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From the Banks of the Dovey. At last the Infectious Diseases Notification Act has been enforced at Machynlleth, and though it can hardly be said that we are particularly liable to epidemics, this very simple precautionary measure should have been adopted long ago. Un- fortunately we cannot give ourselves any specially sanitary airs over this matter, as questions of this kind, when left to the discretion of the local councils, are usually very apt to grow musty from neglect. People in small towns or scattered country districts often fail to realise either the importance or common sense of the adoption of any measure affecting the public welfare, should it be bolstered up with any formality. We miss our old enemy, measles," from the Definition of Diseases list, yet this is almost the most common and one of the most infectious of the tribe. Also some matrons assert that whooping-cough should be notified, it being a particularly troublesome ailment, which spreads very rapidly. Personally, one would fancy it advertises itself sufficiently, yet it should be mentioned, if only as an on dit." A correspondent in a local paper has revived an old grievance which he very justly points out is not absolutely impossible to redress. The Dovey, being a river with somewhat capricious ideas of its proper limits, and a certain partiality for explora- tion, occasionally causes trouble, even to those who dote upon its banks, more especially to the above- mentioned correspondent and a section of the general public. It conforms, like every other respectable river, to the necessity for a bridge, but not infrequently it may be said to give that useful structure the slip, and proceed to Machynlleth on business of its own which means that many of us have to take to boats-not a particularly fascinating pastime at this season of the year. Several schemes for overcoming this centrifugal tendency have been suggested, and none of them appear to be very costly. Perhaps the County Council will consider the matter, for after all a road is a road, and a river a river, and just now these respective functions appear to be getting a little mixed. February is over, and we are left lamenting. February, usually so'mild, so sunny, so full of the promise of spring. Spring! Rather the promise of fresh colds, renewed coughs, and perpetual shivers. Snow, not spring, has visited us, and it is only fair to say that these latter promises have been faithfully kept. One's intimates, too, have just now a trying little way of discussing obituary notices in a manner little short of ghoulish. They make astounding discoveries as to the remarkable longevity of the inhabitants of certain districts, they compare notes, and discuss the pros and cons as regards family constitutions, etc. At this stage it becomes neces- sary to suppress these croakers like the dormouse, and, if requisite, in an equally summary style. Now, few people deny that we are physically, at least, a weaker generation than our forefathers. They expected, usually, to see their eighty," and did it too, in most cases with an intelligence and activity very different from the feeble survival of a few animal instincts usually associated with such great age. We may scarcely expect to attain such maturity. We may be thankful to prove mere buds of 60 or thereabouts. And the cause or causes 1 Many of these are only too obvious, and, indeed, whether such long life is greatly to be desired is altogether another question. Yet one gets into the habit of living, besides which few of us care to see the dawn of our last day, even if we have been spared the earlier vision of the Five who pass at death." A leading daily informs us that there is now a great demand for a breezy optimistic novel"— such as may presumably serve to wile away some of the weary hours of convalescence. Coming just at present, this demand seems significant; it is easy to understand that novels of the usual decadent type would prove neither cheering nor interesting to men who have recently been facing death in many forms in a foreign country. Pessimism, apparently, is played out, and instead of the usual cultured corruption, the world-weary sneers of the jaded voluptuary, the blasS striplings and eccentric maidens who resent courtesy from an opposite sex, we are to listen once more to the clash of wedding bells, and the fine old fashioned legend that they lived happy ever after." Realism can become too sordid, and it is usually hopelessly one- sided- ignoring the law of compensation with an alSiowt feminine pertinacity. We hear a great deal about women's rights, and a vast- a nauseous deal more abc, women's ,;rongs- and to be truly fin de siecle girls must, by hook or crook, develope some sort of vocation, which when found make a note on! Queer forms are sometimes assnmed by this thing-sometimes a music hall-or temperance work-frequently a wealthy husband—a Zenana mission. It may turn to the east and vestments- or to the north and exploration. One learns that uost vocations are 'kittle cattle'—but they usually succeed in making thing hot for other people. A new, and certainly unhackneyed vocation would be to cultivate a cheerful and hope- ful outlook on life. Then even breezy and optimistic novels may become usual-and the difficulties of providing suitable literature for those who have wrestled with the cruel actualities of life become less. For if life be not worth living, it most decidedly is not worth fighting for, much less facing Mauser bullets or the ominous advances of enteric fever. We are glad to note that football is yet in being at Machynlleth. The Town team has been giving a good account of itself against Aberystwyth College; and on Thursday last the Intermediate School team travelled to Newtown, and defeated the Newtonian scholars by two to nil. And on Saturday they found the Aberystwyth School team a tough nut to crack, so left the field with honours easy. MAGPIE.

LLANILAR.

PENNAL.

[No title]

WINTER ASSIZES.

Merionethshire.

+. Montgomeryshire. --

LAMPETER.

TREGARON.

TALYBONT.

LLANFARIAN.

LLANYBYTHER.

BORTH.

MACHYNLLETH.