Decatur Democrat, Volume 40, Number 7, Decatur, Adams County, 1 May 1896 — Page 8
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©he democrat DECATUR, IND. M. BLACKBTTBN, ■ - ■ Pubmw. “Whore are all the wicked people burled'f asked a small boy who had been reading the inscriptions lu a church-yard. Chicago doesn’t deny that its caual /nay lower the water in the lakes. It simply denies that it Is going to stop work on lite canal. And now an Eastern sporting man wants to back Mitchell against Corbett again. Has Mitchell been taking lessons in elocution lately? If General Campos had four balls through his cloak the other day he was entitled to take his base. And we presume he took it somewhere else In a hurry. The New police have on their hands a case which seems likely to prove an impenetrable mystery. It is a package of Bibles picked up in Wall street. It is announced that “Westinghouse, the inventor, will make an heroic attempt to enter Washington society.” He ought to experience no difficulty in braking in. It is unquestionably true, as the British papers charge, that Uncle Sam has a chip on his shoulder. But it will also be observed that he stays inside his own front yard. ® The craze for roller skating has got to Newfoundland. When the Uncle Tom’s Cabin companies hear about it, what a rush there will be to the new amusement El Dorado. A burglar the other night stole the wires of the burglar alarm in the house of the Chief of Police of Jersey City and sold them to a junk dealer. Such a thief deserves to be severely rebuked—when he is caught. T Nansen’s vessel for the North Pole expedition is provided with an apparatus for securing electric power by means of windmills. The Doctor's supplies will last several years yet, and he may be having a good time. “The new woman,” remarks the Chicago Tribune, “seems to be laboring under the impression that this is a freak country.” On the other hand, the country seems to be pretty well convinced that it is a freak new woman. Captain General Weyler says he is surprised at the way he has been spoken of recently in the Senate. If that is a correct diagnosis of his present feelings, his emotions in the near future are liable to be too remarkable for expression. Sines the Venezuela rebuff and the South Africa rebuff resistance is springing up against England in all parts of the world where it has obtained a foothold and is attempting to make its way and steal territory by further aggressions. A New-Yorker named E. L. Ljarneb advertises for “a few enterprising individuals with capital to join in an exj pedition to search for relics of Noah’s ark.” The New York Sun "wonders what he expects to find.” It looks as if he expects to find suckers. On a recent Monday morning, nine of the prisoners in a New York police court owed their capture to the police bicycle squad. Five were bicyclists, two were driving and two were on foot, but all were caught. The usefulness of the bicycle squad has been pretty thoroughly demonstrated in the past few weeks. At one of the Eastern colleges a student has been sealed up In an air-tight chamber for the purpose of studying the effect of various f,opd products upon the human system. The idea that an experiment under such conditions could have the slightest possible value to average humanity is one of the amusing curiosities of the collegiate mind. — ■■i'll, ii. The city of Charleston, S. C., though it has been through earthquakes and terrible storms, has a share in the Southern prosperity that is increasing year by year. The trade of the city showed a gain last year in cotton, rice and lumber, the total reaching $67,000,000. The harbor improvements are going forward and ships of deep draught now reach the city. The old question of which has the better chance, the city boy or the country boy, is again agitating the Eastern editors. If they will look over the list of the nation’s most eminent men they will find that the question is pretty thoroughly answered. But the country boy is rapidly becoming an extinct species, and fifty years from now he may not be known. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee, of Virginia, has been appointed Consul General at Havana, succeeding Mr. Williams, whose resignation was recently sent to the President. Gen. Lee’s appointment is of great significance and shows that President Cleveland is much alive to the condition of Cuban affairs. He was a conspicuous Confederate soldier and - ' since the war has held important political offices. Undoubtedly his principal mission will be to investigate the situation in Cuba with great thoroughness, and no man in the United States is better qualified than he to perform
that duty. His reports will be of the highest interest and trustworthy lor the use of the Government in its official action, ns well as for the Information of the people. We ire likely to heat something now besides what is dinned into our ears by the sensationalists auf fabricators of the “Junta.” Mr. Depew estimates that a war on account of the Venezuelan boundary dispute would cost the United States exactly a round $1,000,000,000, and lu says that the man who owns most ol the Venezuela swamp in dispute line offered to sell it to him for $25,000 According to Mr. Depew’s mathemati cal system of ethics, a question of prin clple is nothing In comparison with t. question of principal and Interest. Probably $2,500 would have paid foi the tea dumped in Boston harbor. Doet Mr. Depew think it was extravagant to dump the tea? Robert G. Ingersoll can appear twic< one season lii Milwaukee, draw an au dlence- of $2,000 each time and turr nearly as many dollars away. Then is no other city in the country where the brilliant pagan can pick up dollars so easily. He Is the greatest moneymaker on the platform, and is said to average SI,OOO for every lecture he delivers. If he saves all of the money h< makes he will literally have dollars tc burn some of these fine days. A brothei of the great Infidel is a plain every-day sort of farmer in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, and the two men bear a very strong family resemblance. The California courts have been doing some good work of late in dealing with murder cases. Within the past month nearly a dozen trials have resulted in verdicts of guilty. In the Durrant and Kpvalev cases and a few that have attracted less attention a hanging verdict has been brought in. In the Brady case and the case of Busby. the Los Angeles poisoner, who dosed the wrong men, the jury for some inscrutable reason decided that it was not a time for hanging; and in a few ’other cases verdicts of murder in the second degree have been pronounced. But if Justice has not got her dues in all the trials she has got a good start. It now remains to see what attitude the Supreme Court will take. If that tribunal is as much In favor of the enforcement of the laws against murder as its friends now assert, the hangman and the turnkey will do justice on a large batch of manslayers. The twenty-three reversals granted in murder cases since 1891, however, make the people of Callfornii a little suspicious. A committee which recently examined the status of one of the large eastern colleges in the matter of the college students’ ability to write clear, fluent English, reports a most undesirable state of affairs. The committee quotes some shocking specimens of English prose as typical examples of the students’ work, and adds that there is no conceivable justification for the use of college revenues “in the vain attempt to enlighten the Egyptian darkness In which no small portion of the undergraduates are sitting." It would be worth while to find out whether a similar state of affairs prevails in the other Eastern collegiate institutions of this country. It may not be true, as a New York writer affirms, that “we are the one civilized country to-day where a man’s speech does not indicate what his opportunities of training have been,” but it is certain that inelegance both in speech and in writing is deplorably common among Americans who ought to know better. The fact is probably due to carelessness—or rather to the carelessness which is born of haste. If the colleges are failing to exert their Influence to correct this habit they are falling in one of their most important duties. Room Enough Left. The area of the United States, excluding Alaska, is just 3,000,000 square miles; the average density of the New England States is 71 inhabitants to the square mile, so that it may be said that the Union could easily support 210,000,000 souls, or three times its present population. Meantime other vast fields are opening to invite immigrants. Canada, Brazil, Spanish America and Australia are each of them larger than the United States. Each of them could find room for 200,000,000 settlers, which shows that there is no motive to feai that the world will be overcrowded for many centuries to come. When Ney Was Shot. Emmanuel Arago, whose 84 yean have not dimmed the clearness of his fine eyes, has written five or six volumes of his reminiscences. His memory goes back to a. day when he went Into the room of his father, Francois Arago, Director of the Observatoire. His father lifted him in his arms to kiss him. ’but dropped him without kissing him at the report of a volley of musketry from the square. Marshal Ney had been shot and killed. a “Blue Monday.” A German statistician determined te make an investigation of the superstition regarding Friday as an unlucky day. He has given the world a book of queer tables and figures which-prove that it is Monday, and not Friday, that is the most fatal and unfortunate day of tlie week. Tombstone a Dead Town. Out, m Tombstone, which was ones known as a “hot town,” a five-room house In good condition, with fences' and outhouses, is-offered for SSO, wltk the land thrown in. A beggar works as hard as a laboring man. You can’t live without work, and you might as well moko It honosi work. _-‘L ■
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. ITEMS OF TIMELY INTEREST TO THE FARMERS. Feeding Pigs In a Dairy-«. Our Insect Enemies—Potatoes In Drills vs. Hills— Treatment of Orchids—Etc.,-€tc. FEEDING PIGS IN A DAIRY. Pigs will feed very well on the spare milk pf a dairy, with cornmeal and bran mixed with it. Ensilage may be fed to pigs thus kept with great advantage, and as much growth as If on good pasture. For 100 pigs make a house 100 feet long and twenty feet wide, divided by A middle passage, and into ten jams on each side, live pigs being kept in each pen. There should be a yard on each side of the house for each pen with a swinging door to let the pigs out and in at pleasure. The floor should be of plank.— New York Times. POTOTOES IN DRILLS VS. HILLS. We never knew of potatoes to be grown in drills until after the potato beetle had become numerous and some of the old varieties showed signs of running out. When the farmer who had always planted in hills, found that occasional hills were defective, producing only spindling plants and a small crop of tubers, he took to planting in drills, so that as the planting was twelve to fifteen inches apart there might not be so wide spaces if a few sets failed. But this business of selecting and caring for seed is better understood than it used to be. Planting in hills is returning in favor, and the chance it gives for more thorough cultivation by going through the crop both ways saves labor and adds to the crop. There is great advantage in harrowing potatoes before they come up. It is best done when they are covered with a coverer, which leaves the potatoes under ridges, which the harrow partially levels. After the potatoes are up the-coverer can again be used, piling the earth over the new shoots. When this Is harrowed down a second time the field will be nearly free from ridges and the cultivator can be run across in the rows, cutting the ridges down and making the hills nearly level with the surface.—American Cultivator. OUR INSECT ENEMIES. Insects are divided into two classes, viz., biting and sucking kinds. The biting kinds gnaw the wood and foliage and chew their food and therefore can be killed by outward applications of poison, but the sucking insects get their food and do their damage by inserting their long snouts through the outer coverings into the top or soluble life foods of the plants. The remedies for either kind or called Insectcides. Fungi are also divided into classes, such as mildews, pots and blights, which are minute plants, and the parasitic fungi, simple threadlike bodies such as are often seen in delicate tracings over grape and other leaves. You state that tomatoes are one of your chief crops. Moulds, root blight, leaf blight and black rot are the chief enemies of the tomatoe plant and fruit. To protect the tomato from these enemies, William S. Powell, of Maryland, recommends to first soak your seed in a weak solution of the ammoniacal solution of carbonate of copper, then dry and sow. As the plants put forth the third leaf spray them in the beds with the same solution. When they are set out pour arqjind each plant one-half pint of the same. This answers as a watering and impregnates the ground and prevents root blights, which cannot lie cured by spraying the foliage. This application also induces rapid starting of the plants in growth, caused by the volatile ammonia the solution contains. Theu spray until the fruit begins to color up. well to remember, damp and cloudy weather Induces disease in plants. Therefore In such seasons ,or when constant rains occur, the spraypump must be kept going.— Coleman’s Rural World. TREATMENT OF ORCHIDS. The essential cultural requirements of orchids were not known until long after they had attracted the attention of horticulturists. It Is Interesting to note the struggles of our great-grand-fathers to discover the conditions most suitable for them, says a writer in Garden and Forest. We who know all about it are surprised that any intelligent cultivator should have tried to grow epiphytic plants “in common soil In plots plunged to the rim in a tan bed.” Teak baskets, sphagnum moss, peat fiber and charcoal appear to us to be exactly what any intelligent schoolboy would have recommended as supplying the right material for an epiphyte. But, like all useful discoveries and inventions, simple as they appear to us they were not worked out without much thought, experiment and the sacrifice of many plants. One of the shrewdest of botanists working in the van of the horticultural art of hls time, Dr. Lindley, stated in a paper read to the Royal Horticultural society in 1830 that “high temperature, deep shade and excessive humidity are the conditions essential to the well-being of orchids.” Thirteen years later another authority, Mr. Bateman, recommended the same treatment, adding that a resting season was necessary. This treatment became the only orthodox one, and was persisted in for upwards of thirty years. We now recognize that fresh aiir at all times Is essential, that many orchids enjoy bright sunshine, that while some require plenty of moisture all the year round, others requore It only for a pc> tlon of the year, and that some even thrive only when treated aa If they
were cacti. Th* temperature for exotic orchids varies from a purely tropical to that of a few degrees above freezing jiolnt, and while some species during growth are kept in a hot steamy atmosphere, and after growth is completed are removed to comparatively cool and dry conditions to afford them a rest, others suffer if the conditions are not fairly uniform all the year round. RAISE YOUR OWN HERBS. I noticed an article under the heading “Raise Your Own Sage,” and it was good sound sense, every word of It, but let us go a little farther and say, “Raise your own herbs,” writes Eva Gaillard in The American Agriculturist. Every good cook knows that a good supply of the various herbs and mints is an almost invaluable help in her work, and that in many cases the dash of some particular one makes all the difference between a perfect dish and one that lacks the finishing touch that proves it to be the work of a skilled cook. Nearly all herbs are so easily grown that they should be counted among the indispensables in every garden. Sweet basil is used in highly-seasoned dishes of nearly all sorts,such as soups, stews, sauces, gravies and salads. Fennel leaves are boiled In water that is to be used in making fish sauces and the green leaves are used as a garnish around the fish platter. Tarragon is used fresh as seasoning for many dishes, and is prepared in vinegar for use when the fresh cannot be had. Do not fall to include spearmint in the list of “musthaves.” for to many people lamb Is not lamb without its accompaniment of mint sauce. The list of valuable herbs is a long one and they are not only valuable to the cook, but many of them are very valuable as to their medicinal properties, and constitute the only sort of home remedies that many houses afford. The surplus over and above the needs of one househouid should find ready sale at hotels, restaurants, grocery or drug stores, if properly prepared and put up in attractive shape. I only throw out the hint, but it would seem that one who took sufficient interest in the work to thoroughly post herself as to the best methods of growing and preparing such things, might find a profitable market for them. When either public places or private families once learned that they could be had of certain persons, neatly and perfectly prepared, there would be a yearly demand for the goods. Another opening might be found for the sale of them in larger quantities by corresponding with the manufacurers of patent medicines. With many sorts, the season for furnishing them fresh can be very much prolonged by having plants in different locations. In a bed with a sunny southern exposure, they will be ready for use early, while a cool and shaded spot will furnish a supply long after the first has grown tough. APPLES. At the meeting of the Boston Farmers’ club apple growing was under discussion. The lecturer. O. B- Hadwen, said that the orchard could not be run by cast-iron rules owing to the difference in soil, exposure and its power to retain water and food material. One man, with deep, fertile soil, may grow his trees successfully in grass, but the man with shallow’, poor soil should not follow his example. He of the deep soil may plow close and work thoroughly, but lie of the shallow soil could not without destroying the root growth. Each must study the conditions of his own personal problem and work accordingly. Apple trees need sunlight, he said, and should not be crowded. Wind breaks are a necessity to the best work of the tree in every stage of its fruit growing. If the bloosoms are exposed to drying winds the pollen will have Its adhesive property destroyed, and instead of falling where nature intended it should it will be borne away and have existed to no purpose. For this shelter plant the w’hite pine in belts about the orchard, or the hemlock or spruce. The injury these trees do to grass will be more than compensated in the gain in the fruit they have sheltered. If fruit is the return expected from the orchard, then no other crop than it should be taken from the land, unless the land is manured for both. There may be exceptions where the land is deep and rich, but in this there is the limit of thus far and no farther, and the least sign of exhaustion must be met with replenishment. But no crops should be grown in bearing orchards where the trees are less than forty feet apart without liberal feeding. Cultivating the orchard is good when the trees are young, but much plowing among bearing trees, he said, Is detrimental. In fact, the keeping qualities of apples have been proven to be better when thq, orchard is not often plowed; but enriched. r Salt and lime dresjrfng, one thousand pounds to the acre, was recommended for canker worms—a barrel of I’qne and a bushel of salt. Slake the lime to a powder, add the salt and let It stand for a week, then apply. It is with apples as with everything else, if only the really first-class fruit xtyis sent to market there would never be more than enough to supply the demand, and at payFng prices. But with every sort and size and condition rushed to market, as it usually is in bearing year, the price for good quality remains unchanged, but the quantity of all sorts can hardly be given awjiy. Anything-below second quality should not be sent to market In a bearing year, but should be made over into milk or pork or vinegar or apple butter, or be evaporated or canned. The mistake of growers is in selling raw material in quantity when it should be offered for 1 quality.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Raise your own calves and you will have quiet and gentle cows. | The demand for first-class butter la to-day greater than the supply. The dairy business of to-day Is suffering more from lack of good men that of good cows. Never rush the cows from pasture tc stable. Watch the dog and boy and caution thorn frequently. It is claimed by good authorities that there is less danger of milk fever If the cows are permitted to calve in the fall. "That troublesome pest, the'daisy,may be utilized to advantage In fattening beeves, but it will not do to feed milch cows or for young stock. Find out how much it costs to keep every one of your cows and then what her product is worth In cold cash. Do not neglect this any longer. Many cows are not worth their keep. If butter is overworked the granules are mashed, the grain ruined, and the value of the butter depreciated. The hands should not come in contact with butter, as the warmth of them melts and injures the grain. Don’t think you can cover the effects of bad milk by the use of “starters" in the cream. Better never have the bad milk. It costs no more to pursue those methods necessary to a perfect condition of the milk than it does to have it bad. Properly raised heifers are nevei broken in; they don’t have to be. They are born gentle and have been handled frequently and always gently all their lives. If the heifer is wild or vicious she has been made so by improper treatment or neglect as a calf. Let the butter stand after salting till the salt has been dissolved and the grain of the butter has become more firm. Then work just enough to get out the surplus water that has come from melting of the salt. That remaining in the butter forms a film around each granule of it. Some butter makers salt in the churn. A good way is to remove the butter to a bowl or butter worker, then sift on the salt through a sieve. The best quality of salt should be used. One of the indications of good salt is readiness to melt. Colonel T. D. Curtis, who is eminent authority, says the salt should melt Jn the butter like a snowflake in mud. Sagacity of the Deer. Belle Meade, the home of General W. H. Jackson, near Nashville. Tenn., is not only one of the finest stock farms in the United States but it boasts also a splendid deer park wlh a magnificent herd. The stud groom tells a marvellous story which exhibits the intelligence and sagacity of the deer. During the severely cold winter of 1894 and 1895 an old dam that had shown unmistakeable signs of Illness for some time went down to the pond in the lower end of the park to get a drink of "water. The water was rapidly congealing, and.the old deer stood so long with her forefeet in the pond that the Ice formed around them, holding her hard and fast, her weakened condition rendering her entirely helpless. She would doubtless have remained in this condition until she froze to death had not a couple of bucks chanced . along and gone to her assistance. They seemed to take in her pitiful condition at a glance and lost no time in breaking the ice from about her, stamping and pawing frith their hoofs until she was quite free.—Philadelphia Times. Cold Storage on Ocean Steamships. Each of the new ocean steamships coming to this port, carries on a single trip across the water immense quantities of food, esiiecially when there is a big passenger list. In the cold storage rooms of one of these vessels are stored something like 20,000 pounds of fresh beef, 1,000 pounds of corned beef, 10,000 pounds of mutton, 1,400 pounds of lamb, 500 pounds of veal, 500 pounds of pork, 3,500 pounds of fresh fish, 1,000 fowls, 400 chickens, 150 ducks, 100 turkeys and 80 geese. In the vegetable department 30 tons of potatoes, together with 80 enormous hampers of green stuff. Ice cream is present to the extent of 300 quarts, and there are 1,600 quarts of milk. Groceries form an equally large item in the catering department. For lu this way the vast steamer Is provided with 1,000 pounds of tea, 1,500 pounds of coffee, 2,800 pounds and 4,500 pounds respectively of white and moist sugar; with 1,000 pounds of pulverized sugar, 2,400 pounds of cheese, 3,000 pounds of butter, 6,000 pounds of ham and 1,800 pounds of bacon.—New York Advertiser. A Freak Roptife. One of the most interesting creations of nature is the luminous centipede, a curious coinbinatlon of lizard, snake and natural clout ri light plant. It is about one and ond’-fourth inches long, its body being covered with short hairs. Its body is very narrow and appears to be in sections. In consequence Os this peculiar formation the creature appears to move sidewise, except when frightened. Then the natural electric light plant feautre appears, and with an almost instantaneous wave-like motion, beginning at the tail, the color of the reptile changes from orange to a greenish; phosphorescent shade. Then, sparkling o Uke a tiny streak of green light, tfirf creature darts away to a place of refuge. When one of the pair is in search of its mate tlie color grows a bright yellow, but at will the centipede can resume Its darker color, and then; if lying close to the grain of a piece of wood, is hardly noticeable.—Nev York Journal.
THE FLYINC DWTOMM** I Th* Mirage Probably th* OrlglnVß Sea Story. - The atmosphere in the vlcinitym the Cape of Good Hope has the pecuß power of unequal refraction which ■ duces the spectral mirages so W known to the early settlers on I great plains and to all travelers * explorers in desert regions. equal blending of the rays of gives rise to what are known as sfl tral loomings," by which is mean til apparent suspension of ships ant} oj|| objects in mid-air. The peculiar prwil ties of the atmosphere over that tlon of the ocean mentioned have tn known since men first “roundedjj cape’’ in their voyages from WesW Europe to the Indies, and the reg appearance of the mirage at that p , is responsible for the legend ot« "Death Ship,” otherwise known aa “Flying Dutchman.” According to the story, a Dutch ■ tain, homewhrd bound from the I Indies, met with long-continued weather while trying to “round | cape.” This series of squalls 4tl D coupled with other clrcumstai | which made “turning the cape” i to impossible. The wind was “i | ahead" and the weather was dark ’ foggy. At the time when the bi little Dutch captain was making a 1 effort to get off in a northwesterly' rection, and was about to make a ure of it, the mate and the sailors, vised him to turn back and seek shf’ 1 in a neighboring harbor until the ' was over. But this he refused tv swearing that he intended to “turn cape” if he had to beat back and f along the shore until the day of j' ment. For this burst of profanity the tradition says, he was doomet steer against the blustery winds _ ever. The sails of his ship, so tin who believe in the legend say, become bleached with age, and its sj and bottom worm-eaten and dects in the long struggle which has | since been kept up between the ettij vessel and the elements. The 1| Dutch captain and his crew, likejl persons living under a spell, contini 1 exist, knowing their condition, but! I able to help themselves. Ship cap®l who have sighted the doomed vffta time and again during the past cenjfl and a half report that the crew offK cursed Dutch vessel appear to befi ing skeletons. Yet they contlnuf live under the blighting effects of was brought on by their master’s r ness. They cannot lower a boat are so weak. Yet they oecasiw? hail passing vessels, rescued from their awful fate. w Such is the story of the “Fl Dutchman,” which, no doubt, nated through ignorant. superstil| sailors viewing the mirage in stricken terror.—St. lands Republfl Pigeon Cotes on ShHs. R The United States navy is estaUß ing pigeon cotes at various ports « the Atlantic and gulf coasts for® purpose of training pigeons to eS messages in time of war. Every g that goes to sea these days carri® cote of pigeons from some one of® ports, and they are released from I to time with messages for shore. Il great majority reach their destlntl safely, but many have disappell The experiments, however, are gi ing more and more successful eyear as the pigeons are educated j bred up to the business. A farmer | the Soldiers’ home in the suburl ? Washington breeds birds for the tV and they are sent to their destlnt very young. The longest flight y«fc tempted successfully was 900 A and it is not often in these day® cables and quick malls that it vtg? lie necessary to send one a greatenp tance. It would be ik-rfectly east ships of war on th coast of Gul.' communicate with Tampa or J’ West at any time by means of the —Chicago Record. Are Animals Left-Handed? There seems to be 'evidence some animals at least are left-hik* Parrots grasp and hold food wltljh left claw. Livingstone stated that l. 'struck witli the left paw; he ttK that all animals are lefthanded, gj David S. Jordan, who O ing hands witli parrots to? verify® observation, finds that the left-ha® habit may be Induced in parrots I the fact that in offering one’s f;' for the parrot to grasp it is usually L of the right-hand. The parrot tit fore puts his left claw forward. l|| left finger be offered the parrot wix forward the right foot. He says, however, that there 1;/ parently a small preference for th' foot, but this lie accounts for of ground that left-footedness is ways induced in parrots from the| that those who offer the finger or to the parrot Usually do so witlk’l right hand. Repetition of this process it V| l seem tends to make the parrot 'tritS® less left-footed.—New York Mercul I Potentates Who Never Move,. L I There are but two European ifr ■ t ates who manage to get along wiY I ,‘hange of residence. These arm I Pope of Rome and the Sultan of ft I key. The Sultan has never lefts® stantlnople since he ascended® throne in such tragic clrcumafiwl nineteen years ago, and His Hd’,' 1 has remained within the precinc ■ ihe Vatican since the triple ttarfu » placed upon his head.—New Ym ■ gram. I Anarchist Papers In Europe. 1 1 According to careful research ■ I are fifty-one anarchist Papers ,| I llshed in Europe nnd America. in Dutch, ten German, eleven Fl ■ eight Italian, nine Spanish, two t I ish and Italian, two Portuguese, fl Taochlsh and six Englls’ 1 IB
