The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, December 15, 1892, Image 4

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REAL RCKU HEADING
WILL BE
FOUND IN THIS
PARTM ENT.
DE-
Soms Well Kect-tiizeil I'f indoles of
Breeding A Convenient Sawbuck Feed
' the Hogs Turnips liuy Oood CaUle
IT arm and Household Notes.
Breedins Hutehed Horses.
There are few men, even among
those actively engaged in the horse
breeding industry, says a correspond
ent of the American Agriculturist,
who fully realize the long and ex
pensive searches that are made by
horse dealers and by the agents of
wealthy men to secure well-matched
pairs of horses for carriage driving.
It is not essential in a great number
of these cases that the horses be fast
trotters, but it Is of the tlrst im
portance that the pair match well,
and after this that they move with ai
stylish, hieh-stepping and high
spirited gait Such horses, matched,
are worth very much more than j
double their price when sold alone,
owing to the difficulty that is ex
perienced in attempting to cater to
this desire on the part of wealthy
people to indulge their fancy in an
attractive pair of carriage horse
The following of the well recog
nized principles cf breeding will go
far toward securing well matched
pairs. If one could use breeding
mares, of an established standard of
form and color, such as has been se
cured in the breeding of the Hackney
Coach, French Coach, and Cleveland
Bay, and could make use also of stall
ions that had been thus bred, he
could count quite confidently on pro
ducing what was desired But the
average breeder has no such facilities
at hand He must use such mares as
he has, or can readily obtain, but
even under such circumstances there
is an intelligent way to proceed.
A well-shaped mare may be bred
for two years in succession to a sire
whose prepotency has been shown to
be so strong that his offspring, as a
rule, strongly resemble hi;n in form
and color; or, what would be still bet
ter, two mares of as great similarity j
as possible may be bred the same
year to such a ciie, and the chances
will strongly favor the securing of a
well-mated pair. If one is breeding
.horses as a part of his farm opera
tions it is not difficult to secure mares
that bear a close resemblance to each
other, which, if a parson is limited to
the use of onlv one mare, he may, as
suggested, breed for two years in suc
cession to the same sire, or may ar
range with a neighbor, having a mare
somewhat similar to his own, to
breed both the same reason to such a
sire with a view to the increased
profit to both if a well-matched pair
be thus obtained.
' A French Cea.h," or a 'Cleveland
'Bay sire possessing fine style and
spirit, is preferable, for there is a
strength of breeding in the case of
such sires that makes the handing
down of their own characteristics to
their offspring quite certain, even
when the dam; arc not altogether
similar to them in form and color.
These two breeds are specially noted
as possessing such form, spirit and
good ''action" as to make them par
ticularly desirable as carriage horses.
Good results in breeding for matched
pairs may crime when well-built trot
ting bred stallions are used, but the
past breeding of such animals usualiy
makes the chance of uniformity of
form and color in the offspring de
cidedly remote. Attempting to se
cure such uniformity can certainly
result in no loss, if the attempt be
made as suggested, while it may re
sult in a quick sale and a largely in
creased profit.
it all in trade. As I did cot know
what to do with so much merchan
dise 1 let tne trade 'io by. I was
feeding 10J head of hogs on corn and
slop made of wheat middlings. I fed
turnips in-tead of slop and found they
did as well on corn and turnips as
they had done on corn and slop, I
cut with a corn knife a bushel bask
etful of them twice a day and fed to
four tailch cows. There was an in
crease in the milk. The flavor of the
milk from three of the cows wai un
changed, while that from the fourth i blooming.
one (a greedy eater) was considerably
tainted by the turnips. With a fa
vorable fall a good crop can be raised
if sowed as late as September.
soon after blooming, in order that the
young wood on which will come the
following season's flowers may have
an opportunity to get the required
growth. Serious mistakes are often
made on the season for pruning, as
the thousands of fiowerless shrubs
throughout the country liear mute
witne-s. So-call landscape gard-
ONE
HUNDRED MILES
HOUR,
IN AN
Or Muster Mwhaule Kiehrd Will "
Hi New lxieonitttli Away.
A working model of the r.-cord-breaking
locomotive, invented and
r.ntnfi-d by Master Mechanic Jack
son Richard of the Beading railroad
Tlie Sawbuck.
This cut. Fig. 10, shows a sawbuck
extension, useful where the timber is
long. The same principle of con
struction is shown in the ordinary
ners (self-stvled) are at the t-ottom of, was ,aced m oxhibition yesterday in
the mischief, going over grounds in the of puliders exchange, say
the early spring and ruthlessly cut-;the rnila(ielphia Times. A large
t:ng without regard to the season for ,1,,J1- -nirtneers. locomotive ex-
i ,rti :md others interested in the
Boy ood t attle. I increase of speed on railroads visited
We have advised dairymen who' the hall during the ua.
TALKED OF HAWKING.
be-
i of the
wish to nu Drove their herds to at
tend public sales of pure-bred dairy
stock aud buy cows or bulls, if they
can do so at reasonable prices. At
a recent sale of Cuernstys, in rb.il-
Speaking of his invention Mr. Kich
ards said; "If the new engine I am
altout to construct for exhibition at
the World's Fair in Chicago cannot
make over 100 miles an hour 1
Will
adelphia, ihe average made was about ; give it away to the first persoii i nm i-
h tir.lr.u, do not c aim mat tins win oe u.
buck. Fig. 11. In Fijr. 12 we give
an improvement to the ordinary buck
that will be apparent to any one who
would like to vork his big two man
cross cut saw alone. The sawing arm
into which the saw is inserted is
slotted, as the saw will require free
dom to slip up and down in the slot
and is fastened by a pin through the
cross slot. Farm and homo.
Successful Planting.
A good experiment was made 1n
timber planting by B. Hathaway of
Michigan, which he reported in the
Prairie Fanner. lie set 150 trees,
alternating with sugar maple and
white pine, one rod apart, along the
roadside. They were placed on the
west or windward side of his culti
vated farm. They have served as a
windbreak for twenty years, lie has
also set a line entirely of maples,
which he procured from a natural
growth some miles away. The maple
being an easy tree to transplant, very
few were lost. From these maples
he has made syrup and sugar for ten
years without harm to the trees.
This reminds us of a plan partly car
ried out by another person. The
I public road passes through his farm
with a slight and uniform ascent.
Planting a line of sugar maple trees
' ton feet apart along the border of the
I road he proposes to tap them for sap
as soon as they are old enough and to
conncet them all by a small wooden
ifO, some cows selling mu
that figure. A good Dure-bred dairy
cow is worth from $73 to $100 if she
is fed and cared f ir as she ought to
be. Ibis is not mere say so, but'
can be proved by figures from actual
praetie. We don't advise anyone to
buy a pure-bred c ow with the expec-1
tation of having her prove her su-.
periority over a scrub unless she be '
given a fair chance to do so, for dis-l
appointment will be the result. But
if one is capable of giving a cow gen- j
erous tieatment (and this im-ludes
care as well as feed) lie will find the i
most profit in keeping the best cow
he can buy or breed. At the sale
mentioned, we nriticed that a bull j
calf sold for 89, which was low enough ;
to suit the purse of almost anyone. I
We don't understand why it is that!
so many dairymen will breed to com-
mon or grade bulls when pure-bred
ones can be so cheaply bought It h
about time that the prejudice against
"fancy" sto -k was done away with.
Fancy stock, nowadays, means the
most profitable stork that a farmer
can keep. Think it over; ask yom
pure-bred stork-keeping neighbor foi
figures: read the papers and compare
results from keeping the best stock
with those von have been content
with so long. National Stockman.
A FiMUter iintff.
Take two poles 14 feet long, 2 cros;
pieces, 2 standards, 3 standard braces,!
2 cross braces from standard to tin I
runners; another cross stick; all se !
cured with bolts. Take the hind
wheels oft a wagon,
for it, mount the
through the end
augur for
vance one
rnak a tonguf
drag with pin;
Cse a 11 -inch
holes. With this contri
man can haul as muc'n
fodder as two men with a frame on a
wagon. Practical Farmer.
My Year's Profit.
poultry account for !. was
not large, but it shows that poultry
will pay for itself if cared for in the
right way. The feed cost $27. 04, and
they were credited with eggs sold tc
the amount of 0.79, chickens 20.2.7,
or tin trough extending from tree to j et's used 2G-53 and 5 bb!s manure at
tree, and thus collect the sao from "" 3-u- making a total income ol
ih u-iininin thoeo eiirpescivp trnntrha ! 63.29, and leaving a profit of 3(1.2.")
. . ... . .. ." Thi. i i
at the bottom ot tne. descent into a
Agricultural Atoms.
Plant deep in dry weather; shallow
in wet.
Keep the weeds out and the crust
broken. . ,
Cut your grass early; it is more ap
petizing. Grow such crops as are adapted to
your soil.
Ose can plant more than he can
cultivate.
It is better not to stir a porous soil
too much.
Right planning saves both ' time !
and labor. j
Do A little thinking and contriving
every day.
Broad tires on the farm save the
moist turf. j
Poor feed and care are worse than
hard work.
Have a field of clover
every year.
Grow a little something else
sides wheat
Don't plant corn until the soil
well warmed.
.Insoluble fertilizers are of no
practical use.
All fertilizers should be well mixed
with the soil.
Plow deep, according to the char
acter of the soiL
There are no weed seeds in com
mercial fertilizers.
. Small farms do best because they
"they are best tilled.
A clat soils needs much care to
Veep it from baking.
It is a (Treat mistake to stint in
amount of grass seed.
growing
bc-
is
i suitable evaporating pan, where the
I pure sap can i e evaporated into white
j and crystalline sugar. Country tien
: tleman.
1'roiii flu' Dairy,
.A took cow is a dead weight which
will drag a man to the bottom of
the slough, of despond.
' Better buy your milk and butter
of the neighbors than to keep a cow
that will not pay her keeping.
Educate the butter-maker and
slaughter the ponr cow, if you" expect
to make any money out of dairying.
Short pasture makes a short yield
of milk unless supplemented with a
grain ration and plenty of fodder
corn.
Do unto your cows as you would
have them do unto you. It you are
stingy with feed they will be stingy
with milk.
There is no grain equal to oats for
ifeeding to calves, and mixed
j ground com there is no better
for milch cows.
There is hope for poor butter-
i maker i, as they can be educated; but
I for poor cows there is none, as they
I cannot be made oyer,
j As well expect to reach the top of
! a flight of stairs by climbing up
! steps and falling down three as to ex-
I pect to make any profit on a poor
cow.
The axiom "A penny saved is
worth two earned" is practically illus
trated by feeding unthrcshed oats to
cows and calves. Try it once, and
you will never waste any time, money,
and labor in threshing oats.
Ok course, after milking your cows
all summer you know what each can
do, and whether you are milking her
at profit or a loss, so you will have
no trouble in telling which ones to
sell to the butcher.
It is easier to keep a cow up to her
regular flow of rnilk with a little feed
than it is to bring her back to it
after she has shrunk off it, with a
good deal of feed. This is an in
stance wberc "an ounce of prevention
is worth a pound of cure." Corre
spondent Farm, Stock and Home.
The account does not include the
chickens eaten, and values the egg'
eaten at 25c per do.. I have kept M
hens most of the time. My hens arc
Barred Plymouth Rocks, which 1
think cannot be excelled for all pur
poses. It took me only about20 min
utes each clay to take care of them, 01
i three hours a week, which gave nif
j 20c an hour. I set 82 eggs anci
j hatched out 78 chicks. My hens laid
j 1005 eggs, or 133 doz.. an average ol
j 89 1-0 eggs per hen. The hens were
i kept shut up from April to Septem
ber and let out a few minutes before
1 dusk two nights a week. I changt
i cockerels every year and think this is
the reason the eggs hatch so well.
W. II. Miller, Jr., Westchester Co.,
"ew York.
Turnip Instead of Slop.
A correspondent says: Last year
I bad an acre that was too wet to
plant tn corn. About tbe 16th of Au
gust I sowed two-thirds of it in
turnip seed. I would have sowed all
cf It but 1 did not want to fool away
ao much time. Late la tbe fall I
priled 160 bushels of turnips. 1 tried
to Mil t&em In tbe home market
, Qm nwenMt Anally offered to take
mm or two bushels a week at fifteen
Casta s biiiaei, provided 1 would take
Pruning Shrub.
Late summer and fall blooming
shrubs may be pruned tbis month and
make a much better appearance
through the winter. They may he
pruned as sharply as desired, for the
bloom coming on tbe voting shoots
will then have an opportunity to grow
between spring and tbe blooming
period. Tbe novice will note that
this fall pruning appjlea tolate bloom
ing plants. Spring blooming shrubs
should receive their main cutting
IHlllH tO lfOUSC!kO!M'lH.
Put salt on the hot clinkers in yo.
stove or range after raking down ttTc
fire, and it will remove them.
OliAXOE neel dried nd rrr:iter1
with j makes a yellow powder that is de
food licious tor favoring cakes and pud
dings.
Flint glass ground to a powder and
mixed with the white of an egg
makes one of the strongest cement
known, Galvanized articles may be cleaned
two j by a solution of one part of borax tc
i eight parts of water. Rub on well
i with a brush.
I To remove bits of paint from win
dow glass, put some soda in very hot
water and wash the glass with its
using soft flannel.
Oxe of the easiest ways to catch
up a superfluity ot water on your
color picture is to lay on a clean sheet
of blotting paper. 1
Dark brown sugar slowly dissolved
in a little water on the stove fur
nishes a syrup scarcely inferior to the
product of the maple.
Peel off the vellow skin of a lemon,
rejecting the white, cover with
alcohol and in a few days a pure
lemon extract will be ready for use.
Wet boots and shoes may (be ktrpt
from shrinking out of shape when
drying, if, as soon as taken off, they
are tightly stuffed with newspapers.
If the stovepipes are found to be
rusted when taken down, rub thor
oughly with lard. The good pipes
may also be preserved in the same
way. .
Oilcloth should never be washed
In hot soapsuds; they should first be
washed clean with lukewarm water,
then rubbed dry with a cloth wet in
milk.
highest rate of speed it will be capa
ble of making, for I believe tin- sj-ed
will I practically unlimited. By
that 1 mean the engine will be capa
ble of going much faster than anyone
would care to travel. If the machine
is successful, as I firmly believe it
w ill tie, it will revolutionize the en
tire construction of all the high-speed
locomotives of the future. I have
leen working on this invention for
over ten years, though the drawings
were only completed about the first
of September. After this the patent
was applied for, and as soon as it was
granted I had the working model,
now in the builders' exchange, made
for the purpose of exhibiting it to tin
public.
"The new inventions will enable a
L'ftrantic stride to be taken in the
; matter of high-speed locomotives, and
j it Is more than likely that the time
between Philadelphia and New l orl!
will be decreased to less than an hour.
I intend to make the first trial trii
between this city and Chicago with
the engine I will have built for the
World's Fair.
'In outward appearance the new
locomotive will not differ material!
from the speedy ones now used by out
company between this city and New
York. The driving-wheel will be a
triiie larger, being 0 feet high in
place of 3 feet H inches, as at present,
and the engine 111 weigh fifty tons,
a small increase over the present
weiirht . The peculiarity of construe-1
tion lies in the fact that instead ol
tbe two cylinders as now uied then;
will be four
"One cylinder will be located on
each side of the locomotive frame, a;
at present, and the other two will br
cast on what is known as the cylinder
Raddle. The inside cylinders are U
be cast in one piece and will be hori
zontal to the outside ones. The foui
cylinders will entirely overcome what
is known to engineers as the dead
center and the engine will lie per
fectly balanced without any counter
balance in the driving wheels. Tlib
latter improvement will be the mcam
of saving from 30 to 50 per cent, ol
the present wear and tear on the
roadbed, as it will do awny with th
vicious pounding which has proved s
destructive to modern roadbeds.
'The engine will glide smooth!
and easily along, and there will not
be any of t.ie sudden starts and jerks
so noticeable in fho-e of the present
time.. These are'speeially noticeable
in the starting, when it is necessary
to reverse the engine before a start
can be made. In my invention,
owing to the perfect balance, this
win not tie necessary, the -engine
starting forward as soon as the-valve
is opened. -
,"You can see how smoothly and
easily the engine works by the model.
This, though it has been running 100
miles an hour for over a day, and
though it, is placed on a movable; sup
port without any fastenings what
ever, has not shitted during that
time one-sixteenth of an inch from its
first position. .
"An eisy way to describe my loco
motive would be to say it is two en
gines consolidated into one, so ad
justed that when the balance of one's
driving-wheel is on top that of the
other is beneath, and vice versa."
Lj uiid J. -r AU.lrrMM tight Ilondre
, Northwestern ttnlul.
Lvman J. Gage, President of the
First National Bank of Chicago, gave
a lecture on "Banks and Bank. ng"
in the First Jlethodist Church,
Evanst ia The iecture was ire uri,
nne in the series to be delivered
fr-.if! the nolitical science clai
College of Liberal Arts of North
western University during the com
int winter and soring. Mr. i:lge
is a trustee of the Northwest
ern Cniversity and formerly wa a
resident of Kvanston. It was his in
terest in the University and its well
fare that induced him to prepare and
deliver this lecture.
Tne arrangements were first made
to have it delivered in the chap-l of
Memorial Hall on the college campus,
but manv Citizens expressing a wi-h
to hear the lecture the First Meth
odist Church was thrown open for
the purpose. It was an enthusiastic
audience of tr students and others
that greethed Mr. Gage, and ho held
his hearers cluscly t ) the end of his
lecture, which was most interesting
throughout
The speaker was introduced by
Prof. John H. Gray, the new instruc
tor in political science in the Uni
versity. Mr. Gage said, among other things:
The banker is generally regarded as
a dealer in money. He is o only in
cidentally. 11 is primarily a dealer
in credits and instruments of ex
change. This is easily seen by obser
vation. Let us, in an imaginary
way, develop a course of event which
are daily taking place in the actual
business of banking. Mr. A. applies
to his banker for a loan of 0.iM'O.
lie asks for a loan of money, but if the
banker grants bis request bo really
gets a credit uiiora the banker's books,
against which, lie may draw his
checks. To be virc, he may draw out
the cash, but as he Imirows only to
buy something or so nay ;"1 existing
debt his check answers the piirji-ise.
He therefore gives his rhecks to IS.
and C. and I. and K., who are re
spectively dealers with Mr. A's
banker. They bring A's checks to
tlie bar.k and dei:o-;it them ftr their
own respective credit
lie subject to their
orders. Multiply
sV- F m ftamnrtMJM ss
. bi s, jn u vr nj at u urjii. it-
the banker Duds that hi J
x i"jn-nj an flow
sate, col on ttie ordinal
credit but for cash, falls ij
below its natural a-.J
is universal, it is
when these evil
at
unfoni
Con.semi,.,
reacnen a enmax a procest
btruciiou anu n storation
A m biilMiiff's of j-
Few cities to-day pre-ri
i .1 ; .
nious anu practical a luea
prevention of contagious
Fans.
Among the reforms late'
there are tbe ambulanci
tho city government
Ten of these are used
diseases, such as diphtheria
scarlatina, smalliox or typlJ
nunc vtiu miiici twij iirQ m
patients atiacKi-a with
gious diseases.
unese venicies nave four
provided wnn ruooer tires.
drawn by one horse, Thi-cJ
rounded in the interior, andti
iron sides are painted ana val
iney contain a nexiwe intta
for the nurse and a litter for
tienu . moocr tut
communicating with
Til
for 1
the dr;
winter they are heated with
Each of these vehicle) js
of carrying one adult pauot
children afflicted with the $J
lagious uiseasc. xne amtm'J
closed by the driver, wliom-J
the key iu ins pocket; but tJ
can I opened from the interii
tence.
The litter put In use is join!
that tne patient can U- either
or placed in a reclining pisturJ
out Having to he disturU-d. j
ranged as an armchair f .rdwtl
stairways and as a tM-d in the
lame. The invalid rest
cushion or pure horsehair, whirl
oe passed through the stove f
dell into iHTiod.
Die patient having ln hi
downstairs, the legs of the lift.
where tiy j placed upon the rollers dt-sd
fut ure checks or lacuitaU! its introduction or r4
the trail-action through rails arranged in the
Watkk without shade loses half IU
value to the hogs; both are necessary
In the pasture in the summer.
Too Mm-h lor II I in.
i i ii - .i . .
jv tau, siiemn-iooKing young m in
entered the restaurant with a mild.
apologetic air and seated himself at a
vacant table near the middle of the
room, says the Detroit Tribune. It
was evident that he dreaded to In
trude. He wanted to get as far away
from other people as possible. He
even blushed painfully when he gave
nis oruer, ana tne most casual ob
server could have told that he wa
bashful,
Just as his dinner was brought to
him a buxom-looking woman with
seven small children entered the
place. The head waiter swept the
field with his eye. pounced down upon
the table where the young man had
sought solitude, motioned to the
mother, who clucked to the chickens,
and a moment later they were nil
around that one table. That young
man's face was a serial story.
Other people entered the restau
rant, glanced at the group, smiled
significantly and seated themselves
"Ue docn't look it, does he?"' queried
a pleasant-faced old lady in an audi
ble whisper. "She looks at least ten
vcars older than he?" murmured a
girl at the next table.
He flew to the hatrack, threw n
dollar to the cashier, and tried to get
through the door without opening it
Mr LiVEitNAsn of Santa Rosalias
acquired a habit of shooting at peo
ple. He claims that he only docs
this when lost in a state of auto
hypnotism. The alleiraM
i.Yi . " intuit;
with some show of reason that to be
hot by the hypnotic process is verv
like being shot with tho ordinary ac
cessories. It would certainly be rea
sonable to ask LWernash to also hyp
notlse hl trgts, as he seems S
have an unfair advantage andor pre?
nt arrangements. v
many fold and you will understand
how it is that in the daily receipts
over a banker's counter the great dis
parity exists as shown a moment lie
lore bet.veen the amount of checks
and the amount of cash, ilcfeeting
upon what has just been said, vou
will perceive also that the banker
gains interest not only by lending
money, but more largely by loaning
his credit
Now, there is one imlispensaUeam!
ever-ruling condition wnlch the
banker must observe and oU-y it he
long continues the exercise of his vo
cation. It is this: be must always
be ready to respond to-a call for' cash
from those who have credit balances
on his liooks. Ordinarily such de
mands are extremely limited, but
circumstancesmayarise which will!
make them extraordinary. It is the !
ever-present possibility of such exi- j
gencies that gives the thoughtful and I
conscientious banker anxiety and I
care. To guard against them he
carries at all times an Important por
tion of all his liabilities in cash. Tbe I
National Hanking law requires that!
national nanKs uoing ousiness in cer
tain
4
Ibis litter Is made of inm
painted and varnished. A
are punched in the tiottom of
order to give a greater liglitnsJ
children a Jitter In the foi
band-barrow is used. It. iseaiM
that these apparatuses can
easily disinfected.
Tint Oriittiiieiits or llnine.
It has been said thattheornj
of every home are the friend
visit it. Now, though caller-
more intimate acquaintances ml
morally decorative, still the real
menisoi ins nomc are the w
who live In it. They are the hi
prettim-ss that turn even plaisj
roundings Into something tnoii
tractive and delightful to the
who wends his way thither at i
fail or sets out from tliencej
morning to assume the dutiw
posed ukiu the breadwinner.
"What is h. Hue without a motl
is a very much parodied exura
yet in it lies a concise and m
truth, though wife, sisters, ilaugH
each and all types of home femisj
go as much toward the making!
important cities shall maintain I tliat 011(3 ercial nest fur many
at all times a minimum of 23 per
cent of their total liabilities in legal
money. The law is a wise; one so far
as it goes, but it is impossible to ade
quately direct oy written statues in
a matter so delicate and flexible as
this. Not less important than his
reserve in cash are tho quality and
character of the notes and obliga
tions of his debtors which he carries
in his portfolios. They ought to
represent some form of existing
value, either held by himself as se
curity or under the control or his
debtor. In tho credit system every
honest financial obligation is given
eiuierio aid in the production of
value or to transfer property of value
in the course of Its distribution from
the producer to the consumer.
For the success of his affairs It is
necessary that peace and order pre
have been deprived of the temlcij
loving care of pap'tits year ago.
A sunny-faced wife, who luW
husband good by in the moriiii
bright-eyed daughter who follow
to tin! door with gay little nii
lions as to the cares of his hi
during the day, or a sister whoa
his gffives and hat In rendlne
him as an act of affectionate
tion, these are tne ornamented
home he leaves behind
a man remembers, thwugn ho
not be able, to save his smil,
call the especial name of anjr
his cabinet or on his dinner tw
Do not forget this, ye little
circle of busy women. Make
selves bright and attractive
men folks that belong to pa
they will not Invent so manj
engagements and lodge meet"
vail; that industry thrive; that pro-! (mler to Kct away from you.
lauor oe nur v compensated- tint . "'.- n m -cai.li.il.
ihn tV-.i ..V ..J,.., V,-,111:11 hc-licv.-a ill the United SW
should steadily increase Vsleta, situated on the Wo j
Now, there 'is a stratum t,-i, ,.,, "ear El Paso, the chief M
oft fi,c ...!. . . the county of that, name. I'l
Z -"u 'en"a! Population of 2..100 souls.
IllVt L' t '( Ifll I Tl i 1 r 14J I T " -
have existed. 1'rosperity begot con-
fldencc; confidence makes credit ,,r,. '
effective and tends to stimulate
prices; rising price invite specula
tion, to fupp'irt which credits en...
is one of neeuliar interest ah"'
Its age. its iK'onlc. its archil
Its nLTleulturn. and its eenei
UlneU. It in i. u.-n.psi.-ililishel
i torical fact that a .Spanish W
more largely into usr- ti, i pxiionr named coraimo am
............ .... , . - "v.u.j ,., ,.,n ,l f,,mu il
k.uu.s oi niuusi ry ana trade seem slow i ' JL
and small compared with the n nick ' IK'l,ul"lls "d prosperous
and brilliant achievements of the i ''ommunlty- 1,0 wa im,,"rJ
speculator and promoter. Hank do ' k,wetl l,y the Franciscan frjT
posits increase (Instruments of credit i crenc1 church and e
HChonla Vul.-fn Is believed!
been a considerable cent!,
latlon centuries Ixjfore they
rstri.rwl. 1 ii fit. a nun
rii nil ii.ll.. " - -
other r,.i.,..;n. XZ:. "i ! considering the advance
icing multiplied). The nouveau rlehc
'mid new houses and furnish thorn
with all that is rare and i.ntir..i
pi . """""i
papcjs quote society
;,'ny, and in
the
,...,, I,..., uviuenccs or prosperity
which on every side appear. fUt to
Urn who sees through tho apparent
Iho real these new conditions are
,L V-V" hUjn of a Wiring
florin. alues cannot, rnrvr ..,
upward. The expanding vol,,,,,,.
credit by wnlch thev h.,,,,
i vital relation to the m-jney mlpi,y
;"! though the relations may K
time be Ignored, it will finally be re
asserted. When this f i,,,,. J, .Vs.
whole fictitious fabric Is tu,
ml we arc exposed to the retributive
eiTccu of what Is know,, T
da panic Then under tho law that
iicllon and reaction are equal, credit
v, ii-Kii,iniaic and
tlou from kurone, that th
oi people cxiri in iuu
n pa nniti rAi in Iia aianiA V
and mechanical pursuit Kt
f-.thnr at. thai mriod '
fathers at
preceding.
fhia'a AMMft'
A I-,I,I fart Cn
vivnnvl with the aid 0
the twentieth genera.'"- u
this present each person
i nfMi not! nf ancMtor. M
flguVcs are 1,048,ot '-.
, will verlfr
9 .. .wl)
eight
doubll
tion urn
rkt
ft
an '
this
dnp
of tl
If mi1
chil
brec
Mb;
.rl
Ioca
In
E
rV'rl
Wl
wi
yo
b
sizi
I
boa
lod.
lit. I
till
HI
e
4
ri
(
c
c
ggrcga
given w-
fcs sssssssssfiiwsisM-Mssss' mmmGMH
wmei it once enjoyed
" --r"'-' VjV.y