Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 23 Mar 1893, p. 7

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A MEIORABLE VOYAGE. An Eventful Trio Forty Tnn Ago- si tr u T . New Ioirrei|ax that we were in no immediate danger, the L-tptam directed the boata to be made ready. The Ocean Home was now near us, and her captain cried out : 'Ly on IM: we are .inking :' When it was reported to the captain that the boata were manned, he re- plied : 'Alas, it is no use ' The ship is Bne! She has disappeared: 1 Only fituen minutes had elapsed since the urn cry had ben heard, bat the agmy of those fifteen mmtuies to the emigrants on board the Ocean Home no imagination can conceive, no pen can portray. By the conclusion the windlass was driven on the forehatoh.wliich prevented those below from getting on deck. The bow had been chopped ott and in front of them was their watery grave. The ship settled forward, and as it Beared a perpendicular one after another dropped off, until, at last, those who were left went down ttli the ship and with cries of woe aad disappeared from right. In a very short time we heard cries to the windward, and upon looking about saw a boat under oar stern trying to fetch the ship. ou 1 a line and hauled the peo They were those who had Home in the quarter boat. eople left We threw le on board. the Ocean m all. We then tacked toward the spot where the ship had foundered, and looking through a spy glass I described what seemed to be a man Moating about in th* wrtx-k. A boat wa* lojrerecl and with the third officer and UeultS SB*1 a arkers Kevlv* I leas. The facts concerning this memorable voyage were gathered t>om th* dairies of two well-known citi/ens of Newark, who both participated in the scene* whicli they relate, one as a passenger and the other as first officer. Their recollection of the events of which they speak is very vivid and will probably never be effaced. The account given by one of these gentlemen is as follows ; " On the 9th of August 1353, our vessel, the clipper ship Cherubim, of -J.OOO tons burthen, left hir pier in .Vew York harbor on her first i.rip, bound for London, having on board the British Consul, Rowcroft, his wife and five children, teu passengers mall, with a number ia the steerage. The usual excitement attendant upon leaving home and friend* for a distant land mor* distant then than in those days of rapid travel was over : tbe pilot had clambered up the hip si.Ie and taken our parting word* to those we bad left en shore : our diaries had bad their introduction to pen or penc*J as the case might be, and we were settled upon | three seamen I set out for the spot and the dangerous element to which we had found a man supporting himself as best he committed ourselves, its fascinating sparkle could on a hatch. He *as nearly exhaust seeming to tare us on to whatever fate ed and must soon have perished. The sea might await us, and the other half upon i was very choppy and it was difficult '.o ap the movements of those about as with whom I proach any object. My orders were' we were to form toe intimate nlatious in- j ' When we near the man seiM him wherever cident to life on shipboard and who, together ! you can and aeu* aim firmly. ' One seaman with ourselves, were soon to learn what | grasped hi* leg and another his hair. After providence had in store for us. i great effort we hauled him into the boat ' Nothing unusual happened until M- I and found that ws had rescued Captain day, the _nj. when we were informed by Merriman of the Ocean Home. Hearing Captain Smith thai the British Consul wss | shouts not far off and going into th* d'rec- i|U,te ill with bilious fever, though he wa* tion of tbe noise we picked up tbe first otti- not considered dangerous by his family. I cer, Mr. Shields. Seeing ao other strug He continued to get worse, however, until ! gling life about us we returned to oar own the following day (Saturday , when he sent | ship, when we learned that twenty two for tho captain and expressed the wish that in all had been rescued. They were in the if anything should happen to him, he, the course of the day put on a pilot boat and captain, would take charge of tne valuable i retsrned to Plymouth, paper* in hi* possession belonging to the | "Ths discipline of th* crew devolved rSntish Government He was apparently upon me a* first officer, and one of the sea unconscious of his real situation until late men obstinately rc'used to obey orders, say- in the afternoon of that day, when he sum- I ing that lie did not intend to work on that mooed his family, consisting of his wife, 'ship. Hs resisted all my effort* to reduce two daughter* and three sons, to take Ie v* of them. Though he had been ill only forty-eight hours he wa* soon too far gone to make himself understood with eaae, and at lOi.'JOp. m. he passed away. His death occurring so suddenly and so soon leaving New York, gave rise to tbe him to submission, and so far got the heller of ins that I was forced to suspend h.m on a horizontal bar in handcuffs with his feet just touching the floor. The captain's sympathy was aroused for the man after be had pass- after | ed the night is this position, but he would rumor j not interfere with my discipline. The dog- among tho passenger* that he had died of ; ged determination of the sailor sustained yellow fever, and some of us were not a j him wonderfully : finally the captain asked little frightened, espe:ially tbe captain. 'Betogodoan into ihe bold, slating that whose fan led him to feel sore that he, if ! the man wished to sec me. I went down any one, would fall a victim to the dread and passed from one end of the ship to the scourge. sly diary at this tim* reads as ' other ; the man said nothing and I went on follow* : i deck again. In the afternoon the captain Sunday, tha 'J.lth. The passenger* have [ mads ths same request. I said '.'aptaiu, I been quiet all day, whether because it ia will set th* man at liberty if you ini*t upon Sun. ray or through fear of taking th* fever, I can not say. Monday, the Ittth. The events of this day will never be effaced from my meaiory A burial at sea ! The body wa* kept ou hoard th* ship until this morning, hoping that we would meet the steamer or packet from which wo might possibly get some spirits and preserve it until we readied Lon- don. The captain, thinking it hardly pru- dent to wait any longer, consulted the family, and they consented to dispose of the remains with the usual ceieraoniesof a burial at sea. The captain wa* so over- come that he could not read the service : my brother Johu and myself performed that last sad rite. The body, sewed in a can- vas* ba^ with a hundred pound weight attached to the feet, rested upon a plank balanced on the railing of the ship. At a it.' Th* captain said 'No I will not inter- fere, but the man wishes to see you.' I went down into the hold, passed back and forth as before, bat not a aord from the sailor. Later in the day the captain was worried beyond measure : again I went > down into th* bold ; after I had passed the I man as before, noting as 1 did so tbat his I bauds were very dark, he called me back, saying that I would have no further trouble { with him if I would release him. 1 ordered him to be taken down at ouce and that every possible care should be taken of him : he could not move hu anna and I ordered them to rub them with warm water and put him to bed. The next afternoon I found him at work: on my remonstrating, fearing that he had not sutiioiently recovered, he slated that he would rather be working, abd he was the most faithful man of the crew given) signal the plank was inclined and the ! throughout the rest of the voyage. body slid otf, going perpendicularly down. "A* we ueared our port we mourned down no far a* th* eye could reach, to iti the loss of our beautifu. figure-bead, but AGRICULTURAL. Mixed faedi for Dairy Oows- II M fair to say tbat a cow muV pay lor tile feed she eats, and return a living lo the owner : but after all ,t is more profitable for the owner to raise the feed, and make yet another profit between the actual cost of the oow feed, as raised on the farm, and ' what the same feed would cost if another man raued it, an 1 his living and profits cam* from its sale. OUs, at forty cents for. A nor** that is well cared for ean du 10 hours' work easier than one half cared for cia do six lumra work, aad yea an as* ashamed U. meet your neighbor or frienu wjion yon are an * little drive. \ ou must not forget for yourself, family aud help, that you all need a little pleasure, for it i* a poor mono "All work and no play. " to* Iwr* for Sheep- A lilo for sheep can oe proniauly use.d sjasasi i^wiv, sa-v |jl ty VJiJll , , . I -----. per bushel, are too expensive it feed, when U18<1 '" connection with raising uarly the results are compare 1 with good bran or ! '* ml >. the ,|uality of the emtilaze should I* what is yet better, with *ec-nds, the grade * P rlme ob J et:t - The spent ulalks of field of bian that has qui'e a showing of flour m '''""" *f' at '" >turing a crop of it, and is yet in most market* cheaper than ""8 ht " * kP heep alive, but would t he bran. Corn meal, at sUty cents for i ''* r<1| y an*wera good pur titty sit pounds, is a good food in part, for *""' r "' n K "dy lambs. MtWSwf :a.mi.M uo\r. The trial is reported of a sew electrical submarine boat, which ia said to be favor- ably regarded by tl.e Italian lioverumons. She is Jt> feet long and S feet wide, sod hae tbe peculiar depth of 1 1 feet, tbe total weight being forty tons. The special aeV vantage ciaimedfor this boat over all other*) of its kind is that it can remain under water, if nee-i be, for the spac* f forty eight hours, beside* being abl* '.o descend to a depth of 131 1 feet. THE KX1'\ \MiiN OK ..!!. |U HD!U. An ingenious instrument for measuring the expansion of minute solid bodien is purpose in connection found "> lt of recent inventions. T.ie I substance is placed in th* field of micro a batter dairy, and especially so, if it i. " woul11 **' '"""I" better lhat a consider- be fed wuh clover hay, which is largely I * ble P ro Prtioii of the ensilage to till a sil.i hy foods '" r sbeep should he con. posed of material albuminous, and need* the starchy like corn meal, to balance it. rather thin more albuminous matter.which is so largely reoresented in bran. \\ ni-a I can i-et clover bay in abundance, I feed largely,)! that, lor. from every tii dollars' worth of hay there is made nine dollars' worth of fertility. To balance the bay, 1 would gel corn in the ear, and have it ground tine and feed with the clover hay, rather tU*u buy more albuminous matter. Kach corn should bs ground on the cob, and not shelled. For milk, the fourteen finer, morn fibrous, thvi corn eaiilage. A good mixed crop f. r '.his purpose would b peas and oats Id quarts of oats, having a stiff straw, .lined with two bushels Canada tirlH ]>uas, drilled in at the rate of four liuaneU to th* acre on land weil prepared far r.i.'h s, crop. It will soon cover th* ground and keep down weeds. It may be ut for ensilage when the pea is in blossom, but if circumstances faror it is best when the pea is in ths n.ilk. With out present improvement in ma- pounds of cob in a hundred weight of 'meal cllln "7 l ' combined crop is easily handled are worth more, as a promoter of digestion for the $ll - bv cnU'ni lt with a self binder than would b* the fourteen pounds of pure **"* lh * a ' mng the bundle* through the meal in its place. A cow in good How " Uer '' the silo, ihos treally reducing of milk will need from twenty. two to tWty ll " l bgr - Tnis .-rop may be sown vry pounds of .-lover hay each day, with eight a * rl >'. pnng frost does noi injure pounds of the meal. In my dairy I reverse ' ther P eM or "" this by feedi: from fairly we peunds of seconds daily, anil what clover bay the cows will consume som* five pounds daily to each cew. In the same way cows. to do their best, seem t need a bulky food largely on the carbohydrate aid* of ihe ra- luvvr ny ecn <iy, wun eigni . ~ J ' lie meal. In my dairy I reverse * .ing nfty pounds of silage, made e>MI ' 1 wsll-ared corn, aad five t. six rmln - This would furuish an ge for ewe* requiring but very little and thtt mostly in the form of bran, until th* *wee have dropped their Uriih.fl < Ina could have different compart rnsnis in his silo : till one wilh medium m/ed ensil- age com ami ihe other with pr\s and oats, feeding one lo the sheep at morning ami the tion. as mixed hay. wsli cured corn f.wder, and th* like. The albuminous matter ihouM come in (mailer amounts, though clover bay U an exception, a* it is a loose, bulky, stomach distwding food, and the corn meal balances it in starch to some extent. Cows eat as they were born to do. some mere, some leas, and to produce milk the aaine rule holds good. ihe amount of food a cew will consume is no indication of what she will produce in milk solids, so that the good dairyman, has tu teed as ireunisteures seem la indicate, the milk pail being the indicator. Wheat straw is not a good promoter of milk yields, nor an economical factor in the feed line. Wheat straw is far better under a milch cow than in her stomach. A cow needs lo eat so much straw to obtain minimum anioubt of nutriment that ih* stomach is overtaxed, aad there is a shrinkage of the milk. If the straw is cut fine, and mowtea ed with a small amount of water, and then tins middlings mixed througb th* mass, th* straw will be improved and mad* more di- gestible. Cut straw and linseed meal are useful for young stock. Hints for Tooar Farmers- Be sure that you will be satisfied to get a liviug by the sweat of th* brow Be mre tbat you love nature aad it* working*. Be sure that you enjoy the work of farm g. Then work with oaf of the best nn\-.i farmers, or one of the host agricultural r at evening, or preferably mmng th* I ""possible and irregui two tog-:,,,,. But we should advise corn d nsilag* to l>* cut into ihe silo not niors than one-fourth incli for sheep. Sheep may bo fed from two to three and onr-half pounds of ensilage per day i .luntry Cenlleinan. ok: a Mils: For the Cowi and Pajtarat image of it, magnified several tunes is thrown on a screen. This in . further msgnified by two micrometer micro- scopes, which see-irately determine the e- panaion. Tbu substance is heated ma idle plant mum oven through which an elwlne current passes, and the temperature of the oven is arrived at by observations en Mm melting of the standard substances, lly Ihe use of this instniment lh* Uiermal c . panaion of any substaaoe, even to tae small- est diamond, can be determined uiild *M temperature of combustion is reached. IIISTOKT HIPSAT* IISKI.r. Althougli ihe advaniagesof the electric light are becoming very generally recognis- ed, there are many persons who are still unconvinced of its superiority as an iliumt- 11*111 and it* cheapness as compared with gas. A correspondent, in commenting oa some of ihe adverse criticism which has been vented on the modern light, calls to mind the fact that Clement Oesormes. writ- ing in I HI'' about coal gas, then jus' coming into II.M-, says : "Tbe light is of a disagree- able yellow color, entirely different from tbe red and warm gleam of oil lamp* : it I* of la/-/ hog brightness : it* distribution will b*) much lights which we already Ihe same or very sim lar criti- cisms are now brag made on the electna light. > M: t.-riMtiiTKk. A new apparatus tor th* measurement f actinism promises to lie of great service to astronomer-, a* it will be specially valuable A correspondent of the New York /'.>' ! '" examining the luminosity of the sky 1 w whose pastures had become badly run ! d ff " g * 1 ' ''8 nt - Tn apparatus pretenU out hy continual croppnijf without return i ioll>e '"'restmg feature* from an ele ijg asything to oBsei ta* fertility removed ' P lnt "' y ' w - " con*uts essentially ot in the milk, was advised tu change from lwo P Uu " f iuued copper immersed > dairying t (> heep but having learned dairy I *tr containing I Uth of either chloride. ing and fearing a change might prove .lisas- tr ous hs decided to feed kis skim milk to his cows, thus retaining tiie chief elements iodide bromide of sodium. One of the plates is exposed to the action of the rays -' light, whilst the other is protected from of fertility to bs returned to the earti.. and ' lhl> **"'. either by -umimidinj: it willi at no expanse for carting and spreading. ' parchment or paper or by pla-ing it direct By adding .-ottonaeed meal u the milk 7 b*"""! <" nrl plate at a distance of ra'tien he has brought hu pastures lck to about a millimeter. The action of the light a higher state oi : productiveness lhan ever ' "!tautanei.us, and although the senx l>ef , rf . tivenees of th* element decrea.es rapidly as Butter takes nothing from the soil, and no *rt. it soon become* virtually constant, dairy fsrm devotl to butter production J 1 wl " * be seen that Ihe electromotive .-an run out under proper management. ' '" apuaratu* is the phenomenoa In this experiment it was fauad that , "P n wlllch determinations depend : line milk enough to make a pound of pork would v " r ' lh * >>ght winch acU make a pound of butter wvrtii three times .i mach and then the farm wa* free from tbe odors of trie pig pen. a mailer of no small account where the sweetest butter is the aim. There i* no .loubl thai a na'urally good pasture would maintain its oiigioal cndi tion under su.'h tiealmenl ; still, i? ths land schools, one thai is usir-g modem improve were easily tillable, much more feed could ii.sntsaud it a littl* ahead of the times, be grown per acre by the s.ull filing Bv so doing you will have an insip'.it ml can for you not only but you make a belter master for yourself. cli tbe planting and growing of the crops, the kind of fertilizer* used, lli* market prices, what crops will pay the best tor the least fertilizer make notes of the same. d labcr, and Spend some of ocean home. Circumstances connected with | soon forgot our discomfiture when we saw the death of the Consul are calculated to the crowd upon the pier waiting to hear arouse suspicion, and it is whispered among i the particulars of the collision My friend those on board the vessel that he was of the first cabin was heard lo say when he ' your leisure hours in reading' and study ing set foot on terra tirma that never again j agricultural papers and books snd reports would he croas the ocean, even to return of thr experiment station* and collages. | to hi* native land.' Learu the analyses of plants anil feeding This vow wa* not religiously kept, for ] product, and understand the meaning of | if it bail been, the cabin passenger, .Mr. K i K. Dorrauce, an.! the rirsl officer, I S poisoned by the stewardess, whose own ut terance* seem to prove that these suspicions are not groundless ; further comment is un- necessary, and, in fact, unjustifiable, until we reach London when, ot conn*, th* affair will be investigated. Suffice it to say that the steward*** i* supposed to have beeu employed by the Kenians to bring about the death of Rowcroft, and the oapUin state* that a reward was offered for hi* head in Cincinnati. " We proceeded on our voyage,'' says our informant, "after this ssA occurrence with- out any further unusual incident until Vnday, the 5th of September, when the pASseugers, officer* and orew of the ship Cherubim had another warning ->f the un- certainty of life and th* ntcessity of hendin? th* divine injunction. ' Be ye also ready.' At midnight,' says th* statement of th* first officer, ' we oasae into collision with the emigrant ship Ocean Home, bound from Rotterdam to New Vmk, with a general cargo of madder, gin, wine, block tin and upon it. okimrn "i- <i.RiTKii n. t. TI..N. Th* growtn of electric traction in this country i* one of the mt-*t mnrvelou* devel opmeut* of this century. A leading street railway journal draws attention to the fact that in the past five years the mileage of railways operated by electricity ha* in- creased fron; ."K) mils* to over tttKJO mile*. Inch is a greater mileage than thai of ai> railway* in tke country nimal and other fortnr uf this large total jar l> one-third was built in l>s!i. No esti- mate has yet been given of the aggregate incr**e in v.Uue in suburban property that has been impio.ed by tho running of new electric liims. but the amount mut beenor- N i ire profitable fow! ,-aii be raised on , mous, as a lurire proportion of late install- the farm than the goose. It is a popular ' alions, have i>ren in suburban districts, erroi that the goose requires plenty of tun particularly m th* East. In .luly. ning water to paddle and swim in. All th* j the slreet railway mileage of the" water that is ncenary is n..-n'. v of water to was *M(| doing you will have an insis-'.it into svstein than where themanureisJistrih.it- all branches of fanning and can choose what ed by the cows. Pasturing mu*t always be * oth ' streat " branch w.ll suit you. Work as napsrenti,c : more r less wasteful but on rocky lan.l K operated >.y cnti, a for two or three years aad do tlio best you ,., eften the only practical method. In such I " lot ' T ^ '* ' ' " only make a paying servant better master for yourself. i the only practical i animal i Bust be made to do t hi- ves ting. Goose Raising os the Farm- th* writer, who ha* endeavored to recall them for the benefit of our readers. & M. U. A 1. .11. teae. 1'his brief history of a pebble i* so won, I- ly interesting and out oi the common, that, were it not, to the writer's knowledge, ab- solutely true, it would appear exaggerated and well nigh incredible. After the last performance of the Passion t'lay at the Bavarian village of Ober Ammergau, an American lady Mrs. Baou was taking a - i m.Is : at the present time r. drink. If geese are kept out of the water, i reach e* a tot-al of ll,ti.V> miles, or an in they will fatten better, and the feather* will I crease of WtO mile* in the past two and i potash, nitrogen and phosphoric acid 'and l>e more oily, and last louger. nor doe* jr half years. I'uriog IUi-_' there was an ad their formation. Learn all that you can in ri<<ir so much grain to keep Oiem when I dm.xial increase oMOtto miles. Sosie .>f 'these lines hsve been introduce<i in the moat crowded paitt of laige cities, where it is admitte 1 that cabji- tra.-tiun woult'. be more economi.-al. The reason for Miis lies probably m tbe fact that it would be far leas economical lo change from elect r . cable power simply for the short distance, a oper- strolland picke.l up at ha/ard a couple quinine, many packages of which could br j of pebble* to take home t.> her ton for hi* seou floating on the water after the Ocean museum, a custom she invariably practiced She Home had disappeared from sight. sh.> struck us on our starboard bow and tbe Cherubim struck her forward of the foie rigging, cutting her completely through, carrying away her foremast and other spars. At the moment of collision several of the crew of th* Ocean Home jumped into the urging of our chip aud reported that she wa* sinking very fast. In looking to our owu safety, however, w: lost sight for a moment of the ill-fated ship. We found that our beautiful figurehead, the pride of officer* and orew, a cherubim with flaming sword, had gone to the bottom. Our lantern, too, was gone. It was au expensive one ihe first one on the water with three colors Whru the while light was visible tu a ship coming toward us shu was directly in our path : when the red light, she was on our port : wher" the green was prominent she was on our starhoat. I'nder ordinary circumstances,' continues the first officer, ' these losses would have beeu keenly felt by us, but the horror* that we afterward saw osi the Ocean Home entirely obliterated them from our miml. " When the collisi"ii c. .-uircd most of the passvBger* were asleep in their berths, but ten of them, with so lie of the crew, contrived to put out in 011* of the quarter boats ; the second mai< , two seamen and one cniigtunt l,>:t tlu- ship iu a larger boat, which was leaky and had but i>ne oar. They were reamed hy A pawing schooner. \\ hi-n Captain Smith, of ihe Chorubi:n, felt the shook, he rushed from his berth and cried "My i;<yl ' we are siukjng :" \ sent the estpcnte. to sound the of preser journey*. mementoes of her foreign noticed nothing pecuh.u bout them : ami, indeed, pai<! but scant heed to them, taken, as they wero, from the roaUsMe. Some time afterwards she had the misfortune to lose her son, and his early death terribly affected her. Turning sadly over one day the content* of hismnall museum, she chanced upon the above for- gotlon slones, and while examining one by th* light she was startled au 1 astonished to notice upon it* surface the impression of a face. Close investigation proved it to bear au extraordinary and unmistakable like- ness to that of our Savior, as the head ap- pears in the earliest painting*. The stone has been submitted to the highest authori- ties iu America aud at th* British Museum, who give it as their opinion that the face is entirely natural, the pebble showing ab- solutely no signs of having been engraved or touched by any instrument. The onlt other case of such an inexplicable freak of nature is that of the Chaucer Stone where the poet's features are formed by gradations of color in .ths substance preserved in our national colled ion. Mr*. Bacon ha> had her treasure photographed, the portrait appearing remarkably clear, and on rare occasions exhibits it forcharii ible purpose*. It is needless to say, in conclusion, that the t imi- .mil iniime; m which fkc made her strange discovery hav* powerfully impress i, and that she guards ihe litile man wilh the utmost cure an. I retcretice. r s 1 workman who made pen* got on .iu. ling i -'>u-c Lit e pro- After you have served you7~time as an . duce 7 P. u . ndl ' fe lhe 7 7 rtil "" <|' apprentice yon ought to beritted for the I," U F .' 1 "" .*?<> y r - "J the gooeei. left o? "farmer Itien ebouM a few crop, that !" leh " W " b fr m hlt ? ' ^ " "", doll , r you are best adapted for and mo*l iucl,.,l ' lht? ""T !*." V(ry n ' 4r t' Ub ! fowl - M , l " lo aud make ihem a .pecial .tu.ly. ttoos. I " f l 8 Il4rj '" "'" " i"" turkey. It does not require the care. In the winter u will ilh III'' cattle, tske care of itself , liog* unless they acquire a taste for it* blond, and thrive, if it have a low, crops that would mature in the first or last , ? i part of tlie season for there is alwavs p|pni v of rain at that lime. ''rTt^blo Make up your mind that you must creep war iiicoop m whTciito huddle wiiTt 'iVmates before you can walk and do not expect to al nie |,,. ],, ln<) lmnlm ,,. lt will feed on have as much as vour neighbor farmer who ,, M ,l w |,,t stubble and same pasture* than to retain the system already i I'KOI I I , Kit To BW I -erf so /Ml rr I ssaM-rrlnl Trailr ir Slfdi. in- While the word "egg,' in its broadest Application, cover* a great variety of pro- has been in the field a number of years. ThJsTt 'is"seen"t"uat The "liltTf'iu'TieepinK 'l''^ l! "n. ">e term, in a culinary sense, has Won't by his experienc* by ttralii.g him i, , m u th year round. Hatch ths Bixue col ," l> io '""" .''"'>'. * P*" 1 ot ln<> with rsspectand being an obligmg ueigh- .__ wit |, hen, as she will make a better ' rd>uar > r , htu '"' wllom l> lher ' " bof- | n" her liian the goose Maae the nests on ' J't'8 u " 1 '"'* "' i" common use which Alter choosing your crops ;hoo^ a favor- t | ie grglluUi M j art w ii; eM1 i v k (\ t the _,,.. : "he i* not m rusti-e obliged to share with orable piece of land as near to a growing i.ng- i.i the shell. Thunder i a,,,^,,. I the females of entirely dutinct and tmre- niarket as possible where you cau market known to kill then, when the nests h.ivc I * 1 *' branch of lli* your own goods so a* lo |*t the best price, j been in the chickeu l.oiuoor other buil.'.ing Try to raise k h* first .inality and it will tin,! ,,,. Mc |, hen frcm nvo'iglit egg*. It is put into the nest lo one hundred geese every year, and go lo school, or assist in all the ordinary house hold dulies, except on pi km.; days. Shi- can reali/c alxmi one .Imlai piolit on each goonr. This will give the girU a chance of be. oining self supporting. a re,jdy lale at |>a.ving prices. I aid to be a good After choos.ng the crops and soil, ciioose two or Hires ben s eggs ui the end of ihe life partner who is not afraid tu help turn | fi rst week. Set a number of hens at the the wheel of 1 e and one who understands time and when they are hatched you and loves, the farm Mid its pleasures. I bi , n hunch two or three brmi.ls together with lieve one ot the most essential thing* to t |, e ,(, |, en _ [ ,,,,,g,.,t < j u - r*isini; of geese make a successful farmer is to have a wite ' profitable employment lor farmers' girU who has an interest and 1,-v. for a farm. | On . girl ca ^ ,., clre of , riml MV enty-Hvc If there i* any point that you wish in for mat ion on seek it through the agricul- tural colleges that are maintained for our special benefit. Farming M like all other business; without capital and th* bent t lols we can nut make progress. Save in hired help I iy u.sing the latest improved tools. There' is not muoh risk in farming on borrowed money in the eastern states, where they i can hire money for five and six percent interest and have a ready market for all good* i' paying prices. lu ihe weal they have to pay H. I, aud even !."> percent on money aim hate th large monopolies and railroad* toconuml with. Hire the best help tbat you csn for that is the cheapest. It does not ct,t any more to feed good help than poor, and with good help you havk most of the time to work - -If when wuh poor help you have to 1 inoat of your time in watching. I'se telp lik* gentleman not like -.laves. ud other dunil' nil-Hal*, but see lhat ihsy are well cared . ., No fowl ' produce- egg* m sullicient numbers A nri. . Ki.ue The time rexjuired for a journey around the earth by a man walking day and night without rest woulj IH> l_> i , - : au express train, forty days: sound, at a metlium tem- perature, shirty-two and cue ball Ii urn ; caiuinn ball, twenty-one and three-fourths hour* : light a little over one tenth of a see- on.! . elect ri.-ity . passing oter it copper wire, .t little lees than nne-tenlh 'if a second. islaisU la lelUwtUac Part.. There are e*timato<l loleat pri-vn' In.. 'HO. -Ik, i:K)tdeer. Irti buffalo, I(HW l>lack- tailed .leer, .ill mountain sheep, and plrntv if U^ar, beivver and other varieties of am msJ iu '.In- Vellowstoue Paik. lo justify its mamu nitnce for that purpose : while the almost innumerable ipecics of the domestic fowl" possess o,uiie different <|Ulities as to egg and fiesh production. The person who is lo keep fowls > eon*t<|iiently be governed somewhat ! i.'i.'e. i inview. If In is to sell the prod u. I, the breed of fowl* likely lo lay the largest mimlier. regardless of size of the egg should be sought : whiln if home consump- tion is the prin -i pal object, the greatest weight of egg pi < .duct would lie the desider- atum. 1*11 the other hand, the larger bodie<t fowU m )r valuable for flesh pro.hi tioa. arr n. 't generally speaking, leaders as layers of egg'. As we are not -ousidering the <|iieii"i! of dressed fowl* At all, we dv"p that factor from the present consideration, i are not simply food: they reach also into t ii- realm of medicine, where they have a penon of delicate "or irn digestion an ho most grate . iv never give rise to those distress- . .K-ks whi.-h com* from the consump- tion of most other viand*. In case of disease of the bowels, sui-h as dysentery 01 dianli- a, a strong plea i* made for tha It al <>f ogi, beaten light either w>; mli< ul sugar. While rrrnnng a gra:efl .oat in,; '. r the tnrianiod .iii.l diseaae."! sur- face*. ::.i nature b ^ tuno to make the.a*o> e**aiy repn and d. spouse with necessity for oarsar autl ajui'nvatiug fooiia, egg properly cooked 'uT food, and it* uses

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