The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, April 09, 1891, Image 4

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    ... I
Ametemeats." The text was 1L Sam
ii, 14: "Let the young man no
and play before us."
There are two armies encamped by
the pool of Gibeon. The time hangs
heavily on their hands. One army pro
posee a game of sword fencing. Xoth
iiir could be more healthful and inno
cent The other army accept the
challenge. Twelve men against twelve
men, the sport opens. But soswthing
went adTersely. Ferhaps one of the
wordmen tot an unlucky clip, or in
some way had his ire aroused, and that
which ooened in SDOrtfuloaas ended ID
violence, each one taking his contest
antby the hair, and then with the
sword thrusting him in the side; so
that that which ooened innoceut luu
ended in the massacre of the twenty
four sportsmen. Was there ever a betr
ter illustration of what was there true
then, and is true now, that that which
is innocent may be made destructive?
What of a worldly nature is more im
portant and strengthening and inno
cent than amusement, and yet what
baa counted more victims? 1 nave no
sympathy with a straight jacket relig
ion. This is a very bright world to me,
and I propose to do all 1 can to make it
bright for others.
1 never could keep step to a dead
march. A book years ago issued says
that a Christian man has a right to
some amusements; for instance, if he
comes home at night weary from his
work, and, feeling the need of recrea
tion, pats on bis slippers and goes into
his garret and walks lively round the
floor several times, there can be no
harm in it. 1 believe the church of
God has made a tremendous mistake in
trying to suppress the sportfulness of
youth, and drive out from men their
love of amusement. If God ever im
planted this desire. But instead of
providing for this demand of our na
ture, the church of God has, for the
main partj ignored it. As in a riot, the
mayor plants a battery at the end of
the street and has it fired all, so that
everything is cut down that happens to
stand In the range, the good as well as
the bad, as there are men in the church
who plant their batteries of condemna
tion, and fire away indiscriminately.
Everything is condemned. But my
Bible eommedds those who use the
world without abusing it, and in the
natural world God has done everything
to please and amuse us. In poetic fig
ure we sometimes speak of natural ob
jects at being in pain, bat it it a mere
fancy. Poets say the clouds week, but
they never yet shed a tear; and that the
winds sigh, but they never did have
any trouble; and that the storm howl,
but it never lost its temper. The worlu
is a rose and the universe a garland.
To help star the plague now raging I
project certain principles by which you
way judge in regard to any amusement
or recreation, finding out for yourself
whether it is right, or whether it is
wrong.
I remark, in the first place, that you
can judge of the moral character of
any amusement by ita healthful result,
or by its baleful reaction. There are
people who seem made up of bard facts.
They are a combination of multiplica
tion tables and statistics. If you show
them an exquisite picture they will be
gin to discuss the pigments involved in
he coloring. If -you show them a
beautiful rota they will submit it to a
botanical analysis, which is only a post
mortem examination of s flower. They
have no rebound in their nature. They
never do anything more than smile.
There is no great tides of feeling surg
up from the depths of their soul, in
billows of reverberating laughter. They
seem as if nature had built them by
contract and made a bungling job out
efit But timid be God; there are
people in the world who have bright
races, and whose life is a song, an an
them, a pssaa of victory. Even their
troubles are like the Tinea that crawl
up the sides of a great tower, on the
top of which the sunlight sits, and the
soft airs of summer botd perpetual car
nival. Toey are the people yon like to
have come to your house; they are the
people I like to have come to my house
if you but touch the hem of their gar
ments you are healed.
There is nothing mora depraving
thsw srtenrttTww upon amusements thai
are fall of low tojrgeetion- The young
man enters. At first be sits far back,
with a hat on and his collar down.
Thamsjhoithamt that first came to
hctwti anything indecent wss
eoavted comes no saore to his cheek.
Farewell, young man! You havo preb-
aaiy started on the waong real which
ends m conenrattt destruction. The
statsof hope will go oat one by one,
una yom wane ten is utter darkness.
liter yoa not the rash of the
trots, la wtma enter circle your
ism? tmm, making merry with, the
wUwatan fist yoa are being
wwala,tUta genus motion wilj
lSBitai tsrrtae gaaueo. Yen ery for
mt lavtjal Ism wia paaattta
aartoiawsk, Vnttte stratus wO
mwrCl Tew wa to torn
tZz til ttiiwrertii, aad swsi-
losxJ tj C wtted Cm hat already
arrniawcar.-i torn,
r . rz ' rtLm wtl
, - Kltp-ltiHIJI
till further those amusements are
wrong wtucn ieaa you uw
beyond your means. Money spent in
recreation is not thrown asrty. It is
ail folly to come from a place of amuse
ment feeling that we have watted our
money and time. You may by it have
made an investment worth more than
the transaction tint yielded you hun
reds of thousands of dollars. But bow
many properties have been riddled by
costly amusements.
How bright the path of unrestrained
amusement opens. The young man
says: "Now I am off for a good time.
Sever mind economy. Ill get money
somehow. What a fine road! What a
beautiful day for a ride! Crack the
whip, and over the turnpike! Come,
boys, fill high your glasses, fill high
your glasses. Drink! Long life, health.
plenty of rides just like tnisr nam
working men bear the clatter of the
hoofs, and look up and say, "Why, 1
wonder where those fellows get their
money from! We have to toil and
drudge. Tbey do nothing." To these
gay men life is a thrill and an excite
ment Tbey stare at other people anu
In turn, are stared at The watch chain
jingles. The cup foams. The cheeks
flush. The eyes flash. The midnight
hears their guffaw. They swagger
They jostle decent men off the side
walk. They take the name of God in
vain. Tbey parody the hymn they
learned at their mother's knee; and to
all pictures of coming disaster tbey cry
out, "Who cares!" and to the counsel of
some Christian friend, "Who are you T
fussing along the street some night
you hear a shriek in a grog sbop, they
heir the clatter of the watchman's club
the rush of the police. What is the
matter now? Oh, this reckless man
has been killed in a grog Bhop fight
Carry hhn homejto his father's Louse.
Parents will come down and wash his
wounds, and close his eyes in death
They forgive him all he ever did, al
though be cannot iu his silence ask it
The prodigal has got home at last
Mother will go to her little garden and
get the sweetest flowers, and twist the in
into a chaplet for the silent heart of
the wayward boy, and push back from
the bloated brow the long locks that
were once her prida. And the air will
be rent with the agony. The great
dramatist says "how sharper than aser
pint's tooth it is to have a thankless
thild."
l our sports are merely means to an
end. Tbey are alleviations and helps.
The am: of toil is the only arm strong
enough to bring up the bucket out of
the deep well of pleasure. Amusement
is only the bower where business and
philanthropy rest while on their way to
stirring achievements. Amusements
are merely the Tines that grow aitout
the anvil of toil and the blossoming of
the hammers. Alas for the man who
spends his life in laboriously doing
nothing, his days in hunting up loung
ing places and loungers, his nights in
seeking out some gas lighted foolery!
The man who always has on his sport
ing jacket, ready to hunt for game in
the mountain, or fish in the brook, with
no time to pray, or work or read, inot
so well off as the grey-hound that runs
br his side or the fly bait with which
he whips the stream.
A man who does not work doss not
know how to play. If God had intend
ed us to do nothing bnt laugh, he would
not have given us shoulders with which
to lift, and hands with which to work,
and brains with which to think. The
amusements of life are merely the or
chestra pitying while the great tragedy
of lift plunges through its five acts-
infancy, childhood, manhood, old age
and death. Then exit the last earthly
opportunity. Enter the overwhelming
realities of an eternal world!
I had a friend in the west a rare
friend. Ha was one of the first to we!
coma me to my new home. To find
personal appearance be added a gener
osity, frankness, and ardor of nature
that made ma lore him like a brother.
Bat I taw evil people gathering around
him. Tbey came up from the gamb
ling bells. Tbey plied him with a thou
sand arts. They seized upon his social
nature, and he could not stand the
charm. They drove him on the rocks,
like a ship full winged, hovering on the
breakers. I used to admonish him. I
would tay, "Sow, I wish you would
quit these bad habits, and become a
Christian.'' "Oh," he would reply, "1
would like to; but I have gone so far I
don't think there is any way back." la
his moments of repentance, be would
go home and take his little girl of 8
years, and embrace her convulsively,
and cover her with adormenta, and
strew around her pictures and toys.
and everything that could
around my body. 1 wish you wjo.
take tbem off of me." 1 saw it wa.
delirium. -On," replied his wife "
dear, there is nothing there, there i
nothing there." He went on, and said,
-just where you sit, Mr. Talmage, my
mother sat Sne said, to me: Henry.
1 do wish you would do better. 1 gol
out of bed, put my arn'i around bei
and said, 'mother 1 want to do better
Won't you Lelp me to do better 1 Voa
used to helt) ma.' So mistake about it
no delusioa. 1 saw her the cap and
the apron and the spectacles, just as
she used to look twenty years ago, but
I do wish you would take the strings
away. Tbey annoy me so. I can hard
ly talk. Won't you take them away."
I knelt down and prayed, conscious ol
tbe fact that he did not realize what 1
was saying. I got up. I said, "Good
bye; I hope you will be better soon.
lie said, "Good bye, good bye.
That night his soul went to the God
who gave it Arrangements were
made for the obsequies. Some said,
Don't bring bim iu the church; he
was too dissolute." "Oh," I said,
"bring him. He was a good frieud oi
mine while be was alive, and I shall
stand by him now that he is dead.
Bring bim to the church."
As I sat in the pulpit and saw hit
body coming up through the aisle, 1
felt as if I could weep tears of blood.
I told the people that day, "This man
bad his virtues and a good many of
them. He bad his faults and a good
many of them. But if there is a man
in this audience who is without sin, let
him cast tbe first stone at this coflin
lid." On one side the pulpit sat that
little child, rosy, sweet-faced as beauti
ful as any little child that sat at your
table this morning, 1 warrant you. She
looked up wistfu ly, not knowing the
full sorrow of an orphan child. Oh, her
countenance haunts me today, like
some sweet face looking upon us
through some horrid dream. On the
other side of the pulpit were the men
who had destroyed him. There they
sat, hard visaged, some of them pale
from exhausting disease, some of them
flushed until it seemed as if the fires el
iniquity flamed through the cheek and
crackled the lips. They were the men
who had done the work. They were
tbe men who had bound him hand and
foot They had kindled the fires. They
had poured the worm wood and gall in
to the orphan's cup. Did thy weep
Xo. Did they say repei.tiugly? Xo.
Did they say, "What a pity that such a
brave man should be slain?" Xo, no
not a bloated hand was lifted to wipe a
tear from a bloated cheek. They sat
and looked at the coflin like vultures
gazing at the carcass of a lamb whose
heart ihey had ripped out! 1 cried in
their ears as plainly as I could, "There
is a God and a judgment day!" Did
they tremble? Ohno.no. They went
back from the house of God, and that
night though their victim lay in Oak-
wood cemetery, I was told they drank
ana mey gamoeiea, ana there was not
one less customer in all the houses of
iniquity. This destroyed matt was a
Samson in physical strength, but De
lilah sheared him, and the Philistines
of evil companionship dug his eyes out
an i threw him into prifon of evil hab
its. iui in me nour oi ueam tie rose
up and took hold of the two pillared
curses of God against drunkenness and
uncleanness, and threw himself for
ward, until uown tpon him and his
companions there came the thunders
of an eternal catastrophe,
I saw a wayward husband standing,
at tbe death bed of his Christian wife
and I saw her point to a ring on her
linger, and heard her say to iter bus
band, "Do you see that ring ?" He
plied, "Yes, I see it." "Well," said she,
"do you remember who put it there?'
"Yes," said he, "1 put it there,, and all
the past seemed to rush upon him. By
the memory of that day w hen, in tht
pretence of men and angels, you prom.
d to be faithful in joy and sorrow,
and In sickness and in health; by tht
memory of those pleasant hours when
you sat together in your new home
talking of a bright future; by the cradle
and the joyful hour when one life was
spared and another given; by that sick
bed, when the little one lifted up the
hands and called for help, and you
Knew he must die, and he put one arm
around each of your necks and brought
you very near together in that dying
kiss; by the little grave in Greenwood
you never think of without a rush of
tears; by the family Bible, where amid
stories of heavenly love, is the brief, but
expressive record of births, and deaths
by tbe neglects of the past, and by the
agonies or we ruture; by a judimari
day when husbands and wives, parents
aim emuren, in immortal groups, wil
all
happy: and then, as though hounded by Istand to bo caught up in shining arravs
w w BiutuA uuwu into uaTKness; by all
Uut, I beg you to give to home your
VIM HHCUWU,
Ah m frlAflula tk.- i . i
, .udio u au nour com
ing when our put life will probably
pam before us in review. It will be our
mm mm. n irom our death pillow we
beue to look back and see a life soent
In sinful imiiunont v, 1,7. "Pent
""T ,'-gh o'ir
Willi WtlH-ll
aa evil spirit, he would go oat to the
eofieming cap and the boose of shame,
like a fool to tbe correction ef the
IwattammoasdtohisclsaUiBed. I
hatt milT 1 entered the room. I f oond
Use, to Mf torprma, ryiag mfaB every
aaydremeathetopof tat ceoea. I
toSooamytMad. He graspta U ex
ctr, asm said, &t dews tit. Tal
ahtre, right there." I tat down. Be
sojj, -Last 014 leeway methtr.wlse
trtlartwlMnyoaittaew. It
tmm lwat wlaawate. ttarawmi
ae sUact a fai wmttx. 1 mm km
jaBtatKjratl set yeev-TTl I
wttyMwewa 2
efKOs Tsea est Cp tpt ,3
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT.
knnm iut Low to talk to
CUV Mvt- 4
kinds and conditions of men," was tbe
recomendation given for a bright wo
man who makes her living as much by
her ability to pleaee J l,er ctual
labors.
Nirg that woman afterward, ana
observing her closely, one could w.
but be impressed with Uie Uum oi
hat had been said. She was gay wiiu
the gay, always good tempered, never
too animated, and never, never visibly
u pain nor in tears. She was always
charming, bright, sympaineuc
sweet. She was witty, too, but not
erriblyso. She kept her wit to illu
mine conversation and to lighten dull
spirits, not to burn hearts uor scorch
sensitive feeling. Everybody went
from her presence feeling comfortable
in spirit and with reasonably satistiea
hearts.
She was a peacemaker and a court e
Rtreiipthener. There are two or Uireo
dozen of such women in the world, aua
when you find one she will tell that it
almost impossible for her to get an
evening to herselt, because so many
dear, kind friends are apt to drop in of
an evening. And she will add: "I'm I
glad it's so, for I should not be able to
get thrmgh tbe day without tbe pros
pect of these pleasant evenings. I wish
the days might be all evenings with a
timetable that never crept beyoud the
limits of 3 to 11 p. m." Xew York
World.
Wnu'i Sapvrior Coarse.
"Most people think that men are
more courageous than women, saiu
Dr. S. D. lllack, of Xew York, "but
the dentist knows that this is not true.
As a rule a man will groan and swear
when the dentist tries to fill his teeth,
squirming, gripping the arms of the
chair and making a big row about it.
And the heavier the man the bigger
coward he is. I've seen a strapping big
athlete sit down to have a tooth pulled
and almost faint when he was looking
at it On the other hand, a light little
hit of a woman will calmly close her
eyes, lean her head back In the chair
and submit to tortures that would
make the Sphynx swoon into insensi
bility. Xo, sir; a woman can stand a
dozen times the pain that a man will
nndergo." Philadelphia Press.
"Xot worth a button" wasan express
ion wont to carry much meaning. Xext
season, however, a button may be
worth a great deal. Latterly it has
been the aim of well dressed women to
dispense with any ontwrwtd and visible
fattening to their attire, merging the
indespeusable junction in much mys
tery. The inevitable reaction now
threatens, and buttons are to be re
vived for ornament as well as for use
The more antique they are so much
tbe more stylish will they be considered.
Consequently, to use the language of
Ilibernia, antique buttons are being
manufactured in great variety. Minia
tures of the beauties of different reigns
set round with pearls, enamels studded
with paste, old silver, and gold in-
crusted with jewels, are all to be in
favor. The smartest will be of Wedg
wood china or its best reproduction
The ground is to be the color of the
dress or coat, and the figure or tracery
upon each button is white, cream color
or delicate relief. London TelegraplL
The memory
than the
Vtrdnins slew his
ssEfi'infSKi
Shir WaliU aa Bloom o B. Wara.
Shirt waists, blouses and round
waists without end appear again upon
gowns of the very prettiest sort showu
as models for the spring and summer
seasons. Light wools and soft silks
are used for present purposes, and
among the useful garments are black
satin blouses, embroidered collars and
deep Cromwellian cuffs. Blouse waist
with belts all around, and basaim vith
blouse fronts and girdles, are favorite
oouices on imported dresses of llht
textiles such as crepaline, lace veiling
hallia TnHi ilfea -J .
, auu ul0 jj trJmj.
parent, old fashioned lawns and muslins
wai are revived by leading French
moaestes.
Tli hl...u i.
inures are u compro
mise between plain and full waista
" '"una very generally be
coming They appear upon dresses
n simple and ornate. Chinese silk
wsisU to wear with skirts of various
kinds are made with "coat skirts"
Which are annlloH -a- '
,-r-. u lira rage or a
.vuuuwsisi under a belt and stream-
.i nuDon. lwelve inch lace flouoc.
""ow iu we same
York Post. ,
How rigeum ''J'
The power of pigns on tl wing is
proverbial, ssys the I'ornhill Magazine.
All trained birds of this species have
two qualifications in a marked degree.
Tbe first spetd, tbe second long and
sustained powers of flight This pro
position can be amply demonstrated,
and the following are some of the most
remarkable records: Oct fi, 150, Nr
John Ilos di'Datcbed a pair of young
niwons from J: istanct bay, a little
a iL. Mte
west of Wellington souna, ana im
a pigeon mad H apiarnce toe
dovecot in Ayrshire, Scotland, w.nre
Sir John had tbe pair taken out The
distance direct between tbe two places
is !,OuO miles.
An instance is on record of a pigeon
flying twenty-three miU in eleven
minutes, and another flew from liouen
to Ghent, 150 mi ls in sn hour and a
half. An interesting incident of flight
Is the case of the pigeon which in IMS
fell woun ded and exhausted at Vaux
hall Station, then tbe tertninous of the
South western railway. It bore a roes
sage to tbe effect that it was one of
three "dispatched to tbe Duke of Wel
lington from Jchnboe islaud, 2,000
m ilea away. The message was immedi
ately sent onto his grace, and by him
acknowledged. In a pigeon compel!
tiou some years ago th 9 winning bird
flew from Vetnor to Manchester, 308
miles, at the rate of fifty miles an hour
As an experiment a trained pigeon was
recently dispatched from a northern
newspaper office with a request that it
might be liberated for its return jour
ney at 9:42 am. It reached home at
1 :10 p. m having covered in the mean.
time 140 miles, firinz at the rate of
forty miles an hour.
In the north pigeons have long been
used to couvey messages between coun
try houses and market towns, and in
llussi they aro now being employed
to convey negatives of photographs
taken in balloons. The first expert
mant of the kind was made from tbe
cupola of the Cathedral of Isaac, and
the subject matter was the winter pal'
palace. The plates were packed In en
velopes Impenetrable to light, and then
tied to the feet of the pigeons, which
safely and quickly carried them to the
station at Volkovo. Here is another
instance of speed and staying power.
The pigeons In question flew from Bor
deaux to Manchester, and not only heat
all existing records but flew more than
evenly miles further than anything
previously attempted by English fliers
The winning bird flew st the rate of
1,879 yards a minute, or over sixty-four
miles an hour, and that for a distance
of 143 1-2 miles. The same club has
birds flown distances of 613 and 62
miles. These latter, however, were sev
eral days returning, and in their cate
the only wonder is that they could ac
complish the distance at all.
The following is still more interest
ing, aa it eatailed a race between birds
and insects. A pigeon fancier of
II am me in Westphalia made a wager
that a dozen bees liberated three miles
from their hives would reach it in bet
ter time than a dozen pigeons would
reach the r cot from the same distance.
The competitors were given wing at
at Itbynhern, a village nearly a league
from llsrome, and the first bee finished
a quarter of a minute In advance of
the first pigeot.; three other trs
reached the main body of both detach
ments finishing almost simultaneously
an Instant or two later. The bees, too
may be said to have been handicapped
n the race, having been rolled in flour
before starting for purpose of identification.
ilR FARM DffH
' Baa
TbeSuear IIm
boot ;uaranU-t for the O
tugar beet plant at GraadV
that special arraiigenieahO
made with the three rauaW)
ing inroagn that point u ,
from the surrounding coesti)
muea. inuopeus upcoo
inirmert over alarm
Muaaagooa supply of ti
rial, provided the uimU
wining to pay enough u
farmers to undertake and
culture of beets. This
it one of tbe four in tht, pakj
each capable of lundiinth-
tons per twenty bona j
700 such factories woiud U J
meet our Borne demand fa J
consumption of fifty-seven J
sugar per annum per
factories would need
uuuioneoi Dee is, grown
a ft atj lilAAM a
uuau i,iui,uw acres, ana near
wars oi zajuuluuu meu lur
mu
rsevJ
er esNai
I to UK J
rown
in the year in cultivating m?
ing, besides hundreds of SUJ
vehicles and horses Tht iv
would use up 3,fi00,(i luu si
year, besides the iron, cor4
belting, ettv, required ttg v
building of the plants, sudd?
give employment to a larfij
mechanics' and other aurkJ
thought Ike prodnetion of
this year will not nm4 1
tons, but (hat will be six i
quantity manufactured in tii
in 1887. The present cost of t
beet sugar is placed at 2
per pound, but it Is lutiuuti
impossible it will ere many j '
ducedto abbutl4 cents, iw
cost In France and German; -Tribune.
Ab Aaatnllae D ator' W ar 1
Uaa II dim.
)t of Town of
: "I cssj
rse is," ml
They are aj
A correspondent of Town t
ty, Australia, says:
what a good horse
known dealer. "They :
as men. In buying a liomt it
look first at IU head and e?
of intelligence, temper,
honesty. Unless a horse i
you can't teach him any
than you can a half-witted a.;
tl.t tail Kav fhfrA a flri.U9
i 1 I 1. . i rr
I inai, ii i mil iiiuma iiigu. l-
leacn iiiai nurse any uunj r
Well, l it show you a dM
heads, but have a care of
Look at the brute's be-ad, thi
full place below tbe eyes. TH
trust him, i
"That's an awful gmi u.
added. "She's as true si Utaa
can see breadth and ftiflbeai w
the ears and eyes. You wnlAi
tbst ure to act mean w brl
body. Tbe eve should U itg
Ilk. .!
UK IJ
manner. Xew
,. A ""rafyTaaUSearr.
A very pretty scarf tot table or dreV
w came to my notice lately. Linen of
rrthernnequalityw., hernstiUbed on
ends and sides, and 'a,,--. . 0n
with atei.-
aim wen elmala A ..
0. the same silk, a single thread
floflos. being used for t!.!?1
wo for the outline. The Hum" 'C
JfMclom together as eoaldba
nde tnd the stitch wa. tJ?...
Piole on tht wrong iiT Z7n2
"tioUd .ilk flower -Jl"t,
-U" result when .n.-ZTT!0?
J- trnely jyj
Showers of Blood.
Mowers of blood from the sky are
very rare in (hit day and age of the
world, a fact which makes their com
paratively common occurrence In the
olden times only that much more ex
traordinary and unaccountable. In
the "Annals of Ilemsrkahle Happen
ings in Home mention is made of
fourteen different showers of blood
scd other substances mixed between
the years 319 A D. and 1170. lkeides
these there were two "showers of much
Intensity, of which tbe liquid resem
bled pure blood and was not intermix
ed with other matter aa heretofore re
ported." In 1222 we find record of a
anoweror blood and dust over the
larger part of Italy. In 1226 snow fell
in Syria, "which presently turned into
large pools of gore."
a monx who wrote in 1261 tells of a
three days' shower of blood all
southern Europe. In the same Tear a
emy lasen from the oven "did
bleed like a new wound" whan aii
uie uow. m 1x44 the great chasms
made by (be earthquake at Vlllaeb,
Austria, "tent forth blood and a
pestilenee followed." Burgundy had a
.wuuj auower in IKI. arul rwri
shire, Fnir'and. -" ik.
paeaomenoD In lifiO. In imm
tooet fsU In Wurtembur wM.
rtTZS. Woe-
. -mwhj anuwar on raiMan a
eurred in Mam in mna S T00?1 .oc'
rjuhii - Jie-
SpinsterI came very nee i-j..
Blrrud ti . . B
uiuea, put ibare
always a slip.
Widow urn 1 1 .
"oouier Kind of slin-a
pUnt, In fact .
f. BoatAs Tnli -'
, ; 'w; iBere tn
Pfi"aa ce to a .i
tbttr aandt to tight 4a arava thmttZZ
csn't ret them IZ-?!?
was
hazel is a good color. 1
thin ear, and want a bom i
ears forward. Look out for
thai wants to listen to all tin
sation going on behind him.
that turns back his ears til!
most meet at the points, (sir
for It, is sere to do sotaeihiai
Sen that straight elegant fact
with a dishing face is cosvfr
cowardly brute is usually v!
1 like a square muzzle, with
trila, to let In plenty of air t
For the under side of tbe nttt
horse should be well cat
jowl, with jawbones broad
apart under the throttle.
"So much for the head," h
"The next thing to cooa
building of the animal Xt
tonx-lesmd. ttittv horst, Lfi
a short, straight keck, tat I
rumo. and von've got i
horse. Tbe withers soots a.
and tbe thoolaers weU st"
broad; but dont get them W I
Urn cheat The foreleg soosMi
Give me a pretty strait"
with the bock low down, that I
joints, and around, mulish tH
are aU kinds of horses; bat j
that hat theet nolnU is slts
be tightly, graceful, good -n
tervioeable.
Far rrmn
Tbe red spider Is best kept
Bbb M aaaaaiiamaaji aW AT
vj inifiuiiii vi "
inonn.
Hee that tbe outside si
side of your butter packsi'
Uave them neat also.
Whltatuwado not rMtM
tMUBaMiiirBi thev should b(K
ably Mm quarters in witct
ly the young sows.
their bosii
margia of profit
too tmaS to admit
InttMexpsrimenU
ai the Ohio Kxneriment
to have no em
whether attd alone or is m
not sffori M
by go'
; on tbelr r
sit of It I
aenU tfi
Don't Torgei w v- j
wtdMtrowiingthe co(
that taay kwva dry qoar-"
tKmaty warm,
oaia wwlsitH bran. J
tmm t&xa an to bt e "V
eewe may to town taletj m
SMwDM(aMllll'j
k...i i. ' ie
i-MBStWof
J
wefcxow
m