2iOVEMBKRl1,1880.J 



FOEEST AND STREAM. 



293 



where liai'cs live, and sit down on some log or stiimp com- 

 mimding a riiawny and listen to llic industrious liltle hounds 

 until their near approach warns hitn to be on guard and not 

 let tlie liltle quarry steal liy imseen and UDShot at. 



The writer is fortunate in having holh varieties of ttie hnr' 

 within easy reach, and tboy can li'e hunted in winter win i. 

 pointer and setter -ak useless; and many a day the comir- 

 winter Will my jmck of beagles make the M'oods ring wiili 

 I iKJT music as they follow the great white hare in his gliost- 



lik.^ night. N. Er.MOKE. 



TirE CARE OF DOGS. 



CllAPTEi; 11. 



r kennel, and hintcdat the 

 its occupants, let us give 



HAVING prnvidnl 

 general arrange 

 lli<;ni a "PiinHrc mral." 



i.''-r!niiily evrryliiiij^v l<n(ivvs just What is bcst, and fotu- in- 

 liividiiiils i.ui nf'tive will disagree as to bill of fare. How is 

 tliat ? Ju.st tills way. No 1 keeps a dog, Ko. 2, a brace, IVo. 

 B, four r,r live. aiidNo. 4, twenty or thirty. Ho 1 advocates 

 laltle Hcrai«: >{,, g^ Spratt's biscuit, with milk, or soup 

 made of boiie.^ from the butclier's shop; No. 3, oiiiiueal al- 

 ternated with wheal bran and corn meal mush; No. 4, corn 

 meal mush, with meat ami veu'ctalile soupooeasionally. All 

 arc well enough in tlieir iilaee.s, Imt is it not evident that each 

 man speaks for his own particular ease, witlioul thouirlit of 

 the thlference between it and tlie olliers. Would it ii^ii seein 

 ridiculous to tell a man to feed Ids .stock of twenty dogs uii 

 table serap.s or tipratt's biscuits exclusively •" 



1 take feir my starliug point a kennel of from si.xleen to 

 t weni,_v, liccausc you will get ray experience with a kennel of 

 twenty a.s licallby and fine-looking dogs us one would care to 

 see riweiity is I lie average nimihcr, dogs coming and going 

 continually I, nut, of which I have, not lost a single dog this 

 year, m.r is rliere a sick one on the place at lime of writing 

 (Nov. 3, 1880). 



In feeding dogs it is an advantage to change the food quite 

 often, thereby giving a relish and keeping up good appetites; 

 always bcarinjr in mind that in most cases food can bo made 

 to an'swer theliurpose of medieiues. 



Mush <aK-e or Iwice a week in warm weather, remembering 

 not to cook at one lime more than enough to feed twice, as it 

 soon begins to ferment unless kept iu a refrigerator. A good 

 mush for idl seasons, but especially for summer, is made sts 

 below : 



1 beef head or 2 largo boot shins, 3 heads of cabbage, or 

 1 peck of turnip or potatoes, (3 onions, 1 tcacupful of salt, 1 

 ounce black jiepper. Cut the vegetables into fine pieces, re- 

 move as nuicli meat: as iiossible from th'.- bnne, eliop it fine 

 and crack the iHine. Tlmr.- -Il j i.; -i, i- .i, !., ii!e and add 7 



buclicts (8 rpiarl.^.i r,f w.al-r, n-L i.-i;' ;,,i!l remove 



hOtiea. Thicki'ii ti. the eon:>is1i n.-v nl r,.i:l ,,m[; sinip with tlie 

 following ndxture : Cora meal 1 bushel, uat meal 1 peck, 

 wheat bran 3 pecks. Stir in while the sonp is boiling and let 

 it continue to boil tliree houis longer. Do not let il scorch. 

 Feed cold. 



A good winter food is made thus : Put into the kon pot 1 

 peck of hominy, poiu- on it i buckets of water, jind boil 1 

 hour. Chop up 4 lbs. fat pork (fresh) and 3 pecks of pota- 

 toes (skins on), put them into the pot rind allow water to 

 cover them, boil one half hour and then stii- in a handful of 

 salt, the same of lilack pejiper, and snilicieut coarse wheat 

 flour or middlings to make it stiff. Boil until hominy and 

 potatoes will mash with a spoon, and feed moderately hot, 

 say " pretty warm." 



Plain corn meid mush, with meat fibrine or cracklin 

 cooked in it when the latter article is not burned— as is 

 often the case when it is not convenient to exainine befeire 

 purchasing —is very wholesome : but where skin diseases arc 

 concerned, avoid fat or eraeklin, which contains more or less. 



Use in its place h 

 Better use no men 



As tt staple ar 

 baked corn lui .ni 

 fore Iiaking. 

 seasoned wit, 

 thick) one hour in 

 is browned, if boM 

 kind of sin-feit, lea 

 alternated williw 



'i'l 



than fat. Feed e 



.'le for all 

 ill! cooked I 



lid. 



other e:heap parts. 



lid 



icasous I would reeomi 

 leal cut fine and stirred in he- 

 meal should be mixed with r..id wall r. 

 r andsalt.and baked i for a loaf two iuelies 

 1 hot men, Uirninii the loaf when the top 

 in doe.s not brown well. If there is any 

 avc out the meal, giving plain corn bread 

 •II cooked vciietables, and where convenient, 

 jil of fried fish. Feed cold. Exee]:il in the 

 ig pup.s, there is no danger in fish bones, 

 ill cat them — and few but will — give occas- 

 pe tomato, or two small white pi^tatoes be- 



Taken 



into ihe.stomaeh tijev con- 



lospjio 



ns anil lime to the bone. 



"■■Il 



I'lio, 111 causing worms 





Mill e.MicUing them 



-1 , 



I e, nieiii which a dog 



are \i- 



-V iieiieli.ial to his health. 



r, is < 



le of Ike must important 



1 tine 



' times u ila', in Sununer, 



iLsing 1 



III or seruliliins the buck- 



Case of ver\ \ 



■Where il'ii 

 ionally a raw 

 tween meals. 



Soup once or twice a week in cold weather is good ; Ijut 



soup in warm weather is a nuisance, ll often sickens a dog 



■ and causes him to lose his appetite : easily spoils or sours by 



keeping over night, fmd, if fed in that state briugs on charr- 



l)o;a. 



Bones are of more importance than most persons think. 

 Each dog should have a bone to gnaw, and a few small or 

 thin enough for him to grind andswallow.at least onceaweek. 

 As a. mechanical agent lliey cleanse the leelh, strengthen the 

 jaws and harden the gmns. 

 iributea large amount of ]i 

 Ijiusole and brain, and assi- 

 to loose their hold upon 1 1 1 

 from the bowels. The exei 

 Clerivea from giiawintr a born 



Fresh water, cold ami cle 

 items. It should lie renewr 

 and once a day in winier. r 

 ets each lime. A\arm. dii 



jurious to a dog as il i( is naiisrous tii a person. A i 

 - neglects to kcc|i up a constant 

 noinore fit to have charge of 

 run a barber shop. 



Dogs should be chained up nt feeding, in order to see how 

 each individual's appetite is, and m prevent fighting and steal- 

 ing of the weaker or timid dot's' share. 



Do not place the food vessel loo far from the Chained dog, 

 and cause him to choke himself. 



The quantity of food given to each, should be .gauged by 

 bis or her size, condition, etc.; huge dogs, and thin or poor 

 ones needing an extra allowance. Is is often necessary to use 

 a little petting imd coaxing with choice bits fed him from ti\e 

 hand wheie the dog is oil his appetite or naturally timid iu 

 company; and sometimes in the latter case, the only plan is 

 to move him oil b\- himself at feeding time aud allow him 

 plenty of time to eiit. 



Care should Vie useii tri clear up all scrap which may be 

 left, and no food allowed to remain about the beds or boxes. 

 It will prevent unpleasant odor, and teaches a dog to eat sya- 

 tematicnlly. Everett VoS Culin. 



limy 



iipplyofcli . 



. kennel than a monkey is to 



CUKBENT DOG STOKXES. 



V. 



B. M. Cobb, the posBoesor of oxtenai re pastoral interests in this 

 -'.■■■:i.ai, In- .i fJii--]-il "■r. I 'a^j iji^.i .j !-■■■ ■!-. i;-i trie iija,1orfty of the 



■'■ .:■ ;.:■, 'I ■ ' ■' ;■■■■! ■'■ ■■■' ■. .■■;!■._■ Ill pU'uf.c a master. 



I ■ ■!■ . ■ ■,,-;■ ■ ; ■■■,,: ,■■ -fitirifv thimtogriilifv 



•I'T aa'-O-i, ai-.l ■■■ ■■■n-.ir,. i,- ■;,: - ,,■ i ,■ ,i ■. iiiaiiifestation of (lij- 

 Xileasnre on her niiistia-'spiirl at Lei IjehLinur appiMirstn amioy her 

 exoeudinely. About six weeks .•if;o Mr. Cubb lelt for C'liliforuia. 

 leaving this dog- with others in tim enrn of (lie henler. Ho filuo 

 tiuned Ins mule out n.. II. i- rronr,. t,, ,,„.f,„.. ,t i, „„,,,, uatii he re- 

 tlUTierl. Whfn hiV -l" " ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■' ■■■- :.■ ■■-■iiii nt nip'ht 

 tiiedogdisruvereJ liiiii ; ■, : i ■ ■ nmiiglvover 



this fuel she grew y.,,v ; ■; ■ ■ ,-!.■!• .jliKerved 



this roHtlesHiieSh on ^(.■i.,ui, ..., on ■'■ i , ■ . ,:! tlml shu 



wnnld be all right next iiiuriiijig. W I, , i i ii!:. however. 



the dog was goi.o. A few day^ siihsf ■ ■ I ■ r diseovert-d 



her oil the range with the mule aud Him^, ■oi.il ■. ;ii^liiuinK her to 

 foUoffliim to eariip. where he tod her. .^he ngam .liH.apppart:<l. 

 Wr. Cobb was alisent ahonl five weeks, and wbcu be returned lie 

 rcpiiuedto the rant;.' to get his mule, wbicb was also a dutiful 

 animal, and to his amazenient and relief ho fonud the faithful dug 

 ill coivipauy with liis fmlhful doulu'V fur out on the range, appar- 

 ently <-ont.,iited and ha[i)iy eoiiip.-iuions. At the sight of her. 

 mii/ter. however, tin- dog Ijeeaiiie perfe.dlv frnrilic wath eestacy 

 aud mauifeHted lier nnnlloy,-d rapture by uetionH th.at were as easily 

 comprehended by him as thongh they had been spoken in words.— 

 Stale Line (^Cal) MeraliJ. 



VI. 



.\nimal instinet of « very liigh order was pxhibitod at tlie Rulldng 

 vannli last Snndsrv. Mr. Piper, of Bnpid Cilv. was there with a hue 

 pointer dog. .UJ hands were seated at the dinner talile, when alt 

 at onee the dog went up to his master and eomiiieiuaid wlduiiig. 

 The attention of the master was attraetcd to Hie di.fi and turning 

 around he asked liim what lie wanted. The dog n-aehnd up and 

 dropped a gold badge in his Jiand that he liad iiinlied up some- 

 \yhera. Dr. Me>ei- reiajgiiized it as one that bud dropped fnaii Ids 

 yuBt, but knew nothing of the loss luitit the dog fomid H.—Deail- 

 wood I Dal:) 'fimes. 



As au evidence that whisky is nu infaUible autidnte againfit 

 poison, we «ill state that Mr. .T. W, .Taekson, while out on the 

 prairie some few days ago with bis iiiie-l:,|„odi-d hmitnig dogs, had 

 one of them bitteu bv an enormous mocea.Hin suiikn. 'Therejitile 

 fastened bis fangs oii the edge uf the dog's tongue, from winch a 

 perfect stream of blood issued. Such iras the feme of the vine-^ 

 that the wound inllieted lieoame nistantlv k'laek. and the dngs 

 tongue and lower jaw had eonuiieueed swelling ranidlv and nlarm- 

 ingly. The owTier, liaving with him a flask" of whiskv. In.^t no 

 time in pouring down the iiuinmrs tliroal aliont oue-liiilf of it. As 

 soon as the \chiKky took elTeet the dog lay stretohed out as if 

 dead, but he was only tb-iijik, as he soon revived from his stupor 

 and was seemingly us well as ever. The place struck hv the suaUo 

 rotted and fell oat.— St. Xan'M-i/ J)emocrat. 



vm. 



Last evening, as the through mail on the Baltimore and C)hio 

 rtoad was Tiaasing AltiBville, a dog started across the track. The 

 pilot of the engine btruck the canine, aud the engineer supposed 

 ihat It had been .erouiid up hv tlic train. When the engine reached 

 the eitv the fireman wa^; surprisi'd to find the .log Koated on the 

 a*-pan under the fiu-naee. 'The d.^gdidiiot seein to have been 

 severely injurod by the pilot, but the liair was burnt, from its back 

 diu-iug the long ride of twenty-one miles on the ash-jjau. This 

 morning the canine appeared ipntc frisky, and was nent back to its 

 owner at AlpsviUo.— Erf»-eji.<. 



IX. 



Policeman Charles Egolf, of the Twentv-second district, wlio 

 patrols that dismal part of the Twenty-ninth ward Mug around 

 Xiiieteenth street and Indunia avenue denominated " Stifl'towii." is 

 generally aewmipanied bv the station lionse binndbonnd "Nig-." 

 This was an advantage to'liim o„ Fridav nm-he 1^...-,.!f found .Tobn 



Brannan beating his wife ttbo.r, , , , ■■!■-! ,,,,i,:0 .o-d to arrest 



him. Brannan loioeked Eg. ,1 ..A party of 



ronghs gathered to Branuaii'r ■■: ■ ■ ,, ,, ii no Kgolt'waa 



down and being vigorouHlv 1 . I , ■ , !.. ;,n„nlhound enme 



into play, like .another d.i- ■■ ; : ;,,,d ..ther celebrjited 



hounds of history. He (koi, .\ ■.;,,!, bit right aud left 



iuiakei,ttlie assailants at bav.iin,. I 11 .. n^.^, and went at Bran- 

 nan with a lilaekjaek. He sp,,eoily siibaiu:ai?,rannaii and coiidneted 

 him to the iioUce .station, his four-legged an.-iiliai-,- hm]ii]]g along 

 on tlu-ee feet and with a couple of broken ribs, I-:golf fell fainting 

 upon the lloor and when picked ii)-. it wa,-; Pnind Ihat Ids seiiU was 

 fractured, iuit not dangerously, and in ! 'i - !,■■. ■■■■ :m liadiv eoii- 

 liL-cd. Lnoncni appeared bi have be. ,, , , ,,,-,;i:^e mncldne, 



In- «:!:■ io ^,a..h.il nji from .CgolfR 1,':^ . , ., day lirannan 



was given a hearing by Magistrate .s,oe r , :,e.l .■■■e i lifted in de- 

 fault of ija.OOO \iwl.—rhilaaelph:ia Tiwe.t. 



A B.\D Bird. — The following story comes to ns well au- 

 thenticated: At a certain club house in Boston there was 

 kept ill till? billiard room a parrot whicli w=^as so tame and 

 such a favorite that il was not confined to its cage, but was 

 allowed the liberty of Ihe room, and was often seen perched 

 upon the furniture or wiurdering about the floor. On one oc- 

 casion, when the liird was seated in one corner of the rooui, a 

 gentleman, a j\Ir. B., cnlercd, followed liy Im; dog, whether 

 a pointer or a setter w-e do not know. The clog after a few 

 moments winded the parrot, drew on it, and finally stood fast. 

 The bird, which had been up to this time .apparently oblivi- 

 ous of the presence of the canine, now turned its head slowly 

 and in tones cxpre.SEive of the utmost contempt said, "Go 

 home, you darned fool." The dog started, looked, and then 

 turning tail, slimk out of the room. It is said that although 

 up to this time the animal had been a splendid hunter, he 

 woidd Iheueeforth never point a bird. 



GtiESTS Expected at VisoBNSBS.-^The ftillowiug gentle- 

 men are expected at Vincenncs during the trials : Mr. Luther 

 Adams, Beaton : Jlessrs. J. A\d Munson, St. Louis ; D. San- 

 born and A. II. IMoore and party, Phila. ; C. H. Baymond 

 and parly and Chas, De lioiigc. New York; Janics Moore, 

 Toledo; .J. H. Dew, Harry Bishop. E. 0. Sterling, St. 

 Louis ; H. L. Smith and Brother, Strathroy, Out. ; Chas. H. 

 Turner, St. Louis ; Dr. McDermotl, Cincinnati ; also a ntmi- 

 her of promincui sportsmen from Boston, Chicago, Pilig- 

 burgh, Toledo, St, Louis, Dayton and Cleveland. 



National Awekioan Eield Trials' Clfb Mebtisg. — The 

 annual meetuig of this organization will be held at University 

 Hall, Vincennes, Indiana, on Monday evening. November 15, 

 at 8 o'clock. 



TueNational Trials— T'i«ee-» nf.s, fiKf., JVm. 15.— Already 

 all the rooms in the Grand Hotel, which is one block away 

 from University Hall, where the meetings are to be held, are 

 engaged, and the other hotels, the La I'latte, Union Depot 

 and Central are certain to have their quota of sportsmen. 5lr. 

 H. AI. Short, who handled several dogs at the late Penna. 



State Eield Trials, is seven miles away from here having ex- 

 cellent sport. Mr. C. B. Whiiford is aiso iu tliia neighbor- 

 hood gelling his dogs in trim. 



E\srEt;x FiKi.o Tmals,— Wc arc informed on the iiuthori- 

 ly of Dr. II. F. Atcn, President of the E. F. T. Club, that 

 there is an abundance of quail on Hobiu's Island, sufficieiU. to 

 ensure a successful meeting whether others are obt.alned or 

 not. A meetmg of the club will b« held this afternoon at 

 3:30 p. M. 



.SOMK ^fyssACH [SETTS DoGS— ..'l.s/i/fr//?, JA/Y.ri. , JVlJV. ,1, 1H.30 



- lf!,/iU>r Forest „,id tytnvM : I have been shooting Ibis fail 

 Cloud sired by Alton, aud litter .si?i,.|- to S. T, llain- 



moud's Thistle. 

 Held, Mass. She e 

 durance for a pup 



-■d by R. F. Kabi 



We 



three 

 lire La' 



•Spr . 

 1 ami en- 

 Ihs: .Viist also make 

 my particular •■pets," 

 First comes Ite.v, a |iure Laveraek, one ye.ir old, by Lathrop's 

 Dick, out of Lathroii's Lima, lie is -oeiu'd by V. H. Fuller, 

 of JspringCeld, j\lass,, who has also lately purchased Luna. 

 lies is a king among [nips, ami if he is kept U]) to the 

 " scratch " as he has started he will gnve the ' cracks " cause 

 to look to their laurels at uo very liislant day. Next comes 

 Doctor, a six monlhs old pointer pnp oni of "l.nllirop'.s Kate, 

 and a remarkably promising dog every way for rine oi his age, 

 He is owTicd liy'F. 11. Lalhrop; Ivsip", of SpringtieUl, Mush" 



Bv the way, did you ever hear a dog tulk ? 1 liave an 

 English sctler'ownedby G. W. Gunn. of Springlield, Mass.. 

 that will talk and hold a big grouse in his monih at the same 

 time. His name is Lark, and I have dubbed hiui "Old 

 Honesty ■' from his quaint, honest ways, though he is but a 

 [uip. 1 was out with him Wednesday when he came to a 

 point by a liemlock thicket in llie alders 1 i)assed qiiictlv 

 aroiuid to the oilier side and Ihrshed a grouse and .shot il. 1 

 sent him after it, and he had just picked il up ami taken ,>t 

 few .steps toward me when he suddenly stopped and made a 

 rigid iioint off to the right. As Ibcre "wa,s no mistaking the 

 point 1 let him hold it a liltle, and then took a few sicpa in 

 that direction, when I Hushed a grouse which rose above the 

 liiLshcs and pas.sed directly over Lark, and when it was about 

 forty yards distant it passed a little opeiuug, aud 1 cut il 

 rlown. Lark stood staunch as a rock, but turned his head 

 and watched the bird until it fell, when he gave a perceptible 

 start, and whined a few times though he did not stir from his 

 tracks or olTer to drop the bird in h'fs moiilb. 1 Id liiiu sland 

 II little, and then ordered ''fetch," when he came in prompt- 

 ly with bis bird, but several times on llic way he turned his 

 head toward the fallen bird, and whined, saying in Ihe purest 

 dog dialect, " C)f course 1 should obey order's, btit I am most 

 awfully afraid that w^e .shall lose that last bird." However, 

 1 liad him come in and sit U]) and hold his bird about the us- 

 ual length of time, aud Ihen allowed hinj to retrieve the othei' 

 bird, which he joyftdly did. When romonslrating with me 

 the expression of au.xicly depicted on his coimtLaiauce was 

 ludicrous iu the extreme, and at thcsame time very Mattering 

 to the dog's future prospects. It has been very dry here mi- 

 ld lately.' However, by plenty of hard Tcork 1 have secured 

 fair bags of woodcock and grouse the ciilire season. Grouse 

 are plentier than last year lliough they have begun to packs 

 whicli of course make the day's bags more variable tlmu when 

 they arc scattered. The shooting rather improves ns cold 

 weather drives them out into the sun. Rcf feu GRorsE. 



What IS A Cocker? — Editor FarM nnd Strmm: Ism 

 inch j.ileascd indeed to sec that Mr. G. D. 3Iaedougall has 



judged aud b 

 landnble attc 

 Let 



ilvance of other cockei 



• to gel at a standard by 



■d up to, I would be Ve 



pt sliould be frustrated b)' bre 



■cspondents give 



cilers m 

 they may be 

 r\- if his very 

 ■■tlieiiisclveB. 



should be like and back 



Iheir oiiinions as lo what 

 u]) their opinions bjrshowijig 

 iperior to all others, nol by 

 tr dogs. It is all moonshine. 



wherein their ideal spa 

 pitching into each other and I In 



in my opinion, to s-y I'eo ope ,n;in's dog^ are half King 

 Charles and anothe' , e' ■ i _ idi water s|)aniels i'if ijierc is 

 .such a breed), Wr . ■ ■ oie to anvtliiiig' delinilo itt 



this way. Let then nr.'L-n ileir remarks by sayiii.g Ihat the 

 modern cocker spauicl is a " mongrel," wiiich" mi one can 

 deny. There is a little of almost every breed of field spaniel 

 in them except the clumber, conscqucntiv we have the vari- 

 ous colors— liver aud wliite, liver and tan, liver, black aud 

 tan. black and white, black. It is a well-known fact that if 

 the lemon and while is crossed by any other breed of spaniel 

 the lemon color is lost and that liver color takes its pkee. 

 The old Welsh cocker, lemon and white, is uo doubt the 

 foundation of the modern cocker, but as we rarely ever gtt 

 that color it is a sure indication of a cross. 



I have written this to endeavor to show that because a 

 cocker spaniel is not a certain color or weight it does notuec- 

 easarily follow that it is not a cocker. What Mr. Maedougall 

 wants, aud I place myself in the same line, is to know what, 

 the various breeders' consiiler the eery best style of dog of 

 this particular modern breed, llii-h Dalziul lu his work 

 gives two classes, the black codier and the cocker. I think 

 he is quite right ; the black cooker is a much larger dog tluin 

 what is now almost universally conceded to be the size of the 

 modern cocker. 



To repeat mj'.self, let the various breeders and fan ci era of 

 modern cockers go to weak and describe in every particular. 

 give the weight and measureincnls of the breed, length of 

 body, height at .shoulder, lenglh of ear, pasiliou, size and 

 shape of eye. deseripiion and character of hair, aud all other 

 points necessary to make up a standard. Thun I would sug- 

 gest that the Kennel Editor or oilier impartkal aulhority 

 should analyze what has been writteu aud give the result, tor 

 we may be sure that no two writers will agree ou tins impor- 

 tant suliject. 



I will at some futiu-e time give what I consider the proper 

 size aud shape of the cocker. Although not my.self a breeder 

 I take a gi'eat iuleresl in the men-y fellows, b'e they sixteen 

 or forty pounds. M. B. 



X<)-«rf<j?*, Ontario, J\\rc. 7. 



TiTE Dog-dealisg English Cleiuc— The dog-dealing 

 clergyman is a type of the amatciu- jobber, lie often breeds 

 some rather uncommon kind of dog, possibly a species of 

 wolf-hound, the progeuilors of whicli lie purchased dtiring 

 his travels in the East, perhaps at an Armenian convent. He 

 inyites inspection of these interesting animais, and the in- 

 tending purcliaser makes a pilgrimageMo Ihe hermitage of the 

 clerical breeder. This he fLnds to be an unusually snag 

 country rectory, looking the perfection of all that can possi- 

 bly be cvpected in a well-ordered parsonage. Pictures of the 

 Holy Land hang on the walls of the druwmg-rooni, aud an 

 oak prk-diev, in a little recess lighted by a stained-glass win- 

 dow betokens the devotional habit* of the family. 'Ilic divvaj 



