Decembbe 0, 1880.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



375 



considered as particularly ignorant or perverted in conse- 

 (jueuce. HufPKD Qkodse. 



Pknksyt,vaxia. Bench Show.— Mi-. Chas. Lincoln will 

 reach Piiisburg, Pu., this week and enler into his dutUis aa 

 Supei'iutcnrien'i on' the lOtli inst. Major J. M. Ta^'lor, of 

 Xiexington, Kj'., lias lieeu selected as one of tlie judges. 



— TVIr. J. J. Snelleiiburg'a addj-ess is at New Brighton. Pa., 



not JStew Castle, as publislied in account of Vincenue.? trials. 



. — -a — . 



KENNEL NOTES. 



Names Glai5ibd. 

 ■ 'iI—Mt. Geo. ScliotioW, of Toronto, Canada, ddins the 

 ...1..K iliu-old fcr hia liver airl white cocker dog puppy hy PlUKhcr 

 out of Fanny, purchased from M. P. McKoon. 



ifauke—'ih: Geo. Sebofield, of Toronto, Canada, claims tli- 

 name Hiddee for his liver and white cooker bitch puppy by Ned II. 

 out of Daisy. " ; jjirav: 



Tip— Mr. W. D. Batey, of OreanoaBtlo, Indiana, ololin the name | authi 

 Tip for hia black, white and tau setter dog puppy out of Bessie Lee 

 by imported Peun. 



MoMd-ile. Charles W. Stewart, of Ft. Madison, Iowa, elaima the 

 name Maud for bis setter bitch puppy, purcbiis.xl from Mr. S. A. 

 Kay. or St. Louis, Mo., by Dan out of hiri Jflora. 



Graff IL—Mc. E. W. Saporta'i, of New York, clahiis tlie name of 

 Grace II. for his pointer bitch, H montliH old (Semahc.u-Whitf's .,, 

 Qraoa) Utter Bister to Gregory'H BeUe, winner of Nmsiay ptakcH at i 1,., 

 Eobiu's I4a.nd, 1830. ,„' 



Divn — L. R. Landy, of South Framingham, Maan., claims lb<! .-., 

 name Diva for his red Iri.4h setter bitcti, whulpud Uecember 11, I J" 

 1879, bv Chamoiou Berkley out of Bookwood'B Mag, Bhe by Llcho ! ,,, 

 out of Fottler'fi Eileen. ■ | ,, ' 



Snrd— Mr. E. L. iSc!olev cbiims the name Sard forhiu red Irish I ,,, 

 dog pnppy, wlielpert S>v/,a^i 31. 18S0, out of VI. N. CallenderB j jp 

 QuoeuBass by lioiv O'Mnie. j,,', 



^leni Partka-^bv. A. WcfJoliuni, of this cifcv, claims the 'lame jj, 

 of Silent Porlnei for hicj liver and white Englifib cr,r-<-'--- ■■,■;••' -ir •- i 

 TVheiped at Pee'skjll, N. 1'.. October 17, 1880, bi! 

 ontnfUiaFly by hia Mnrfe. MoHio, Ist prize > 

 No 7.56 ; Miiaio out of Wliitm.m'g Pamiie by Iiif ' 

 ported and li^t p:-"-- r' ■,■";'-■. ':-■■-". '^'■■'^^■:' .i.-.i;! l-jih 



Sam: Flora l>v i • , , i,^ i,,.^ 



Koon'a Nellie (I I : i,:|iortrrl; 



Captamby Ber,i.-r -,.,,'.: , im • 



Tni.m.p—Di: a. K Viyyaut, i'fii:l<Bkm, iN 1.. ciaiiUn (ho name 

 Trnon for Uver and white coskor Bpaniel dog puppy, whelped Oct. 

 17, 1880, out of hia Fiy by Music. 



Boston, Dec. 8, 1890. 



In .VI. i i inst.. Ml-. Line F. Kellogg, of Piincctou. 



Kan., '1: . ,;idv E!ebo. for a bitch mantionod in the 



aama L - i. Smctlirrs, of Ottawa, Kan. I aslc that 



theanpii : ;,i:> another nnme, aa I claimed tlie niirae 



Lady Elcho for my Rose-Elcho bitch, April 8, 1880, 



C. E. "WiNo, M. D. 



WHEt/PS. 



Jesaie—filr. E. A. Horzberg'B JesBie, dam ont of Chnmmon St. 

 Elmo, wlinlpef! Dpcoml.er 3, 1880, two dogs and tv,o l;ilchcH io ijis 

 ■pure Laverai'lc .Aifler.sbot. 



Pet— Ml-. E. V. Moi-dlliott's celebrated first pv;,,c r,,.!,.-!, j™,- 

 bitch Pet baHwiielpodlivi v : - i : !i ■ ; 



/■rf— Mr. E. D. Biiflsf'.r ; , i.. j.->uutc(t 



harownerwitho litler of i . iildjen, 



by the aamo owner a Lio,,. -. i , . ,. , . . ,-. -. ; m;i, :, v.hite 



ban-. 



(?yp.w>/— Jlr. G. W. BasRforrt'g (White Plains, N. Y.), red Irish 

 Better bitch Gypeey, whelped Dec, 8, 1880, nine jiappiea, four doga 

 and live pypa, aU red by Eleho IIL A brace of dogs and gypH will 

 be disposed of. 



Dbatds. 



trotted about the yard for a short time, and thou started off, and 

 that was the laat bccu of bira. It was learned that he went off on 

 a miff, and did not atop until he got to a ueighbor'a Honie miles 

 away, where he has since remamed. — AsMabula, 0., Senttntl. 

 XVL 

 One of the two iHo^t firomiueut dogs of our day— Prince Bia 

 mark"8 Tvras ;'i' ', • ■'' Hiigu's Senat— the latter has just 

 joined the caj .i i ' of years andhouorH. The ■' Realm 



Dogs,'' who i- - mmiorality two yfeii vr af.-o by col- 



larmgthe ven ■ : i ifi vihen the celcbiated oiplomatiHt 



was paying an offici-al vitiit to tlie German chancellor, atill Uvea to 

 diaraiaa ti-ouble>iome deputations and terrorize importune petition- 

 ers. But Senat, the great French poet's faithful friend and con- 

 stant companion during many years of exde, baa Kuceumlied to old 

 age at HautevibB House, and received intennent in tlie grounds of 

 that romantic retreat. With bim was bnrir;d tlie sil-. ei- collar pre- 

 sr'nted to hin> '(OTiie\Yijat late in life bv his incinjpr. wliiwe senatorial 



-Red bv thoflr-at 



iirolmbly sugl 



Dayhn—ViT. J. J. Jennelle's rod Irish setter bitch Dayton (Bob- 

 Dnok) died Thanksgiving night from distemper. She was in whelp 

 to Elcbo n. 



8etlera-Mr. E. F. Mei - 

 Hall, of New York City. :i 

 of excelteut strain and > 



aurlem-yi\: ,L Oti-i I 

 ohased of A. A. >----!' i 

 (Jack -Fannie • 1 ■ ' 

 liittleButtei-cir 



Bernhnrrlf—.', 

 Chaser! -r- ' 

 six pil: 



■haHed from Mr. William 

 ;>liiok EngUsh setter dogs 



t, UsTtlle, N. Y., has pur- 



! cVar bitch Cnrlew 



' ; ichoater) and of 



1 1 -J, N. Y., haspur- 



iiro-n i.ii.;1j Baruhardt and 



I ibis collar was 

 -iniin-fd for Senat by the 

 i. ', ■■ luau logiB quelqu'uu iriH 



ramenat. Mm viijo? Hugo. Mon iiom ? 



Senat." Fori; . k, we trarifrlata ; "Iwish 



some one would lnk<' ms lif.iiic. Jily profepsion '? Dog. Jly 

 master Y Hugo. My name ? Senaf'-^iotidon Telegraph. 



xvri. 



The frrniii^ nf .Tnv,,,.. Hprrin.-lr.n of filnpletoo, S. L, whileseated 



,-a, tli. . ^ , ,■ : . ■ : ■ . . M,c._ had their attention at- 



rrafii' ilu closet. Omiiaknig an 



invo.;i -i a rat with one of itn legK 



• its teeth m iho cafs ear. The cat, maddened with pain, 

 ,bcd ont into the vnrcl. cai-rving both the rat and the clam v.itli 

 •. Thpj- Ih'i ist. htill held prisoner, was killed bv the cat — Si'n. 



; •:. ^ ^1 i-:,;;, -•iurr. Imi be got left. 



: I i^iaiirc of practical joking fitly re- 



; , I ii •. LriB a rough-haired coUie, wiBO and 



1 Oiiy ev.iuiii.«; a. lady of the household, 



stooped qiiictiy, as he lay 



f.tce close to hiB head, blew 



of his o.trM. Tickled and 



startled, 

 feuded, 

 dining m 

 the inmid 



.^yiccial favoiit 

 . iind placing b 

 )'. shout 



eil off, 



nelr s 



of the eve-i'ii- the ladv hitppcncd to be re- 

 ir, when the collie -.vaB ohserved Ijy some of 

 d luidiing a cifcnit, to move stealthily toward 

 r. paws on one of the arms, and placing his 

 ■'s ear, to give a sharp bark and instantly 



THE CHASE : 1X8 HISTORY AND LAWS. 



Unned from page 310.] 



;iii;m tombs and the bass-reliefs 

 I"';, vdiich, after the long lapse of 

 : i! iii'oii.'j;lil!oliLrbt, and the Jewisli 

 1 Vi' limy 1101, be certnin as to tlie pre- 

 ■iis i'.i;y;jirisr.,i, siiil Undoubtedly cairl&s 

 ■ itipiipiity, liave nfffirded us some iii- 

 : : " - imtions a.s regards Ibe Bporta of 



h bijcr period ibnt v,e become 



,, lu'bils of other nntions of the 

 ii.,.i. iiiion ledge of the Persians and 

 derived from the Greel;.? 

 jocts of ttie Pergiau f^np 

 ire brought into roiiri':, ' 



chif 



(Wildoir-Doll.vl. 



Siju'no—'itr, J. Otia Fellows has purchased of .iohn PnmeU the 

 black cooker bitch Squaiv (Wndau'-Josie). 

 Bkep. 



C/lisei- Jf'nVi-WjMin.i'— Mr. Wm. LoclTer'a dachsmid bitch Wal- 

 dme. first prize St. Louia, 1880, w-as hred November 2i to Dr. L. 

 Twaddell's Unser Frdn. winner of Centennial medal and apocial 

 prize, Philadelphia, 1876.; first and ^periial prize. BiiltuiiovH. IS77. 

 fiv.ft and speiiftl prize. PhUadelphia, 1879. 



Goin-Countfus /^uson— Dr. C. E. Wing has a fine he,i!thv liilor 

 of seven puppies, five dogs and t.vo Ijitch.!.-., ont of ConntcE.? Liisca 

 (Drake-'. 'I'll - in. Thev were whelped 



October J 



JJhiri. ' ■Uf-v Black Bos.-, (1,086 N. 



•A. K. C , . .fanieB T. Walker, Troy. 



N. Y,. Kl, (956 N. A. K. C, Stud 



Book), I' 



i^o.-^' Koalindale by Dash III. 



•waa brrQ 1 ._ -, ,', . _ ,._ : . -;..: ..;.: ^ .^.....y,. 



Salbf, 



Leuip Thorelein—'Dr. 3. J. Jennelle, of Dn Qnoin. Illinois, has 

 iiold his Ii-ish Kpttci- Intidi in whelp to Elcho U. to SIr.'K. G. Sylves- 

 ter. Ci.rl-n,...,:. ...... 



Sai<y iCoon, of Frankhn, N. Y., has sold to Mr. 



Gao. B : 10, Canada, a Uver and white cocker dog 



pupout u: i..i.i.. b, iiu.iher. 



kaidi-e- 'U. M. 1'. .McKoon, of Franklin. N. Y,, bjis sold to Mr. 

 Goo. Schofield. of Toronlio, Canada, a liver and white cocker bitch 

 pnppy out of Daisy bv Ned II. 



Svlph—Mx. E. F MerciUiott has sold his beautiful orange and 

 white fox terner bitch Sylph to 5Ii-. John MacUev, of New York 

 Oitv. 



Jrf— Mr. E. McrcUUott has sold Ids Newfoundland dog .lot to 

 EuKCoe Hale, of New York Citv. 



J?.H/i-JVeK \^'■h>'lp.^—^h■. S. W. Ti-nalow, of New York, has sold a 

 brace of pointer pups ont of his imported Neil by Mr. Orgill's 

 Chnmpinn Push to T. Broach, of Morristoun, N. J. 



i^;.(/-.Vu,«ic lf/ie/p,«— Dr. B, Wygant ba.» disposed of his "Fly 

 and Music" litter as ToUutvai A dof; to Mr. nnbfu'tson, of Peeka- 

 ktU ; two dogs to Dr. A. M.:Collum, N. V., onr- of whicdi died : one 

 died of membranous cronp. One dog he keeps, not for side. 



rriHEpainlir 



X of Kin.', 



,<!Resi, have in ri' 



history, ivbicl) 



cise <isiti_- lit nh 



us back into s 



sight info the 1 



the field. It i; 



acquainted v. I' 



ancient iv-^'i 1 



Medr-- ' 



Minor : 



gavdsi^ 



siam court or rnlci s after thn Pensian 



val separates the Egyptian or Assyri: 



writings of Herctlotiis or Xenopbo. 



unabb'"-.-. - ■ ^ 11 ---':-,- r- '-^' ■ 



cha?i. : 1 r: 



large. ' -liii 



thePci-.,:: .: : -..11 Ill 



aa a iniljonal lusiituiion iiialrnnlly inriuc-iiciu;.,'- 

 Charaeler, ancient writt.'rs, botli Greiikaiid Roaiai 

 The himting parks, of the Ptrsinns ,ind Vtilvs 

 may tru.st the Greek writers; on a still gmu 

 those of the Assyrians. Curtius, the historis ; 

 campaigns, who" of coitrse eould personally lui 

 ing of the uputter, but is said to have dr; 



o in Asia 

 or, as re- 

 tUe Per- 

 iig inter- 

 t'om the 

 ■ lierefore 

 ■i-c-nrtbe 



irril MueJl 



t^rj-.ii'' of 

 ;.d.--.l(ince, 

 national 

 re agreed. 

 ■re. If we 



:iid reliab 

 IS (bni the 



:l lui 



irli I 



froni earl 



parks, tf lis 



ai-my juto 01 



disturbed fc 



ensued, idte 



park. ')f e 



the narrator li.id not ninde h 



iianil- He accoriliiigly does 



disdiii:ifully rej.ectiiig the tisi 



Ilia generals, who came np 



and peremptorily orderio'.,' jiim lu 



dent, adds Cnrtfnp, aiosc tlu siory 



dered Lysiraaclin.'i 10 be ilirown ird- 



however, Lysimnchns surr.>i dcri in 



the statement of Xenop'ia in, us ^!a 



enclosures, wlien he tells ns fhai riic 



of Cyrus, then amounting- 10 i.i.OOO 



plion w£is lumseif serving, whs f-vi. 



another occasion the Greeks rec 



Kppaldng 

 IT ba^ 



of tbe.so 

 entered 



leiosed 

 bis 



? lie ^ 



no had not been 

 I thou.aimd head 



i.'le army in the 

 ieen complete if 

 "ill with bis own 

 lenistbe king as 

 iniar-hiis, one of 

 ei -.villi the Hon, 



nider liuving or- 

 tli a lion, wiiom, 

 ]\lnre reliable is 

 exreid, of these 

 lie of the Greek army 

 ami in wliicb Xeno- 

 in oneuf tbcm. On 

 inforuuitiou that 



|-!I t 



a large army of the enemy wa.? stationed in a neigUboriuj 

 park. Au instance of the estcn.sivc scale on which the royal 

 hunting establishments were organized is to be found in the 

 statement of Herodotus, that the tax imposed on four large 



Mcsopotnmiau vill,i 

 houuds in the Babylonia 

 these vilbige.s wereeveni 

 We are infor'n • -■ - 

 the earlier pi! 

 the chase, as 

 cises, as the ni- 

 preparing them iui Lli..; 1, 

 business of arms. At l 

 -wrote, ibese babil 



OUREENT DOG STORIES. 



sv. 



One of onr citizens bnd a hound which was great on a fox trail, 

 and wanted to be in the business most of the time. One morning 

 liat spring his master started to come up tonn, and the dog wanted 

 to accompany hmi, but was not allowed to do so. It was a sore 

 disappointment to the dog. and he made great comphdnt. He 

 stood on bis hind lege, with his fore paws on the window, and 



tude— to which, a.s one of 

 of the chase, he goes so far as to 

 Per.s-ian power; the more rational -s 

 being that the downfall of the nai 

 by the Macedonian conqueror wen 

 disuseof hunting and other active e.\ 

 eflfeminacy and' luxurious habits 



that of maintaining the royal 

 11 satrapy, in consideration of which 

 pted from all other tribute. 



1- r:rppks that the Persian youth, in 



: ' by, were regidarlj- ti-ained to 



■iii.ihip and other martial e.-^cr- 



piing their physical powers and 



i:irn..diips and fatigues of war and the 



he. la'Icr pL-riod at wbicli Xcnophon 



1 by him to liavc fallen into dcsue- 



his enthusiastic Ic 

 cribe the decline of the 

 ■w of the ma rter perhaps 

 in and its easy subjection 

 o be a.'cribed, not to the 

 rcii^ts, but to 1 be growing 

 ■hich led, arming other 



evils, to the abandonment of the cha.se, and the other manly 

 and warlike pursuits of their fathers. 

 Of the other Eastern nations of the period we are treating 



of we know 111 fie or nothing, though at a later period we read 

 of some of them — for instance, tlie Parthiaus — as being 

 pa.ssionately devoted to hunting. All we are acquainted -svith 



were acknowledged to be the finest then known, from which 

 we may infer tJiat the cha.sc had been energetically cultivated 

 in that couulrv. It may be assuined that the other nations 

 of the Ea.st bad not bi.-cn behind their A:--,.\yi-ian, Egyptian, or 

 Persian bretbicn in Inilo'ving wiiat Siieni.= to be the common, 

 and a.s it were instinctive, pnnjfcti.sity of man, more cspeciall.y 

 as in these countries wild animals were abundant, and the 

 facilities for hunting great. 



The mention of Greek historians brings us to the Greeks 

 themselves. Bui berc the beginning of liistory is lost in the 

 obscurity and ini.st of fable. Even Xenopbun,' in his treatise 

 on bnniiii;,', ha'i nothing better to tell us of its origin than 

 the legendiiiy .sliiiy that hunting and the training of hounds 

 were the invention of Apollo and Artemis, who imparted the 

 di.<:cnvery to Chiron, who in his turn instructed the long 

 list of heroes whom the writer ennnienites. But, as has al- 



iid it.self shows 



ig to manldnd 



liter in tlie dcsiruction of wild 



im the earliest 



be otherwi.9e. 



ready been ob.served, the existence of 1 

 how deep was tiie .sense of the ben 



from the 



beasts. It-: 



.-■f ihr 



i nai 



A conn 

 covered wiin 

 which au act 

 take !idvanti>; 

 are told an ii 

 cieni .' ■' '•'■- 

 Atli-i 



id I 



When 



B Greeks were fr 

 >Tor could it weli 

 .1 dii-eclions by mountain ranges, 

 laj be prolific (if wild ttnimais, of 

 :-rgetic population would not fail to 



:)me to the historii 

 iii-y, for which tbcTH si-rms ti 

 ■ t-iolon having *■ 

 -'tain that, if an 

 .lis enforced or (ill 

 enjoined to the 



times, wo 

 iR no sulli- 

 iiig to the 

 . ever pro- 

 larta hmit- 

 :tive by 



lie authority, and bounds were maintained at the ijublic 

 ■iii.se. Hounds of the Spartan breed were much esteemed, 

 as were also those of Crete, which probably diffei-ed but little, 

 if at all, frooi those of Sparta. We have to thank the record- 

 ed excellence of the Spartau hoimds for Ihe exciting and 

 vivid description of a pack of hounds which Shakespeare, 

 who had probably been reading some cfld work on hunting, 

 gives us in the Midftwmvwr JVfffhi'n Dream, liippolyta be- 

 gins : 



I was with Hercules and Cadmus once. 

 When m a wood of Crete tbev baved the bear 

 With bounds of .-^patta 1 iievcr did I bear 

 Such gaUaut ebidmg ; for besides the groves. 

 The skies, the I'ountams, every region near 

 Seemed all one mutual cry : 1 never heard 

 So musical a discord, such swetft tlumder. 

 To which Thesena a.us->veis : 



My hounds are bred ont of the 8part,an kind; 

 80 fleived, so sanded -, and their heads are hung 

 With ears that sweep away the morning dew j 

 Crook-kneed and dew-lappod like The.saaliau bulla ; 

 Slow in pm-suit, but matched in mouth Idee bells. 

 Each mider each, A cry mora tuneable 

 Was never hoUa'd to. ntir cheired .vitb boi-n, 

 lu Crete, in Sparta, nor in Ibcaa.'dy. 

 Whether bdutids were used by the early Greeks, for the 

 purpose of running down the game, or only for that of find- 

 ing and bringing the fiercer animals, such as lions and boars, 

 to l.iay, for (be purpose of thoir being spoared by the hunter, 

 and of di-ivittg the smaller sort, such tis hares and deer, into 

 the net, and sO capturiug tlicm, appears to be doubtful. 

 From several pa.ssages in the Jliad, especially the spirited de- 

 sca'iption of tiie Caledonian boar-hunt, tis also from that of 

 the boar hunt mentioned in the Odynsej/. at which Ulysses is 

 represented as having been wounded by the boar, by the scar 

 of wdiich wound he was first recognized on his return to Ithaca, 

 it is clear that in t'lie Homeric age hoimds were used for the 



first o 

 no Til 



of Oil 



is said 111 uic :•",■,■■.-. 



'U byE 



it would seem that 



lonnds M 



po.se of pursuit 1' 



.u- Eunia 



if he once camdi! .-.i 



'ill, of ll 



the same time 1 1 





Be this as i 1 





the bound for 1 Ml-: 





tove mentioned. But in these instances 



1 their employment for the sole purpose 



(I animal. f.)n the orbcr band, in what ' 



■ ' ■ 'iiad Argos, 



1 the pur- 



animal, 



11 oi.u, wiuleat 



■ic age, the use of 

 jwn in latertimes. 



rl iroin what Xdiopbon snys on the subject. 



ouiplished Athenian, the general, thephiloa- 



of Socrstesnnd Plato, and .tl the .same time 



e fund devoted to that pm-pose 

 01 the money made by the sale of 



I ' 11 iitng and endowin-a a temple to 

 i'''nj;iiig an annual festival ie ■ ■u, ,. ii,,; 

 rled himself with himting a- 1. 



e(l d.is treatise known by it 

 treats of three kind? c-f In 



and 1 1 

 hiuiscli' - 

 having reiigi 

 by there renii ■ 

 their prisonei s, 

 Artemis, and ap;: 

 goddess, be dive 

 ture, ,'ind compo.s 



ing, stag-hunting, and l)oai--huntihg : but the work 

 ptdly dtTvoted tobare.hnntiiig, which was plainly tin 

 .sport of the author, who cvi(l(..'ntiy wimld not liav 



with, the poet Tliomson, 



Poor is the 



The work in cincKti'iii 



Ofhliv !.■ • . 11 ■ 



favorite 

 ; agi-eed 



tbi 

 the sk 



iiplio'ii the timid hare. 

 - He Millestaccoimt of this form 

 ' n ot such as, accord i ng to 

 idike. It consists not in 

 > the bounds a.< slated by 

 1— a result which, according t'o 

 Xenophon, seldom occurs, and which he seems to tliinlt it 

 too much to expect— but in driving the hare, by means of 

 the hoirads, into nets placed to receive her, where, when en- 

 tangled in tlie net, she is to be knocked on the head by an 

 attendant staiirmed there for the purpose. 

 (To be contumed,) 



WBafcuBBB aadtricknesa changed to health abd strength with Hop 

 Bitters, nlwuys. 



pl^ ^i/ff 



watched his master out of sight. After a while he was lot out, and as regai'ds India in this respect is that the Indian hounds 



UANGB AND GALLERY. 



P0BTi,AKi>, Me., A'ov. 25.— Tb 1 day's shooting at 



theFort Preble butts to-day, th I ■ was not all that 



could have been desired, and IL- .1. 1,..,, lu such a way aa to 

 greatly bother the contostimts, but nuverihoieBS the shoot between 

 teams from the Mochnnic Blues and the Cadets icKuited iiu a fine 

 exhiWtiou of marksmanship. The range was 200 yaids. At 2:30 

 r. Ji. both teams faced the targets, and the Cadets won the toss. 

 Privates Baker and Dow led off, the former opening with a " mias" 

 and PTUa.to Dow with an "outer," closing w-ith 60 points. Gap- 



