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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 8 Jul 1886, p. 6

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 f rrrrv giamammms 'H m H-i ^l (I II liF !j um m m He Tlirif^ HouekMpcb ' Cold bfanoits ten ovsr framtM mi^be â- ad* iMttor tluk when fint htlud by d^- ffag them Inte hot water aad |ib«iiig Aan â- iBglyoBtho hot grata la th* mp!! loag •aangh to let thorn get woU wannad tibroaith. Lairp wkke ehoald bo chaagod often enoagfe to Inaaro bavfaig a good light. If ttuj KOB cToggod they may bo waehod in â- tnng rada and pat into tiis lamp again Abattoritimpehoald always bo waohcd in oeld aalt water before it is need. If eoak- od in hot water the bntter will atiok to it but noTor if wyced in oold brine. Theaalt abaorbcd by the wood keepa it moirt iHiilo in OM. Alleonpsaro better o'ado withfroehnn- oooked meat aa that which hai been cocked onoe haa loot mnoh of fta flivor and rearly all of ita joloes. Meat people dry their nmbroUaa handle npwarda. Thla .oonoentratas Uw molataro at the top, where it ia close, mita the wire whiohaooorea the atratohera and rota the olotb. It b better, after the ambrella ia drained, to aimply ioTort it and dry in that poaltion. To aavo atalr carpeta niA aevoral thick- noaaea of old carpet or oanvaa over the edge of each atair. It ia a good plan to boy more earpetiag than la neododto oovertho ataira and mem it eiadi 'ieas«m so that the whole will wear evenly. If tUit oupsta oannet bo changed in thia way they will not wear long. To GetRidof Gookroaohes. A oorreapondtnt writea aa followa " I beg to inform yon of an eaay, dean, and certain method ot eradicating those loath- aomo iniectB from dwelling honaaa. A few yeara ago my honao waa infeatod with oook- roaohea (ar ' olooka,' aa they aro oalled here), and I waa recommended to try on* onmber ptolinga aa a remedy. I aooording- ly, immediately before bodtlme, atrowod the floor of thoao parte of the honae moat infeat- od with the vermin with the green peal, ontnot very thin, from the coonmber, and â- at ap halt an hour later than nanal to -watoh the (ffaot. Before the expiration of that time tiio floor wliere the peel lay waa covered with oookroaohea, ao that the vege- table oonld not be aeon, ao voraoionaly were they engaged in anoking the poiaonona mola- taro from it. I adopted the aamo plan the following n^t, bat my viaitora war* not ao nnmeroaa â€" 1 ahoold think not more than a fourth of the prevloaa night. On tiio third night I did not diaoover one; hot, anziena to aaoertaia whether the hooao waa qoite dear of them, I examined the pod after I had lain it down aboat half an hoar, and perodved that it waa covered with my- riada of minnte cookroaches about the aiza of a flea. I tiierdoie allowed the peal to remain till morning, and from that moment I have not aeon a ceokroaoh in the hoaae. It ia a very old balldiog, and I can aaaare yoa that the above remedy only requirca to be peraeverod in for three or four nighta to oompletdy eradicate the peat. It ahonld b* treah oucamber pod every night. Hints. Blxachiko Sibaw Hats -Obtain a deep box, air-t^ht if poaaible, plaoe at the bot- tom a atone on the atone a flat piece of iron red-hot or a pan of charcoal, on which acatter powdered brimttene thm* ahonld be hooka in the box on which to hang the hata oloao the lid and let the hata remain all night. Another recipe for bleaching atraw ia to acak the goeda in oanatlc aoda and afterward to nae on them ohloride of lime'or javelle water. The excoaa of chlo- ride ahould be removed by hypoaulphite of aoda, called anti chlor. In the flrat method the hat ahould be ^moiatened, aa a dry fabric will not bleach. It ia eaay to get rid of black ante. They live in ant hilla and generally near tiie bnildlngB. Open thoao hilla with a hoe, aoatter on a himdfnl of aalt and amrlnkle on a quart of water and the anti wul leave im mediately. Yeaterday my house waa over- run with thoae inaocta. I f onnd deven ant- hnia within two roda of the building and to- day there ia not an ant to be found any- where on or about the premiaes. Any gold jewelry uat an iivmerdon In water wfll not irjare can bs beantifnlly deanad by ahaking it well in a bottle nearly half fidl of warm aoapiuda, to vdiloh a little prspared ohalk has been added, and after- wari rindng in dear, odd water and w^^g It dry. To preserve goods from moths do not nso camphor in any form. Pi*o« of tar paper Idd in fur Iwxea and in olo**ta art a batter prstectlon. Five oenta will buy enouirh to equip dl the paokbg boxea anddoaetaofa luge houae for a year. Gindiama and prints will kera thdr color Dotter if washed in water thickened with flour staroh. Flour is very cleansing and will do the work of aoap in «ie or two waahinga in the atarch water. Thia, with tiio rindog, will be anffioientand the gooda wlU look frobher than if washed and starch- ed in tiie eld-fadiiened way. A good houaekeeper in Bergen county. New Jaraay, aaya that ahe adda a teaapoen- fnl of turpsntine to the water ahe mixea her atove-blaoking with. She lota the ateve bs- 090- almost oeld before blacking. FESEAFB TEST WBBB TWUE i^afc^j^gt»t/iii"i rt ia pr Ooiinige Ceurage is frequently thought to be tiie abeenoe of fear. Yet, if there were no fea' there wculd be no room for oeurag*. If we did net fear ttie water and fire, no courage would be required to plunge bito tiiem to save a fellow creature fr«m deetruction. If a child had no fear of the dark, we should net appeal to his ooorage to face it. Fear has an important miadon to perform for ua â€" ^that of wanting against dangerâ€" uid it wHl and ovght to continue aa long aa dan- ger or evUdf any kind oontinnea to threat- en na. When ita presence ia fdt, however, two oppedte courses are open to usâ€" th* an* to shrink, exyiild, or ran away, the other tofaoethe danger, mhatover It ha, witti loTatim and 1*0 unoia tbtt'fmA of oowardico. £e other of OMiragvMA «h*gpaa*ar the fear Ih* men laUiB* is tkrt ooong* whioh oanstaad fliB faits p tsasne* s ad a n s hrinki ngly porsu* th* path e doty. ibept 'fsn!/ issrsn tias faMHMetJfhn W bi^ Ai^oKied iAil*' tLake'^is oaoitp*. Th* b*ar" and there waa abri|^tharvaa* up tiio r«o» in wUoh H^ t^^^ ptaoe. We^ had a dub bsddftftbed, and he gave th* iatm^ a Ppmirfjf W »** Ola before the{Bhot was flr*d. Th* ball*t en- tared hte abdMsen, and he lived about three days and was perfeetly oenscioas aU the tim*. He dedarod en his dying bid tliat his murderer was a yenng man nuMd 8do- men Biehards, a lawless oharaotar wiio bung about the village two mHea away. Mn. Weat reoogniisd him aa well, and when Bicharda waaarreated and ohargad witii the crime he did net deny it. There waan't ttie al^test doubt of hia guilt, and but for the firmneas of the Sheriff the feltow would have been lynched. Be had been in jaU two woeka bd or* BB DZCLABSD BIS ISaOCESCt. Aa he had no money he could not engage a lawyer but he made a â- tatement to the Saor- iff, which aet that offioid at work to prove an dibi for h'm. On the night of the ahoot- ing Btcbarda had aat in the vttUge Uvem from 8 to 10 o'clock. Xhia could be veriflod. When he left the tavern he viaited two adeona, but thia ooull not be verified. Sov- erd peraons wtra almoat aura of having aeon him, but no one waa pedtive. At 10^ o'clock ho went tea livery atable and climb- ed up on the hay to aleq^ He olaimod to have apoken to a hoatler named Warner, bat when Warner waa oonaiilted he could not be aure whether it waa that night or the one preoodinsE it. On hia way from the aa- loon to the bam Biohard'a enoonnted a per- aon who waa dreaaed like himaelf and whose generdreaemblance waa very atrttiog. Beth halted and looked each other over aa if aa- tounded, bat neither apoko. Not one man in a hundred would have taken any stoek in snob a story, but the Sheriff singulw as It may seem, believed tnat Bicharda was telling the tmtii. West had afTBirOK TBB HAN WITB A CLVB. Biehards had not the slightest wound or bruise. The pistol with which the shooting was done had been Idt bddnd. No on* about the village had ever seen it bdor*. How could Biohards who nevar had a dol- lar at a time have porohaoed it! He was on the street, perfectly unoonoemed, when ar- restad. If he was guUty why had ho wait- ed right there to be taken Into custody, when the fanner had oalled out ' Sd Bioh- ards, you have sh*t me, but I'll llv* to s*« V*a hung I" All thee* points were overlooked by every- body except the Sheriff. Mr. and Mrs. West declared that Sol Biehards was the man that was eviamce enough, espeoially when Sel was a geod-f or- nothing. Three weeks had paaaed when the Sheriff g*t trade of a man who had patsod a toll rate at an early morning hour, oarrying a bandl*. Further en he found that the man with the bundle Jiad a bloody ear. Five mDes fur- ther and he had entered a farm-house, d- leged he had met with an aoddent, and hwl a scdp wound dressed. He had Jour- noyod a hundred milea before the Sheriff overtook him, but here and there jho had sold firagmenta of hia plunder. When finally overhauled and arreated he admitted hta crime dmeat bdere a queation was asked. He was a profesdond tramp, and robbery was nothing new to him. He was not only DBBSSSD FBICISCLT UKB BIOBABDS, but he reaemblod htm ao cloaely in height, build, wdght and fadd cxpreauen that poo- fle came to the jaQ and oaUed him Bioharaa. [e gave hia name aa Terry, but aa he oonld • remember little or nothing of hia childhood, and aa this waa dao the caae with Bicharda, it was generally believed that they wer» twin brothers. Tae one was released aa an innocent man, and the ether was sent to prison for auoh a long term aa practically aatured hia death within the gloomy walla. Not " Smart" Of all forma of bad breeding, the pert, amart manner affeoted by boya and girla of a certain age ia the moat offendve and im- portinent. One of these so-oalkd smart boys was onoe employed in the efSoe of the tooa- surer of a Weetnm rulroad. Ho was usually Idt alone in the office between the hours of eight and nln* In the morning, and It waa his du^ to answer the queetions of all oall ere as dearly and politely as posdble. On* morning a plainly dresssd dd gentie- man walkad quMiy iI^ and asksd for the oashisr. " H*'a onl^" said Ml* boy, wlOont l*oking up from the paper he was r ea ding ' Do y^a know where he is " •» Uo." " When wffl ho b* In " •"Boat nine o'dook." If s nearly that new, Itti't it I haven't Weetem time." " There's th* olook," sdd th* boy smart- ly, pointing to a oloek on th* walL " Oh yes thank you." sdd the genU*- man. " Tan minutes until nin*. Oan I wait ban for him?' " I s^peoe so, though this isnt a public hetd." The boy ttienght tills was smart, and he chuckled doud over it. He did not offer the gentienun a bhdr, or lay down the paper he held. " I wonld like to write a note whUe I wdt," sdd the caUer; "wUl you pleas* get me a piece of paper and an envelope ' The boy did so, and as he handed them to the eld gentleman, ho ooolly sdd, â€" " Anything die " " Yes," was the reply. • I would like to know the name of sooh a smart boy as yen are," ♦ The boy fdt flattered by the word "smart," and wlshiog to show the full extent of faJs smartness, replied,-- " Fm one of John Thompson's kids, Will- iam by name, and I answer to th* oallof *BiIly.' Bat hor* come* tiM boas r Th* â- * boss" oame in, and, sodng th* stranger, oried oat,â€" "Why, Mr. Smith, hew d* you do T I'm ddightadtosssywk W* " Bat Jahn ThoinpMn's " kid" heard no mar*. H* was l*siMI% awrtodfar his hat. Mr. Smith was president «f the road, ^4 Billy heard Irem him later, to Us iutow. Any â€" aesdhig a bey *t Master Billy's p*. OTHsr « omartnass" Bi^ asooM hia, a* hi lialffloatol b Ibtfloiu alhitiMili* Bidnof? v^mm is dfll â€" isa fcl a vast amtaatd dfaa*MiMiwag«i.krt*«^ h!feJ^ttm nartami th* pnasBt is Im- hSSmT T?! ffiiwnps tias muf- ** " '^T to deasot a dami^pd h-rt or a«toaffi*«t lung as a brekaa Iag The ^htiid mewepe .^Mmm mm to tooflion th* buMrsMSt r*osss*s SttHye, whBiwIMiJh. ^n^r^i^ oan hav**oalar pcaofaf tiMOOoditisB d tii* windpipes Th*mlorc«»op*sidightjBBns** th* trainatux* el gtawths. »«* •«»^*»»i {aformatiendtai mikes It posiibl* to ehadc thdr devdepment. A«eith*tIoe have rob- bed surgery d aU its oradty and half its danger they have woofvrn «xt*nd«d its Hh*r* of actUo, far •psrattans ar* now fre- onently perf orased idiiah formerly oeald net have been attempted. The introduotion th* aatissptifl m3th*d hailargdy inoroassd tiie preperrion of reooverlea after savor* wounds and mutilations, and has also dono maoh to insnre tii* safs^ of th* lying-in chamber. Th* nsoeadty ef outttng for atone is uow obdated hf measures whloh invdvo ndther pain nor asrioos risk, and there oan bo little dMibt that tiio operation will in th* course of th* next 60 years be- come obsolste in dvQIssd oountries. S oDall- pox is no iMiier tho standing menace to beauty that it onoe was, whUe it is soarody taken into aoooant as a posdble danger of life by ordinary peo|^. Typhoid fever still claims many victims, though it la being gradually driven off th* fidd by an anllght- en*d byglm* typhns is almeot unknowa except In th* lewast and most aqaalid haunta of poverty. Madness is no w treated as a bodily disease, not as a curse of God or spite ef the devU, tiio result being a large proportion of rocov«rles, and infialtely less suffering among tho Inonrable. A like im- provement is seen b other branches of tho modiod art. The loathsom* oompen n da Invented, one mlg^it suppose, by a ooonoll of ghouls and soavengorsâ€" whloh as*d to b* ordered, no longer vex the palates *rnp- haav* th* stomachs of nof artunate patients the active prlndpls of th* most Important ronudles haa baoi ssparatad, so that th* agent o»n b* administered in a purer and more cffiolant form, while the phvdelogicd aotlenot fte drag Is dMBrmiasd by *xp*'i' ment and Is taken a* Iha index «f Ms thera- poiitto vdoa Laas pbysia is given, but it is presorlbed with a ofsaaar parpoaa. Bstter atiU, mere atDsuHâ€" k prid t» dial and tha Iqrglsrio sumondings *fth* paMsal abev* all, natova Iskss JiwiSBhar* th* effidoos holpsf a bttsd ally wh* en aldli^ h*r with a asd ttut k B«t ao- omrdlttg t* kn*wl*dg«. Hm trafh has at last b*«nb«m* In *ai tiM m*dlod odnd that many dbeaaes nm a osrtafa deflolte coarse on whloh BO madislM' hoi any effaot for good, though It nuy have for avO, and that aocordlngly a peliw of masterly inaottvlty la the wiaeot in auca o aa aa, Th* phynod change* wr*nght by diaeaae and th* morbid prooassss whloh give rise t* th*m ar*. now to a oartain cxtsnt aoonratdy known, and this fidd of Inquiry promisss to be increas- ingly fiultful of solid result. Seme soatter- ed rays of light, to*, are beglnniitg to pierce the sbrend d darkness whloh formerly mad* th* origin of dUaoas* a more Impeaa- trabl* mystery than th* sourao of ttie NQ*. This marks one ef the greatest advancee in the Ustory of modioine, and ita praotiod importanoe is obvioady inoalanlaUe. The cauae clearly known, tho effect oai( often be removed, or, bettor still, prevented. Spe- cific fevers may posdbly be banished from among men, sod even those isll sosurgts, consumption and cancer, 'may in course of time be stamped oat. One disease after anotaer la traoed to tho action of orgaidama infiniteaimnl in afza, but having an almost inooncdvable power of self multiplioatf on. From leprosy to a oold in the head the ' conqueror woim " is credited wltl the generation of dmost every form of diaor- dor where it has not yet been found it is suspected. In a word, the sign Bacillns is in the ascendant In tiie medioal firmament. A Hationof Gontmdiotions. Seme Bastem nations are made up of contradictions. Tho Bengalee frankly says, ••I am timid," and dies with a oalmnesB that a brave nan ndght envy. The Oliin*** hav* litde physlod qearaga, but they wOl commit suicide If an enomy may b* th*roby bjurud. AtHoakMr.aOhinsaebarbsrpr*- !~"*^J?* of his men f*r atsalfag tw* d*l- lars. Th*maBo*Bmitt*d sntdcT*, net for sham*, beoanse theftis not disorodltable In China, bat to apM* his master. Assaan ash* wm dsad,. Us widow want bd*r* a mandarin and pnvad fee Urn tiiat h*r husband's daath had baea oauaadby Us master's prosooation. The • ' tiM barb vuoh iha m.4i^,. with late with oHdoatly w* d* !• Boldwaya aJppfaolrts*u» •*H*ir do you' Uk* Tm y*ang BMB «sa ssoisly bsUs» as tinqr ohattod betweOB daaoei. **Ota." Bud abe, InnoeaBtly. "I never wasthara. Isltafrat^ptabel' Hsr partiMr^ie|9yls n«krcosrd*d. A lady who had travailed In Eiir*pa was •zpatlanig to an aoqaamtano* npon th* woMMt which ahe had seen there. She had jast fiidihad a flaant dasoripHoB of the bmmm Stradmirg deok, whao her frlond in- autrad,â€" "'And did yOn see the odebrated Watoh ontheBWn*'" Bat th*** ar* tiie peipla who art Ignarant •f what they should hav* kown, and wh* snooeed In bdng simply amusing. There do oom* tim*^ h*w*v«r, whan a onrtoin kind of Ignoranoe Is refreshing. When.Longf*Uow translatad th* " Divina Co»Mn«f»a,"oy«ryon*wasoblIg*d, by th* •xampi* d the learned, to admire it. and a knowledge of Duito at onoe became fanpera- tf vo. Th* nam* of tii* gr*at Italian was In th* meath of tii* fasnimabl* and the would-be "cultured* oUeaes ef sodety from mopi'wg till niglit. When the rase was at Ita hdght, a stranger arrived u BNton to whom a friend, a native of the city, at once put the pertinent inqdry,â€" « Do yen le Danto T ' ** No.^' was the answer. " I dan't know him. Whoiahor' ' 0»me along I" oried his delishted friend. ' Keep mo in oeuatenance. It lent rospaot- able not to like Dante. I'm the only man in Maaaaobosotta who doean't, and I detect hia very nam*. Cl*me to dinn*r with me I" A Boy's Coaiage* Do the lada *f thia g*n*ntlon doclaim that peotiod tributo to yonthfd horoiam whloh extola the boy who "atood en the bn^ng deok, whenoe all bat him had^ed" t When we were boys, th*r* was soarody a " Dsdamation Dm" on whloh we did not hoar it raoltsd. It saay b* that th* years staioe then hav* ba*n a* freighted with ex- amples ef boyish hsrolsm that no boy now fflwtt for ' (T ftSftHan iw " One «f tiiese lator, and, to aor thinking, inoreattEaetlTar«ttiB|deaof youthful hero- ism oeeoRad at tiw •utinoak of the Sepoy mBHwf in 1867. Jast bdora tho awful storas br^o, the mtem of oleotrio telegraphs bad basB txtsadad av«r tha surfaos *f British Dsihi, to .t of th* Hoham- OBttlBg the hll* th* rattl* rolling around Eogltah boy, of duty, stack J ^y^ *• P»y ana huodred and and twmty d*llais for th* Bapnsrt tiia wld*w. Th* house beato tiireng wltt dilldr«k and, iHtii aU tile oar* In A worid. tiMyd* fdl Into til* riv*r. To gnaidavdStfaat oentingenoy. a oord is tied around tiw waist of^^mofechild,towhidi is attached a J w °° '«aale diiidls provided witii a ^t thoy may drown and weloemo. Boys are prissd. The poalshmsBt for â- teding a md* diOd is ^ffButghS areoonsUerodan a^ndv* nnisano*.l»d frequently die from hok of care. Thdr Jeij*«"*^ta*l ttanearort hole. A toge dith wteld* of Foo diow was .a modt S!!i?*u"' P^P*** ttat tiie autiieritfes posted tiie notice: "Femd* infanta inS no bo thrown hare." »â€" «•â-  may The people seem to be indiflersBt to hn. t^ sufferinf^. howevor rfteo^lr^OilJdS laFooohow,^ mitas aniSglidi offioeT'S â- tenggles of adrownfagmMTabaorbod tiie in- swert of a orowdj who made not the aUghest •ffert to reaoue him, "»»w» /• A byatander, onablo to obtain a daar view, ezpreaaed a doubt whetiier thoTIa ^J^ P^nfJjeJ. wh*reupon tii. IrSS S^JU'^^i^ '«^ a»a soeptlolnto «herlv*r with th* xunark. *0»m»Ai^ *ft«hii«y*a,Mlf.. artoi,MS£l^ writes that it is a country " -«- â€" ^^- aada withMrta Tha matioaors fwh*d to Bp*n th* aid I m a dl tMry BMdaa Empbo^ aad^l thraate of Bon of oanBOB the tdegiaph offioe, a moved by tne EagKdi to bis po*t ontU he had teleeraphed to the ComBiisdoiior at Lahar*. Ih* m*aaag* an- nounced that the mukinoers had arrived at Delhi, and had mnrd*r*d tUs dyOian and that offioor. and woond up witii theae aigol- fioant but ohOd-liko words, ** We're off!" The boy's oeurago and sense of duty saved the Fonjsb. Ai soon as th* th* tole- gram reached Ldioto, tha ganerd .in com- mand of tha Sspsys disamsd tham. When they learned of the rising at Delhi, they wore powerless to do aay bjary. The g*n*rd flashad the awiful news to Paahawur. The Hbdoestanae reglmonta there were alao disarmed, and, though mu- tbeers at heart, w*r* rendered boapable of harm. Then the telegraph was out by the rebels â€" butthe bey at Delhi had saved Northern India to the British crown. The cffioer b charge had been killed, but that brave lad stayed long enough at the bstrument to des- patch the warning. Fratty Fair-Sisacl HailBtones* Speobia from E^gb Manor, and Paige aay that thoao placoa and the eurroundlng neigh- borhooda war* vldted ttie other evening by heavy storms, Infllotbg great damage. At Elgb there was a torrifio thunder, run, and ball storm, wUoh dduged a part of the town. Nearly every building had wbdews broken and holes knocked b the roofs. Hdl fdl varying b sis* from a marbl* to a man'a hand, and perforated iron and tin roofs. A pbo* of ha^bton* waa picked np thatwdgh*d s*v*B poondo. Th* Metho- dist ohuroh waa btown from ita foundations and demoHshed. The Baptist ohuroh was moved dightiy out d Haa. On* man was stniok down by a hailstone and seriously bjozad. At Maamr tho storm did IndesoribaU* damag* to eropo, haOstonss f alUng as large as hen's *ggs. Thi** ohoroho* and many atiiar bnUdbgs was* bad^ danagad. At Pdg* th* storm waa t«v*re. There waaaveryhaavyraiBiaU. Ody alight dam- ag* was dfSB* to otoft or bnildbgs. At Meida tho storm wrecked one church and s*v«rd asaall heusos, oBredsd others, and badly bjored th* 00m crop. No lives were lost, the people hastily seekbg shel- tor b storm honsM wh*n th* gab ap- proaohod. A OourtBhip by Means of a Bible Text. A yonng genUeman happening to sit at church b a pew adjelning one b which sat a young ladv, for whom he cenodved a and- dm and HrisBt pnssloB, waa desirous of en- tering bto a oenrtahip en the spot but the pUoenotiBltbga formd deolaration, the axiganoy of the case snggostsd f oUowbg llan: He paUtdy haqded Us fair neighbor a Bible, (open,) wItti a ^n staok b the fol- A^^ *V* ' Second Bpistb of John, verse fifthâ€"" And mnf I beseech thee, bdy, not as though I wrote a new ooqiniandment onto thee, bat that which we had from the b^biibg, that we love one another." She returned it, pobting to the second ohaptor of Buth, vors* tant ** TtUKi Bhalsn an h*r face, and bowed baNolfto thefgrtuid, and sdd unto him: *Why havo'Baund grace ia tUne eye*, that thou shouldst tak* kn*wl*dge of me, seeing thatlassBstraBgarf " -t -â€" • V» r*ta|B*d^the book, psintbg to tiie ^i^tosttli «yka at the jQrd Bpistb d John â-  T ' ^!?^l "^I^^^l" vxi** " I^' 'Lwoaidnot' " Itwrtto ito*.«bit 'laoa tlM "i««»» M iS;21jkrj hard, it j. .:.*•* a. .* k active erorat-T^ k J w» thonaanda ofWiLNfi square iaoh. i^SSSS Moreover, th,JJS« nffl Uwerkbg.th.ni2?LNS profuie.andpe^lS*" peraphraaon.^lK whloh lorn dir7l««lfcj wetiona being rtopi^ Jjl h»rab.dry,09Btr»rtM^ Impure matter-beij^l gathera b pUoa ^r^^iJ blotoho, ertSfiS^'i moved. ther8?l2lliii bl«K)d. and, whh uTlll?^ «|ndgUnder..fi«,;'dJjSI he prevwited b, Liijjl bg and broaUns, ul mS,** «alltagbythe^i,S;5f*l| Aa preventieii h tta bS J??! that owner, of ZS'^^J P«idbleprecwa«i,t,»"3«M direction pobtd eat. liiT" annoyance and ka, *â- â-  Bearing OalTN to Adn When abant to oalvt, piM il l] aeparato ataU and lanhtbl no grab or atimnlttiBi h,j J bdere oalTbg. Whiatbealli move it to a pen^st » dhtaaiLH be kept quiet aad ONdRhO never know wha^ b to k ii|7 and much tronliii aftonA ' apared. b t^ ar f on hn 1 cow, and gtv4the mVktt h ing It ta drhk. With pub 4 cdf may ba^taaght to ddikkll leaaen. Mflk tha oOttiMUbiT and feed tiw milk |t| fta di fourth day i^nn the atable and the mlog. The calf g« after thlaâ€" three qa day, and wanned '• The feed ia gradn calf growa, and wha it ia taught to lake corn and eata, andl with the warmed ^^iouudilki aix or eight menth^eiU. Ikl si calf to make a fini^|rofth|jd t up b deolllty and ^Pf'" qnalitiM areimprored^il and carding, and by ufgWilil and to lead, while it i|i||Ul pen. Cintbmal hudliD^iJ preventa the contnotiagM sf f common vices, and whin ta d U a CO v, it ia b an BXoellantltriiMl and givoa no tronbla. Tw^'JlTj carried eat, ia the miin attptpanf proved herd, which villbe«nn value, «nd one gained tltwjr' Emdneu to iiinii' E^ery one ahauld knif M treated anlmala will do th« Ml owners. A oarieoa oim hipfoK' whloh may be given a a •»â-  noted trotter waa diina â-  atrange driver. The haia"" diaaatiafied and loit two haa driver knew the hara """"jS bMged the owner to bo P«»"l hlS: HUentr«a«pio«Wjl he mounted the aulkf to b«^ with plea8nre.aiid wantho !«' with eaae, maUng wohi w" owner had an ««« .•'.JJ deUan for the aoimsL »â-  IfarmheraeUndlfWjjJ work than one whbhbi""' owner or driver. A** J*^ when attended by •iWgJi^ peraon, and one that hjj^ ^th gentleneaa '^.'SLil common fractloMneaefU*^^! up th«mllk. T"»lit* J aSmala, whe re^n kbg^l tton and fS»«^'rLi0 the oonrider»tien f^^Z^f ewnera. Every 'J^** farmer's bey, •honldeuiy' ulmaU with klndMia^^^_^ rranoiaJeleyl'i^Ji the late OharlesDW^-J** waa bom January la.j7ft,Ji hU death wMP»^yJp,J^ dledattheredd«j«^*j| met him »'^,^-ti»ia'l )«y papat and bk, bat I* aad speak boa to bafulL" had met him »» "-7, Mounted poUoe, » V^ ^2 waa held to the ow y a were pUoed /n Vj^ CJ^I atruotlona '5j?j^ Jft J the halfbreed g-^,^ underLonh RJi^fltafj.- FortPitt.whwJfcliaiVJ In so "J%Jfflitftoafl5^ ohildienef»»J20ii«' His W. T.

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