HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1893-4-13, Page 6VW MP NAL : OQQ1C, ON'1., THURSDAY. APRIL 13, 1113.
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SW to V gown wed hessolsie
M. W. awes.:iarawMh —
THE POETS CORNER.
ley llestere. Mad,
Such beautiful, beautiful heads'
'They r- neither white nor small .
Aad you, I know, would warmly think
That they were lair at ell.
Fre looked un hands whom form and hue
A sculptor's dream might be
Yet are those aged, wrinkled hands
Most be.u•tful to me.
Such beautiful, beautiful naiads '
Though heart were vicar) and sad.
Those patient hands kept toiling on
That the children might be clad
1 always weep se broking beck
To childbo .i'. distant day,
I think how those hands rested not
When mine were sr their play
Stich beautiful. beautiful hand.'
They're growing, feebly uow,
For time and pain hate left their mark
On hands. and heart and brow
Alasalae • be ne.riug time,
the wed. amid day to me,
When 'nc.th the daisies nut of aught,
Them. hands will folded be
But oh, lieyucd this shadow. land.
Where all is bright and fair,
1 know full well these deer old hands
Will palms of victory beer :
Where crystal streams through eudlees
year..
How over gulden sands,
And where the old grow young again,
111 chap my anther's hands
-Old Favorite.
Ner s►sek U.
Inde the Loutaville Courier -Journal.
Wit i; revwon for the season sod apolo
nes to ye ecuil:fdl quick .
Her scuttle Hatt is wondrous wide
Upoo t is bleu: 1 Fluter tide,
See out she trippeth daintyla,
To let )e youth full well tu.ee
Mow fayre ye mayde is for ye Bry•ie
A lyttte puffed, they he. by Pride.
She vett ere lovelye ys tb.tt I'd
Shvllyna- gyve to tye, perdue,
Her scuttle Hatt.
1T7.1iS FOR THE FAR...a.
SATHIRIO FIIOM TIME FARM PAP NS
-MANY UKFUI HINta•
Ve Coates into ye Scuttle slide.
Se yo her Hatt wolde 1, and hide,
To .teale tame Luse. --two or three :
But synce She never asketh me,
\ e + orntul ''..nick doth deride
Her scuttle Hatt
• Tankee ea serdtas Meme..
Almost all (•amelias homes hate vege-
table gardens attached, and quite pic-
turesque many of them are, with nicely
kept paths bordered with Fngluh daisies
and old-fashioned pinks divtdtug the beds
of early vegetables awl rows of small fruit
taws and currant and gooseberry bushes.
1e the autumn the mistress of the house
will show you with great pride her well
filled preserve cellar with jams and )e1Les
mid pickles enough to make • New England
hoesewde je•lous and ruin the digestion of
any lees robust people, says the New York
Tribune. Most Canadian women are good
housekeepers ; girls are taught housekeeping
as part of • refined education, and • mother
who allowed her daughters to grow up with-
out this knowledge and its practical and
economic working would he considered re-
mise in her duty. The wealth or social
standing of the family does not influence
this matter in the least. In large families
the grown up daughters take charge of the
younger ones, overseeing their lemons and
rwefel deportment. In this way the
unity ties are kept tory closely united.
The mother and the older girls have so
much united interest in " the children " and
the little tees instinctively look to their
eider sisters for example and eocour.gc
tient. Canadians are • remarkably healthy
people. probably owing to their good
climate and love of outdoor life. The
children are robust and sturdy and make •
pleasing picture in winter in their brightly
colored blanket coats and caps defying cold
and .now. Occasionally ears and toss get
frosted, but • vigorous rubbing with snow
will soon restore the nipped members to
life and on they go as merrily as ever with
skates and sleds, deeply resenting • winter
with little snow and " no fns."
• NN legs.
Fair visitor - How can you tell .n opti
mut from a psalmist' The artist --The
one rays " That's good." lied the other
"That's not bd."
peeeetest end b.ig.mi -L'a`test end
Mems.. -£beet MereM emd wahine
Poultry sod Wren. sou LI•. stoat sad
nsiry.
The lazy dog is pestered nine by the
He who leads time by the forelock ma
sleep well at night
The prows/inkhorn's.. do not always hold
the sweetest noway
Be the kind o1 man that you would Irk.
1. hove your boys t.ocotea
It w no mousy is your pocket to fail to
soakm yon- stables comfortable
1'b woskine of a dad heart sakes the
darkest. dreariest day radiant and plebe
SQL
There no mora solid comfort in a amde
than to • whole gross of fronto It is good
economy to sails_
If you get mad,o to the looking glass
and watch yourself growl, and see haw
qutck you will quit it.
The man who depends on the spur of tie
t ft dacovers that parttcunr so
Ay O4TRICH :AR*
1laprlueet• wt•b Ossrtebes M Slaw.",
'stood"
A resident of Honalulu is esperiwb•
inns in rnisisg ostrich leathers ler the IOW
het. The ladustry ls yes in use afsn.pe
hat It will dos►t visited to o �w A w
demon who lately wsiM
as follows.
1a • i tddeek near Me road were a
Mims bird., 2 yeasts old, standing herded
together in the shale of the algeroh. tress
They were probably sin feet a height, with
gray, ferry nooks, which they writhed .ad
twisted like .erpsota Their furry Mads
scented ridiculously small, m proportion he
their sass, with so much of the avaltehls
spear devoted to mouth and eyes that, me
the owner oriucally ou•erred, 'Users wsma'$
aitch room left for `,sins.' Tire eyes of
them young buds in molded ate. in their
color, sage, and softness, of the .yes of a
heifer -the softiies* `sag coat.&dieted
hy
the porierlut hoof. ilk. tlut o1 • tai
ending in a terrible claw, and a savage,
muscular leg that could diemhowel a eta
at one etrokr•
"The birds awned • great deal, tad lh
the operation the heed menet to part a1 -
most in two. They had altogether the
most bored and indatfereut jar 1have ever
seen outside of polite soci.ly. The little
eover.ng of feathers that suottl• protected
montes often
most b•so't any .put then !tacke only emphasised t err eked•
IA, not set the rasa' with your farm, by (ilen sad they fanned the . selees continua*
ly with their small, useless snags in the ends
of wbicb ere the feather- moot •aluable is
commerce. As we approached they cruse
to the edge f their tncl.wre, looked over,
retreated. and yawned agate. 'N'ha' de
you feed them'' 1 asked. 'Alfalfa, mb-
ar. and • little gram. They cannot
endue the least overfeeding ; it is fatal
&l er& t s
taking from it more than you give back te
it is Lk" way of fertilizers.
If you can ate- nothing but the bed, .hut
your eyes. Better be bland than unable to
tree the beautiful and the good.
lead the cow Amine; Piing that will Barden
the butter. t'otmriseed meal will do it.-
Profes.nr Gilbert
thb•rthing. beta equal, of two animals, ••Hc thea showed w the mcub.tora
the
see
sw one which a the hotter feeler will Ile
birds were 'alma, and prudu.e•: from
r'.. •Iw.ya pmomov. the moprofitable. fifteen to eagh.een eggs 7 hese were re-
St..ck with mho eo: good qualities will moved at ulght, and were sot left to be
make mosey with the !•tine fe d and Dare batcheda the natural method, and had to
that scrubs eta return a ince. I be stolen from the sl.aliuw depression in
Some who hats tne.1 it say that common the maul, ...hid, sena. to, a nest. afar
coal oil anpltsd three times a day to bleed- dark, when the old ones are not on guard.
lag warts on • horse a or mule'. leg is a
son remedy. it is better te put a a ves-
sel and squirt the ori through a •+uilL
Moss mea pretend to lore God; who
They are sery 6erx, and the ower keeps
them at ley with a long pole mss the end of
which is • fork with which be holds them
by the neck beyond kicking distance
show that they do not love the wives Of "The incubator is a cylinder of gateways -
Omar t.ottoms, by making th in use the most add iron heated with c a1 vel lamps. Th.
primitive household u- ensile, while they we:opeer..tun of the bard's bo.ty while she
themselves oro suppued with all the test nit wit 10,1 degrees ; the incubates. is kept as
improved farm tnaebtnery used by civilised goy ,degrees_ The egp have to be turned
men. soar umrs d. -ring Inc day, and as often
"Hoard's I)anymmao' believes that the
Inset foe of the farmer, either ea • private
airym.n or creamery patron. s his own
lack of good dairy understated/rig. This is
the dead that is playing the mischief with
oar profits_
When we remember that a cow as a rule
is supporting a calf during the greater part
of her pe.t..I of 1►_utt.n, and thus is asked
to do do tbie work daring all thin urn•,
the plea for liberal feeding will seem all
the more reu.onabk. eggs I had only tris -.
1». Hooking' asp limes for the year 1892 i -ilea, with • dtseonrage,l sic Moetae
shows that he ran grow -is ro;u fodder so hatchiug u.ccompla.bed the young birds
good that the cows ort up .tory scrap o(, aro removed to what looked liken reinllera-
tt with-.ot even the tr ,tile of cutting it for poo from the roof of which depended many
them -mon winter te-d for them on focr woolen strings. These were supposed to
acres than his wlio'e thirty acres of fodder, provide the pr-tectiou that 'satiate formalities NO
it was grown to • young ',refried. to the plumage of the parent's body.. ♦�
to promoting the :,cairn and vigor of "The young birds are fed upon • die
plant• we are .l'o wdhng to lessen the suited to their youthful appetites, to which
chances of disease loth with the trees and
fruit, and manuring, farming and drainage
are all-important items w securing this.
To hone owners who desire to have their
horses' feet fillet with the loathsome, foot
wrecking dais.. known as tbru•h, we can
my that tit. mud and filth .which can be
found .t this time of the year in too many
yards and stalls, when horses aro kept,
are factors extremely conducive to that
To Preserve
The richness. cola', and beauty of Bee
laws, the greatest can is necessary,
tech harm being done by the use of
dellelbasTo be sun of
wog s;