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The Exeter Times, 1924-1-24, Page 3ti nes Aboi IViI:; Baldwin's Eioyhood.' 'My beet,fricndL;;a3,a bey were tw i• who tepresearted,two:,s,ldrez of life Iig CL 1Gu al .and t7le': industrial it p :was a dear old apple o,gta ogilier'd, 'who, ct;:uid neithe The otlner was a tac tory: lugs' wire, by eheez shard sviirl rose to'bo ,iagez, Both' these fine were a great deal mere iutelligen than many at znan who bas received formal education," These ,words were spolcea" a fety days ago by Mr, Stanley Baldwin, i recalling.his iiayhcod in Ids Writ -v county of Worcester. Few people: ar P u(olikvnPoop! 0elivea their his moat valet tion. Pinions, .,Next to this, biro asset; is his'discre- An alntrepid Woman, 4. remarkable achievement was that r or Mrs George Duller, wife of the well- - known English jockey, who the other C, day, at Brooklands, broke two motor rn racipg. rceoz a s, in tine course of which t "she AINVO, z giant car ata speed, 'of a aver 105 miles an hour., Though not many men would care to attempt such a feat, when she ;l O finished the intrepid woman snriliugty a declared that she wouldclo it again a any dayi aware that his family passed through oritieal ...times, before attaining itspre- sent entiinenee. As Mr, Baldwin paint- ed, out, at one timeonly a ;l'ew pounds toed between the family and ruin,` Man:of Many Secreta. When Mr. Baldwin and M. Polncaro, the I+renoh, Prime It'finister, stet re- a widow,' she married, again, her: bus Gently to sdisPuss international affairs, baud being the heir of. the first. baron, only, one other person was present at who was a.' merchant prince, a Iawyer,: the interview --.the official interpreter, and a power' in railway- and banking, who Shares the secrets of most of the circles. world's statesmen of to -day,: . ' Lady Terrington and llirs.•Wintrir - The interpreter in question is M. ham are tho two Liberal wouienMem. Cainerlyiick, e distinguished French bers. The Conservatives have three: and so have the' -Labor Party; so that there - are now eight women in the 1 -louse --Lady Terrington, Miss' Bond field, Miss Lawrence, tlfe .Duchess of Athoil, Mrs. I31lton Philipson, Miss Jewson, Lady Astor, and Mrs. WVint-, ringham. ' A Place itt Periiarnent. Lady Teringtgn,.M.P. for WYrombe; England; is one of the pleasant band bund to introduce a nnore harmonious note into debates when tired men get cross' and angry,.. It is nearly, six 'years .now since, as. scholarProbablyno than hay e more ceinplete personal experience- .of -atateainen than he has haci;iil ilio past °ilve years. hits feats of �tenslatio'u aro the won- der of these who -meet him officially' IIe interprets as fast as the speakers Will Attempt.;Rc indrrtho-: World Flight.' t. British aviators wily try to match exploits with- the T7nited States air- sten when the latter start' their round - the -world fiig'iit froze Seattle next April, by a. flight in the opposite direc- tion. - Equipped with a powerful Vimy Am- ' phibean plane of 450. horsepower, Squadron Leader A. S. M'eLaren, dis- tinguished British pilot, of long` war And post-war experience, will attempt to circumnavigate the globe soon after the United States teams start. He will be accontpani•ed'py Fying Otfcar'W N. Plonb ry e'. lci th' • and Engineer -Sergeant ` Andrews, two other ,v veterans of. the alt. Boss Smith. ".z t. l Tho' flight is backed. -4s faras possible, the airmen 'will ll follow the route taken by the late Sir b the British Air Mini'st r '. which' has iven g the leaders a special:. course. of training. The route will be by way Eg. gyht,:Meso of , p aznia Persia, Znclr Burma, China, Japan, the Aletiiian. lands, '' T , • Canada, 1�,evv Yoik St. John' Nfi d. sed. .., thence. tGreenland, Ic land returning to London, • fire..Proofing Wood. Wood is such 'a convenient material, on account of the ease with which it is worked, its relative Strength` its low cost, and attractive' appearance, that if it could be rendered fire -proof it would be almost ideal for many pur- poses. The Forest Products Labora- tories of the Forestry Branch Depart meat of the, Interior, are investigating various processes for rendering wood resistant tq fire. The Laboratories point, out that it is 'possible, by impreg- nation, with certain salts, to render wood; fire -retardant; that is to decrease, its natural'' inflammability .' very',, con- . - s derabl It can n tl ins: be made'e - x tremely.difficult to ignite and the per- sistence oflowin • embers g g can he pre- vented. This is an important step, in the desired d dire c.� i t on ,and in view of the progress ens 'ea g z ald 3 made, it is hoped that .hoprocesses may be made even Moreefficient. of lordly bison and the alvtiays Inter At Wainwright, themain1 f another A Large Baby. g young Buffalo are es.„ b••1 `(NAL CARIES `T hQ It fir nal Parks of Ca , Canada' the ` I'1 t f Canada's - s ntr eforbiddentheanimals and, where :sheep and goats abound, and file visa- was purchased some sistaen years ago a o am ar es o ' national - ational 'a i' g au al f o a are'som ' haven, park, e S 000 animals, v er i t or. wil d 1' zPe •• wilco g sand Parks, bears; deer, moose, mountain the oro hunting �._ growth from a herd Of 716: which do , znimals have come to look.:u on tor r ii P or ods also great numbers of small- `b theCanadian Y o znan as.. G v eminent and 'al': their friend gather than . as .' er and l mals such as beaver squirrel to Ye- ', q v d to multiply in ea e, • their Which P y P a So great. it des.troyer. As a result wild ani- r i ,and-otue.s .��are becoming quite has be g q been the� r -development elo men p t a the herd ma s are ;increasing in, the national i tame sin'co they, realize that theyare that this s fall 2;000 of the sur-lus ani - arks P of Canada and the gracefuL deer, protected. mals>had to. be'Slaughtered, and In the. the _ w rig on . ane o sprfzi .apo er 2 000 er .. � 4r five.. a. .acean.their „ua the CanadzanrNational.£ailways, east to:be iiloved into the' no the hi t 4Tatl.er saidrural I a boy, da youknow habitat without molestatio n ` of Pdm h ,Jenny: ;a ov vita a l) tjt' Xts , vvbiclz she i15 1tri Sizig t oll1et iies''ln a window loa'.ing''out on�;t4 IIctiII`94, r. rluezited street in ,,Storia,Il4�ill is a , ��� any ea b,r~ the Inaid of tt farnous daia:p., d' her ',the lib'eIt' atzd: rclrozced her"find", `,ay, thri., it r fh?rnlrtof I oZ, oarri'a about that she eWai to en lri a -rorat at,�$ hand and trained f'il a musical careers islet coipr' n Sho was' at that time, as site baz•gelf on .his bac later wrote to the editor oast biogralzh. stn'azg. . Y, witw<izd adtogethez un- as a fuiigx dergrown girl';: but she sang �� so Wlzile i beautifully that the Swel fsh ,govern- oil; the eoiiote' nfent paid the,costs of her musical The nnyth'glo; education, on the condition that she Doiuge with a should in tune give tier sesvlces to tho tire Indian Noa,'jytl` tr P leis d tine Ives only ten when, she first lined f I dt 1' that vnv of sent t I b t beautiful voice with 4 was resppj y of .fe• l ` ri to is dictionary, "a ;small, ugly, broad=. pzntert'; nosed sh a national opera. a?1K on e,ti She ' a eve, 'to :c 1, After the 0 sang in public. Then for ten marc a n, zazi oby had par. years she worked, hard---s'ri hard tt ly snbs'zcloci, 112`os� ztima, ahe spa size wrecked, the ben ' , lie on y e s ,s aved ;vasa coyote, to seeac out a land.,, which she bad been born. In conster- in, man might again flourish andai nation she went to' Paris to•seelt the ply: Legend has it that the an„, aid Of the most fait -roes teaches AFan ai "It wool �.has n�as c--^: d be • useless to' -teach you, At another time the ndie41 Miss.Xou Have nbvoice left." � r ��., „•�, It was then that Jenny Lind "mad herself"a, great singer and a foo musician—at flz:st; with the aid of Gar cia, i3e made her promise not to sin a tone for six weeks: Then he taugfi her how not to use her voice izicor- rectly-it was that,'and not overwork, that had. injured it. Site .had to -star Pe_Poz'mod ; los IlItaSion to tit l uel Garcia. 1-Iis aneuer was crushing:, satisfaction of hi t ao ti t were th*,-a ,'°' :..- 3- t G4 est e ane a,id death, They Ilia; d ec1 :up2(21°, n the annual sa thelz food "suP, i1y, , OnE g 111021 is ezided tho'�zive r gation 'proircl thwt a human form had locks the divers•so that no fish'!�cag2t t up out of.,the sea: The ':stare:` diazzs believed tar& t •rio f un nix strive against the spirits, 50 114'. the tribe would attempt an t obtain the key', A coyote 'yob ., to risk his life to,re ov er`111e ilze river gates:and unlock 'thezztl vras sacoessful, sc, the ranine!. av eri.ed, i4Tany, many more cig .sil:, have., recorded. In every one the ccyote'�'lia , been the benefactor of mankind., The Indian lee -ends describe':?t'i coyote as a hero always-, but the man' rarely has, a good word fax lYiS#z ,The animal is never inany:roleexcep't' 'that of coward and, thief, without qne, ood xa,lit � attr i _1 ..ted to'. ez h 9 g <l y the dog or e wo f' his re t•xe1 i e .. n e s 11Ty: acgizaii$ance:' � ; r"' `eta n• Inn' led dm .t e ob�lit� 071<'tie v, `- ry �za Q, � � a11`,'i � d heard:of him des iite the rood eaffita-' I g x , l?,,, , tion eiven`hint in. time " Ir, legends'. tion .., ie t�an.a�,ends•. Al `eoniuiaint' of ; a 'neighbor Shia r c°used pipe to change rny opinion., . nn cieserate caa' i z i 1<Lznea l` P zny neighbor, "I have been unable to raise all over, again from the very begin- ning, singing scales' up and down very slowly ' and learning how to breathe correctly, It ,took her ten -months to.' recover her voice under Garcia's guidance; but that was only the' beginning, To her' teacher size was' 'eternally grateful.. And yet she could , say truthfully in later. years: "As to the greater part' of what 1 can do in my art, I 'hare my- seIf acquired by'incredible work." Thirsty Liners.. Few people' would care to pay for `a i; liner's s drink for one voy agP;across the Atlantic, even in water at a cent per gallon. Very little change would be given,' out of 2,500.3 One.` of the bigAtlantic Q, liners has. to carry about 5'00'0. -ton es s of fr�.„h water r Sox all ur zo " se P. P s orasingle voyage ' from, Southam pta�. to . New York.' This : tonnage "alone is about two and a half., times the weight:of elson's old flagship, H.z1�T.S.Victory. A,as p senger on one of these leviat - h ns .uses for drinkingand do e m stfc r rn n er N onton Cher exists f the land. finestdemonstration's o "thefeasibility unt under conditions where the also wil ..Y l a • � e xis one o re . an and allowed to roam at will there that .hare isA a ba t Jas by tills' Per National. wji -that Park,. in Alberta f i was fed one �,,?,rr 4 le Pant' . 114 4. P s milk'and RO s itiar` s,.eine agnate' miles � .. gained ,• x11 extent, of game -conservation forthere, in the be safe.Irom faithless hunters.. seven pounds a day? It -is so big 'that It is possible _t i t cannot betaken into' the B2ltishers • ,and the noose; but Rule or: H - . tiers ealth: Willcross one an - is Irept in a garden." iJnitedilStatos The Town A good human ®83£�)5�30��ie „ u n machine should' not other's pathThat cannot in Wild-oceabe ',true said •n, and the d the wear out in seve„.. , SII III I'."1.,„\, my years, says1� The little town' of Tenderheck; Sig r., .Il ere te, an° animatsd frlendl mothex. Dr. 4' Y ,, .,e,• .. ,, .: , I MacCabe, the English : Fi Is des, l.c.'s, g army doctor / �, scarcely more than lust a nook rivabetween the United -.Stu ei ep7 ed ': he `bov it �* ,,, States . , is who • ,. o h Beside th r e cad where children la a y,. u ,,. ' play joyment: an !• d rolon atzo I end. old P g n. Over � Wren loaf tlre_tlme Great•,Bxitain for suremacy in interne- the elephant's baby!” ! ' as written iional 'flying, Apart from the credit of the*fl st en eiiclement of ,the globe the enterprise 'will forth' an inter " estin test of,, endurance -fors the, machine lend engines The British ' authorities re 0gniz that the winning of- such a.triunipkr apart from its sentinientaI value, ha a material side: They say the United States Government also realizes- this , since the'Unitod States victor in the great Schneider seaplane .contest here °whici>~...�aeulted in a tremendous -ad. vertise�, 'tit for the•United States'aero engine, and the placing of -orders for these engines by foreign 'Governments. Sunlight Tablets. The British Admiralty•is'experima nt- ing with, a now; extract, in tablet form of watercress, spinach and ` d other green plants. It is called phyllosan, and it may supersede 'lime juice, for the treatment of scurvy. Phyllosan is the discovery of. Pro- fessor E. Buergi, of Benne°University, and is made from chlorophyll, the vital fluid in .plants which bears a close chemical relationship • to human blood on human life its en against the; opinion of the Psalmist he quotes .-Genesis vi,' 3, "And elle" Lord g' § ' f,said: `Myi spirit shall not always a � ' Strive e with man, n for that he also .,. is //���� I flesh, yet his days;shali be an hundred �� I and: twenty years,' " Arguing from ;� . • `' rw. I scientific analogies, .a ,, to s, fir: IV1acCabe. s'`': f/ 'al I out that most s � � t or the higher ani "The theory; 'of transferring plant energy to enfeebled membersof the human race was expounded` -by Dr. A,,; White Robertson, the famous:At- ' aurgeon, as long ago as :1012," said a London specialist, "and., Prafessor iuergi's application of it]las been wel- comed at several London hospitals' where patients have been rejuvenated by a course of treatment," Its place in the Navy.'rival to ,� lime -juice will depend upon the speed_ t of its action in strengthening blood that has been weakened- by .a .lack of green vegetables and fresh fruit, Conspicuous suceess,,'it is claimed, has already attended the Royal. Air Voice experiments on •troops in Irak Buffering from scurvy, malaria,'• and general debility,,' °'And Wake hlim h p, fiVliy do you carry an alar 14 your mach hat, Brown?"... ii'laon one of these. nieeliartics. to got finder rho car I'sot ii tri go :111 the and or 110 long a'nap as Vel lU tb pa,i for—sea?" , 00 I •.•yh�. .,,a !4-.� mals enjoy life span that at is approxi- , Lia mately five times their growing period. If man falls short of that it'is mainly w gt0:sa m kind of intemperance, tem ance' he believes. Moderationin all things is his rule of health. • - A Woman's Nightmare, - Taxi -motorcycles in Paris are said to be doing a brisk lousiness: , Fares are cheap, and- the, speed- is astonish in'g. Some of the . side cars have in- closed bodies. Whether the l y will con- , >:•_ tinue to be popular after' the noveltIf y you are sure to' have .plenty of of: riding in them has 'worn off' re time to -morrow, forget .it; i mains to be ,seen. • The Augmented She (viewing parade) -"That's the most effective jazz band that has passed yet." He—"Don't you' see why? They're Tiding in an old Ford," While ,..you are on the lookout: for a better job don't forget that, your employer may have aneye open -for a better man. Many of the birds which' winter in Southern states and In South and Cen- • trai Amerioa are now planning thein northward: migrations: They' began to fly southward last July'and ninny have rained families and taught them to, fly since then, Some `eRectos have"- eon - tinned .fu.rther southward) with: their young. and taught them how' ,t6 guide` themselves in .,migratory flights, and hove to plan and e:cecu'te auoh frights,'. which must Pc undertaken every"year, They are sometimes Carried out in> &tormy weather ' ,and alwaysrequire, careful 'attention being given,.; to the choice of route, costing places and food- gathering, - From, the-Sarlieet Migratory diabits in birds have been fixed since ' the earliest historical times,. Homer and the early' classical ,svriters, mention certain obseryatione sviilob. were fiiP.da , nn :the iliglitii " of birds in Dgy-pt,;4rrtbiu, arePile and Lame, iioniei= i ttticed that; when .the weather to 0toi'z11y .the cranes begin to flee to'domniei' sande, The bigtde oP Asia a.nd Lira gig etllh visit Q'aope and: Italy ne they difi.in classi'aal'times, Rind Ip tiro Nay Wer14 we aro enebled.' to' witnt;ss every year sirnilar migratieiia, heti on •a'VCster> scale, W ' Do'i3bde Migrate? Nuxoarous titeorieit P %e been ad» vetoed to explain tiro e;itzier prompt- i ing the annual migration, 'Shea vievyd, of American naturalists= suggest that'd len„ beforo the ;glacial 'epoch, when s tile arctic ice shoot came' clown, towaz'd. the equator, there were innumerable non -migratory birds in America, But the' changes wrought in'tho :elinnate ley 'the -oncoming of the shoots forced the birds°`':to,` socks' warmer 'areas .upon which to'' feed, , The home -loving, or homing, traits of seine birds- caused them to linger in their 010 haunts', tin til their young were able to fly, and then. they rejoined the others in the southlancds,. These: early Migrations were. for only small Lengths, lint as the ice eheets spread further southward the' migration of the birds increased, Thus.. .the' first impulses to migrate were prompted by the need 'of seeking Warmthand food abroad, Many other teeters came auto' play when; the mi., gr'ation areas iiecanzd lengthy; and the nairierous migratory phenomena were gradually. developed :in. - accordance. with the evolutionary prinoipies, The• migrating birds learned how' -to' adapt migration to.'c;o'nditi,ons of life .and safety, Migration among North Aniericat birdm esia now comon to nearly all sloe close and, in many cases, the migrants' paver enormous distanooe- ' , 'Traveilers by Night, !d'tlere' are night, as well as day mid, grations, although some birds' do not' Inilgrate at. flight, Ducks, geese, hawks; swallows , and :the house swift arochiefly; clay migrants: Dunks and geese, however,' sometimes fly during ho clarlcness, The warbling birds, tlzrtisires, fly - ateliers; vines, tanagers, orioles; Barrows tinct Moat of the •shote birds uligrat s through the night, The night r By Dr. A. S. Brown migrants find traveling most Hazarde ous, and there are numerous casualties among, them, • T,hbre,a:re birds which migrates sin gly, but' moat birds, migrate in flacks,` it is -believed -that the habit of travel - _1 frig in flocks was started by the social instincts. 'of ' the birds, Protection against enemies and ,straying oli the Path afterward strengthened the flock- ing instincts; The lengths of migratory fiighte ,vary with ,the, -species, The Arctic terns nest; , near •:tli'o North Pole in summer and Migrate to the Ant -arctic` In the fall, a distance of more, than 11,000 nii,Iesi Ina little more than five Menths',these .terms make migratory flights, many o1 them oven-:tholisands of miles, of ocean, without resting, ag- gregating nearly 80,000 miles! They' arrive at the`North Pale in the middle of June, nest these • and rear ,their, young, and, about Serptembor 1, they' start migrating for -the South Polo, Hew the Plover Lives, The plover, in a single flight, of be- tween 2,500 and 8,000, miles, ar Ivep• in Labrador, where it nests and fattens Ito young on the rich berry. harvests. Wheii the young plover are strong enough to fly they are 1a1roa over the St,' Lawrence to Npva t ootia and' Naty England, and aro fed on the' wild berry. crops. Then, preparations are made' for the long migratory' flight to Bor.: nnuda; the Antilles or Venezuela, These flights are constant. There is no Stoppage night and. day. The young golden plover,: Ilttlo more than two nioilthe out of the shall Psi e b Six shabby stores,' of churches twain Beneath the "cliffs a Lovers' Lane, 'A' schoolhouse Baldwin's Hill atop, Of course, a moving -picture shop, And little more. Yet it's the place To which' I'Iong` to turn' my face And wander back, and: there to stay, And never more'. to move away. Oh, nothing there -at'Tenderhook Amounts .to much, and yet I look Across the hills, and long' to roam Back there to Tenderhook and home. Always keep handy some cloth gloves, made just like babies' mittens, with :separate thumb, but fingers all in one. Make them from old pieces of cloth. One in the living room comes in useful if the fire has to be seen to. or the hearth brushed up, while in the kitchen they are : invaluable for taking hold of hot dishes, baking tins etc. purposes about slve-:allons a day on the :voyage. And as these ships aver- age 3;000 passengers and' crew `it It's a Fact. "It Just seems like New Year's is fo making resolUtions." Not altogethee. It s also for break- ing them." known to take part in migrations di - root from Labrador to South America. They spend several months. in Argen- tina and, Brazil, and then fly north - Ward again by a. differen.t roirte, This northern flight is over Louisiana anal Texas, and not over the arib ean Sea. 'Thence they follow the MissiasiPPI to 'the Arctic, taking a much longer time by this route than by the sea trip. 110 Miles Per Hour. is found' that the fastest of all flying birds is theHswift. Its flight over Bagdad "has been proved to b.e' over 110 Mlles an .hour when chased by an airPlane. Its ordinary migratory sefeed is about se'Venty Miles an hour, SAVallOW$ fly. nearly as rapidly :as Swifts. 1W,easurements made in:France an era s.'.this -year.. y P ,r e Even my ,vo'uii ^' ,trees: ha— e -`.been barked `b - the, jack 5 ., M1 rabbi . ts. ; The Cotton -tails. ' have aye .cies- troyed' -thy kale'and cabbage. The ground squirrels, gapbers_ and.nitce have`, Cos t Consumed what .the other pests left. But this year, there were no' coyotes to steal ,my chickens' Lest yearto my persanai `e ledge, my ne1bhbc °mad °a' At war upon glia coyote pn.ving a. n uaity for his 2'e its etfuck a nice•''balanoe •t tit ,__ must not dIsturb, ' The nates -al food rho coyote is the ja ,r, r bbi� eo tall, gopher, ground sgizir mouse, the principal ezze'b't Parzuox P 'West., o thel�� ©� Q1�Ie 0203= mals destroy millions' oP dailais;,worth of agricultural , g Rural prodizr is �'i� :year ., Losses .are not confined fe<pradne,t alone, .but to labor used•to 'curb tli1Y# activities. Much of tl is loss iiiglilct be saved, if the- farmer of the `YVNt- ceased his' efforts to: exterminate :PIs best helper, the coyote: In Oregon since the Coyote lLais been nearIy'os_terminated, jack-rabhits-akox destroy ten per cent: of ail crop suit :- ed to their food habits. Does; this not prgvo,that-the despised coyv ,1v' in tended .to keep down such ei r n ting,, a,.. jack -rabbit?. �.� ..*r�_ True, the coyote all { the chicken coop and pigsty riBu I not, spend a bit more. -if Mel o se u .., the coops- and Stys? Then the coyote will .perform his ,mission more .e?feei tively; that is, the preserva tion of tare's balance that no one tribe of tlitp yrT little folk of the field, wood and dese monopolize her 'bounty', toe the. 'detr ment of man. 00,0 wedding ringa were net used, at an ean; ly period, the,- eSpousal'ring being plieyed at 'the wedding cereniony, g. • later time a signet was sot in the'amity ' us pronubus, or betrothal rinse; to: right r..)f aealing -up the household N'aturallsts have I-mar-vele/I at the hour, Their grouncl=level fligh' ts aver:, "f4polirs'. and (jeeasi°1-1allY a sin -an capacity of, migrating birds o find age atout forty miles an hear,' ' - • formed a :part Of the ring with a sirnie' their way when flying, enormous dis- Ti„ 'following avoi-lige s e sign4acailce' Tliff ring- Pledg° and night, in fair weather and 'in fences over land 'and sea, both by .day have been ,workod, out' t:gho yePrieease °Afeilinievrei iisit%ailadtutroe'bbayfili‘aeitaltlal'ealliti°-tileec11,1:; storms They have advanced inany e orv ae, crows, mag- Br to as ir ove o ten, 1 theories to account for it. The general Pies and ravens have it sl:eeloolift. bees- The custent c'f placing tile betrontgheai, special sense of direction, cOnpleti an. hour; tile snialler pass-eres, Such as , ° ' e ' opinion to -day is that it is duo to a ti,Veen thirty-one and thirt >ail , 1.1 screreInvlesdcti)11:golavl.einngietrsvul:3,093.0itxg.it.t.notilitatiltu`dudtiarencov.: - .A. thousand dangers imperil thcr mi- and nuthatches fiy botween twent grating birds. ManY' become separated ar.41 forty Tulles All honr, Goose fly- be- ..,,, Du_rillg .,•tlic r°ign of George Is ok from their flo,c1c, lose their way and tween forty-two and fifty -11y° miles an '-n-digl'aci, l't Nva,! not` 1-1111181141 to we-ar are atafired to death, Others, .carrlecl ilour, pigeons liiiti doves front thirty the weading ring en the thumb, al" Y windS, are dashed egainet ,t0 ti:147.rsitc mileg an hour; starlings though it had been Placed on the third stacics and are killed, -Every light.; rrifies f,Olir falcons' and eagled be, ' honare keeper, after ,every L'ter.to' has ii;two„0,X1,. fOrty,'and fifty milers' an' hour.i were dashed to death against tlie light- I an 'tour; sand gronso between .ovor "water, aro foreed ',by': Wind er afici ok the wading- ..hircis othor 'nausea'', into the, sea and, arc l'hetween,,thirtiy a:nd fifty Billets arthottr.' finger at the marriage ceremony. raittl ,,,,li,;.,:lsc,,,,liin,11.1174,1: sI.i. 5r",a.',''''''::,l;51Lte,l,t's„i'l;:iit,1:1,ellolileuilailli, , will get a geed idea, of '.the enormous isvainable for protection pitra-ait.. - Borne of the larger coastal ligh.thc,asoa,-I tion and an act:elevated speed 'whica ',)',11.14aeelollaniii::ea*e'reflaleo, lossni sustained bY migratory flocks ".rhis is often more than tioniplo ,the saw ,h,tm,, ju-st nalittlg Oyertaiten hy ge`t, re “03.111, nal speed,,,