Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 September 1886 — AN EXPERIENCE WITH CHICKENS. [ARTICLE]

AN EXPERIENCE WITH CHICKENS.

BY BILL NYE.

My Deab Son: We are still pegging along here at home in the same old way, your mother and me. We are neither of us real well, and yet. I suppose we are as well as folks at our time of life could expect to be. Your mother has a good deal of pain in her side all the while, and I am off my feed more or less in the morning. Doc has fixed me up some condition powders that he says will straighten me out right away. Perhaps so. Doc has straightened out a good many people in his time. I wish I had as many dollars as he has straightened out people. Most every spring I’ve had to take a little dandelion root, limbered up with gin, but this year that didn’t seem to get there, as the boys say. I fixed up a dose of it, and took it day and night for a week, till I wore that old dandelion root clear down to skin and bone, but ih ten days my appetite was worse than ever, and I had a head on me like a 2-year-old colt. Dandelion root never served me that way before, and your mother thinks that the goodness is all out of it, may be. It's the same old dandelion root that I’ve been using for twenty years, and I believe when you’ve tried a thing, and proved it’s good, you ortent to change off. I tried to get your mother to take a dose of it last week for the pain in her side. Fixed up. a two-quart jug of it for her, but she can’t bear the smell of gin, so I had to take it myself. Dandelion is a great purifier of the blood, Henry’. Some days after I’ve been taking this dandelion root for an hour or two, I feel as if my blood was pretty near pure enough. I feel like a new man. You know I w’roteyou last winter, Henry, that I was going to buy some new-fangled hens in the spring, and go into the egg business. Well, I sent east in Maci.h for a couple of fowls, one of each sect. They

came at $9 per pair over and above railroad charges, which was some $4.35 more on top of that. I thought that as soon as the hen got here and got her things and got rested she would proceed to lay some of these here high-priced eggs which we read about in the Poultry-Keeper»’ Guide and America;. Egoist. But she seemed pensive, and when I tried to get acquainted with her she would cluck in a croupy tone of voice and go away. The rooster was no doubt a fine-looking brute when he was shipped, but when he got here he strolled around with a preoccupied air and seemed to feel above us. He was a poker-dot rooster, with giay mane and tail, and he was no douLt refined, but I did not think he should feel above his business, for we are only plain people who aie accustomed to the sel - made American hen. He seemed bored all the time, and I could see by the way he acted that he pined to Be back in Fremont. Ohio, having his picture taken for the Poultry-Keepers’ Guide and American Eggist. He still yearned for approbation. He was used to being made of, as your mother says, and it galled him to enter into our plan, humdrum home life. I never saw such a haughty rooster in my life. Actually, when I went out to feed him in the morning he would give me a cold, arrogant look that hurt my feelings. I know I’m not what you would call an educated man nor a polished man, though I claim to have a son that is both of said things, but I hate to have a rooster crow over me because he has had better advantages and better breeding than I have. So ther i was no love lost between us, as you can see. Directly I noticed that the hen began to have spells of vertigo. She would be standing in a corner of the hen retreat, reverting to her joyous childhood at Fremont, Ohio, when all at once she would “fall senseless on the earth, and there lie prone upon the sward,” to use the words of a great writer, whose address has been mislaid. She would remain in this comytoes condition for between five minutes, perhaps. Then she would rally a little, slowly pry open her large mournful eyes, and seem to murmur, “Where am I?” I could see that she was evading the egg issue in every’ way and ignoring the great object for which she was created. With the ability to lay eggs w’orth from $4 to $5.75 per dozen delivered on the cars, I could plainly see that she proposed to wrap up this great talent in a napkin and play the invalid net. I do not disguise the fact, Henry, that I was mad. I made a large rectangular affidavit in the inner temple of the horse-barn that this poker-dot hen should never live to say that I had sent her to the seashore for her health when she was eminently fitted by nature to please the public with her lay. I therefore gave her two weeks to decide on whether she would contribute a few of her meritorious articles or insert herself into a chicken pie. She still continued haughty to the last moment. So did her pardner. We therefore treated ourselves to a $9 dinner in April. I then got some expensive eggs from the effete East. They were not robust eggs. They were layed during a time of great depression, I judge. So they weie that way themselves also. They came by express, and were injured while being transferred' at Chicago. No one has traveled over that line of railroad since. I do not say that the eggs were bad, but I say that their instincts and their inner life wasn’t what they ort to have been. In early May I bought one of these inkybaters that does the work of ten setting hens. I hoped to head off the hen so far as possible, simply purchasing her literary efforts and editing them to suit myself. I can not endure the society of a low-bred hen, and a refined hen seems to look down on me, and so I thought if I could get one of these ottymatic inkybaters I could have the whole process under my own control, and if the blooded hens wanted to go to the sanitarium and sit around there with their hands in their pockets while the great hungry world of traffic clamored for more spring chickens fried in butter they might do so and be doggoned. Thereupon I bought one of the medium size, two-story hatchers and loaded it with eggs. In my dreams I could see a long procession of fuzzy little chickens marching out of my inkybater arm in arm, every day or two, while my bank account swelled up like a deceased horse. I was dreaming one of those dreams night before last at midnight’s holy hour, when I was rudely awakened by a gallon of cold water in one of my ears. I arose in the darkness and received a squirt of cold water through the window from our ever-watchful and courageous fire department. I opened the casement for the purpose of thanking them for this little demonstration, wholly unsolicited on my part, when I discovered the hennery was in flames. I went down to assist the department, forgetting to put on my pantaloons as is my custom out of deference to tne usages of good society.' We saved the other buildings, but ihe hatchery is a mass of smoldering ruins. So am I. It seems that the kerosene lamp which I kept burning in the inkybater for the purpose of maintaining an even temperature, and also for the purpose of showing the chickens the way to the elevator in case they should hatch out in the night, had torched up and ignited the hatchery, so to speak. I see by my paper that we are importing 200,000,000 of hens’ eggs from Europe every year. It’ll be 300,000,000 next year so far as I’m concerned, Henry, and you can bet your little pleated jacket on it, too, if you want to. To-day I send P. 0. order No. 143876 for $3.50. I agree with the Bible, that “the fool and his money are soon parted.” —Chicago News.