Democratic Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 July 1889 — Page 8

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1 |n|. |ifL iinliMtiimn, i«pW- tetoncte4 t» in all lift and all nation —drinking fcL on trerr tide, learning, eagerly vgcdorinn, fijteaing to aQ around waib bright and raadr wit There is a pretty little etocy told by Kn. Kills in ber book about Mra. Ba»> bauld, how one day, adieu Da. ASkm and a friend “were oonrendng on thy passions." the doctor ebeerree that toy eaanot hare place is a state es perfect felicity, ainoe it eoppoMe an aeoeeefaa el happiness. “ I think yon are mistaken, papa,” says a little voioe from thy opposite side of the table. “ Why eo, my ehildr sagrsthe doctor. “Beoaose is the ehaptar I mad to yon this morning, in the festament, it is said that 'there Is mote Joy in heaven orer ony sinner that repeneth than ores ninety end nine fast persons that need no repentance. Vendee her English Testament and he* early reeding, the little girl was taught her mother to do aa little daughters in those days—to obey a somewhat posters rule, to drop curtsies in place, to make becks, to presem fruit* The father, after demur, but surely nef without some paternal pride In her proficiency, taught the oofld Latin and fttmch and Italian, and something at Greek and gave her ah acquaintance with Bnglisb literature. One can imagine Uttlo Nancy, with her fair head bending over her lessons, or, when playing-time had coma perhaps a little lonely and listening to the distent voiccff'of the schoolboys at tfc ir The mother, (earing she might acquire fon&i and boiswrou# manners, strictly forbade any porn luutii cation with the schoolboys. Sometimes in aftnr days, rs peaking of these early times and of the constraint S i many by gone rules end regulations, tu?«. liarbanld unod to Attribute to this euiiy, fonnal teaming munething of tha hesitation and shyness which troubled her and never entirely wore oft She does not seem to have been in any great harmony with her mother. One could Imagine a fanciful and high-spirited ehiid, timid, and dutiful, and yet strongWilled, seoretlv rebelling against the rigid order of her home, and feeling lonely for want of liberty and companionship. It was true she had birds and beast* and plants for her playfellows, but she was of a gregarious ana sociable nature, and perhaps she was unconsciously longing for something more, afid feeling a want in her early life which mi glent oompapy am fuppCbfto

If it is our purpose in rearing pigs that they shall be fattened and sold on the marftfit for pork, it will not be necessary that the dam is a pure-bred animal. Care in' this regard is needed only in case of the sire. If lie has come of a Well-established pure-bred fuinily oi good feeding animals, Ida progeny from well-formed and vigorous common or grade bows are usually all that can be desired as rapid growers and good feeders. Such sows will generally prove quite as profitable for this purpose aa the higher-priced pure-bred animals. In fact, common bows are, with a good ahow of reason, often deemed the better suited for rearing pigs to t>e fattened than are the pure-bred sows —first cost being left out of the question altogether. They are believed to be more hardy, from the supposition that their digestive and vital organs are hotter developed In reading your remarks on silos and other methods of curing corn fodder I was reminded .of the way in which it is often cured in Maine. After the com is husked (wliich is done as soon as the com is cut) the fodder is put in a mow or on a scaffold —a layer of straw and then a layer of fodder three or four inches thick, or so as to oover the straw, and so on. Usually some salt is scattered over each layer. The cattle eat it readily in winter, straw and all. It is doubtful whether in this climate and with the corn fodder as green as it is usually cut, it could be kept in that way. But if fodder from corn planted for fodder only—to be cut before the corn is matured, or that from oorn matured, is carefully cured and kept from the weather it makes an excellent food for cattle or horses. If cut and steamed 1 doubt not it would be equal if not superior to silo-fodder. When left out in the fields, exposed to the weather, mixed with dirt, dust and sand by the rains and winds, it is of little value. — J, P. S., in Philadelphia Record.

I ff XAF eaanot tell what tke needs a*| |mk of women and children ace, b* Alme he is not one of them, fie wffl Bfemember well enough, however, thas run to hie father but to ha comfort in his infancy; ra* j a auffieient argument, if*# minded man, to show him management of women a#4 roman ought to hate an at» »*y. —Toronto Week. , _ —« 1 - Bold jour baud iu very coUQputaf Jlfeai m a tight finger ftefr

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Bjroirt good mjing* hare been k «T nfcafc mouibe—in the month* es epme who hare claimed them w their Hear were admirable puna, ethers had a better claim to remembrance. The kat time I met him—a long time ago—l sat next him at dinner. "Be fools the tailor, is dead P remarked eur hoet. Indeed! What did be die #r “Of a fit,” said Byron, at on eel “what else eeald a tailor die off”— lonian WorH. ■ ■ «■— Loose’s Red Clover Pile Re' medv, is a positive specific for ul forms of the d Bliod. Bleeding, Itching, Ulcerated, and Protruding Piles; Price 50c. For B*l** by Long & Eger

The Formal "Call"

flatow man have foot inn to wfeWlal they bear bo port th that Browning bore of all borea fcown as Mia •formal ealL* That is a feminine institution. It is an invention el the sox, and the sex groans under its eMan smokes his Durham in e peace, while the wife and tars pay tribute to the formal call. He heart the sotio voce prayer that parties will he out, and that the matter can be dispatched with a card. He quietly notes the sigh of relief when the exhausted women return after hours of sodol distress. He observes the tax of drees incident to the affair, the bad temper it invokes, and tbn hypocrisy and total ehunce of any 2 uivalent in the way drtpieaaure for 1 this slavish adhereroe to oustom, d then dimly realises the mhaculoua felicity of his own escape from such ibrallaom, and it maybe takes comfort in the thought that the whole businesa E totally on those who have mad* pay the piper for counties* other a and whims of fashion and oaprioe. The elasticity of conscience with whiob the gentle creatures endeavor to mitigate the infliction of the formal call by convenient fibs, furnishes masculine monster some amusing food for study, and it may be doubted Whether he wotdd budge an inch to abolish the formal coll. It is diamond ft dkrnondi women annoying women. such a transaction the wise man holif loof and lets tbo dainty beiKjjerv.'te HUWcroeracßng as friend! manr. v tha hollow and artificial show as eulu ihemoalvea. It is not often Ih<«i ho ima an opportunity of keeping wt of a game in which women unary toair wits against one another instead oS against the common man. ot « i.t libuik to bo iudficiwawly *»lent and feaar tire fair prattlers discans ecwfe qib'w in a style utterly unlike (he fatwf racture* of novelista and poets, and § ke deesaft get some whohwome eaaUgbdfxf»-

Ter Arab and Bit Borsb.—Tbs Aw-biana never beat their horses; they never out their tails? they treat them gently; they speak to them and seem to Hold a discourse; they use them ao friends; they never attempt to increase their speed by the whip, or spur (hem, but in cases of great necessity. They never fix them to a stake in {he fields but suffer them to pasture at large ground their habitations; and they oqme tunning the moment they hear the #tmnd of their master's voice. In consequence of such treatment these animal* become docile and tractable in the highest degree. They resort at nigh 4 to. their tents, and lie down in the njidst of the children, without even hurting them in the slightest manner. The little boys and girls are often seen upon the body or neck of the inara, while the beasts continue inoffensive and harmless, permitting them to trfth and caress them without injury, Cauax and effect are net wa# boianeed. A man with a good cattle often make little or no effeefc

MAMMOTH FURNITURE WARE-ROOMS m-Bh Sits, Xhl Furnllsire. It Ma Fan. JOtr -3hr3i UQM Ks. W. WILLIAMS^ —DEALER IN—FORNfTORE WILIIAMS-STOOKTOH L’LOCK, Third Door West of Makeev er House, Hensselae, Indr Rensselaer Marie House MACKEY 4c BARCUS, —lDealer-N In — American and Italian Mat’bls, MOfIUJMENTO, TAKLF VS * BfIADSf9IIS, SIiAIS, SLATE AND MARBLE MANTELS. URNS AND VASES. Frtnt Street. Rensselaer" Indiana. )

An Açident.

Mr. De Prig (to Boston to a Dakota Hotel)—“Walter what caused the explosion Just now at the other end of the dining-room? Waa somebody shotr Waiter—“Oh, no, sir. We don’t al low shooting in the dining-room. The cook was a little careless and let a cartridge from his revolver fall in the soup, and the gent who was Just carried out happened to crush it between his teeth."

All desiring to move South are invited to investigate FLORENCE, ALABAMA.

In the selection of a business location, a pleasant home is also desirable, and in no place will the intending, settler meet with a more cordial welcome than is offered by the enterprising citizens of Florence, Alabama, and Lauderdaie county. The soil is diversified and yields readily, as is shown by the variety and quick growth of crops, consisting of cotton, corn, tobacco, wheat, oafs, sugar cane, dso apples, peaches and grapes. Florence excels in beauty of k-eoilon, being situated on the gently lulling plateau banks cf tire, kk Fiiver — navigable for the la. *est class of steamboats. xlm records show singular exemption A » kJaJX Mid larial. diseases, and thomda temperature, pure air and water make it a desirable resort, both summer and winter, from the extreme beat of the South and the rigorous cold of theNoith. Aside from this it is on the basal line of the new non and copl discoveries, and with abundant water-power supply, fa - vorable transportation facilities, ky rail and pa; kot, and by virtue of close eiuximity to valuable ores not round mother localities, Florence is destined to become the metropo 1 k o? the State, and will necessarily concentrate the bulk of industries in this region. The count.y iiuitii of Florence ia covered with a primeval gro vth of imm rose poplar, whitooaks, maple, hickory, pme, and walnut trees, and within a few miles large quarries of beautiful marble °re found. Building stone and limestone abound all over the county. The erection of the finest college building in the South was commenced May 13tli, and at this time tnere are over 250 houses ia course of erection. For excursion rates and full particulars address,

E. C. McCORMICK,

Gen’l Fass’r Ag’t Monon Itoute, 185 Dearborn St.. Chic .g, 111.

Prerident Cleve’.and** Prise far the three best babies at the Aurora County Fair, In I*7, was Slvea to these triplets, MolUe, Ida, and Bay, children of Mrs. A. E. Dart, Hamburgh, N. Y . ae writes : “ Last Aurist the little ones became very Bci, and as t could set no other rood, that would agree with them, I commenced the use of Lactated Food. It helped them immediately, and they were soon as well as ever, and I consider It very largely doe to the Food that they are now so wriL” Lactated Food is the beet Food for bottle-led babies. It keep* them well, and is better than medicine when they ate sick. Three rises : 25c., 50c., ILOO. ‘At dmgsisM. Cabinet photo, of these triplets sent free to the mother of any baby bom this yean CT WELLS. RICHARDSON fit CO.. Burlington, Vt. w

Wildly Improbable. ‘I had a delightful dream last night Alfred’ 6 ’ “What was it. tny dear?" “X dreamed that i had a directoire sub that cost You ought to stop reading Rider Hag gard.” “Why ought. I?” ' “You woo’d have no such wildly im probable rs reams, my dear, if you did." BBPErSY. This is what you ouurht to have in fact, you must have it, th fullv enjoy life. Thousands are searching for it daily, and mousing U-oausa they fiua it net. Thousands upon thous* andsof dollars are rront Annually by our people in the hope that they may attain th’> boon. *od yet it may be had by all: We guarantee th tElec. ■.lie Ditto.' c. if us cl according to di» roctlons utui the use persisted in, will bring you Good Digestion and oust the demon Dyspepsia and Install Eupeppy. We recommend Electric Bitter? for Dyspepsia and all diseases of Liver. Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at 50e. and SI.OO per bottle by F B Meyer, ruggist. V When Baby wu ilck, we gave her Castor!* When aba was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she Hung to Castoria, Wbsa she had Children, die jare them CasSori*

THE Elbbeoge Leads The Wclld! m; JpPnT~i*% MKK JAB. W. McEWEN, Agent, Kensselaer, Ind. • 'lf FI El WRIGHT^ Undertake ii Establishment, W RIGHT, PRO ERIE !>*

The owner of this horse uses the 54 Ironsides Sheet for the stable. It keeps the horse clean, and ready for driving and saves an hour’s work each day. 5/A Lap Busters 5/A Ironsides Sheet SsMrvjsst In Stahl*. 5A Clipper Fly Nets Te&Oibler.. Equal to leather at Halt th* cm*. 100 other styles of 5/a Horse Sheets aad Fly Nets, at prices to suit everybody. For tale by all dealers. If you can’t get them, write us. 5/A BLANKETS ARE THE STRONGEST. NONE GENUINE WITHOUTTHC BfA LABEL Manufd by War. Ayuhs A Bows. Phllada., who make the famous Horse Brand Baker Blankets.