Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 37, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 December 1909 — Page 2
I Seeing France with | | Uncle John | YVONNE ro Her MOTHER
oo R e Dear Mamma: The morning after | st 00, tike Bad G waked up at boven auaflm%@gwm ot paper, just about siek, for l koew he wasn't s carty §EI R sos Loo sgain But 1 got op and dressed, of couree i&&é:fifl»fi%%fifiifi&» myseil to 4t & goud by betore we took 4 cab for e gawififi?fi@”%‘}#wfih wpiritn over geiting out mgain, and afl went weil until It eame the minute to get Bim o !‘;?”’i'&'fl}% I do be BevE Le was sesred Blnselt Gotting on to & Proneh frain s almost ke going up & ladder that slopes the wrong way, [ abe iy think, and 1t took two commisslonnives to hoist onele Inty Ihe m:rgw;}%@ma gy iy Wi
e | ‘”’fi??;fl 8W) -K~ v = ;&(}fi’.:vq i .}i,‘_i:l’ " A i :; ‘1 : 1’55 53 : -SeLl \ » v \ ' \\” IR ST LR (T AN A7\ ks, st il Y T 5 i . - WEEE e |\ SN iVI L LA RN &\<‘}\* - e = “lv:"w \ *’%Q fi" fi% ff’{ - O | & N g LT / RN e T e = ‘ " ;o T s o o A D : gt % Basylintarn Tl Tl 0 - ' . YAnd R Was Les” o
rhead over i, Vel g Tor L about *fi;‘%éfm bt lalkeih . Hmmwu@«‘“fi iy e ens ufe“‘ to Bay . oA :t_-:ij*‘—‘f' s ks o v ‘eourse, *WQ WE% "mfim Mate, 1| know how ’;11’““’”‘“” ol übele -;’mf‘?éi"f%“ff?*“ the end | e - bearted 8 meok. goud | [ oßßieg B T n who had| Moy ol e 'hé ke 8 ISR B s auite o from mi*%fli te a waikf , o 3 f,-.f‘kfi/ii.,‘_.l“”’"«jf awn whe thal sbghts nre wnd i“%*“ where the thing on vm‘ 4 cab o & e -‘?;;»,,."‘r.fi":ii&h‘ ook st ungie nw e hosn | e R e beck TR hit stax T L seendd al it stangered AL Bpst, and the e sald well, (€ wad feval, and th B .xmamflxii‘v:%:m?;-‘-fifrv%?*-“ wed g 0 . aeiEntely EE ;\;e_:fi-:;.zwe troxh, | Jrre, swest Bie oF b conritry ¢ Lesh | . walked alufie B| e eountry So we enfoving ity | %%fi'u e ve AR hoar to figiw? e We wenl ”‘”‘ ere golug | ; et B the eatheorsl first and|
e 5 : L - YA . ; A S | ' ol ; Qe ey 3 ; 5 ‘ ‘. »-2 r‘{‘i, Ky R F Yy - : i *'#)‘ I - % o /\y ‘ N M LV R e o Rl ,‘*‘ - "“ = :f/ P " o £ = R AN 3 A 4 R S g ; {{:j, ST e #1 ¥ R .*\\' ! é& 3 .“_ £ . /f)\ P g CHD, A {D';. AT\ . s'kfifi“f ey S . A A d B - g LN A | M BT BRE A 7 O v ( k- “f;i VT } 3 ‘ ; AR g e N il . v ”‘ i,’l, )4 I : ' J Lt LRI / . t y ‘:/:" T"' { ¢ E T “We Passed Elfrida and Her Sister Today, Pedaling Along for Dear Life. . ‘
uncle sat right down and saild he wanted time enough to -enjoy: the ground-work of the vaulting and that 1 could just léa_w him and go around alone. It was my first chance to look at anything as slow ‘as I liked, and 1 really did enjoy myself very much. It's a really wonderful old cathe: dral, and I found a nice old sacristan behind the altar, and he took me underneath into the crypt, and the crypt i{s the original church where Harold took the oath. It was slowly buried by the dirt of centuries, and when they started to put a furnace in a few years ago, they found it and dug it out again. It isn't very large, and the walls are of stone several feet thick,
Money Was No Temptation
Traveler Finds One Spot in the World Where “Filthy Lucre” Is Not : 2 aKing. " *1 had to travel to the wilds of New Gainea to obtain a new point of view toward the fundamentals of our industrial system,” said a wanderer in many climes recently. : “A small party of us, in charge of a missionary and two soldiers, visited a cannibal settlement some miles inland in that savage and practically unknown country. We met a group of the natives, huge. muscular fellows, with monstrous beads of Kkinky hair and bones run through their noses and little else in the way of clothing. 1 took a fancy to a carved spear which one of them held and sought to purchase it, offering a bright silver Ger man mark. “The big cannibal looked at the money curiously and, taking it from me, showed it to his fellows. It amused them Immensely. At this voint the missionary, who knew some-
g With Hitie bils of SEEREd witdows wet fup too nigh to see froes. | Svßen | came Baek We wont (o ece il tapestey 5 fhe mmeim, snd i {iant rently tapeatiy Wt all, s n jong. | long atrip of Huel about & foot wide, with ,mrz;{-fi flfisfifl It in Ken: | alagton, and cres BBA gver lis real Piy very owell done. snd 0 isot e bi | budly wotn out—omly A few lile hoics | Interesting, aod sotse of them are awi fally tinny The ®Ay ihey badled | the Borsew uver the sldes of the boate ga;wmsa they landed f 5 England. for ex- | mmple. The Saxens Bave binrds and [ the Normans are shaven 1 couidut i help thicking how fuppy 1t was that * the Normans, who were reparded as . lstbarians by %%** Prench were | looked upon as tremendously ¢fote by the Epedsl IBt ook a deal of
1 jueasirg STUCYINE tHe WhHGie ' thing %‘ffififi“"* wore Q&&,fifll{ was time for L elean littde L}xmwfififi then came th rub There waE BOHNIDE to do 11 ?t:fin{a-!%nm and thEL terrible walk to the gare | had Brought a book along L only & wiman would come (0 Bayen ’wufi: rend & novel, aad that | remindes Bl of Aunt Jage. You know how ter Crible it is when BBy eue reminds hin of Aunt Jsne: 50 1 closed the book once, and sald Id do anything b lked He sald that that was mon back and thr«rfi@‘i@%fi%&fim burden o b hin and then Be shook his watc! and held it to Tis apr and said ium too. one rightsfigfiwaflnr I was t almost beside myself 1o kpow wha to do or what 16 sußgest, and jus then something Ghme pufling up be hind us and stebped riebt At Hur oside
It was a big automobile, with thrwé men in it, and one jerked off his mask | and jumped out over the wheel and; grabbed uncle by the hand. And it | was lee! : % You never saw anything like uncle's face! He seemed reparalyzed for a few seconds, and Lee kept shaking his hand and telling him how glad he was to see him, and how he must get right into the automobile and go on with them to.Caen. My heart just about]. stopped beating, 1 was so anxious, but Lee never stopped shaking, and the other men took off their masks and got out, too, and told uncle he really must do them the homor and give
thing of their language, explained that 1 desired the spear in exchange for the silver. He told the chap that if he crossed the bay to the steamship landing they would give him a plug of tobacco for the coin at the little store. | “The owner of the spear studied | this proposal for some minutes, ab~] sorbing his first lesson in the \'alueé of money. Then he shook his head | and returned the coin to me, uttering ‘ a few words in his strange langua.g’e.t His remark was translated by the t missionary. In substance it was this: | . "'l don't want the thing. llf I takel it 'he will take my spear, Then I will never'have my spear again. It is my spear.’ : g *1 confess I could think of no answer. Can you?” - - English Sarcasm. Ladies who cross the Atlantic will be well advised to put out their ecigarettes and hand over their unsmoked supply to some male acquaintance! whell the immigration officials come
hem e plisanurs and to the end we g Wit in and Lew mon Out Oh, 8 was sk fun' We had the oot Blorioun frig Baek o Uaen They Exd an o3tys Mask aioke snd uncle Woter t sng sat i the ot st and L 2 SXCH p i s whe awps The tothohile, was really lovely 14 him Varde seid 1 wak 8 vory satnoatibrging p s apd Mr Peters said i 214 %5 B iy ¥.=_,.> {inrenig s i St CBAne £ . gniecd the food poitie of A § i s ne B opnte bhe said pot ne than In 8 tiousang bßad braitss ! T / 5 g (E ; g ¥ M S ! ik ~.:_ ¥ A : 3 I.’ 5 s 1 , % T &4&§ ¥ i - ey e B ‘, WA A o s VAL AN RS - - ‘,’~ 2 2 » f fi'{‘ Fivih B " 7% - 3 W A 5 oaB " s EIL N r e - :'. Mol & y ‘ P e % é! i 8. 3 i = W TL ¥ o S et Rr ™ *{j)“ 241 J 31 i) E ' Ve g R A ) & L . \é : - R e PR " @ . 8 AP IS &-g'i‘? (-8 e AW ER Pt s G f i ' i -«m" “ ) X L g i i ’fl,m 7t 0 & ~“:_.» fe* % o Pl P 4 7 & - » - ~4“"*.!#.-, s £ . : - 3 3 " ’_,,.,«w‘"" : . - - TR - ’ » » . 0w : Bayeux. $ Bl o Xnow a 8 good miactise slivg % 1. Bhe (0L bLie wan sier §4% ¥3 i 3 it iatly et the e ‘ ; i : Ry 3 & et au y 3 A LR E Y e 58y $ it LE 1% ¥y e wll Rt i¥y n . iy iy ¥ o e jid £l ¥ s il welsh * s & 4, W 3 % R & AR ¥ ¥ ¢ i 3 ¥ Ciee (m:‘:, o Lhan o ey ursted with Mr Petora ¢} §E xR el o lew a W gt % i 33 st Thesiny R % ey lOy Siné is At vight THey sceepted. and @#oiment g TR POy WilHOut o one e | &, and we bad a very nice 10 in oA 1 seßarats owon, and the way Mr Pelers Lalked to uncie WARE Worth IWiening Lo sureds And when yneie was laiking he j«aned for ward aud pald attention as i bl 1 depended an dvery word Hy It¢n g olock ncle was happier Ithan | bave siimioet ever seen Him and Mr Poters i 11 was g gse, weo iust slmply must joln thelr party and go on in Lhe nit Bt L Leogan to laugh when heosaid thnt and zaid Now, Felers, yau o learn the sensation of getiing tutned down eoid It was an awful recond for e, because | Just felt un cle's ferrible battle betwecn not want GR 10 g 0 on with Ilae and wanting tc contradict bim, bßut in the end the wanling 10 contradiel overpowered evervihing elee, and ae said. "Youns tan;, whon Youl are 88 old as | au vou'll be lesx ready to spesk lor oth or people than you seem disposed te iy oW - And then he aceepied Mr Pelers avitatian! So wili ¥oit oniy Dlense ¢ think of W We are touring with lam sl loday we came up throupgh the. oviely valley of the Vire to this litlle w 1 i the Efme pane 1t 18 adl L 1 for wWiols inole Btk on the ron ent @il the thme and When bhe gives MM Peters adviee. Mr Poters alware thanks him and says that he peve el ARy ohe . beafore. with o &ense enaugh to have fizured that out We passed Elfrida and her sister to dav, pedaling along for dear life. They hidn't Know ux and they are gotting ¢ ok so oawfal that 1 thought it war 8t a 8 well I'ncle savs he think they are secing Europe for 30 cents a day now H 4% raiping, and 1 mast go to bed Your very happs : YVONNE.
o Secret Well Kept. Sir William Folkes has been alected | president of the King's Lynn Sons of Reflley, England, a most exclusive social society, which bhas been in exist- | ence for neariv’a century and a half The members assembla in thélr temple in Refiey- woods 1o transact business and to indulge in old Engiish pastimes. Near the tempie I 8 a cha. Ivheate spring, the water from which | enters largely into the concoction of a wonderful punch which is served at | the banquet and of which the recipe | has been Kept an invielable secret by | each succeeding president for over | 100 years. ; 3 - Affects American Trade. ; July 1, 1909, began the enforcément of the new pure food law in Switzer- | land. The American meat trade is @ largely intereésted, as some of the re § strictions are very stringent and the | inspection fees are too high. i Million Immigrants a Year. § During the fiscal years 1905, 1906 | and - 1907 the number of immigrants | arriving in the United States aver- I aged more than 1,000,000 per Aannum. i V‘Wmm 3
on board. We read in the Daily Man% how an Englishwoman of 60, described | by unprejudiced fellow-passengers as | “a woman of refinement and culture, | much interested in antiquarian re | search,” is now detained on Ellis Is- | land as “probably insane,” because she | was seen smoking a cigarette. Nation. | al views of morals and manners dif- | fer, no doubt; but it is rather strange | to find a great country which will ad- | mit Mrs. Pankhurst drawing the line | at a woman who smokes. Apparently, | “the madness” consists not in smuk-§ ing, but in doing it in public—whichk | comes to this, that it is mad to of | fend against one country’s views of etiquette. At this rate it would be | well for the American authorities tc supply a printed list, for use on board | liners, of things which are quite com- | monly done in Europe, but considered | insane in America. For all we know, i it may be ruled mad next not to drink | ico water, or to speak with an Eng. | lish accent—Pall Mall Gazette. i e e - Tree Slow to Bloom. ; The bamboo tree doea not bloow until its thirtieth year. : '
HELAMERICAN: S zrgmn. HOME ) PRt PN e 1 , g:-» *i‘ i WEARADFORD “”'m!—g;!fl{_' “N L ' P EDITOR -
Mr Wikatn A flatford will ssewes guestiong and give advice FREE OF CONT s nis wubiects pertaining to the sulidet ol wlllieg G the pesdeols of Ihis papet. fin socourd 8f EiB Whle et rience ax Bditer Adtiee ant Marulac furer, he i wiihownt Jeußl the Mgbeet BulbEority of sl theee subilerta Addeves Al frguirien t Wilkiess A Hadford Nu, e ik A hicmge B and ouly Mcices tWo-Crnl stamp for repiy. So oy W‘«»A\.‘;,,‘M.L,..-,fl v«w.mwwwkwiwpfi.n&mmfi-w ‘ The concrete hlock house has be eome Brinly estabilahed throughout he coutitry as & new type of Amers cat howse construction Like all other things pew 1t bas beon abused 5 some testances by biock makers who were tgnorant of the proper methods to be foilewed Bn manufacturiog Llocks, bt 21y Ihé Information pow st hand, Lota trem experionce afd & carefs stiaily of theaublort, conerble Llooka now belng used in bomebullding are Tully eqial il not syperior o any othir twmaterial It has bhesn proved that the hlatk et be misde waterproof by os'tg a dedpo mixtare of wellgraded
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Sy ~ e . . Ay TR » TNy E Dining Dooed ¥l 3o | ST f ,7-1 % Ctarreram e msesnsta e . N 3 Ha Lasee Rocss { Ceedds 32 il ‘e s ¥ | Pt | 0 | : First Floor Plan. gang and gravel or ergshed stone Then, too thiee - f . degivns o f tHe bßlocks are now. produced In such artis tic deslgns that one marveis on o b iBvsor s ¥ 29 OGN E LGI e i
HISTORIC OLD DUTCH CHURCH Kingston Edifice That Was Buiit Over Old Graveyard—Pews Mark | Family Vault, : ‘ The celsbhration of the 260th ann! § versary of the Reformed ":‘«xti'stifll-’.§ Putch chureh of Kingston, N. Y., m; which {t 18 Asserted more presidents | of the United Stalex and governors of , the state of New York have wor| ghiped than in any other church in | the United States, with the exception ; of St Paul's chapel in Trinlty parish | in the city of New York, was heid re cently. : { The First Dutch church, as it s called, which is one of the oldesy andg most historic in America, was founded In 1837, and its present ;mfitur,i Rev, 1. G. Van Slyke, Is the lineal de-| scendant of the Voorleser Andrus Van Slyke, who was first in charge of | the church. _ ‘ The building in which the congregation now worships is the fourth that has stood on the spot, not count{ng the log bullding which was used by the settlers in the beginning The foundations, greatly extended to mest the growth of the congregation, include ;sirt of the graveyard surrounding the church : : i The families whose past generatlons were laid in the first graves still worship there, their pews in the last reconstruction of ‘the buliding being so arranged that each family lis placed over its own dead. Thus the pame on a pew door marks both the pew of the family and the tomb of! the ancestor. It was not until 1908, ‘after servjces had been conducted for a century and:a half in the Duth language, that English was substituted. The feeling of some of the old Dutch families against the supplanting of their tongue in the pulpit has not yet ceased. There are catechisms still printed in Dutch, and the old members of the congregation at times use thia language in their prayers. 2 The old Huguenot and Dutch records of the church tell a great deal of the customs, manners and condltions of the early settlers. When the church wanted & bell the pastor sent word to each family that bad had.a «child baptized to %ring a contritution. Offerings ~f silver, spoons, buttons, buckles and ornaments of various kinds were sent to Holland and melted into the bell, which now, attached to the clock, strikes the hours from the church steeple. Four presidents—Washington, Van Buren, Grant and Arthur—and 13 governors, it is asserted, have worshiped | In the church. e
The bouse hete shown is & good srampie of Ihe cunoretle biork house. 1t will be noticed that the pornet (roatment provides for blocks of a different cofor than thoas of the body of the wall These Blocks of a lighter color are Fige used about the doors and win dovws This gives a reilef froam the ssmeness of the wall The bouse s 178 fowt wide and 19 foot 4 inches long It has ¥7large porch and yos enter from the aé}rfig fntn 8 poodsized Ball A H¥ing room 156 feet 3 inches lomg and 12 teet 6 Inches wide 3 provided, and & pleassnt feature of this room is the wide Lreplace % ; - The dining room. which fe 13 fest By 15 feet s well lighied and ix con vetient o the pantry. The kitchen is 11 teet sguars, large enough for the usex 0f a wmall family The second foor (8 resched by the slalrway londing from the front hxil The housekecper wiil be pieassd with the provision for 5 sewing roon on ihis Soor directly aver the hall . : = Thers are thrée bedrooms and
. 5 § Beo Room l A O Ei : ki i B o Room - bt BAaTy | \ 30 i % .-£ 3 } . Lpe PraL L ) - Beo Poce B SE T ” 2 : ] . 2 ER T & j TOXSY i\ i ,' { | i & i i | ; e e i 3 Second Fioor Plan. plenty of set 1 . Thiz bouse {s 1 roooanst & Lot oniy in but & 1 small towhns it will L% Ratinf el wliieller slalidipg ol A COrner f F al inside lot
P s o At g P P P S P S The Thoughtiess Panhandler. “There goes Frank Scso." remarked Ofie actor 1o mnother as & tfall man with a new fall coat strode past, nodding condescendingly as he went “Fine looking fellow” answered the other legit. “Seems to be qulte pros perouvs, oo™ : “Is, now,” assented the first. one glumliy, "but & few years ago he was not only down on his luck, bt continually on the tosch. He maced everybody he encountered, and, | think, | actually saved up enough money out of touches for a new start : “Once in a while he got fearfully ahsent-minded. One afltermoon he | cyme up to a little group of us and sprung the old song-—flat broke, no work in zight, hadn’'t eaten for two days. And as he talked he thought | lessly pulled three silver dollars out of his pocket and began jlngling them, tossing them up and down and | catching them as they fell, the clanks | ing of the silver making a really re-: markable asccompaniment to the woeful story he was springing” - { Needed the Knife. -4 Speaking of table etiquette some ! time since, Gen. E. Burd Grubb told | ‘a story about a man who was justified | in eating pie with a knife. Smith was | standing in & hotel lobby one day, ac | cording to the general, talking to' Jories, when the conversation turned to a dinner that had been given at the | home of a mutual acquaintance named ; DBrown. o : * “You should have seen Barton.” r&‘ marked Jones, referring to one of the | guests. “I thought he had better table | manners. When his pie was served ' he actually ate it with a knife” | “l don’t blame him for that” was. the startling reply of Smith. o “You don't blame him?" repeated Jomes in amazement. ' { “No,” smilingly rejoined Smith. “T| have eaten ple 2t Brown's myself, and | it is a wonder to ‘me that Barton didn’t take an ax.” : i ~ Bareheaded Wellesley Girls. | The Weillesley college girls are re- | turning for the school year and from } present indications the students at this college will.go bareheaded for the greater part of the year. Saturday the campus and town swarmed with the young women, al¥ of whom were well wrapped in heavy coats or sweaters, but not a hat could be seen. They will continue to go without their headgear, with /the exception of certain occasions, as one young woman stated, “it is the proper way to be.”—Welleslew correspond |
]q ARM i i ol Wil LY N R o IR N T A 238 e .\5 ’ Y Y | ' A - et ) s " -LN - e ‘ h Alfalta wmakes dairving profitabie : It is uncicns o plant clover op wel sl . The lite ¢f Ihe boney bee i very ghort. - i 1 & ) Pew plants will grow without alr in Ciover and jegpimes 4o Bot sucoved O oiacds thal are waongr The fall of the vear in the bost Ui OT Melling peoty planis o Gassline has recontly gained cof Rileralde repulalicn as & vz f i The pewny e vgee of ‘3l; bowrs 1 24 vt 1 it OF al T BRIy Duwe F { ts 2 A pien o <3B % T 4t f ey iaxnd Ihat be $ 4 ’!l‘»‘ ¥ ¥ * > .8 % . «s‘l hy § e entire iy : ! PR EGRE S or 8 Farms shire the soil I this rid Xeldity may be overcome by anply bk from 500 b g A f me per acre, or by Ihe i ol Doats or ground shells Reports have been received that about B 0 homiestead efiries wers Bled in Montanas during the first six HGHIGR ¢ iAy o 5 ) No biher penple st 3o high a value an good soll as the Hollanders and we are lsarning that not many acres bt rleh ones. make the profitable farm Clover fislds that are thin may be seeded to Umothy far a crop next summer by sowing the rclover foad Row to timothy and harrowing in the fiald ' ‘ . Neyver hreed o ,:‘ | * i 1 wili gn;' wanrk or unmanageabl TEsY 1 a 8 any othor fault A v'r‘li.f-.nf". varicty of ntestinal wormm which ig & souree of 3 apecial attention just now fs popularly Kpown as the pinworin AN effectusl ‘;~ ed¥ for potatd hiight hars bLeen | nd n bordeausx mixture, which conslstd of four pounds j of copper sulphal and Sye ; six pounds of fresh Hme 068 gallons of ®aler All milk must he cooled to a ' perature not above 55 da Rrivg WHLID two hours after boing drawn, and kep! thereafter below that and must b covled to 50 degrees or less If not de Hyvered at the creamery twice a day » “Live stock farming does not alwavs mean diversified farming and some | forms of live stock farming may be rotme as oblectionable Inmany ways as a form of farming in’ which & single crop-is grown f{or sale, COne of the most serfous obiections | to & singlecrop system of farming h«,: the effect it has on the fertility of the | land. Our best agricultural lands will, stand expioitive farming-—that s, | farming without any attention to fer- | tillty-——for about two generations. | —. B | Agricultural teachers have urged dt versified farming for many years. buz% with ifttle effect until the appearance | of the boll weevil., This ifnsect madez cotton farming very precarious nnd; bas led to radical modifications in the | ; 1 systems of farming prevailing in that | section. 3 The brood sow that §s mature c;wsg with safety, ralse two litters a year | and be carried cheaply and easn’:«'l from the weaning of the spring litter | 1¢ the coming of the fall litter without much grain ration, if given plenty of succulent feed. The soy beans make the best hay i‘t} cut when the pods have formed and the lowest leaves have turned yellow; but for seed the cutting should not begin until half the leaves have turned | yellow. Even the soy bean straw !s! a valuable feed. Animals relish the | hay and thrive upon it. : ’ To insure the best health, vigor, fe- | cundity and profit in hogs the herd | should be handled as largely as pos-i gible in the open field and pasture, and ! during a period of six or seven months of the year alfalfa, clover, rape and other forage crops should constitute an important adjunct to the grain ration. L The milch goat, like all goats, can make a living on brushy and hilly fand, where most other animals would starve. They are very beneficial to land in cleaning it of weeds, sprouts and brush. They cannot endure low, wet land, but thrive perfectly on rough, hilly land. Those giving milk should be fed on good grass, hay fodder and wheat bran, but no grain of any kind,
IR T TEEEllll————————_——,, Vory tew pees die ineide of & Blive. Nothing i 80 stajie as the alalfa’ Cren ; Exrly tomators prove & profifadls ep - . ) Artd soiis weuslly bave poreel g'r‘:fiw fug on then SR ' Have this yeas s wheat feld far satie sliier orep next Yomr” . Ths aspabages bestle iz & troubls e pret and bard in fght s . land gefa Its value froon the inter. 3l i will pay on the investmesy An acid ensditice sy Se Seter mited By leating ihe modl '-’L?..f; bige mus papet - i Irrginage witl yltiaately B geen 'n be of vilal bmportasce in evesy rd gatssl disirict - = Woarms sre smost f‘-« toent i ween in YOusSg porses and in those thatl are wesk and debilitated e Timothe and cloesr solyed . mskhes ‘Bl Bay Bersose ha 2in £ty 3 i 4 the phiver Up abd the cuning s 08l p tilaver alofes calinst indefinttaly mainiain the land A rotatios w 1 Bt enable ug 10 Imalniiin. the fertilly of the wol i kosa are sy ¥ g £oB A aplife the matyred im £ oaibwed P oy owh Boaw ptatied 'R cania States declare Ihat 1 i Bo ddnger ¥ sok Mgt Phiapti o ) o hnt Vo meslsse fesdday: LBan the 140 e adew. jande The gdlivie®s of o ts 1 -t ‘:"’-zi." sl gimia I a dairy viw -‘_‘4_,‘_; both milk and butter fat production y"‘"!':‘r“?.f T--i‘:a!.:;‘.‘; the age of 43 dars, oxoept during thelr titae of 5‘,;,"‘7' ALlOf I wintes yet ia this shart period i ¢ AOCOnE priighed on! because wheal 5 high ';"_- 5 vear do 4‘12155_ W an exvira izrge o - for nyaxt Year Everviody wiil dothkat which sill have (e endency 80 fowar the price : » Perbaps & cow ig at her Hest st six Or Eeven Years of - age though osarh leals &8 have beovn made Ao not slewars | prove that The duta sdieme 10 be Hin iteg fur M.zg;;v Pesi g ) PE Rol 1t min¥ not be generiily known that 0¥ Dekns hake tho fdeat V;*;t,;;r.:: ducing fond for poultry The bvans wemid o better he cracked until the chfckens sre educated to eat fHeln. - Bome of thke ‘l«az‘— plants Wit ’n waln Bitve and some clover seed will be in o the soll 0 Ihat ihe meaddaw rexl year will be mixed clover and ity which -,-.13":;' % excelisnt hay for the Rorses. ; - The first two wicks of 5 beo's [ifa. Are glat RIS entirely inside of the Bivee pursing larvac,. taditg only A shert fight on supny alterpoons (o strenethen e wings and mark the caticn of & o ) ' When pinworms are noticed to be present in horses, frequent iplestiond of infusions of tobacco, fhiusions. of quassia chips, one-Ral! pound o one galion of water, (Rlowed up by & ca- . thartic, are most efficivnt [ ‘Land plaster is a soil stimulant, and | while It increases growth ot -frst, wiil injure the soll. lLand ;»S;istli-r'h put fnto some fertilfzers, But it harts | the land. Farmers don’t want-to be- | gin 1o use & stimulant for the land. Reéep vour gasoline engine . clean and free from surplus ofl, but keep the valves and working . part: wet]l oiléd. so they work freeiy. Use gas engine cylinder oil for oiling the cylk tnder: never use steam engine oyl inder 01l S | - . The farmer, to win the highest suecess, must be in thorough sympathy with his work and proud of his calling., and he must mix a great amount of brains with his labor. ~The keynote’ for achieving high success is careful attention to detalls i ! S e . s Rock phosphate does not leach o"uti of the soil; it might wash off from a hillside. As to the quantity, it is best . to keep applying rock phosphate until | the soil content of phosphorus bas been brought up to - 1,500 or 1800 pounds per acre in the surface seven i inches. : S f : St S | An ideal of a farm is one wh}'ché maintains a system of agriculture which builds up the soil .to a ingh‘ state of fertility, produces everything needed on the farm that can be ufiu? tfactorily produced and maintains notless than two principal industries as sources of revenue.. . ; . Look after the young stock as pas | ture feed gives out, for upon present | young stock depends the future pro i ducers. The young heifer will not grow and build frame and qligestivel organs by simply running to a straw| stack or being fed on weak bay in cold weather. - SR e T A very good ration for milk produc tion would be as follows: Feed daily ! to each cow 30 pounds of silage and about 10 pounds of hay: A very good mixture to go with this roughage would consist of 300 pounds of gluwn, feed, 200 pounds of bran and 300 pounds of corn chop and for each 3% to four pounds of milk produced, give one pound of this combination. If it is found impracticable to give 1¢ pounds of hay daily, the- allowance may be cut to five and the oat straw may take i's place. If this is done, and theu feeding as divected.
e e e e e BURIED 8 YEARS, REMARKABLE DISCOVERY MADE WHEN BODY CF A WOMAN 18 DISINTERRED. LIKE WORK OF A SCULPTOR Undertaser and Friends of tiie De crtased A~e Amazed o Find Body in the Congiticn of Marbie. v isparl, Pa-~For ihe firet Lasmw . § ! £ e IDAD e bundred b . Sinlory the Hlle Quaker 7':‘..;. £'s ard 16 Fidred ownshiy Las o 4 & sensation Ihe bedy of & wWoinan wl 5 Bad tarued =IONY ;’ 4 s feseelly, and the Ul 1 ¥ 3 i Bere slartisd 8! 1o Tee 5 by gEathersd sboutl het £rave 5 t iusl WO ] P L ) 5§ &R e § raville § Alrs g Lriet WFaEs 5 exyard £¥3 e 3 e & 3 .%sSe % iy v i | gy EETuE Ry 2 WO A% sding thi £ the £ through the grand the red Falion - and when :r-:., tried it thes Rsdst so much as budge 11 Then they opened the 1d o P “\ 7 - e o o, %% A fiW e T SR 7 IR by et 3 ;% & ‘2, G, ; L] ;/ /f’ “V*" i HF Ly . ¥ ; a 7 SR L § :‘3) 3 - ',"-1, \}. :‘; 2 <7 . : )': l'\" - /:', i{ 2 4 1 s N/ Lo A\ - S ') L - AR Nl I\ 4 AT [ VAt o R v ALY ) i,,/ ~{’(“ "\, / 7 "‘, (B . i g T N ! 7 . "0, d o o . < 5 - s Undertaker Spitier Touched the Face; it Was Hard as Marble, aud pwered in. There lay the woman, not so much ag a wrinkle in her face, and the skin was but little discolored, except in gmall spots where the colortug. from the casket trimmings had dropped on it The men were amazed. tUndertaker Spitier touched the face ~{t.wus as hard as marble {tself. and. indecd, the silent figure des P dfll;“n in the grave: looked for all the world ke a thing chiseled out of granite rather than something that had once been ordinary flesh and blood . The men sent. for help, and when the combined strength of six men was exerted In lifting, one end of the casket yielded to the force. 1t was gradually raised by propping ong end and then the other until the top of the grave was reached. Then impeiled by curlosity and wonder, and in: the presence of the friends who were present, Undertaker Sp#tler made: a further {nspection. The grave clothes clung about the form without disarrangement, though when the fabrich was touched it fell away, owing to disintegration. Then a plece of the gown was purposely removed from the shoulder, and underneath the skin showed as white and smooth as when the woman was in life. The face was wonderfully preserved—just as if the skill and genius of a sculptor had been pressed into service to preserve the expression, the lines, the contour; they were all there, and as perfectly molded as _any sculptor's chisel could have made them. The hands were round and quite white, except for the coloring matter from the casket’s trimming. Slot Machine for Suicide. " Washington—" Drop a 2 penny in the slot and get a ticket to the other world” might be the inscription on a machine that is suggested by Rev. Dr. Donald Guthrie of Baltimore. Dr. Guthrie was talking on “Calvanism” at the closing session of the synod of Baltimore at the Metropolitan Presbyterian church here. At the close of g plea for a wholesome, enthusiasile in. terest in life he said: “Life has become £0 meaningless and so useless to sou:e that | advocate the setting up of a suicide machine where one ecan deposit a cent and be killed easily and respectably.” : . The Practical View, “How do you think this fusion movement will result?” asked the re“ln ‘con’ fusion,” answered the prac-
