Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 30, Number 45, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 July 1888 — Page 7
WHJELY COURIER-
POANK. FuWtoesar.
of tall. aad wa knew that we
M j. eeWfk Haaehmabat fijAaamf JEnToeea km - sji mmI IbsM mm! ItMMti
Jtal
tfMeS UeeS DeMWSTC.
junk is ii mere shell. One solid ahai I aad
feraem then us U they bed
m . .a nua . La -
we ateafief llkr Mtur o a Hear seW oa a ieMs HtMr. ! jroe nasH tea XJVwSm mm U fTAMwereJ '- "I wW
KfcLaMHr
K to
Teotfnht.
MM ft
UMrieeHaa mwme,Beei
thenar etffciy wTtr to M K Oe graato me T TVUlif K oM--t f-" He $t as; at m ef i we1T1fie rd "C-rr
m4 sur, m the leagtta n
It to Kto
mlto-ttoe
tb
K u t et
u ! tkm: ant he natte
TteZTUuk dswu Ihaewere. IWr- Mrf be ? town. -A Ire hh. Vr!!'1,
eC tb weeWKH tmm
seteeft en.
with satekrea
na a HtrM C Wrt
K to me: mm-W,
Ma ri to ttctarw
0(
AMI Lllwrtjr r WlMMtotoUMhMt. Ml eMM( tato, WaMh 0w oy, t Xt a MMll lt : MHl tlMt hK-AT' rOe FvnrNM Uw rta wtm m My -ItettAt(u pmimd, wc tM wWHet (TfftM QerOMF H At TTWwur M wm t iNMMttot
Axl
MM MM 0( MM N MT I
TMt en- ef IMprte Kody"s rte.
CHINESE PIRATES.
A Brief
lHt SttOOMfd Upon Tbm.
Warfar
lft4w iXmmne C-A rrh
From tb Yr 1888 t 1851 the CWUa from ShiwiKhiii iR the
aortk W Stitpore la Una hhiUh wiw iafoiteA with pirate craft. Aa for that taUer, tkte ea kad Wa te cntWK grcMtftd ot pirated for a nsore of years frrkm4y, mt I mention the two vmmr fer'aarttoular reasons. Oae wa
that I vm oiHPMf 4 in viperous warfare afaiaei thew, awl the other tha4 the doe of 164 wite the eMh f the le4if mriU aad hroke f piracy as a trade. la thoe far-haek daysoemparattveiy Bothla vm kaown of Cliiaa outride of a few eeaporte. TreaO were of Littk account, ant Coaeak were few and far between. Krery erchat shin wae vxwieA to defend hereelf.
md the CafHaia of every Bwui-of-wxr had authority to hombard any town whiek reiued to renew hte water and proriflkHM. All aatione weretradinr whk China, but, wdde from a few eaTMrWL all China hated all other people.
At the doeks at Hon Kon I could driak tea with the Chinese merchant. Half a mile away the people would hart eat me to piece. While the ooeetry wanted to iell it product, it hated the men who bought them. While it wanted the good of other eoontrieti, it dwpbed the makers and tthippere. There ia no doubt that the Chine Coreraaient tacitly encouraged piracy, aad, eould the great maw of the population have had ite say. not a single foreiiwr wohM have erer been allowed to hn4 the eoaet
In the rearW there wae an aeeoeiatlon at Canton eatted the Foreign Tr4rs." It was eompoeed of Amerieaa, JCagilhmen, Germane, Frenchmen, Spaniard aad Kneeiaae, aad numbered ever sixty repreaeatatireu. Theentrital represented amounted to milHeae. and the object was threefold. We had more power with theChlaeee Government than nay foreign Minister. W had rule and regulations regardlag the tea trade. We eould earry a eiathy protoats aad threato. Krery voend of tea from a district five hun-
-elred miles square had to paee through Hir haw as. We Med many protests aaam4'the pirates aad the laxity of the Govern meat m hunting them etewa, and were finally ofltoially infcmeel that we were at liberty to take amy stops we deemed best in the mattor. That meant that we eould lit out aerattaadgo tor the rassaie right and
had a eraft resfty at
m
ef
furuiim. we had ever seen in thoe w
tors. We armed her with a UmgTom aad foar tweaty-tour peHtadera, having bought tU guaa from the sale ef the salvage of a French maa-el-war. Then we picked up a erew of Hty men all fdreiffaera and sattoni aad when we went oat of Moag " prepared to give the pirate Hall Cohunhia. I was purser erf the schooner.
which was called the Revenge, and her rSminJa was an Enrikdunaa named
Wetherbee. who bad nerved as a com
missioned officer in the regular service. 'ITmi First Lieutenant was an American,
tin. otW o Moors were dhided up
aaumg the other nattonaHtles. We Itow the juawclatlon nag, aad whttewe
were at liberty to go for pirates, we
were warned that any mistake would be made to ooet us dearly. The two boss pirates of that date were Shung-Woag and Chln-Laag. The first bad a Host of seven or eight
craft, aad haunted the sea from Singapore north to the Toag-Kla Islands. The seeond cruised from theaes as far north as Shanghai, having his headquarters at Formosa Island. He was reported to have a fleet of nine eraft. That both were monsters we had a hundred iroof8, and that both had crown rich and powerful it was easy
to show by tbe long nsvo nawoK vessels hanging in the headquarters
ofKee. While we had kept our move
ments ae secret as possible, we had no
doubt that Government officials had
riven us awav. aad that the pirates
would be on the watch for us. To deceive them as far as possible, we ran
to the south for three day, and spoke
and reported to four .hlp bound for Canton. Then we ran over toward the
Phillimlne Islands until we had a geoo
offing, when we headed up for Formo
sa to get acquainted with old Chin Lunr.
Dunne the next three days we did
aotsUrhta vessel of any sort. Then
early oae morning we fell in with a tot i J-rw&iL which showed us that a
trader had been overhauled aad burned
We were now to the east of Formosa,
aad fifty miles off the ooast. Men were set to work to give the schooner the
annearance of a vessel ia distress, and
under a light breeae we made slow
kouivnr tnwanl the island. It was
about four o'clock in the afternoon before aav thing approached us, although mm -At .mW u - aa
we saw a manner oi - " distance. Then a small junk came out from a bay about five miles off. and headed directly for m. Every thing aboard of us seemed to be at sixes and aevens. A man was lashed to the inaia-
maet, to represent tae eapwuu. thing atoft was askew, aad the seven or eight men on deck were seemingly drunk ad having a high okl time. We had a man atoft to play a part, knowing that we should be hailed in English.
Both of these boss pirates had Americans and Englishmen with themrtoeiitewhe had deserted their ships and voluntarily adopted the life of a plrato-aud one of them was always pat forward to hatt a ship. The Jank mm steadily forward to withla hailing distance before she eame up toto the Thi was aroof, whether she
was honest or not, that our appearance wi .lvmI W. The men oa deck
veiled and shook their nsfc, as drunken men might do, bat at the first opportunity a voice hailed us. "Schooner ahoy! What wheoaer is
that?" "The Keveage, Captain Tbateber, bound to Shanghai," answered the man aloft. "What is the matter aboard?'' "Crew in a state of mutiay for the
lust three days. They have lasaea tne Captain to the mast aad drivea me atoft.1' " What's your cargo?'' " General merchandise. '' " Any arms aboard" I . .. r . .J
"Jniy a iw "huuj. There were a deeen men ahaard the junk, but they dared not attempt to
board. They caawerea aw3 theaHelves for a while, aad then the spokesman called out: "Very well, we wiM bring you Withthat the junk headed back for the bay, acoompaaied by the yells and curse of the apparently drunken crew. We had a native aboard called ShinLee. He had been in th headquarters ofttoe for several years, and could lie
oepended upon. He gave it Amnion that the junk was a spy boat
sent out by the pirates, who never attacked a vessel by daylight wMout taking all due precaution. He saM we Would see the pirate fieet come out In case no sail appeared on the horlaoo. and his words were speedily verified. We had been gradually edglag inshore. uni WM not over five miles from taa
Uxl. when we caught sight of five
junks coming out after m. There was a good working breeee. aad was only natural, w began to law off. By seeming to want to get away very badly, but bv carefully manipulating the helm, we were sevea miles off the mad before the fieet reached us. We were satisfied of their intentions tong enough before. It was not to help a vessel to distress, but to take advaa; immm at am almost helotes.
The junks kept pretty wen wgew , aad when within rifle shot each oae raised Chin-Lung a flag and uttered a cheer. Seen had a couple of howKaers, with which they opened fire upon tha schooner, hut ao harm had been done when we ware ready to spring the trap.
At tha word of command every mam
was oa deck, tha gua erews jumped to their stations, aad things atoft were shipshape to a msanat. Then we were ,tobetoreMi the idratos lend the hay d epsnid firs. A Chinees
The poor devils were unnerved
as sooa as they saw the trap into wkkh
they had fallen, and devoted all their eaergies to getting away. Ws eould outsail nay ef the juaks, hut It was quick work with four of them. They
were sent to the bottom one after an
other, and as w eame up with the fifth
we ran her down. Oar atom struck bar on the starboard broadens aad oat her almost in two. She had at toast thirty
men aboard, aad there wae eae loaf, despairing shriek as they went down to wstory graves. A few came up to dutch at the wreckage aad beg to ha taken aboard, but not one of them would the Captain lend a hand to. Such as die sharks did not gat hold of drifted out to sea with the tide. It was a fear
ful retribution, but these men were
inoasters. Inside of thirty minutes
. ...m It.
rota taa time we openea nre mm
fleet was at the bottom and at toast a
hundred pirates had paid the penalty
their eiimas.
Our captain was lamenting the fact
that he had not picked up oae or two In order to secure information when there wae a row forward, and it was announced that a pirate bad bean found
hanging to the chains. V hen brought
aft lie wae ready to do any thing to
save hm life. His name was Muag-
llang, aad he had good cause to believe that we would reverse it. He
waftbe captain of the junk we had run down, and was ready to toll us all
about old Chin-Lung. The hay was
hi rendesvous, but his plunder waa hidden on the eoast near Too Chow.
There were barracks for the man up
tlitov. Mad thlrtv or forty men there
at that moment. They had captures a
French brig several days before, and she was then at anchor in tha bay waiting for Chin-Lung's return. He was then up among the I Joo Kioo islands with 'four juaks to capture a large ship which had drifted into shoal water, but was not abandoned. If we would spare his life he would pilot us anvwhere and prove his gratitude ia any way. Shin-Lee took him ia hand for a few minutes, aad then announced
that we eould:: depend upon him. We
ran into the bay, brought up alongside
the bri. and sent forty men asbore no
i1mi out the idace. Not a pirate was
tu um. all having bolted for the
woods. Every thing which would burn was set on fire, and a prixa crew
wae nut aboard the brig to navigate
her to Hong Kong. She reached the ort safelv: and our salvage money
weat far to reimburse tha company far
its outlay.
When we sailed out oT the bay it was to look for the boss pirate. He was
nearer than we thought for. At eight
.VW4r iwtrt morainf we saw his fleet
ahead, on ita way hack to For
mosa empty handed, and by ten we had
th tank under fire. These were a
braver tot of men. Knowing they could
twit mbmXL us. and Booming to suspect
that we wera aa enemy, they closed in right for a fight. It did not last long, however. We had one man killed by the fall ef a block from naft,aad three or four wounded by the hultoto from their aactoat fire-arms, aad hi return not a maa of them escaped. Ia less than an hour's fighting altogether
mt nine tanks and two aunareu
men to destruction. Butchery, was it? Well, call it so; but remember that ia the previous twelve months the fleet of this old pirate had captured no toss than tea foreign craft aad six traders, aad that every maa. woman aad child aboard had been murdered. There was no sentiment about Chin-Lung. He thought of nothing but Wood aad plunder, aad he would cut a child's throat
with asmUe oa his face. We were now ready to sail ia search ofShunr-Wong. who had less power.
but was just as great a villain. These two toaders had divided up the torritorv, aad compelled all lesser pirates to join them aad come under their control. So, then, we had only twe men to strike at to dowm the whole tot. At the etose of the third day after heading for the south we easae upon k M-ir at tfc ntratieal fleet. A
tnutor in woods aad dvestufis had been
overhauled about a hundred miles north of the northern group of Fhillippiacs. called the Little rhUKppines. The erew consisted of three men aad a bov. aad the vessel had only part of a cargo. Shung-Wong had boarded her himself, aad although the crew were native Chinese, he eould not restrain his htoody hand. Be deinauded a sum equal to tflOO ia American money.
There was only about w aooaru, ana
It was several years before anothar ef piracy was eoaunttted. Tito
Chinese Ctorerameat returned its thanks to the sasoriatton, shiy owners sent in contributions of moaey to aa-
their gnaUtude, aad when we to sell the schooner to the
Chines Government as a cruiser, the
ematmnv waa financially ahead It
was probably the briefest cruise aad attended with the greatest results recorded of aa armed veseel.--.tf. Y. Sua.
SASLC ISLAND'S FATE.
m ye
fOMOOL AjtQ QWMeaOM.
TABEBNACUL
JjHsifia 45 JlftSie4ee(enn'fJ
towed l Hr ""
The strange disappearance of the raluarkabto strip of terra firma, Sahto Island, near Xova Scotia, Is one of the marvels of the Atlantic Ocean, aad prove that, though man's power has chained tha lightning, and with It bound together two great worlds, he can not chain the ocean nor stop its ravages, aad, using the words of the immortal Byi on. his control stops with the shore. This Island has been rradusllv dlsanoearing for years, and with
out doubt ia a few more years it will luiAtallv aubmerwed. aad there will
soon be nothing toft to prove the exist-, ence of one of Nova Scotia's oldett landmarks. In the year 1776, aoeordlag to the earliest charts, tha Island waa 40 miles long aad i mltos wide.
The next survey was ordered la xmm by General Sir George Provost, the Governor of Xova Scotia, aad from his renort we learn that the Island ia 9
miles in' length aad S miles In breadth, with hills 140 to S00 feet high. In 1850 the island was visited by the late Hon. Joseph Howe, for the pur-
pose of m axing aiuMeii
with the condition of tne place, mm oy , actual meaeurement he found that the island had decreased at the west end
11 miles in the tost SO years, and for
tin safety of navigation and lor pre-
ventioe of disasters a new chart was compiled. During 1830 nd 181 there
was little change in tne wesi sum o
the island; but the winter ot li was
remarkable for He many storms, gate following gale ia rapid suoosssioa, and during oae gale 70 feet by a quarter of
a mile departed. A short ume nner-
ward 30 feet of the wnoto wwta omappeared in a few hours.
Tn th winter of 18B. Jew. were
swept away, nad the altitude of the hill,
which, whoa the first survey was mane
wa from 140 to S00 feet, was only w met.
The earth has been washed from beneath
three lighthouses, the first being placea
five miles from the shore,the nexiiour,
and new operations for the third one have commenced. The island w now
onlv 19 miles long aad less than oae mite wide. Should the breakers continue their work now in operation, the
t friuiant when the sea will
giaile and sparkle over the place
celmlv aad cruelly as only tne knows how. !tosm Traveler.
aaee at religious services voluntary m uweacaiaf its aneoad year of trial at Harvard. It to not yet ddtoiteijr m enrteieed how the pton worka. -The trustees of Cornell University have decided to build one of the largest aad ftaeet library buildUag to tbeoouatry. It wid com nearly 140,000, aad
ktoisxxaaiaodnteeOO.000
ftoraaa Dam S Uttto
eimel girl received from tha Qaaaa'i hand a ring for net mamtog adnf at
anhoei ia tevem yeara. Thtom wortay f iaUtatioa by oar girla. - Oaro
-ThaUdheraaehutoh hi
all the other Pi atoataa
oombiaad It has aaa hundred eight puetora preaching to five
THE
l ,es.a e
Sn9affpttAe00aa BOOaMaay aoa tor Jaly 90. ISM I JBseM hItii pat ii i freot tod Oss mndag Mm Kresttaa ef me Tea irs sate -A stostaetoa effai Farts aad
fad Is with
fmmS.i.Qi:tssly.I
Ex.e)l-to.
held the tabernacle oz anl Be wUl dweU with
17. the hchtof the Word
with the Ood of
aadaraver. Is eoauauahm wwa um kwVaecthla,aiaboy Tna-The tobsmsmt was bemg
of Sm
FEEDING THE HOGS.
W tare rmer.
W rftto ao much corn, and it is so
nay to throw a little corn to the hogs, totting them get water from a brook or pond, that we are apt to eouolude it is ae good away to bring them along as any. Right 'here we need a little practical knowledge or experience, and if we have neither, we may get it in the end by payiag dearly for iU All breeding aad young growing stock should be fed vary sparingly on corn; a mixed or rariety of feed for them Is much the best. You can feed shorts, oil meal, ground wheat, rye, ones, bran, pumpkins, potatoes, turnips any thing of that kind that they will ant This kind of feediiur tends to develop them so
much betteraod faster by making bone aad muscle aad keeping them ia better baalth. I am not in favor of cooking feed for hogs unless it hi done on a Wm scale: it costo a good deal to fix
far it aad takes so much time that it does not pay the majority of farmers to dot it. The water that ws mix the
feed with should be warmed In f reeling weather. About as good feed as you
cab ret is shorts and ground onto,
about equal parts, and if you have soma ji aJ tn add with them, it will he
todter. Feed twice a day oa this with
a. small ratten of corn, of course letting them run on good grass (timothy nad
clover are the best), aad have access to a mixture of ashes, chareeal, salt, sulphur, copperas and Hack antimony. If it is not convenient for you to have ground feed give plenty of onto; and If the weather be warm these might he
soaked. All your hogs should have t Miid vail or aarhur water; I
would not
-Tha taltoatate Grammar School.ea
West Seventy-fourth street. New York,
malms to be the oldest school m Amertoa. It dales its orgaiattoa hade to 1SSS. aad has a somploto record of eeholars from 1793.
-Two Bohemias Coagrefatloaal churches have been organised lately. Oae Is organised at Cleveland. O. It to called tha Twelfth Congregational Church of that city. Another church of the same nationality has since beea formed at Chicago. -Definite action to tha matter of mi between the German Reformed
aad Dutch Reformed churches can not betakea until 1000, when the geoeral synod of the German church next meets. Meanwhile the movement to favor of such union will gain strength. -Tha Welsh Calvtototto Methodist embraoe 1.30 churches, 129,000 membeis, l.Olt ministers aad 1,440 Sab-
hath schools, with home aad foreign
missionary societies. Ia doctrine
polity they are Praebftoriaas, est aad aggressive branch
church of Christ. The total number of city misetonarias in New York may be set down at
m, who probably make 800,000 visits a year. Besides these there are huadredsof tract visiters and hundreds of poor visitors aad other voluntary at vartoua ehurehcs nad so
cieties who are going about oontinuaUy
doing good.
It has been said that Enoch walked
with God without a JMhto, witaout a
church, without the aaeramenw nne
without saint-fellowship. There art
MM iMftoto in this day who
thev eaa be good Utotisuans
any of these helps, but, while not pre
suming to judge them, we must eonfern that we have never known a ehttrch-metnber becoming aa absentee
from the church who impressed us that he had gained to epirituality of mind or consecration of life. Carhew Inquirtr. Buddhism eaa not long hold Ma rround. and Christianity ntast finally
prevail throughout all Japan, ssa Buddhism and Western
eaa not stand together. They eanamtent the one with the
The Buddhists eoutinue to
noat vigorous effort to
oread of Christianity ia Japan,
the Hoganjl sect was never
rw school in Kioto aioaa w w
built at a ooet of 112,000, aAdiiUtto aemtoartos aad
heinsr started to various parts aj
aamd thtoaak the aetmua aad urmmrei av fTtoV?eadsnpt
firat of April, M. C inn. a year an-r m-.-h?25Sias vaBey to ffentef MouatMmu. Coyxacnos All things having beea wo. eared as the Lord osmmaaded, Moses beana to set ua the tahsraaeia, to betas cen-
tar of the Israelites' worship. Hsre uoa-s tarrjmpMrel. Over It was the pillar ef TnTaaaaxACLa--t. f"f?'w2t cuMto (45 feet) kmg, aad 14 feet high and
It was olvMea mio iwo ro wy
veil;
ha re-
are
tha ooantry.
Oasefm.
the helv alnes was cantta by 18,
a tae Hulv ac jsouea, iu
. . . - -
lr-the tabevmuaa. strictly so called;
Lk uat. extendinc above to the rl
mmAK rwUu ou fsetl bavoad the
aads on every aide; tha third part
HMriuof nai' and badgers' (
seals1) skins over the toot to protect it
I the westhir. The taoeraacie proper wa i nadeof tsaoadia phwks, each 15 feet loaf
bytrmcheswate. These were lnaese en si silver bases, each wWpto. It was eerered by ana hnen, under the neat" fuller destjilpl lone, see la. at: 18; B6: ItoM: 4L For eapianatifsm, s Beb. 9: 148. .... Bslts Ovxa Eaaa Piacas f. xaa aaekctat mst.- see dhrtiactkm above. &
AnV; a short eovcroa vmn g oaealf eemte hmg by one wide aad htoh (a eabit ta
H eaamuned the
Mm7Tnenes.it was eausd the Mark of
" Over It
atetkaBotvof Houea.bshJad the
w mil 4. raak; of eold. nlaesd In
T . TV. Jl- Sk
anew bread (Ex. 40), to
seals mast Mve ea Ged;
s7:Mi. a symbol ef
. mw Hht for taera was no window. AS
tbsir Ugni came iroaa uoa. u w . the aeuth side. 4. AMar ef
nw for tan hMumse: a type of
naeed between the csmdhmttet
a Attar at harat sJartaf the
far aatwmess. stomted eatsnto ef
n. . rs haw; of brass, for the
lags ot the priests before pai forming
riacea emawie, emwOT ibarnacls. a. Tto eeanV
wm im feet bv WJ). Tne
Btaoe ef aangmg or cananw. w. mr a sacred oU aascribed in Ex. i SMO, by putting oa of which nay thtogwaa dedicated toOod. A type ef the Heto Spirit. Dsocairnva Noras. In this leesm hideMribed the aructot of the taberaasie farnt-
tare sad their msantng. Begto with
ark. This stood ia the most aoiypmoa
HvmrettotaMssof the law. its
ealledthe "mercy-eeat." wv
aMa?aahm that stood oa the
mut iImi Ha would manifest His
The most holy place typified Heaven ramlf, and the presence of the tables of the WW ad at the merey-seat set forth the flam that
justice aad mercy are attributes of the Dta . e-. . . aL - eMaVAaaa
natttre. m hot m
the holy amoe from tae
d the altar of mcease.
tvautod Braver. By the altar ef
aad the offering ef the incense anon it, we
have set forth the prayers of
Jesus for His people, far as Meat. He toteroatol for tarn
there was also the table of
aad the
to
ft
the
MAKING ADVANCES.
tt eould not fatt
at eetmg
Invaded oon- rrr
AM aVaasfceeef raem wera,
Prorrees to aarricultural
kw. u amr. As a rule naturally
tervative farmers do not take hold and use advantages so often afforded by tha at others. Cb BllgSS hi
methods of pleating and euWvattoc aa I Jhe
that theyeanld
the nvmg hvaafi
laatay It relive ay
that
of Hhawe
Israel
alone, bat
food as well as their bodies Itete, thus far all the articles of which we have spoken are ef pare goht They were
of tats material because tasy
tosrt fortotkmga heavenly.
wall as in feeding or lammgwg w-- ooMtypmes parity Tot there is no question but that great I fmr, ther
imnrovements have beea made adarelaay thing bat perfect parity.
en
em no sign ef
fell
of brass. Tele waa blways
of water, and at it the high
himself. The meaning ef
needs tae
the Heiv Smrlt before he can he;
ta Ood in aa aecentable way.
amy reedOy see a type of that " waahiagof regeneration, of which the ncriptores apeak. Before we eaa enter Into the rehv tamehia ef psace wnh Ood, we mast be weaaedas cleansed from the taint of am. Prnauy we we the great altar of braes. At tma altar were ottered all the ameyatc-
a creek or pond unless
1 nera was oniy noviiv , . , t, t he personally out the captain's threat, the W was fenced IlL'TiriiJ aod. aad went oahk ! from it in a pipe to the trough, ustog a
hvdraat or float valve, l preier
OB
and ra
the
had the others nagged, and went
to Um bar of Laaoa. which is
the west side of the island name. We spoke the trader.
paired from her torrined
liu4dBt above narrated, aad
gtatped our course for the bay. As luck would have H, an Amerienn ship called the Joseph Taylor
waa ahead of us, and as atoe passea
down the eoast was attacked by
fteet about sevea mltos off snore.
the We
a T
trough that win tot tha water to fresh
an they drink it. Creeks and orancaes that flow from arrest distance are lia
ble to contain germs of disease, if there to any to the country, aad therefore are
to be avoided. Car. Farm
--The proper Ume for pleating out celery is from the latter part of June until the latter part of July or even the
c t lMmMt. at the aorta, ana au
heard tha rumpus about an hour before . August, aad perhaps even into .... tr . . Hill. - I - . , u
aayaght. mere waa hhib mi uuHwk rreatlv outnumbered, the erew
of the Taylor heat tha pirates of. At daylight the wind freshened, aad we Ud ia between the junks and the shore just as they ware arearinr for a eeoad attack. Wa wera no sooner withit. i-n than we ooeneU on them, and.
udarawameiitof. the fetlews tried
hard to lay us aboard. In thirty miauto from the opening of the "ghtwa had sunk or run down every junk and disputed of every pirate, nad only had fmr men wounded to doing it. Our work had beea dene aa prampt-
i i thi n. aeruek torrer to the
hearts of an tvn aeaw m
ev alu sTi lieimi
ZZ of the tabernacle itself we find no more farm work. .. I Krarv uuaar there la ef a metal
The use of improved machinery, ma i ? Mmriorrt.. amm. Owlaide ef
keeping of better stock, better mooing, better wnter, better crops, better iaeral afmearaaee of fnnae, all bear avi-
thnt farmers are maeng nm-
At tha name Ume there is plenty of
room for greater improvement, aad to
o eaettou are tha poaotatimcs ftiuoiua
thna in the South and Southwest. Acrea
of land not yet ia oulttvattoa, muom
that is not yielding what under proper
tka anil ta eaBSJim OX. a-
ford pleoty ot room w i 'r re-reeented bv tta hign
meat . attest, firat mm wrth smfal man. Ho step
Too often we get into a rut misrittam sdrpwapabhli
wefall totoahabittbattomaay 9m I ' Jl
from tha experteace of oaera, - gad a tyae of Cartot
wa might make chsnges that waaaaaw Mteasaerhlesfbra1n. There Is no way of
w tha tmttar. vet we fail to improva. .atattsa ta
.... . ... 1. ' - I Wl 1 J Ik TjMik " M
entry, ear aeaveaiy laenawt
aaea wtu
w4r evUentlv with tha totou- I h m. own Mood toaleryaaddo.
wlllbe watched doseiy. U I "TJJZZZ mlhe
more thaa aay thing ehm. tot douw make a start to tha aeighDod,ifhetoamaaef eawrgy.aad
fails ha mutt exj Hdkmto. butif he
time ha wDl have seam
mm imiproveaaet at
This ia aaa ahaee of 1
GradmaQy
September, for more southern locaa-
The home garoeaer may wmms a
Htua ntoos of toad iust etoarss rrom
early potatoes, peaa or radishes. A
meee will generally ao wr na
.a a - - - i J.aa.4
averasm fatatir. vne neunren immm,
only require a single row fifty feet toag, t)kt thinking
Will go quwe a gwea way - auuioa. to that MOW
supplying a family. aiaady advance Is
ome tocalittoa tali others. This m in
Tat
eerd the fact that
i to
wiueh yea
They were typeset
i. For a true a
thebev
i their sptrttaal naport, we go te tl ta the ffahiiinn aad there we
i all hrtended to set rena
ta f om of earuuy
hi
ef
a
to
The castor oil heaa ptoat makei
a. anient aad beautiful border along
the walks, but it M a mroag aad vtg-
a
of manure, Tha
MmU tmn aM eFsawl. ajaBy arm
ktoda of
OMMtS eWrnl aaTslBnleafl BmSataSnl wSrw
wae ef to shew at the way ef aseese ta
Ood, and the true way back mte tamaffgaa. Otoe which wet tost by the sta efsmrSm pareata. Te sum it all ap to afaw weed, we nay mtt It aa fatloaa; The mat ta
heaveamthreaghthe
Lamb ef Ood, waa
ear
tora- aum, aad
JraMVtf snf
md to to aa
fit far tsn
I.
