ar to have given Virginia a splendid system of dirt roads. But under the slipshod system of ‘work ing the roads’ the money has been wasted, and there is little in the way of road improvement to show for it. The only sensible plan is to have the work done under a competent engi neer and to build permanently as far as ihe money will go.”—Porcsmoutlj Star. Progress of Cnxsado. New Jersey is far in advance of any State in the actual work of road construction. The law there places one-tenth of the cost on the State, one-tenth cn the abutting land own ers. and the remainder on the county, which is an equitable distribution of the burdens of construction and maintenance. The substitution of solidly btiilt roads for dirt roads soon effects a transformation in the region through v/hich it passes^ and even the old topography seems to vanish. Im proved accessibility tells upon every farm and adds to its value. Time and money, which are always equiva lent, are saved to the farmer and to all whose business it is to communi cate with him. Economy is consulted as well as convenience. So far as im proved laws have taken shape in this country the French idea is recognized that the State should bear a consid erable share of the cost of construct ing main thoroughfares, and French rural prosperity can be traced in no small degree to the country’s excel lent public roads. Now teat the ru ral inhabitant of this country is ex pected to bear but a comparatively small portion of the expense of good roads, his disposition toward the movement is, quite naturally, chang ing tn its favor. With a dozen or more States already engaged in the reform, the rapid extension of well made, permanent public highways i9 assured.—The Epicomist. riemarkftble Finish. The deer shooting season in the Adirondacks has closed with the unique record of not a man being mistaken and shot for one of the ani mals. Frequent warnings combined with some repressive legislation on chis subject appear to have accom- .'lislisd the Hsr* aid-
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 25, 1908, edition 1
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