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| Water Power Plans on the Upper: 


Connecticut. 
(¥rom the Manchester Union.) 

Littleton’s dream of a power develop- 
ment of stupendous proportions on the 
Connecticut river along the famous Fif- 
teen Mile falls, which has been cher-> 
ished for the past six years, seems to be 
approaching realization, . 

Five years ago a syndicate of finan- 
clers secured control of the charter for 


such a development, whiche had been 
held for a number of years by several 
Littleton business men, The syndicate 
organized what is known as the ‘Con- 
necticut River Transmission Company, 
and the company has already secured 
the necessary flowage rights at great 
expense. Work until now has not been 
pressed, ag the company has all its men 
working on the development plant on 
'the Deerfield river in the Berkshires. 
The company is controlled by Chase & 
Harriman Company of New York and 
Boston, but it is regarded as quite prob- 
able that Stone & Webster of Boston, 
who own rights at Monroe, are inter- 
ested in the project. 

The plan as originally contemplated 
involved an expenditure of $6,000,000, 
and it is assumed that the present plan 
Is substantially the same as formerly 
proposed. ‘Nhree dams were to be. built, 
the first and biggest of which will be 
160 feet high, which is claimed to be 
higher than any other dum in the coyn- 
tiy., This would be wcrons e river at 


2.5 


Sp acesieney ae 


11 


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Monroe, where there is la natural gorge 
for the foundation of a big, dam that 
would cost in the vicinity of $2,000,000, 

The ‘second dams was to be 100 feet 
high and stretch across the river at 
Waterford, while the third was to be 80 
feel high and at the head of the 16- 
mile falls near North Littleton, thus 
giving the company the benefit of the 
head of nearly 400 feet fall. This would 
establish three separate power plants. 

it is of interest in this connection to 
know that Stone & Webster are already 
projecting a scheme to raise the lower 
Connecticut lake 17 feet to afford a 
much larger storage capacity. 

The northern part of New Hampshire 


and Vermont ‘will watch with tremen- | 


dous interest the plans of this promo- 
tion as it will mean more than can be 
immediately comprehended to this whole 
region, There is no doubt that the pro- 
moters plan to sell their power as far 
north as Groveton and that Lisbon, St, 
Johnsbury, Vt., Montpelier and other 
towns in this vicinity will use a good 
percentage of the total volume produced, 
The scheme contemplates the develop- 
ment of ‘some 5000 horsepower. If any 
considerable part of this is used in Lit- 
tleton it will mean an industrial boom 
that will increase Littleton’s valuation 
and population in. a most remarkable 
way. The development ‘will probably re- 
quire several years to complete and al- 
ready men are at work drawing plans 
and: making arr angements for the com- 
ing of the large force of dam builders, 

Nearly 50 engineers have been employed 


to aia! rey oe territory, 


Fer ~ See+, Pr 


| Car. 


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d osoM O10TLL 
xR Msood surung,, | 
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involved an 
andit is assumed 
Is substantially 


Ree 7, 


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project. 


e 
osed, ‘Ihre ct ums 


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ou sTTejep 


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ny | mi 
t- | considerable part of this 
}tleton it will mean an induetral 


as Scieiaty Seutsmnuanedt i 
oa died th of $6,000,000, ee A Saitation aie ae iaeeae ae 
are eee Piers. ai a _ The devel ‘ : 


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Oats 


1916 


14 


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WthALn +2 ONAN yvieln 2.45 or bout 


2O Of rh 19 16 
The Nation 


homesteads their heathen negro hordes, their 
yellow Jap robbers, their Indian and. Afri- 
canish™beasts, as well as the scum of their 
prisons and@-their slums, or, with a besotted 
mania that verges on the, sticidal, to hound 
on Kaffirs and Hikaartoen white civil- 
ized people in the rican~colonies” (p. 400). 
Dr. Miiller h riten several “books on in- 
ternationallaw, and in Germany hé~ig a 
man of considerable repute. ’ 


“The Shadow on the Dial: Intimations of 
the Great Survival” (Abingdon Press; $1 net), 
by Orton H. Carmichael, mixes in nearly equal 
proportions delicate delineation of the moods 
and aspects of nature with sincere and at 
times not unimpressive musings on immortal- 
ity. Much of this book consists of entries 
from the journal of a young physician, a 
Dr. Colvin, whose earnest meditations on the 
ultimate questions are not a little solemnizing 
and thought-provoking. ‘The net result, as 
one might expect, is not very substantial, even 
though it is triumphantly suggested, if not 
demonstrated, that all’s right with the world. 
The book would be robbed of much of its 
interest if it lacked the illustrations that 
abound in it, and the gracious nature-writing 
represented well enough by the following pas- 
sage: 

It was a glorious May-day, with the or- 
chards in bloom and the foliage of the woods 
and the wayside trees reaching the fresh 
perfection of its form and color. The birds 
were happy in the full flush of their annual 
romances, for to them the joy of first love 
returns each year as the dandelions return to 
the meadows. The morning air was warm 
and breathless, the smoke of a burning stump 
by the way ascending in a quavering perpen- 
dicular column as does the smoke in Marson’s 
picture, “Rest in Egypt,” where the artist has 
suggested the desert’s perfect calm. The clear 
azure of the sky was unflecked save by two 
hawks which swept round and round in slow 
and graceful circles as if they were designing 
rival plans for some mighty chandelier to be 
suspended in the blue dome of day. 


~~ on 4 ee ot me eS OC ort ct a Are rhare Hy 


other countries, (2 6 
|. DEATH OF Ponts ga 


One of Founders of Disciples 
Church Dies in Pasadena, Cal.— 
Former Sailor Before the Mast 


Sanford M. Hunt, 82, one of the 
founders of the church of Christ (Dis- 
ciples) in this city and establisher of 
8. M. Hunt & Co, paper stock dealers, 
died Thursday morning at Pasadena, 
Cal. Mr Hunt had led an unusually | 
active life from the time when he, 


shipped out of Boston before the mast, 
when he was 15 years old. He sailed 
around the world several times before 
leaving the sea to become a pioneer 
in the paper stock business. He had 
been spending his winters in Pasadena 
for several years, and at his request 
will be buried there. 

Mr Hunt was born in Lubec, Mé., 
September 30, 1834. He was the son 
of Sanford M. and Sarah Fuller Hunt. 
He went with his parents to Boston 
when he was 10 years old, and there 
became fascinated with the life of the 
sea. He spent eight years as a sailor, 
rounding Cape. Horn seven times, and 
circumnavigating the earth about 
three times. He became first maté of 
the ship Fleetwood in 1858, and left 
the sea in the Same year. 

Mr Hunt began the paper stock 
business in Chicago, Ill. In 1859 he 
married Miss Delia Hamilton in Chi- 
cago. She died in 1862. In 1864 he 
married Miss Sarah J. Humphries, 
who died several years ago. After 
the big fire in Chicago in’ 1875 he 
came to this city, where he opened one 
of the first paper stock businesses. 
The company was later incorporated 
as 8. M. Hunt & Co, and is now con- 
ducted by Mr Hunt’s sons at 25 Har- 
rison avenue. eb ; 

In 1895 Mr Hunt, with Dr Horace! 
Detchon, organized the society of the 
‘|church of Christ (Disciples). Soon 
afterward he bought the church at 769 
Main street, now occupied by . the 
church of the Seventh-day Adventists. 
He owned this building until his death, 
although the church of Christ moved 
in 1909 to its present location on Dick- 
inson street. Two years ago Mr 
Hunt went to Pasadena. He returned 
to Springfield last summer, but went 
back to Pasadena to spend the win- 
ter. His brother, Albert B. Hunt, hig 
| daughter, Miss S. Emily Hunt of this 
city, and his sister, Miss Sarah F, 
Hunt of this city, were with him’ there 
when he died. He also leaves one gon | { 
by his first wife, Willard H. Hunt of i 
Philadelphia, Pa.; two sons by his 
second wife, Charles F. and Edward | 
B, Hunt of this city, and three daugh- 
ters, Mrs Delia Hamilton Mohorter 
of St Louis, Mo., Mrs Milton’ Murtay 
of Mittineague and Mrs William <A, 
Hebert of Kingston, Pa., and a broth- 
er, William F. Hunt of Pittsfield. 

Mr Hunt was a charter member of 
the Springfield cormmercial travelers’ 
club, and was recently elected to hon- 
orary membership. He was also a 


member of Hampden lodge of Ma\| 
sons, 


rcrrw esr on Dp 


15 


1745 


haul" VON. Yur EF Co 
hp. sca. 


Litas Gesetties i Pivtin. SU fl 


SAL lot al — gos tt 


; (at kei IG 1B. 
< a ee ~e LIN£4 ke fre fa 


al erate re Than 


er Were dthe Caer Userprosts Te 
atKukesrnr rLeme, 2X $730 arteR_. 


i 
1 
i 
i 


Bare 


a es en ange y Op AA Oo 


a ee Sa Lutte Ld LP 


WrguanT p~ Cae Wl As 
Y y, 3 

ie Lp ese QCA an See al Be 
Aa Aun fe Of Cb tee “7 GATE aaa 


bo Prarie y oe. Core, thrboreufir he 


4 YETI TR KK? | = ON ah Aogophe HK, 
Via he ; 2 pt a ae 


q ht? eke MN Ad IEE RO 


19 


im 


’ ADVERTISER, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1916 ie 
: . | 


THE MAGNOLIA 


From thé Spanish of the South American 
poet, Jose Santos Chocano, Translated by 
Alice Stone Blackwell, 


Deep in the forest, full of song and 


Talk of Today 


tr teeter: 


| Letters to the F 


‘ne Agriculture in Cities fragrance, The Irish Execu/ | 
Y STERLING, | Massachuselis arbeee i. magnolia, delicate and/mo the Editor:—_ | 
iste a arco ‘ Like eae wool among the thorns Iam not an Irishma’ 

t passage of the bill en- entangled, try for as far back as 
\ing Agriculture to Fam-} Or, on the quiet lake, a foam- flake} any way, is English. 
he way to evolutionary +, white, confess that I feel 


sympathy with the 

in this city on ‘Su 

this Government: t 

British Goyernme 

ient policy toway 
In this I feel 

the American ¢ 

working for ft 

all the Britis) 

tions do not 


‘y changes in the econ- 
s of Massachusetts. 
ions of this bill any 

lish and maintain 
sting families and 
ns of day, part- 
ges in gardening, 
ture, poultry-| Is it a pearl? Is it a'tear? We know 
isbandry © and not! 
siculture and] Between it and the ‘moon, with mys- 


Its. vase is worthy of a Grecian 
maker, { 
A marble wonder of the classic days. 
It shows its fine, firm roundness, like 
a lady 
Who with bared breast her loveli- 
ness: displays, 


\n and organ-|_ _ tery rife, for a better 
the instruc- | There es poms Pasi agha ‘story of en- He pemeny 
chantment, 
q the &8P-|tn which perhaps a white dove lost come wif 
LA eation. its life; r those wh’ 
ed to the ; { A moveme’ 
1 of the| For it is pure and white and light and/ pelieve, 
graceful, : 
slit Like a soft moonbeam. on a snowbank itn 
r deep, y 
jority (hat rests upon the snow and min-} Tule 
1 the gles with it: had 
\ffi- | Or like a dove upon the branch asleep. | tio 
nd er 


| 


< a? ig 
C, es aE 4L0 Aas MAA, + SORA 
LAL | Ad pele , - 


j 


Cs Ef tare AUN fo ee 


y ravi PA 


Harte t Pru, iia EP Ae 
plore ~ fan freee. hae Met TOae ‘pe 
eee te 


AA there Cone YVratiag of Vee 
ed ai eee in. WRK, plate 


O49 pre 
| a ae wie reer at Ae 
Y Vrordivarbhen arte taya___ _ 
— Lov Re OG Mee by pa mA 
Houthe : ne 
Ue rho . oy Soha) Aon 


ane Mrs ph teste ee 


Coma 


ara /} oP ier fi) fo) peat , 
hr HVA) (2, 5 l Ny w4 1, , ier “4 r Fal ’ 4a Ve aA LS as, ‘ 
| ag LoY- A Ce tree EM gp (ae : 


Yanpry lrrovk Ww ya Seow 
( sw aa yc (rag ated; 
ral g vk / VAL Mer. e Marked WA O- mit 
lt hak MA ttn ee - lle 
en, WTS “/ SQ ae y= YZ Lo 
Ux, Coce Vero A FOLK. PAA). 


atria \ Wear COR a Sa 
Wwe Pf (HAL. mera xe £2 aL rid Wakrrptrog | 


Bye rome vad 2 eS WAS ADB Oo : 

OWL, OAL S EE Aun Ceara i as 

1 ad abs Wart bx 
Yowdhecde Pues orsKafl fh , 


i At A ‘a ) é Ly ee | v CTrOw Herb =) Practises of the Northeastern Al- mR. 


gonkins: FRANK G, SPECK, 


f) i n 7 
LY? = : This paper presents lists of plants used in the _ 
Vir Vt Foie te 


medicine practises of several eastern Algonkin 


Pre , ; — tribes—the Montagnais, Penobscot and Mohegan. 
Oe A fe Ak) CLAGttLY Practically devoid of ceremonial associations in 
: / // this area, the pseudo-scientific use of herbs by the 
v northeastern tribes is taken as another indication 
of the primitive character of their culture. As- 
suming that a simple herbalism unmodified by 
Titual is more elementary than where subordinated 
to ceremonial practises, the author brings forth 
another reason for regarding the northeast as a 
region where a fundamentally characteristic type 
of Algonkian culture has survived unmodified by 
contact with outside and more advanced types. 
The associations of color, taste, name and the like, 
are shown to underlie the remedies and their func- 
tions in most cases, as appears in the botanical | 
identifications and the analyses of native names. 


The Social Significance of the Creek i ais : 
JOHN R. SWANTON, 
The Creek confederacy was a result of eee 

social linkings from which, in all parts of the 


i world, Sag! A ae and. governments have arisen, 


fash a conta narhed (Os ee 
lire Ayah! Pardon Kh sires 
x ley Vn a OCA gle> 


aoa 


ata. \ Wat CK bk, Pree 
wit bets Me bptha wy 4 Mea het rong 
tir 5, pon 2 ra Wt Le Are ; 


€ ~ AN ALM ee Spi 2 

2 tA “ey a e mere? rt 2857 Ltn Ch Oz 
VOGAL Puaet~ S 

Kieth, afer! Croweces even Pre 

DA Wy a7 hon. » 9K bh: | 


VUE ee Chae eo 7 
Tee Q) Apa) CX oe a to OS ic 


/ 


qoyjOu of} pues soyzeZ 4+ SUUSTOM FUGTEpLFSCIU” 

oy} Fo youo ‘syoryo Jo woT}ETTVISUT FO yenjr ey} 

uy ‘onsBey ey} FO ajdood 043 pesodmos oy suos 

-1ed oy} Lq ‘possessod: eq 04 pesoddns 10 ‘posses 

sod es0y} WOIZ JOULISTP OLOM esoyT, “PET syed 

OTUVBIO [eIJUESSe S}T SB WOAO ‘qratds werprens 8 Sut 

-ABy 8B Roapaen os[e sear 4T pooyqg weUUNy ‘jomod - 

-ureaip ‘qysisefe “purur ‘pooyr0yjour pues pooyreyyey 

‘xog e[emoy pue e[BUl peuoljueU eq fem $1008 | 

-1eyd soy} Suoue fsuoyyouns 10 sorjrodoid o1jorq 

eyuyep Y}IM paMopue ‘Zureq 10 uosxed oyeutue 

we sv poatoouoo sem stonbosy ey} FO ensve, ey} 

‘£q172}0} oTuRSIO UB SB OS PUY “FIL oyl[-UeUInYy, 

sem pojudur os est] eUL ‘eouetsodxe usmny FO 
yd Payee re TO a snnatao pmeR sat 


é. 
COL er | 
0 ri ra x “I Loks Art ck. 


es 


G ‘he we IlIW/6 


= 
ia 
“% 


a4 1906 Justba He 13° ic 


| 
fad eo Same Sein cha: 
| ho Wad aren Ves BA breter Cong 
And _ ra, Oy LA. HOt lLy—_cLe.. 
is: A tad OA’ i fe. Atte TPL Es 
; SOME PP MR era Hef Pr 
| hu nee FG fo Bee sy, ae oa? eal SS, A . 
fw 


Mrs. Abbie S. Colgate. 

Mrs. Abbie Salisbury (McLellan) Col- 
gate, widow of Charles H. Colgate, died 
at her residence, 92 Glen street, early 
Wednesday morning, of heart disease, 
For nearly twelve years Mrs. Colgate 
has been subject to illness due to a 
weak heart, and of late the attacks 
have become more frequent, She re- 
turned a week ago from a visit to her 
son, Dr. Charles H. Colgate, Jr. pe 
Rockland and seemed much benefitted. 
On Sunday she had another attack, 
from which she was unable to rally. 

Mrs. Colgate leaves one son, Dr. Col- 
gate, Jr., of Rockland; three daughters, 
Miss Annie L. Colgate, Mrs, John BE. Gil- 
ereast and Miss Mabel S. Colgate; two 
grandsons, Cleveland and Alden Colgate 
Gilcreast; and two brothers, Edward Mc- 
Lellan, of Newton Centre, and William 
BE. McLellan, of Wollaston, Her hus- 
band died three years ago. They were 
married in 1867 in Chelsea and after 
two years came to Somerville to live. 
Mrs. Colgate has resided in her present 
home thirty years. 

She was a member of Prospect Hill 
Chapter, Daughters of the Revolution, 
and the Franklin Street Church. Al- 
ways taking an active interest in both, 
she was highly esteemed for her sterling 
qualities and will be greatly missed by 
a wide circle of friends. She was a fre- 
quent contributor of poetry to the Som- 
erville Journal. F 

Funeral services will be held at her 
late residence, 92 Glen street, this (Fri- 
day) afternoon at 2 o’clock, Rev. Carl 
Stackman will officiate, and the. burial 
will be in the family lot aha Peer 


Cemetery. ? Fs : ] 4 


Mrs, Mark J, Elvedt, 


Mt oir eee rnerertak, 


’ 


— Mrn bh — aL a Sopa 


’o Prey. 
208 


4 


Ane a Sanden 5 Ce Load, 


ov Any Mine Pace PHA 


gee | 
V 


“ 
? 


Kak Weredt 


okt. Kend., Wert, Mace. 


19/6 
Prec Aime ,) 
Me 7A v o~ ere ye Ceccho ku. ~ 


Rt Ko ai Fan . | & 
GH Uecar Hat 
eo uUt4re Mere GF 
VA Bh PUL A Yat AA ; la) 
AMM %, ee fi ae i 
: fehy oO - Bie & fe Foon 


tut bie 


TOA. LatNn eS Ke: ely _ 


Jy rae ae ; 

A "Llane G : 
th Atte OL Z fee ee . 
CokMled isthe C2 (yk ade 
te ” a 
nh ly n_b th phat Se, — 
anda yo. 


Vat Vy | 
is A 6 “ge f f ; wg r=" 4, S f/ ; 


LR 
M2 tL CO Ath byrne eae 
A ee all 4 2 


i Ee 
26 Rakin tend, lg Hrertl, Race 


mo) 


a 
L Oo 


— 


yoo LSAUL Lsaaq1o dHL 


pa met 


“ys yonsvos, “488V ‘dav ‘@ auvada j 
y  sonsvosL, “36V ‘NOLVG “2 SVWOHL i 
PLO AxeqoI005 ‘WAV 'N AUNGH Hl 
gg =: soanseos.L ‘NaTIV “A woraaagda 1 4 
IV quoptseld 201A ‘SAVaV UAHLUV 


lq@dOOH “H sawvl 


1 ti 


+s} xou ano 4 

ninsuo3 *peoiqe pue $9}®3S i 
u UOYA eIqe]IVAe Auejysul 

: fase) 0} ABM oyes Ajuo OYL ily 

hue zrpaap yo $30390'T sonss] pi 


AO LNaIWADVYNYW AHL» 
Ing JOL SUI 


26 
| ply IS 197% Ly. Me td tha Caza 


dp | / Se 1 
age Fit lJ rs pedro KttAAL oz 


i 


Mir. J. WitntAM FULLERTON. 


a Se y 
hal kin he eee Cue me 732 
¢ P2 Car PS __ 
proves Jy Gis wees Bz Tae VL DYOCL yeu 
ri. Wa Praereortta.r Cinnekerc ‘e. 


VEG 
‘ ee 27 
| | e ; 
trday VY Lx 2 rs 
v 


Jf 


—e =e 
( ‘4 LAN A. Pe To ae 7. Le. Pe es ya 3 : lar wy j “ee S ; Sard Aen 
LY) rR a Oat Y ok Ker f re 


aa Poa. t~ (ZO Lede el am V+ 
CE Sp ile dee 


) Fg 
as ey 


otlrc th Ci fe Wjlen— 


., aad - “oO < POF EEN ~ — on 
AL i epee GEV ne pe l— oO at ag eg 


5 / ve ie t~ A : aor Ly AS hae fae 


| Rtn ty’ oe PS: WAAL tee 
a A 


Tee tie Etec free Cag 


VOC by 6s, Av tn — 


Ly = Oe OPO Varuty At? 
/ 


LLL GONACL__. 


believe it or not, but the 
believes it—the story that 
en of Rheims refuse to 
into the cellars, when 
to fall, because they 

‘s and mice. By a 

ly be killed. But 

That is altogether 

or mouse is all 

the creature is 

yeologian say? 

mething like 


ascending, 


= 
CHuwnwreer nvwwre gon | 2 


s ‘go through all the motions 
of barking violently, put never a sa i 
issued forth. tl 


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 


KATAHDIN 


To the Editor of the Transcript: : 

Gratifying as it is to learn in Allen Cham- 
berlain’s account of a recent trip of the 
Appalachian Club to Mt, Katahdin that ‘A 
Long Lost Mountain” has heen found, his 
article is somewhat misleading in the as- 
sumption that this same mountain has not 
long ‘been the objective and abode of many 
lovers of nature and prospecting scientists. 

The wonderful South Basin was first 
made easily attainable from the east in 
1900 by a party of botanists umder the lead- 
ership of Dr. Kennedy o{ Milton, who 
built a trail accessible to horses within five 
miles of the Basin and who erected a sub- 
stantial log camp which served for several 
years as a cosy shelter for an ever increas- 
ing number of campers who followed them. 
Rhodora, the journal of the New England 
Botanical Club of June, 1901, gives inter- 
esting accounts of the trip by the various’ 
members of the expedition. Another party 
of entomologists visited the mountaii the 
following year, one of its members discov-~ 
ering a new species’ of butterfly (Chionabas 
Katahdin) described in Entomological News, 
Oct. 1, 19001. In 1898 and 1901 Professor 
M. H. Harvey visited the mountain giving 
extensive scientific information in the “Uni- 
versity of Maine Studies, No. 5,’’ Decem- 
‘ber, 1908. 

One of Boston’s most notable artists visit- 
ed the mountain at'this time, painting its | 
impressive features and elusive moods with 
the skill of a master. Katahdin is never 
likely to pose for a more successful or sym- 
pathetic interpreter of her majestic charms, 

Captain Rogers, late proprietor of Lunk- 
soos Camp at Hast Branch Crossing, who 
built the trail and cabin for the Kennedy 
party in 1900, improved the trail in suc- 
ceeding years until campers could ride into 
the South Basin on horsepack. For several 
years numberless people found their way 
over this trail, at times as many as two- 
Score of campers lodging together on the 
shores of Chimney Pond. Indeed, the moun- 
tain would never have been lost and found 
again hadit not been for the disastrous forest 
fires which ravished the Maine wilverness 
in the summer of 1905, which not only ob- 
literated the trail so laboriously prepared 
by Rogers, but rendered the country inter- 
vening between the settlement and the 
mountain so nearly impenetrable that even 
that intrepid woodsman abandoned the pro- 
ject which had promised permanent profit to 
him, Many years after,that disaster a second 
fire burned over the trail, consuming the ob- 
structing blow-down and making the buiia- 
ing of the present trail an easy task. 

All honor to the Appalachian Club for 
exploring, extolling, and again making ac- 
cessible the wonders of this greatest of 
Eastern méantain peaks, but the mountain 
was never lost to the memory of the many 
who had followed the trail of the Kennedy 
party, and its temporary isolation and re- 
discovery was accountable to an act of 
God and not to the apathy of local guides 
and camp keepers or those who knew it of 
old. 2 GS; NOR, 

Boston, Oct. 5. 


Cay fs | 
26 VP rbadkecet 
Krnchetel. oro ware —_ 
Ctra AL Oiers Ping ire ae Vip Rete 
29! Weathiecl rreadtiun Weate, 
panies (S0TLA a 


30. ks Lo/2 cia 
Get / AE pate a ee 04 Mabe 


Mss Fé (ettdin¢hKe[e/e 
Ok 2 y J t— PRLUAWVL Cane Pa, Cathe Lf 
Meartarar Witte ge Hp 


An kh ole WML, i (oka —. 


Se a5 a PER hg 
ben Lev07VL 4 a OK LE 
Ga. VHpneta7, Cr —" 
K ry Ee b sal Ch ee for 
Wt oK_ Ke LI a Kai + Mw 
i og he “ tan be iL Ue 
A tAp Rpt LanrKle Ha aie’ amas 

(4 ty paxzee b, acy dart, Laer 


Lao Qtr. ¥O Aki pe i 


Pie 


AG I 
from tip. , has been kill 
Naples, mters, 


‘|and finally, after he was 


him. Damage amounting to- 
than $1000 was done to sheep ma 


hano | C has [tet the amimoal as led. 
2 AMERICANS | | 

WERE LISTED | 
/— ON STEPHANO 


| Roster of First Cabin Included 
Two Passengers from United). 


ore 


States and Qne German- 
American — Newfoundland, 
Canada and Spanish Coun- 
tries Represented. ; 


[Special Dispatch to the Herald.] 
HALIFAX, N,-S., Oct. 8—Follow- 
ing is list of first and second cabin 

passengers on S. S. Stephano: 


FIRST CABIN, | 

‘William Bierschehck, German-American; 
J, &. Evans, W. C. Ellis and W. J. Levi- 
son, Ameri¢ans; J. Sancher, R. Fernan- 
dez, F. Anqua, F. Fernandez, Spanish; J. 
Johanson, Norwegian; Mrs. 1. R. Erick- 
son, Newfoundland. . ay, 

SECOND CABIN, 
Americans. 

J. Stewart, C. Bostwick, F. Bostwick, E. 
Saxon, M, Harris, H. F, Graham, J. L. 
Taylor, G. Hurlburt, H. Hurlburt, H. L. 
Barnum, R. B. Ludy, N. Huffman, VF. 
Jennings, C. Evans, §. Evans, ©, F. Ul- 
rich, 8. Wilson, J. Wilson, J. O, Andrews, 
M. Curtis, L, Howley, V. F. Burke, M. 
Kennedy, M. Cutler, P: Fitzpatrick, G. 
Gregory Kennedy. - ; 

‘ Newfoundland. 

E. A, Butler, H, Trambelt, M, Driscoll, 
P,. Haley, G. McGrath, J. 0. Marsh, H. 
Rowe, C. Leate, EB. M, Kain, J. Kain, L. |. 
Leate, E. Gushin, V. Squires, M. Gosse, A. 
Lawlor, A. Hickey, RK. Kain, J. Kain, F, 
O’Toole, M, Brown, G. Fellham, M. Doyle, 
A. Carew, C. Carew, K. Ludridgan, C. 
Engles, S. L. Shephard, M, Griffin, <A, 
Norris, A. Conway, M. Casch, F. Perry, 
CG. Gushin, N. Gushin, J, Fenner Saunders, 
M, Clouter, M. C. Clouter, W. H. Clouter, 

Canadians, 
R, E. Tough, Miss Sylvia Carew. 


. Hull Still Floats. 


A radio message from the torpedo boat 
destroyer Balch at 10 o'clock tonight 
said that the steamer Stephano was still 
afloat six miles southeast of Nantucket 
Shoals lightship. The destroyer re- 
ported that she was standing by, al- 
though it seemed that the ship a a 


to the bottom. 
4 — 


‘ Set Dor 


a a 
— 


7 7 Va # 


ae f 


st Expensive 3 Co: in 


Ce 


> 


Langwater Dairymaid, Sold Yesterday at Mr. F. Lothrop Ames’ North Easton Farm 


THERS have thought well of Lang- 

water Dairymaid, and yesterday was 

the first time the market had an op- 
portunity to put a cash price on her. 
Without any question the «auction sale 
on the Ames estate brought together tha 
best judges of Guernsey cattle and many 
of them followed her with their bidding 
until the sensational bid of $6150 was an- 
nounced by C. L. A, Whitney. of Albany, 
This was $1140 more than was pald for 
Mary Rilma in 1914 at Berwin, Penn., and 
the highest price on record for any Guern- 
sey cow. Tirst prize was captured by 
Langwater Dairymaid at the Brockton 
Fair in 1912, where she was adjudged also 
the #rand champion. At the National 
Dairy Show the same year She’ was award~- 
ed both first and second prizes and at the 
Guernsey Show in Framingham in 1015 
she won the Linda Vista Farm trophy, 
The fair maid has graduated from cl 
G and C on the adyanced register by 
her mill production, registering 18,747.50 
pounds of milk with 670.12 pounds of fat 
in her class C test for 365 days. Now she 
is under a retest for class A, in which she 
has produced 12,709.80 pounds of milk in 
985 days. Individually, Langwater Dairy- 
maid is one of the very best types ¢¢ 
high-producing ‘Guernsey. She is one ot 


SS 


those handsomely marked cows, combined 
with beautiful lines, and handsome car- 
riage, which will attract the attention of 
the connoisseur regardless of the size of 
her company. A real Guernsey—she looks 
as if the scale of points had been de- 
signed for her—she will be the pride of her 
future owner. 

About $80,000 was realized for the seven 
ty-four head of cattle that were sold, which 
makes an average of $1072, thé first twenty 
going at an even higher average. The low- 
est price paid was $100 for a lttle bull 
ealf, and next to the highest price was 
$5000 which John §. Ames paid his brother 
for Langwater Generous, 

This auction and the National Dairy 
Show having brought. the country’s Guern- 
sey fanciers into Massachusetts, the local 
Guernsey breeders have taken advantage of 
the opportunity to exhibit their herds. This 
morning a group of the men and women 
who attended the auction went to Cohasset, 
at the invitation of Clarence W. Barron, 
to inspect his fine herd atthe Oaks Farm, 
William H. Caldwell, who is secretary of 
the American Guernsey Cattle Club, en- 
gineering the party. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh 
D. Bancroft served luncheon after the ex- 
hibition of the prize stock, Leaving Cohas- 
set, the party went to Norwell-to see A. 
L, Iaincoin's pedigree stock on tha Rocky 
Reach Farm, ‘Tomorrow morning they are 


going to the Fillmore Farm at Wellesley 
Farms as guests of Charles H, Jones, presi- 
dent of the Commonwealth Shoeand Leather 
Company. Mr. Jones is @ recognized 
breeder of Guernseys, his cows having com~- 
pleted fifty-one advanced register records, 
running as hich as 15,619.20 pounds of milic 
with 871.28 pounds of fat, which was #ic- 
complished by his Gold Dust's Elite. From 
Wellesley the cattlemen and cattlewomen 
will go to Brookline, to the Mecca of 
Guernsey breeders in ‘this country—the 
Sargent estate, where they will meet James 
M. Codman, who was the first man to make 
a business of importing Guernsey cattle into 
America and who is now president emeritus 
of the American Guernsey Cattle Club, Mr, 
Codman yisited the Channel Islands in 1872 
for the purpose of investigating two lead- 
ing breeds, and he was attracted by the 
color and character of the product of the 
Guernsey, of which it is said that its butter 
need not be colored. The first arrivals from 
the Channel Islands gave so much satis- 
faction that Mr. Codman sent for more. 

On Friday a visit will be made to Hollis- 
ton, to the Guernsey farm of L. H. 5. 
Smith and to several other farms in the 
town, and by Saturday the party may be 
inereased to 500 for the field day on Dr. 
Samuel J. Mixter’s Farm at Hardwick. 

Next Monday Is Guernsey Day at the 
National Dairy Show at Springfield. 


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eweChurch BWlessenger 


Incrrz.—At Milton, Mass., on Nov. | earth-life 


her age, Miss Mary Anne Ingell, a mem- 
ber of the Roxbury Society. The funeral 
services were at the house, and were 
conducted by her true friend and 
former pastor, Rev. Julian K. Smyth. | ri 
The clear message of the definiteness of 
the hereafter given us in that service 


his most 
tion. He 
aptain 


son, 


E. G. B. 


New-Church people present. ot dead; 


: ~ ‘ 


we 


December 20, 1916 


the doctrines of the New 


28th, 1916, in the seventy-second year of | Church were his greatest delight and 


enjoyed subject of conversa- 
was a loyal New Churchman. 
Ayres has left, in this world, 


hig wife, two married daughters, a mar- 


eight grandchildren and four 


great grandchildren. 
The keynote of the resurrection serv- 
was spoken, of and appreciated by non- ; e conducted by his pastor was, “He is 


he is risen!” 


Calendar for January, 1917 


January 1, Monday. The Church Committee will meet 
at 8 p. m. at Miss Silver's, 


re 


January 3, W ednesday. The Massachusetts New- 
Church Woman’s Alliance will meet in the Vestry of the 
Boston Church at 2,30 p.m. Mr. Feri Felix Weiss, 
B. Sc., United. States Immigrant Inspector, Port of 
Boston, will speak on “Immigration, and Uncle Sam’s 
Sieve.’’ Mr. Weiss is an author and well known linguist 
and an authority on Immigration. This will be an unusual 
opportunity to hear one of the best equipped men in the 
Government service, on one of the most vital questions 
before the public at this time. A most cordial invitation 
is extended to men to attend this meeting. 

January 5, Friday. The Ladies’ Aid will have a supper 
party in the Vestry at 6.30. Tickets, 25 cents. 

Entertainment: Readings by Miss Bonina Gerve 
Boronti ; singing by Mrs, May Shepard Hayward, accom- 
panied on the piano by Miss Evelyn Caler ; Mr. Starling, 
violinist. 

January 7, Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 
Rev. Earle C, Hamilton. Sunday School at 11.55, 


January 10, Wednesday. The Matrons’ Club will meet 
at 2.30 p. m., with Mrs. Malcolm E. Nichols, 60 Grover’s 
Avenue, Winthrop Highlands. Mrs. Woodward will give 
a resumé of the chapter on ‘‘Interest” in ‘“The Individual 
in the Making,’’ and Mrs, Chalmers will describe home 
life among the Japanese. 

All who find it convenient are to meet at Revere Beach 
& Lynn depot (Rowe’s Wharf) at 1.45. Get off Winthrop 
train at Winthrop Highlands, walk through depot, up 
Crest Avenue, keeping to left to the house, next to the 
Leighton House. 

Let us begin the New Year by making this a large and 
interesting meeting, 


Incerz—At Milton, Mass., Noy. 28, 
1916, Mary A, Ingell, aged 7 years. Miss 
Ingell was one of fifteen who became 
members of the Roxbury Society under 
the Rev. Abiel Silver on April 1, 1877; 
and the last 39 years have witnessed her 
firmness in loyalty, her unflagging cour- 
age, and her quiet devotion to its wel- 
fare. She fulfilled to a singular degree 
the Biblical injunction of Matt. vi. 3: 
not only in alms, in the sanctuary and 
in spmpathetic hospitality, but in sery- 
ice to the lowly where the gift bore the 
mark of human appreciation. The left 


January 12, Friday. The Fraternity will have its regu- 
lar monthly meeting at the Vestry at 7.45 p.m. 

The Fraternity is Starting with its other activities, a 
Bible Class, to meet as near as possible at 8.15, or as 
soon as the business meeting is finished. We earnestly 
request that all members and friends will do their best to 
make it a success, 

We will take as our subject this year the Harmony of 
the Gospels, dividing the Gospel of Matthew into five 
parts, taking this month the first three chapters of Mat- 
thew. Mr. Stiff will be the leader, 


January 14, Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 
F. Sidney Mayer of Fall River, Sunday School at 11.55, 


January 19, Friday. The Ladies’ Aid will meet at 
10 a.m, at the Vestry. 


January 21, Sunday. Services at 10.30, conducted by 
Mr. H, Durand Downward. Sunday School at 11.55, 


January 26, Friday. The Fraternity will have a jolly 
time for young and old, at 8 p.m. Every one welcome. 
Bring your friends and have a good time. 


January 28, Sunday. 
Rev. Wm. F. Wunsch. 


Services at 10.30, conducted by 
Sunday School at 11.55, 


Rerord 


Our Society has recently lost one of its earliest and 
most esteemed members, Miss Mary A. Ingell, who 
passed to the other world November 28, 1916. Uniting 
with the Church in 1877 she has always been devoted to 
its interests. Quiet and unobtrusive, she was efficient and 
helpful, and many a good cause has been assisted by her 
generosity. She was a woman of the highest type of 
mind and character, and one whom it was a privilege to 
call one’s friend. To know her was to love her. 


35 


~ 


hand was kept in extreme ignorance of 
the beneficent generosity of the right. 
Assimilation to the conditions of the bet- 
ter land will be easy to her; she had 
breathed much of its atmosphere While 
here, and had striven conscientiously 
for conformity to its laws. 

The Rev. Julian K. Smyth, who had 
known her, while here for 16 years, as 
a parishioner, gave fitting and heartfelt 
tribute at her obsequies; and he reached 
the many persons present of other faiths 
through his simple setting forth of the 
New-Church view of that normal transi- 
tion to another life which is called 


death. Bh. 
f) 


V7 ’ 4 / ay) me 
how Wn Ne 


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2 CNVGE— 
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, JULY 24. 1916 


The Fine Arts 
THOSE GOOD OLD TIMES 
Retrospective View of Boston Art ativis 


ties Forty-Odd Years Ago Outlined by 
Old Catalogues 


iow many people saye their old art 
catalogues’ Ccuuparatively few, And yet 
for punposes o4 reference Many of these 
brochures are ct constant.y increas,ny 
value to the historian, ‘Through the cour- 
tesy of Mr. A. W. Hilson, president of che 
Hilson Art Publication Company, this de- 
partment has had the privilege of a very 
interesting retrospective glimpse of the art 
activities of forty-odd years ago in Bos- 
ton, aS suggested in outline by the cata- 
logues o! the Boston Art Cluip exhibition 
of 1873 and ‘of the “Artists’ Annual Sale” 
of the spring of 1875. -The Boston Art Club 
exhibition of 1878 contained 185 works; of 
this total about 150° were) oil paintings, and 
the rest were watercolors, pastels, draw- 
ings and sculpture. Among the names of 
the artists in this catalogue we note those 
of A. B. Copeland, George Snell, Alfred 
Ordway, A. F. Bellows, F, P, Vinton, 
Bullen Robbins, Edwin Lord Weeks, Ernas. 
Longfellow, Benjamin Champney, J. Wells 
Champney, William Babcock; J. Foxcroft 
Cole, E. T. Billings, Frank Hill Smith, J. 
Appleton Brown, W. M. Fisher, 8, W. 
Griggs, William E. Norton, John R. Key, 
George Inness, F. D, Williams, Walter M, 
Brackett, Anne Whitney, James M, Hart, 
Thomas ‘Robinson and Helen M, Knowlton, 
All-Ibut three or four of these artists are 
dead. 


| John’s’ River," “Sunset, Newtonville,” 


" study,” “November,” and “Jessica.” Salis- 


| One peculiar feature of the exhibition is’| 
the fact that more than half of the pictures 


were loans, They came from the private 
collections of such Boston collectors as H. 
P. Kidder, 8. D. Warren, ‘Thomas Wisgles- 
worth, Erancis Jaques, Benjamin 8. kKobeh, 
Dr. J, H. Wright, R, ©, Greenleaf, and 
Donald Kennedy. The last-named gentle- 
man lent a pencil drawing attributed to 
Charlotte Bronté. The catalogue does not 
State where the exhibition was held, but it 
was in all probability in the old club- 
house in Boylston street, opposite the 
Common, 

Who remembers the ‘Artists’ Annual 
Sale” of March 17 and 18, 1875? It was 
held in the gallery of the Studio Building, 
in Tremont street, and the 107 paintings 
Were by eight artists—William (MM. Hunt, 
Thomas Robinson, John B. Johnston, Mar- 
cus Waterman, §. S. Tuckerman, Frank 
Hill Smith, F. W. Rogers and Miss H. M, 
Knowlton, In this collection Hunt had no 
Jess than twenty-eight paintings. ‘They 
Were: “Spring Morning,” “Cypress Tree 
and Creek, Florida,” “Hazy Autumn Morn- 
ing,” “Willow | Tree,” “The Rising Moon,’ 
‘Beach Scene with Horses,” ‘The Garden 
Gate,” “Female Head—a study,” “Autumn 
Foliage, Newton Lower Falls,” ‘“Milldam, 
Newton Lower Falls,” “Spring, Water- 
town," “Silver Lake and Factory,” 
“Autumn Afternoon,” “Magnolia Tree, St. 


“Poplars,” ‘On Charles River,” “Sketch,” 
“Cloudy Sunset,” “Storm,” “Milton Farm,’ 
“Bemis Factory,” “Banks of St, John’s 
River, Florida,” ‘Charles ‘River above 
Waltham,” “Autumn Sunset,” ‘Land- 
scape,” ‘Silver Lake—sketch,” and a 
“Head? 

Marcus Weterman’s principal contribu- 
tion was his ‘(Maaroof in the Market-Place, 
from the Thousand and One Nights,” and 
he also sent in his ‘‘Black Birch Grove, 
October,” ‘“‘Sarkateau River, Moosehead 
Lake,” ‘‘Brother Jack, a Moosehead Lake 


bury Tuckerman had ten of his paintings 
in the collection, comprising for the most 
part his marine pieces painted on the Hng- 
ish coast, at Hastings, Yarmouth, Hartle- 
pool, etc. Frank Hill Smith exhibited 
eighteen paintings, made in Italy, France, 
Holland and Canada, Tom Robinson was 
represented by landscape subjects from 
Marblehead, Quebec, Ecouen, Rhode 
Island, etc., and by several of his pictures 
of animals. John BR, Johnston was rep- 
resented by several landscapes painted in 
the suburbs of Boston; F. W. Rogers by 
two or three landscapes of the neighbor- 
hood of Hingham; and Miss Knowlton by 
a landscape and a flower piece, There wore 
some excellent pictures In that collection, 
beyond a doubt, and no one who is fa- 
millar with Boston auction prices for paint- 
ings will question the surmise that many a 
bargain was to be ‘had, 

Mr. Elson has also handed this depart- 
ment the catalogue of the second annual 
exhibition of the Paint and Clay Club, 
1882, This was held in the picturesque old 
sky parlor at 419 ‘Washington street, 
where Gilchrist’s store now stands, Tho 
exhibitors included Hmil Carlson, J, Fox- 
croft Cole, I. M. Gaugengigl, W. F. Hal- 
gall, John B, Johnston, W. L. Metealf, Al- 
fred Ordway, Charles F. Pierce, FF. W. 
Rogers, John Paul Selinger, Hy. Sandham, 
Ross Turner, Marcus Waterman, George 
B. Wasson, George Fuller, George W. Ed- 
wards, Edmund H, Gurrett, PF. G. Attwood, 
WwW. L. ‘Taylor, W. B. Closson, and T, TH. 
Bartlett. Although this show took place 
only thirty-four years ago, of these twenty- 
one men only seventeen survive today, 

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shoulders and breast | , a impled 
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with a patch, and a e's ere n ‘ 2 
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journeys birds, 


redpolls and pine kins have many 
of resemblance They are little, | 
l birds, decidedly smaller t Eing- | 


s and 


Sparrows, with plainly rked 


adapted t 


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resemble 
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ding habits. 


nearly white, with darker stripes on 
and sides, and with ight 

cap, and a k patct 

suggests a chin w 


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rom ‘2 mottled brown and white in the 
fail to a ing black-and-white pattern 
in the Their aerial is are 
most (beautif the compact often 


numberin idividuals, 


hundred 


Circle an 1 the air, 
the white intermit- 
tently and whirling 


flurr 


I} A. the great | 
family of finches or sparrows, the seed- 

ti birds @uite different in structure 
and habits are the shrikes, or ‘butcher- 
birds, a are popul: ly name i, from 
their ha their prey, insects, 


mice, or om 2 thorn or fork 
of a branch, their or to 
forget The are alike in the shrikes, | 
xray and white, with /bla tted 
and tail; the young birds barred or | 


TOW. 
twi 


Their fayvor- 
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This little 


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43 


CHARLES EDWARD FAXON DEAD | 7=05 


"cro eg A Ha ' DEATHS 
Distinguished as a Botanist.and Illustra- Se aaa 
‘tor, He Had Been Assistant Director of | _“°2 228° 7¥O Part 

the Arnold Arboretum “ Charles Edward Faxon, aged 72 years. Funeral |! 


FAXON—At Jamaica Plain, Feb. 6, suddenly, 
at the Chapel of the Massachusetts Cremation 
Charles Edward Faxon, assistant di- eC ee aaa silero SAS ee <3 
rector of the Arnold Arboretum, died 
suddenly at his home in Jamaica Plain 
this morning. Born in Roxbury on Jan, 
21, 1846, he was the son of Elisha and 
Hannah Mann (Whiting) Faxon, He was 
a graduate of the Lawrence Scientific 
School and an instructor of botany at 
Harvard from 1879 to 1884, In 1907 he 
was made an hononary Master of Arts 
by Harvard., vr el ial 

Like his brothers, Charles Faxon was 
interested from boyhood in nature, and 
as a boy roamed the woods in search, of 
birds and plants. He kept his interest 
in birds and their habits until the end 
and few men who were not professional 
ornithologists had a more comprehensive 
knowledge of this subject. 

Mr. Faxon began early to draw. plants 
and showed so much ability in this work 
that he was asked to make some of the 
colored plates for Haton’s “Ferns of. 
North America,” published in 1879-1880. 
For the first volume of this. classical 
book he made six drawings and for the 
second volume thirty-three | drawings. 
When the Smithsonian Instittition began 
the preparation of the work on trees 
which was afterwards known as “Sar- 
gent’s Silva of North America,” Mr. 
Faxon was selected to prepare the il- 
lustrations, For this work he made 
749. drawings accompanied by carefully- 
prepared analyses of the flowers and 
fruits, » He made. 642 drawings for Sar- 
gent’s “Manual of the Trees of North 
America’ and the drawings for the 100 
plates of trees and shrubs; and several hun- 
dred drawings. which were reproduced on 
the pages of Garden and Forest, including 
those afterward republished in “The Forest 
| Flora of Japan.’ His drawings of many 
Central American plants were published 
from time to. time in The Botanical Gazette. 

Among the artists who have made bo- 
tanical drawings in the last four centu- 
| ries few have equaled Mr. Faxon in 
| taste, skill and knowledge, and the 
works which he illustrated owe their 
chief value to his pencil. +) eps 
Charles Faxon had an unusually wide 
and general knowledge of literature and 
| taught himself to read currently every 
European language. Modest and retiring 
he. impressed himself publicly only 
through his pencil, and only those per- 
sons who could appreciate the value of 
its work, or who came into daily contact 
with him, realized that one of the re- 
markable and distinguished men. of the 
| country was living here in Boston prac- 
tically unknown to the general public. 
He was a Fellow of the American 
Academy of Arts and Science, . ‘ 

The final volume of “The Silva’ was 
dedicated to Charles Edward Faxon “In 
grateful appreciation of the skill and 
learning which for twenty years he wae 
devoted. with untiring zeal to ‘The Silva 
of North America,’”’ by the friend who, 

for forty years, had been his almost 
laily associate. . nie t 


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