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About Hemingford herald. (Hemingford, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1895-190? | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1896)
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PAT1UCK, the Root! old patron Bnlnt whoso ninr voIouh nilrnolos n n il benovolcnco IrlHhmnn tho world over will recall ut thla tlmo tho nn ntveisary of his death waH probn- bl about forty yonra old when lo landed oiiilho Inhoapltnblo shores of Ireland, niftj ho Is said to have continued hU Inborn tlnninchltiKly for tho space of four-wore years, until tho day or jus death, on March 17, 4X1 A. D., which would have made him almost a century and . (ltinrtor old. Thoio nro many doubting Thomases who auaort that tho good Balnt wob nolthor a Scotchman nor, aa some say, n Frenchman, but was in entirely mythical poraonaRo whom tho church cnnonlxod in order to constltuto a pat ron imint of wonder-working reputa tion. Tlifno I" a delightful homeliness nbeut most of tho old legends and tra ditions concerning thr rniint: their heto is so essentially human always, not wltUHtnndlng IUh transcendent gifts. All hearts wero won by his kindly and genial personality. It In rolated that when tho saint lay on his death-bed he was deeply touched at tho sight of his mourning followers. He gazed on them with pitying eyes, and with his last breath It is gravely m.Bortcd that ho murmured: "Tuke a drop of something for my sake." It Id said that tho art of distillation wue taught to tho Irish by St. Patrick, though ho had no mean reputation as a temporanco advocate. At nil events, "poteen" was named nftcr him. "When a boy of sixteen tho embryo missionary wan captured by pirates and sold to slavery in Ireland for seven years. Hut for this lucky chance, by the way, the Hmerald Islo might' still be unrcgencrate. Tho youth was em ployed as a swineherd on top of a lofty AUTHENTIC POIITUAIT PATRICK, mountain. Hero he was wont to medi tate on the urgent necessity of a little missionary onterpilse among the thon semi-barbarians. One night, so tho story goes, his lone ly vigil was interrupted by no less n persomrse than the deil himself. His Satanic Majesty had adopted the offotftusl disguise of a huge stone and attempted to frighten the future snint by jumping on hint. The lad, however, was nothing daunted, but, extracting himsoU spoedlly, called out In a ljty volao: "Hellas! Hellas!" At tho same moment the orb of day eaw fU to anticipate the wu, neoerti ing to tie almanac, by sevqral hourg, t a& rn Knnkn. I m ((( lal W W ' (mi fill i iH k OF ST. mnjui,nwimimijui.i)n-nmiu"i i imnmnnmimtBm ,yV rr .f- If i?r-:L .-r 'N; & V-?- sr biiMd! 6 .frv m-Jf teJJ A'J ";! T.'l' WS"-'' T .tT. , ' JhMtt run mmr xmwi l')r, Ht rnH nmt,friiKiti i !!, Mrwttiiv IH ujut IH! tn r Yn tftofitsrt caw unVni ltc m tIT sikwnt AAfruf.ift ni tw, A rwntrv Mm Ari ha v4mt "MAimi? rANCit M and rose gloriously upon tho scone. This was too much for tho Prince of Pin knees. He Hod In his natural shape, while tho swlnohord resumed his poat nnci tho sun discreetly sank to abldo tho oithodox time of rising. On a certain cold morning St. Patrick and hla followers woro on the summit of a bleak mountnin, with no appaicnt means of making a fire. To add to their discomfort snow was falling heavily, and it howling wind had arisen. Now v s tho opportunity for tho snint. Ho ore'ered all hands to collect snowballs together in it great hoap. then he quiet ly breathod upon the frosty mound, and In! flames burst forth Immodlntcly. Tho following touching poem allud inr to tho above Is of comparatively recent date: "St. Patrick, as in legends told, Tl.p morning being very cold, In order to asauago the weather, Collected bits of ice togothor; Thon gently breathed upon tho pyre, When every fragment blazed on lire. Ah: If the saint had been so kind As to havo left tho gift behind To such a love-lorn wretch ns me, Who dally struggles to be free, I'd bo content content with part, I'd only nsk to thaw the heart, Tho frozen heart of Polly Roc." A peasant family living near Doirast hi the early part of this century wcie the much-cnvled possessors of St. Pat rick's Jawbone. Tho re'llc was supposed to havo a su- prnuturai aiuo in determining the guilt or Innocence of a suspected crim inal. Tho accused ono bad merely to place his hand on tho Jawbone and tnko a soltann oath. In case he pcr Jmcd himself the most frightful pun ishment followed. It was also of great assistance to women In child labor, nnd was a sovereign remedy for epi leptic fits and to ward off tho evil eye, witches, fairies, etc. Everyone knows about tho most stu pendous mlraclo of nil tho miracles of St. Patrick, tho one which of Itself was cnought to make tho saint's name Immortal, but wo don't nil know how the feat was accomplished. Colgan, tho antiquarian, says that tho snakes wero banished from Ireland in tho following novel and Ingenious mnnncr: St. Pat rick procured an Immense drum and then walked forth over hill, dalo and valley while heating a most thundering tattoo. Right In the midst of his ardu ous labors a hole was knocked In tho top. whereupon the snakes all stopped shoit on tholr march to tho &e.t. In the nick of time an angel appeared nnd mended the drum. After this tho operation was continued to the end without further accident. Every rep- tllo was supposed to have left tho Is land, but the saint himself know bet tor. Thero was one snako that behaved so badly during tho grand march that St. Patrick conclndod to punish him. According to tho legend the recalci trant wrpent was confined in the gloomy depth of Lough Dllveen, in tho Galteo Mountains of Tipperary. It was understood that the prisoner should be reloosed from durance vllo on tho fol lowing Monday, when he would bo driven out to join his fellow-crawlers in the briny dcop. Alas! St. Patrick was so busy ho forgot all about It. At loast they say in Tipperary that on every Monday to this day the hapless snako comes to tho surface of tho lake and utters this plaint in Irish: "It's a longMondny. Patrick!" Tho shamrock In Iroland. as Is well known, Is always associated with tho snint. The popular roason glvon for its peculiar significance is undoubtedly tho true one "When St. Patrick commenced to preach the gospel to the pagan Irish ho found It very difficult to make them comprehend the doetrino of tho Trin ity. At last a bright Idea struck him. Ho displayed to the throng a sprig of tho common trefoil (shamrock) and in a moment his auditors grasped the idea how perfectly simple it was for three to emanate from one. Mutlml Notation. A Spanish musician has davbwd a system of musical notation by whiek the sharp and flat system is dons way with, The iP rounds of tft ladder of fame nr tw Md fur apart. in , ' ', itr v Lfcjftk'' r'V r -j'jm'jv. m iiiiii Miumrr " ' e3M ;ife'3 . r 'J tfj im i if7 awifc .' i.i ' mni i '',-ii U I "as '. 4 v - . tn r ." iui .. - -V-OI 7w V-v -TL-s s ST. PATRICK'S HYMN Onn of the Jlott Novel MniiutrrllitA In the World. One of the rarest erolrslaHtlc. a well as Irish, manuscripts In the world is the original of St. Patrick's hymn. When it was transcribed Is not known, hut it was probably done within a cen tury after the death of the patron aalnt of Ireland, nt which time n school of scribes flourished tinder his immodhtte suecoasor, St. Column, the prlncoly mis sionary who made tho beautiful copy of the gospel knows as the Rook of Kells. However that may ho, the man nserlnt Is now preserved In tho cele brated Hook of Hymns (Liber Hymnor um) In tho library of Trinity college, Dublin. Ulshop Usshcr expressed It ns his opinion that tho Hook of Hymns was at least t.000 years old In his time. Tho hymn of St. Patrick Is composed In the Beniln Fclne, n very ancient and aris tocratic dialect of the Gaelic, that in which tho Hrehon laws and tho very oldost tracts are written. Tho orthog raphy and many of tho words of this dialect became obsolete very early In the Christian era, when the Latin came to be used, so that tho date of the hymn becomes fixed within a certain century tho sixth. Moreover, it i3 distinctly alluded to In Tircchan's annotations oft the saint's life written In the sev enth century. In this ho stated that tjie Irish hymn ought to bo sung for ever. "B-it perhaps tho stiongcst proofs of Its antiquity arc to bo found in tho com position itself," says the learned Dr. Potrle. "A Christian living after tho establishment of Christianity would hardly Invoke the Deity to protect him from tho spells of women, smiths ani Druids; nnd the placing of the natural powers of tho Creator between hlmsolf and all ovll powers has no parallel In any Inter Christian composition. It may be doubted it the production would be regarded as orthodox In limes sub sequent to tho actual time of its pro duction. Hence it Is never mentioned in later lives of tho saint. Colgan simply Includes a hymn in his list of the saint's works, lint notwithstanding tho silence of tho writers. It is rcmnrk ablo that tho Lulreach Phndrulg Is still remembered In many parts of Ireland by the peasantry, and a portion of li Is repeated to this day. usually at bed timo, with the same confidence In it3 protecting powers as, according to St. 15in, was placed In It previously to hli lime." i:ciio or st. The wearing of the grceu. to tlm t'oolHtrix or St. 1'ntrlik. Whoever journeys In Ireland will make a St. Patrick pilgrimage whether he knows it or not, for tho missionary saint has associated his namo with spots in half the counties of old Erin. Hero ho blessed a field and it is fertile; there ho baptized a host of converts and the river swells with gladness throughout the. year; again he stopppd to drink at some wayside well and Its waters have healing In them still; thero a church raises a stately spire on the spot where some miracle was witnessed. A reminiscence, a legend, lingers aiound the grotto where the tourist goes to try tho echoes, and receives back a tone so silvery and sweet that It seems to carry a blessing to the care-1 lefs wayfarer. A day's journey by jaunting car west of Quccnstown a long arm of tho At lantic Ocean Bantry Bay forms a landlocked harbor. One emerald Island lies far up toward the head almost in tho shadow of tho Klllarney mountains. Somewhere behind those silvery peaks to tho north nestle tho lovely lakes. On bqth aides of tho bay tall cliffs climb to tho fleecy clouds that recede in the transparent blue brightness. A gorge, widening to the deep, enchanted Val ley of Olengarlff. opens to the west. To this sunny glaue the mists never ciep up from tho sea, and Iniallds busk in tho healing sunshine. Far away, on the othor side of tho bay. If you watch you may see the Kerry maids, sure-footed as ehamois, climb the precipitous cliffs to whore a stream of water gushes over a rocky ledge. A pent house is raised over tho holy well, n crucifix rudely rnrvod in the face of tho cliff Bits of bright gar ments, paper flowers, and ends of can dles are Impaled on the whltothorns ami laurel bushes near It. Eleanor Atkin son. T.urk and l'lili'k. Thero is no such thing as luck. Luck is pluck. Luck Is a foolish doctrine of fate; it i's the silliness of supposition; It 1 the cynicism of fools, Incompetents and failure. You never hear .1 toul sensible man talking about luck; he knows the meaning of patience and painstaking oare. of onergy nnd economy. J. G. Rust. !lirltm,n t'oleliratlon. Iii the fourth century te celebration of C:risiias was fixed by the Latin ciuu'eh for Dc St. Before that time it had len a nue.lil ftatiwl, Uke lJaatar. Pr SI v--- BLACK SPOTTED FREIBURG BULL DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. IIott Fnrrnfut farmer Oprrntn Thli nopnrtiiient of tlm Vnrm A 1'cw Hints am to tho Curn of I.Ira block rid I'oultry. 0 It t w o n t y-flvQ years wo havo beon raising poultry of tome kind. How ever, I havo not been engaged ex clusively in that line, but havo kept the breeds pure for fancy. I have handled at various times Light Hrah- mas, Huff Cochins, Silver Laced Wyandottcs, Red and White Leghorns and Darred Plymouth Rocks. Tho Darrcd Plymouth Rock is the best all around chicken wo have tried. It is quiet, matures early and Is a good layer of good sized eggs. Wyandottcs come next. In the winter they are housed, but in the summer they tako to tho apple trees for roosting. Wo think they are healthier this way. "We feed corn at night nnd wheat In tho morning; they also get some lime, boiled potatoes and so on for change. Wo are feeding at this tlmo cooked ap ples mixed with ground wheat. Our market Is St. Louis. It is usually glut ted with poultry and eggs, great quan tities of which come from the South and West. We see by the market reports that the market In Chicago Is much better all the time than it is in St. Louis. In winter wo get a fair supply of eggs, but do not make a specialty of winter eggs. Wo seldom lose fowls from disease, lice or predatory animals. Wo havo always adhered to tho hen while brooding, and have been as suc cessful as we expected to bo. Tho main point is to give the broods good caro while they aro young. We havo never tried doctoring poul try. If a chicken Is seen to bo nlling we cut off its head. Wo use crude carbolic acid In tho drinking water. White Leghorns aro best for eggs and early maturity, but I had to discard them on account of their Hying into my hot beds, as tho products of my hotbeds bring mo much of my returns for work. Wo believe that the Cochins or feathery legged fowls havo no business on a farm. Their feathers aro a great nui sance in muddy times. On town lots they may be all right. The Egyptian Poultry association of Southern Illinois held tholr second an nunl show in Mavissa late In Decem ber. They had a grand show of poultry. There wero 64G birds exhibited. Among them wero threi Buff Cochln3 from England of past year's hatch. Mr. Hcm llch. of Litchfield, Illinois, was judge J. B. Matthews in Farmers' Review. Hotv to M'ln i:ei;. Every poultry keeper now wants eggs, because they aro scarce nnd bring a good price. Of course It is impossiblo to get as many eggs nt this season ns in summer, simply, for tho reason that winter and cold weather aro not the natural times for birds to lay, but yet, given good stocks nnd conditions as nearly approaching summer as may be, and tho lions will provo fairly prolific. A warm, light, sunny coop is very es sential. The house must be snug, yet have ventilators that may be opened in mild weather, for bad air is a very bad thing indeed for any species of animal life. Be sure also tho coop is dry. A damp house means colds, roup, and no profit. Grain is cheap, so feed tho best and a variety also. A good morning mash is mad' as follows: Take 4 parts bran, 4 pnrts ground oats, 3 parts corn meal, nnd 1 part linseed meal. Then combine with the grain mixture just.as much nolled potatoes, turnips, or car rots ns you uso of grain. Mix all in boiling water, salt and pepper lightly, and finally add a little meat scraps or greon cut none, this manes a roj.u winter's breakfast for poultry and will bring tho eg?s if anything will. Scat tor a few handfuls of whole wheat and oats about the coop a few times a day to keep the liens scratching. Food lightly on whole corn at night. Remem ber a cabbage once In a while. W. P. Perkins In Faimers' Review. r.i;Uili Vlrw of Hlusc To obtain a supply of suitable food ! y01- r0"nd U ota'w- an ' matter; therefore, a few suggestions on this Important subject may be useful to dairy farmers who plan out In their minds a possible food supply to carry their stock thtough another year. Ow ing to unforeseen events taking place which may seriously reduoe the amount of food oxpected on the arable land, it is certainly advlsablo to havo a reserve supply of food ready for uso at all sea sons qf tl yoar. In the cbm of a late spring, a supply of ilag will be found of groat aervls to th dairy farmor, J5$h) lNtrlelt Diiy. . - ..- who would otherwise havo to consider ably increaso the nmount usually paid for foods purchased; nnd if drought were to follow In sumrier this nmount would be still further increased, thus reducing the profit derived from tho dairy herd and other classes of live slock on the farm. Sllago Is about the best basis for forming a ration for all kinds of farm stbek that the stock-owner could wish for, s it supplies the place of grass In the winter food of stock, and can partly, or entirely, replace roots and bay. It would not he necessary to reduce tho area under crops or pasture, but sim ply to reduce tho area of meadow land and grow leguminous crops instead. Tho food supply would bo thua in creased, and a rcsone supply provided In case of drought or failure of crops. Srlagc would be given in the long state, thus dispensing with long hay or straw, and both sweet and cour silage could be made. Sweet silage would bo used for all classes of breeding stock nnd sour sllago for all classes of store and fat tening stock, and either kind, when properly made, will keep for years. Silage increases the quantity of milk when given with discretion, nnd butter from cows fed on good silage has tho quality, color and flavor that pertain to It in summer. By practising thl3 system of ensiling fodder crops, tho clnv-land farmer is able to provide winter food for hlB stock on land otheiwlso lcqulrlng to bo left fallow In summer; nnd tho light-land farmer Is able to winter a larger sheop stock when ho is solely dependent upon his root crop for food. Tho Dairy, (London, England). lllnrk SpnttPit frolliiirs Cnttlo. This Is a Swiss breed. The United States consulnr report says of It: Thero arc several off-shoot breeds de rived from the pure Bernese, known as the Freiburg, tho Fru tiger, the Illiez, and Ormond breeds, but they arc all more or less Inferior to the pure original race. As a principle, cross-breeding has failed In Switzerland, and the best results have always been obtained from in-breeding from tho pure original stock. Of these minor spotted breeds, the only one that deserves notice here is the Freiburg, which originated in the can ton of that name, and is still bred thero in great purity, although even thcio It Is gradually giving way In the best herds to tho light colored Saanen and Slmmenthal variety. The distinctive mark of the Freiburg cattlo is found in the fact that their spots are black. Many examples ato seen In which the entire animal is black, except perhaps tho head and a stripe under the belly. It Is fully as heavy as Its Bernese rival, but has larger, heavier bones, coarser flesh, and Is In other respects Inferior to It In tho technical points that characterize a per fect stock. As working animals and as milkers tho Frelburgers rank next to tho Bernese. I'oorly Supplied (,'rcimerle. Wo receive a gieat many complaints from farmers where new creameries havo been established. In most In stances tho cicnmerles aro not to blame. Tho farmers havo not yet furnished the conditions whereby they can make tho most profit out of the creamery. They aro furnishing half the amount of milk they should furnish. There aro thousands of farmers with 200 acres of land, who are keeping not more than 10 or 35 cows. The making of the milk from these few cows costs them nearly double per pound what It would if they niado four times as much. Thon they blame tho creamery for not giving thorn a better profit. They say tho creamery is charging too much for the making of the butter; when it Is hard to sco how the creamery can live with tho small amount of business there is to bo done, 'llicro arc thousands of thebe no-pioflt creameries all over the land. The farm ers about them keep two acres to do tho work of one, and two cows to produce what ono cow should produce. Every thing In and about that creamery Is mnrked by a lack of good, intelligent, dairy sonso. How can such men expect figs from thistles, or profits from ig norance oi sounu aairy cohuuioiib.- Hoard's Dalrynnn. Daltjr tuttriirtlon nt l.uilnc. Last week a representative of the Farmers.' Review visited the Blchigan Agricultural College at Lansing. The college Is certainly doing a great work in its various branehos, but the appli ances for dairy lns,tiuction are very lim ited. Tho dairy atudonts certainly do not have a fair show under such cuiidl- t tlons. There Is no branch of agilcul- I tural science more needful than that of the dairy, and It seems a greut mistake not to at once enlarge this department of the college. It may b that somo i plan is ou foot to better matters, but if so we have not heard of it. The pro fessors that nave the control of tho dairy work there muat labor under great disadvantage. We caa only hope that condltlnus will sueu uufie for ths better. A I'nlfii rtl Frmlt Air. The nir where a pnlm is kept must bo moistened y the evaporation of water about the plant, or by the npr cniion oi it to its foliage 1 rcsli a must be admitted to tako tlio place cfj that whose vitality litis been buu.c out by too intense heat, 'lho t itt must have a itlnco near the Wim'.tfu whore dltect light can exert its Wn -tlcinl oiled on tho soil. C.iro nw-t bo taken to givo only enough water to keep the soil moist Hood drainage must be provided also Washington Star. Autlilnti. for Curbolln Avlil. There seems to bo no restrictions to the sale or use of carbolic neid, one of the most powerful and dangerous poi sons known, and tho result is a largo number of cases of accidental poisoning aro reported Dr. Edmund Carlton recommends older vinegar ns tlio best antidote. Popular Science News. I'rrp to "Comrinlon." Tlio latest photograph of tho Hon. I. X. Walker, commander-in-chief of tho tlrand Army of the Republic Write to P. II. Lord, fjulncy Building, Chicago, and you will recelveono free. You will ne vol realize tlio senrcit of jour menus iiuuijou noeel one. J'illiurd tnble. i fccond-banil. for ik : address, H.C Akiv, , V.ih St, Omaha, No die on Arply to or i till S. Is thesenson tor purifying, eleausinjr, renewing. Tl.r accumulations of waso every wlu re aro being leinovcd. Winter s icy grasp is hroUon nnd on nil sides aro indications of nature's returning life, renewed force, nnd nuniicuiug power. 0 EFH '&: w Is the time for purifying the blood, cleansing the sjsteni nnd lenewli'f I lio physical powers. Owing to elce coi-' tbicincnt, diminished perspiration mid other cniibes, in tho winter, itnpu-'tirH have nol pulsed out of 1 lie si stem ns tliev should but have nccutmilclcil in the biond. I m &$ Is therefore the bet time to take Hi jiVj SRrsnparilla, uccrumj the system ia uiJ ' most in need of medicine. That HoCtfia Sarwirnrllln h the bett blood purifier nnd Spring medicine is proved by Its wonder ful curt-. A course of Hood's Sar.sapnrilU now may prevent great tiuficriug l.iler ou. Vft $r?ft fWvk WWvv . Sa.'sapari!laL: Is Hip One 'Irui' Wood l't r IW AlIdniKSli 51. l'roiaredonlj lij ( I I!ood& ( o . Imi II M i-s u i r-Mi r"r'' ' u,'r I,l'.,'csi 'o nOOCl S lJll!S UiUo ci i a. jih i ite ;. 'IT WITT NnTRTIROFF" a yki. iilM5 ? Am ftl tiiJ A luw. 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