VERMONT WATCHMAN & STATE JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1883. Qiicnlhmtl T. II. IIOHKINS, Newport, Vt., Killtor. T1II! FAIMI. Far np In tlio totl, warin West Tliere lle Rn orchard nest Whf re every nprlng tho Wack-oips come, Anil ImlM tliemiwlves n downjr lioino. Tlie, npplo-bongh" cntwlne And make a nelwork flno Througli whlch ih mornlng vapors r That tie (roin llie dowy grau. And when tlie t prlnu warmth shoota Along the applo rooU Ttie snailcd old bouiihs grow fnll of buda, Tliat glcam and lcaf ln multltudea. And then, flrit colil and white, Soon flathlng wltli dcllglit. The blowom hcada coma out and blow And tntmlc iutxet-tinlcsl mow, Our Stato 1'rtlr. By tho teatimony of tho preas and of individuala on all hands, the recont oxhi bition at Burlington was an admirable success ln almost cvory rospeot. Tho Manchester Mirror and Farmer awards It the palm over its own fair in all im portant pointa, and ought to draw tho losaon, if it does not, that Loring and Neodham aro no holp to any fair, while thoy demand a good aharo of tho proceeda and all of the glory, such as it is. Not only in the moro conapicuoua mattera but in all the details upon which publio satis faction so greatly dependa, tho Burling ton fair was almost a model of perfection. We are sorry that its mauagera haro not the courage (or the wish) to divoroo them 8elvos from the horse gatnblingfraternity, alliance with which is tho only blot on their escutcheon. That such an alliance is no real help has been many tiines proved. The attondance on the horse day at the recont Caledonia county fair waa much less than on the preceeding day, and aimilar experiences are recorded all around. IIow to Traln Tendcr Fruit Trccs So Tliey Jlay bo Easily Protected. Mr. J. T. Macouiuer writes : " The principal diOiculty in raising tendcr sorts of fruits, such as peaches, nectarines, ap ricots, otc. where tho chmate is too se- vere for the trees to stand uuprotected, is tho diffioulty in giving them protection when grown in the natural form, and for the benefit of any who inay be willing to try it, I give a method by which I thiuk they may be grown and easily protected. Train your tree so as to have a branch' less trunk six to ten feet loug, in a kori zontal position about six inches from the ground, then allow a head to grow up right, from the end of this low trunk, which should be trained fan-shaped, par allel with the low trunK. When you wish to cover the tree for winter, turn tho head down sideways until it lies upon the ground (the long horizontal trunk will easily twist to allow this to be done) fasten the head down and cover with Btraw, or better, with evergreen boughs, and if you wish to make assurance doubly sure, place a few rails around the tree so as to insure the forznation of a enowdrift over the whole tree. In the spring, when all danger from frost is past, lift up the head and tie it firmly with straw bands to a stout stake or post which ought to have been set as soon as the head had begun to form, also place a block of wood under the end 6f the low trunk for it to rest upon. To train the tree, procure a small one not moro than ono year old, and al low it to grow straight up, picking off all branches as soon as they appear. In the fall carefully bend to the ground and cover, in tho spring straighten it up and allow it to grow as beforo, and so on an tu you have a trunk long enough to suit you, then keep it in a horizontal position, when it will grow up at the end and form a head. Some have objected to this method on the ground that the horizontal trunk will soon get too large to be twisted. I admit that in time it probably will, but that it will soon be too large I do not ad mit, ior it is never to De twisted moro than one-fourth of a circlo, and a piece of wood ten feet long must be pretty large before it cannot be twisted that much, and besides the horizontal trunk can be trained much longer, in fact it would be well for any one trying this method to have several trees in training, and have the low trunks of different lengths, some twenly or even thirty feet in length. It should be borne iu mind that the low trunk must be protected in summer from the gcorching sun to prevent sun-gcald A narrow, thm board fastened abovo it the whole length would be enough. Let those who lovo delicious fruit, but who cannot raise it at home by other methods, try this one. It is just the thing for the boys and the girls too, if they choose." rost-Ofllces and Secds. From the speech of Congressmau Long at the Marshfield, (Mass.) fair we take tho following : " The poat-office de partment actually addreesed me aaking whether 1 thought it deairable to discon tinuo the offioe at I'ondville in my dis trict. I could not nnd any such place. inquired of the railway mail agenl in Boaton, then of the editor of the Old Colony Memorial, then of one of the oounty commissioners. Nono of them knew of any such place. At laat I waa told that near Barnetable county, but on the edge of Plymouth county, there was a post-oflioo of that name. It was a so rious question conveyed to mo from tho great post-offico department whether it was worth whllo, in tho intereat of publio convenienco and of international relations, to maintain tho post-oilice of I'ondville in tho commonwealth of Massachusetta. I was also asked whether, in view of the fact that tho terin of the postmaster at Ilingham was about to expire, it waa de airable to re-appoint him. I looked into the matter, and fouud that he had served tho town for twenty-five yoars ; that no body romemberod any other postmaater 5 that he had been a fallhful offioial, and that nobody olao wanted tho place. So aftor raaturo deliberation I advised tho department that I was sausfled that he ought to bo ro-nppointed. The depart ment took tho niatter into consideration, and af ter tblrty or aixty days re-appolnted him. But I was saved from boing snroty on his bond. Congressmen have becomo 8hrewd, and havo passed a law that no member of congrosa shall aervo as suroty on tho bond of any ono who is an oflicor of tho United Statoa. But my groatduty haa been in tho department of agricul turo. I received a communication that a largo amount of wintor whoat waa at my diaposal. I was pleased and surprised. I thought it would be a good thing to givo my friends a little winter wheat. But I waa told that a fellow named Sam Cox, formerly a member of congress1 from Ohio and now from New York, had act ually lost his election in Ohio by dis tributing winter wheat. The wheat proved to bo so poor that his constituonts becamo very angry with him, so that ho left Ohio and became that raost unfortu nato of all boings on tbo earth, the repre sontative of a district from New York city. But I got on better with the turnip seed. I received a cotnmunication that eight hundred papers of turnip seed wero at my disposal. At firat I thought it waa elght hundred pounds. I consulted with my predecessor, Mr. Ilarris, and with Mr. Ilersey, who is United States agricultnral statistician, and detormined to have tho seed scnt to tho varioua postmasters throughout my district and distributed by them to persons intorested in turnip seed. I thought I had done a good thing, but at Weyraouth the other day, Mr. Ilarris said that the seed had been of- fered him, and he declined it and rec ommended that it be put off upon mo." Horse Gambllng. There ia never anything but rascality in the horse-racing of our fairs, but tho fact was nnnsually conspicuous at tho Loring show. Among the farces of the occasion was the putting of the drivers under oath " to drive to tho best of their skill and ability." Notwithatanding this bland and childlike experitnent, tho re- port in tho Mirror and Farmer apeaks of fraud in nearly every race. The follow ing aample sentences from tho report il lustrate the aubject : " The iudgea were confidently informed bv a pool buyer that Woodlake was beinc puued.' " O.ve of the bad features attendine the horse race durmg the lair has been the great amount of foul driving iu dulged in." " It was thought by some, early in the race, that Jiiraest u. was not being dnven to wm, and his owners were called into the judges' etand, when they took a sol oinn oath that their horse would win if possible." " Tms turned out to be the trreat race of the fair, though a etrong suspicion of crooKed woris pervaded it, and a smash up in tho deciding heat onlv served to strengthen this impression among those wno aouuiea its squareness. The Mirror also saya that " as usual, numerous protesta have already been lodged in the hands of the society by dis 1 1 lL!i l m . ..... aausnea uxmuuors. xruiy it is " as usual," and we venturo to say that " as usual" the dissatisfied exhibitors will continue diasatiafied. By the way, we are pleased to note that the Cooley Creamer got firat premium, although an editor prominent in tho management of the fair is reported to have declared with oaths that the Vermont Farm Machine Com pany should have no preminms. Farm Jfotes. Ari'KEHENsiONS carry only the main thought. If you would strike a sharp blow, you must tnm your stick. It is a common fault with fruit growers that they aet too many variotiea. Three or four well-tested varieties of applea, pears or amaii iruus are worth moro ln dollars and cents than twenty kinds. ia pleasant to be able to exhibit seventy five or a hundred varieties of apples at a fair, but it doea not pay, nevertheless. Enduwno labels aro made by writing with a Boft lead pencil on soft wood, over which a coat of white paint has recently been spread. The paint must not be dry when the pencil is used. The pencil marks will usually stand up distinctly abovo the surrounding aurface when tho weather haa worn the adjacent parts away. That memorizing of facts which cou atitntea tho chief work of our achools is no more education than picking up stones in a pasture lot is mineralogy. There is no use in imparting facta faater than the pupils can make use of them. Disso ciated from use, they appo&r to have no value to the learner, and ho soon losos them. Thb Sterling (Kanaas) sugar worka have commenced operationa for the season, and on tho first day turned out twenty barrela of sorghum sugar, not ayrup. The works will be run this year exclusively foraugar, and it is expectod that one million pounds will be made thia season. There aro several other large works in Kansas, and other states, of whoae operationa wo ex poct to furnish our readers a full account in the near future. The consolidation of corporations, which is now so rapidly going on, should be causo of congratulation, rathor than alarra. Nero wished that all the peopl of Iloine had but one head, so that ho could cut it off at a blow. When a slngli corporauon controis mo whole ot any great ousiness in a stato, and ono inan thd master of that corporation he livea and prospers only at tho will of tho peopl and kuows tho fact so well that ho will be aa humble as a dog before his master, Lei them conaolldate. OOAH'JSNSATION. 8he folded nptha worn and mended frock And mnoothed It lenderly upon lier knec, Then tlirouRh tho of t web of a wce rwl ock Sho wove tho brlght wool, muiiug thonghtfulljr " Can ttila bo all ? Tho great wotld ls to fair, I huDgor for ItR green and pleaanl way." A crlpple ptlonol In lier rCTtlen chalr I.ool-B from Iho wlndow with her wMfnl gaze. " Tho (rrttts I cannot reach aro rcd and weet, Tho pathi forbldilf n are both green and wldo j 0 Ocxl I llicre l 110 tioon to helpleM feet, So altogcMier nweetaa palha denled, Ilome ln moit fnlrj brlght aro my hotmehold flrpsj And chlldren aro a glf t wllhout alloy ; Jlnt who wonld bound Iho fleld of their doIrea lly tho prlm hedge of tnero flreslde Joy ? " I can but wcave a falnt thread to and f ro, Maklng n fralt woof In a babj'a ock) Into tho worlil'a nweet tnmult I would go, At 11b strong gaten my trembllng hand wouldknock." Jut then tho chlldren came, tho f ather too, Their eager faceK lltthe tnlllght glooin. Dear hcart," ho whlfperol, aa ho nearer drew, " How wcet It 1 wlthln thla llttlo room I " Ooil puta my atrongent conifort here to draw When thlrat l great and common wells aro dry, Yonr pure delre Ia my unerrlng lawi Tell tne, dear one, who Ia ao aafe aa I ? Ilome ls tho paaturo whero my aoul may feed, Thta room a paradlws haa grown to boj And only whero theao patlent feet ahall lead Can lt be home for the?e dear onen and mo." Ho toiiched with reveront hand the helpleaa feet, The chllilen crowdcd clove and klsaed berhalr. "Our mother Is ao good, and klnd, and aweet, There'a not another llke her anywherel" The baby ln her low led opencd wldo Tho aoft blne flowcrs In her tlmtd eye, And vlcwed tho group about tho cradle alde With smtles of glad and Innocent aurprbm. Tho mother drew the baby to her kneo And, sinlllng, sald: " The attra ahlno aoft to-nlght; My world Ia fair; lts edgeasweet to me, And whataoerer la.dear I.ortl, Is rlghtl" S!ay Itiltv Smith. Great Itanch In Cnllfornin. In her craphic illustrated article in tho October Century, on " Outdoor Industries ln Southern California, II. II. describos one of the great ranches aa follows : " The South California statistics 01 Iruits. crain, wool, honey, otc, read more like fancy than like fact, audare notroadily believed by one uiiacquamted with the country. Tho only wny to get a real comprehenaion and intellicout acceptance of them la to atudy them on the ground. By a slugle visit to a great raucn, one is moro enlight ened than ho would be by committing to memory scorea ot I'.quaiization iioard Ke- ports. One of the very best, if not tho best, for this purpose is Baldwin's ranch, in the San Gabriel valley. It includea a largo part of the old landa of the San Gabriel Miasion, and ia a principality in itaelf. There are over a hundred men ou its pay-roll, which averages 81,000 a month. Another ? 1,000 does not more than meet its running expenses. It has 8G,000 worth of machinery for its grain harvesta alone. It haa a dairy of lorty cowa, Jeraey and Durhain ; one hundred and twenty work horses and mules, and litty thoroughbreds. It is divided into four distinct estates : the Santa Anita, of 10.000 acrea; Puonte, 18.000: Merced, 20,000; and the Potrero 25,000. The Pueute and jlerced are sheep ranches, and have 20,000 sheep on them. The Potrero ia reuted out to small farmers. The Santa Anita is the home estate. On it are the homes of tbo family and of the laborers. It has fifteen hundred acres of oak grove, four thousand acrea in grain, nve hundred in grasa lor hay, one hundf&d and fifty in orange orchards, fifty of al mond trees, sixty of walnuts. twentv-five of pears, fifty of peaches, twenty of lem- ons, and hve hundred in vines: also small orchards of chestnuts, hazel-nuts, and apricots ; and thousands of acrea of eood pasturage. From whatever aide one ap- proacnes santa Anita in luay, be will drive through a wild garden asters, vel- low and white ; scarlet pentstemons, blue larkspur, monk'a-hood j lupines, white and blue; gorgeous golden eschscholtzia, alder, wild lilac, white sage all in riotous flowering. Entering the ranch by one of the north cates, he will Iook aouthward down gentlo slopes of orchards and vine yards lar acrosa tho valley, tho tints grow- 1 1 1 r . 1 , , . lug Buiier anu soiier, aou uienaing more and moro with each mile, till all meltinto a blue or purple haze. DrmnK from or chard to orchard, down half-milo avenues through orchards akirting seeminglv end' le8s stretches of vineyard, he begins to realize what comes of planting trees and vines by hundreds and tens of hundreds of acres, and the Kqualization Board sta- tics no longer appear to him even larce. It doea not seem wonderful that Los Angelea county should be reported as having sixty-two hundred acres in vines, when hero on one mau's ranch are five hundred acres. Tho last Equalization Board report said the county had 250.135 orange and 41,250 lemon trees. It would hardly have surprised him to bo told that thero were aa many as that in the Santa Anita groves alone. The effect on the eve of such huge traots, planted with a sincle sort of tree, is to increase enorraously the apparent size of the tracl ; the mind stnm- bles on tbo very threshold ot the attempt to reckon its distancoa and numbers, and they become vaster and vaster as they grow vague. Sponges. It seems a very funny miatake for any body to make to call a live animal a plant or to think a vegetablo is alive. But some plants are so much like animals tbat even such great scientists as Tyudall and II ux- ley havo had disputes over them aa to whether they belong to tho animal or veg- oiaoie Kingaom. oponges aro very near thedividing lino betweeu animal and veg etablo life. Years since they were thought to be sea plants, but now they are conaid ered to be animala devoid ot locomotion and having, of course, a very low grade of life, and lesa intelligence, even, than an oyster. When first pulled from the rook where it grows the sponge looka like wrinkled mass of putty. It is a drab color, exceedingly heavy, has a sickening ouor, ana js uiiea witn a sinngy mucns, which drops from it in long sticky linea. The poros are partly closed by a sort of aea-bug which must be an annoyint.' inter loper to the sponge-builder ; whili of ten a rod sea-worm an lnoh or two in limgth is found far within the fibres. What is tho exact ofllo of the mucus lluid doea not yet appear to be olearly sottled. But itiacertain that when taken.from the sponge and placed on still bottoms, new sponges are produced froin it ; aud i. two pleces of the samo liviug sponge, c r of two diuerent spoug(s of tho samo spe clea are laid sido by sido on the sea bbt- torn, they soon grow together. Srx.nges are found iu the warm waters in v.rious parta of tho world, tho beat cominfj from tho Mediterraneau Sea, whero divera bring them up, and some of the 'Inest gradea have sold aa high as ?50 or $100 a pouud ior aurgicai aud other purrbses, Off tho Bahama Ialauda there is also a produotive sponjjo bottoin. The sponge bottoms most sought aro in the coral beds, fifty mile8 east of Nassau. Lylng on his chent along tho boat's deck, the fifther with his water-glass a pano of glasi aet in a box fitted with handles, looka down forty feet into the olear depths. When he discovora a spongo ho sinks a alendor pole, sometimoa fifty feet in length, fitted at tlie end with a doublo hook. The hook is inserted at tho rocky baso, and by a sudden jetk tho apongo ls dotachcd to be brought up on deck. The oye of tho fisher has to bo trained by long expe rience to poor into the sea and tell tlio valuable spongea from thoso that are worthless. Tho strain on tho eyo and body is raost intenao; tho cramped posi tion and oxposuro to wind and wot make almost ovory sponge-llsher a vlctlm of aouto Theumatlam, yet ho rarely earna moro than fifteen dollars a inonth. To preparo the spongea for export they are placed on deck under tho tropical sun or hung in large festoons from tho little ves sel's mast, so that tho heat may kill all the living organiams within tho fibro. Then the sponges aro dumped into a sort of cago made by driving a circle of small piles a few inchos apart from eacli other in the sand. Through thoso piles tho tide playa violently, washing away from tho spongo tho aand, the (lead animal culx and other impurities with which the mass is cloggod. Christian at Work. Tho Agoof Trccs. The oypross affords an instanco whero tho approximato cortainty of its introduc- tion into England enables ua to form somo conclnslons with regard to its attainablo age. Xhe tact ot lts being lirst mentioned in Turner'a " Names of Ilerbs,' published in 1518, makes it probablethat it was not ntroduced into J'.tiglantl before the begin ning of that century. But, at all events, the cypresa at Fulham which in 1773 waa two feet hve inches at three feet from tha ground, cannot havo been planted thero before 107-1, the year that Compton, tho great mtroducer ot loreign trees into Kng. land in the seventecnth century, becamo Bishop of London. That gives a growth ot about two teet ininoiirst century ; but sometimes it attains a bigher rate, as in the case of the cypresa planted by Michael Angelo at Chartreux, which was thirteen feet round in 1817, giving the aveiage rate of over four feet in tho firet three centuriea. Now tho cypress at Sorunia, between Lake Maggiore and Milan, for whose eake Napoleon bent the road out of the Btraight line, ls not more than twentv three leet in girtn, so that the tradition which makes its planting coeval with Chriatianity, would aeem doubtf ul ; though if we take three feet aa the firat century's growth, and take the third as the average, it may evidentiy have been standlng in the time of Crosar, as an old chronicle of Milan is averred to attest. The Lebanon cedar, first planted at Lambeth in 1GS3, was only seven leet, nine inches (girth measurements alone neod bo given), 110 years later. Dr. Uvedale's cedar, planted at .bnueld not earner than 10 U, was lit- teen ieet, eight inches, when measured in 1835 '. e., ono hundred and sixty-five years atter. And the last cedar at Ux bndge, which was blown down in 1790, was one hundred and oighteen years old when Gilpin measured it in 1770, and found it to be fifteen feet, six inches We should therefore be iustitied in as suming twelvo leet as tho possible first century'-d growth 01 a cedar even m Eng land j wnence we may test the probabil ity of the eldest cedars now on Mount L,ybauon having been growing there in the days 01 ivmg boiomon. ln the year 1000 the traveler Maundrell measured one of the largest of them and found it to be twelve yards, six Inches. Four feet century being tlie averago rate, the cedar measured by .Maundrell would havo re- quired only nine centuries to havo at tained its dimensions of thirty-aix feet ; so that it need havo been 110 older than the time of Charlamagne, and, allowiug for a more rapid growth on a aite whete it is indlgeuous, may probably have been coimderably younger. Lonqman's Magazine. X Mnlo Experlmcnt in Tight Lacing. Men have said a great deal against the practice among womeu of compressing their waista by buaks and coraeta, but one man has had tho good aense to test the practice upon hiraself beforo lecturing women on its evii resuita. Mr. Kichard Proctor, the well known astronomer, is a very stout gentleman, and as his corpu lonco iucreasea with age, ho thought he would test the wearing of corgets to see if it would reduce bia flesh. " When the subject of corsot wearing was under dis cussion in tho pages ot tbo hnglish Jle- chanic, I waa atruck," he says, " with the apparent weight of evidence in favor of tight lacing. 1 was 111 particular struck by the evidenco of some as to its use in reduciug corpuleuce. I was corpulent. also was disposed, as 1 am stil), to take an interest in scientific experiment. thought I would give this matter a fai trial. I read all the inatructions, carefully followed them, and varied tho time of ap- plying pressure with that ' pcrtectly stilt busk ' about which correspondents were bo enthusiastic. I waa foolish enough to try the thing tor a matter ot lour weeka, Then I laughed at myself as a hopeless idiot, and determined to give up the at tempt to reduco by artificial means that auperabundanco of fat on which only atarvation and much exercise, or tho air 01 Amenca, has ever had any real reduc ing inlluence. But I waa reckoning with' out my hoat. As tho Chinese lady suffers. I am told, when her feet biudings are taken off, and as tho flat-headed baby howls when his head-boards are removed bo for a while it waa with me. I found myself manifeatly better in ataya. laughed at myself no longer. I waa too angry with myself to laugh. I would aa Boon have condemned myself to using crutches all the time, as to wearing af waya a busk. But for my one month of folly I had to endure three montha of dis comlort. At the end ot about that time was my own man again." Selected. New York Day and tlio Statueof Liborty, llichard Grant Whito bewails, in the Ootober Century, the desecration by com' merce of New York Bay, and has a satiric word lor the colossal atatuo of liberty " Onco largely, brightly, almoat nobly beautllul," he says, " lt has now become, eavo Ior lts mere Bize, tho most commou place ot acenea, a mlaerable pauorama ot wharves and warehousos, lactorles breweries, ahops, and abantiea : everytbing that gavo lt charm and dignlty has dlsap peared, to bo replaced only by sordid uglinesa. Tho very islands, which sat like little gems upou ita waters, rougbly euameled with bita of warliko maaoury, aro now concealed with shapeless brick and mortar, of whlcli the only merit is that lt protecta somethlng Irom the weather. And ou one of theso it ia now proposed to orect a huge, sham-sentimen' tal melodramatio imago of brouze, that will merely illustrato its own absurdity, and light up the aurrounding poverty of prosperlty." ctv Mdvcrfifscmcnffs. Toras C. O. GRAVES HAS JUST The Largest Stock of Stovcs and Kanjrcs evcr otTercd for salc in this vicinity. His The Celebrated and Coal Heating Stovcs, which aro considered tho best made. Also the which for dairy purposes cannot be eqnaled. His line of the celebrated ACORN STOVES and RANGES is complete, and he also has a full stock of the very popular Waterbury Oook Stove! Avhich has been so largely sold by him during several years past, and has given GENERAL SAT ISFACTION. His line of both Cal and Wood Heiiting Stoves is complete, but includes so large a variety of styles that he has not space to give every kind special notice. Suf fice it to say he can supply his customers with any first class Stove manufacturcd, and having bought for cash can sell at BOTTOM PEIOES. C. O. Stowe Street, - - L. P. (il l ASOV & CO., Having bought cxtensively in New York and Boston mar kets, take plcasure in inviting purchascrs to visit their store and inspect tho iinest assortment of Faioi ever shown in this vicinity. Worsted Dress Goods! comprising all the novclties of the season, and every tbing desirable in style, quality and color. Special Jiargains in Black and Golored Velvets! Fifty pieces are oftered at extremely low J?7'ce5. Nonpareil Velveteens, Silks, Satins and Plushes. Over five hundred RHDY-1DE GARHENTS FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN ! Shawls, Cloakings, and Ladies' and Children's All-wool and Merino Underwear. FLANNELS, PRINTS, CAMBRICS, GLOVES, Hosiery, Corsets, Laces, Ties, Collars, Huchings, Eibbons, &c. One case Ladies' Gossamer Waterproofs at $1.25 each. Two Cases Good Dark Prints at 5 Cents Per Yard. Orders by mail or telephonc promptly attcnded to. Mosnttaptee,l!?.i L P. GLEASON & C0. PRELIMINAEY. H. C. Webster would hereby give notice to his patrons and the publie generally that he has just bought in the New York market A FULL LINE OF FALL GOODS which he will sell cheap for cash. Further par ticulars will be given later. H. O. "WEBSTEE, Union 331oclc, Stato rSti'oot, Montpoliof, "Vt. RANGES! STO VES ! ItKOEIVED stock inchulcs Magee Hanges! G-EAVES, - "Waterbury, Vt. i Dn Mi lir Fi