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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1892-01-14, Page 2appearance of their combs, wideliL. -sad walked tw enty mil . estb-the next tiwn E ON A FEARy. AGRICULTURAL. eMOUSE OF TNE.'W1LL-r-Ti1Ei-,AWV19R-- 0AT0MRG- A.-SETTLEL,-' bright and red. Where the cqmlPhiis& dull, ,and started on the back - track for "Old sickly color, and a kind of flattened,ap . . ..... Hii2glapd " without sending for his baggage The Bout Begins Sinking ill Midstream., t Pear-- A ummr tue Nekth Sm Half a. down j,ears ago _an ngliahmaill, And to -day they tell a story PanIcAnions the P Winter Care ok Sheep. ance, no amount of feeding or care willforce atWone bin eps. Poin mver with the laying of eggs as long as these coadi- as in this country lookingitk at Point about a wealthy Englishman 4- de��h rom Glasgo -An Galen Wilson, in the Cowdry Gewleman, BY W111IT. JAIM& by 861110 exciting scene Occurred I says oing to settle there and marry - tions exist. Again the legs shouldbesmooth an, air of it A ve sheep. i,ft 9 on who m � tells hovv Mr. PeterDubois winters his e gab AAJ i 4- �*-",U Atk andelean and -free fromwales or the boat ply th - , chance strayed to Lone Pe, L6b >wned iik -the- 4*ri�. oat straw, aD. favored "T' li)ne&�thi but was dn ing an the e, and had it He feeds them nothing but bright iver the 4�utry lit Edwin 1610 �10t' been 16i" the coolh ness of ;�t pearance ot spurs, oth,.,ol which in&cite JHilietland-Isles bik a i He wanted to look creek hunting.--[ except occasionally grain is added from -and, of come,; isaster te, t,L! j: vaptain a qew t -a ad pleal 'durftd On that the hen has pan _%I- a w Point. _,o -Collins-i* Tex4 Siftings" )U", t have 0c. y tlle April to grass. The straw is run ua&--Wver laying age. The beld M 0!.- ell Is A a cock should be bro*Jght­9Ut­ol F- ty to tin him, eke�-in jl� miniky. d country he had in. besi es the crew from the thresher. - It is led in Uiiiiks, flock and be as purely tired as possible. -'fight. attim 4ei *04 en,*'ho were returning quarter more than the animals will eat UP he hheirhomesi'mii-Refifre. Themenwie-.esit- clean. Before feedin.a the refuse is thrown The principal callses of failure in egg,pro- Their yarns of wrecks were and sirens false pared wil h Lone Point, . t , balance- Of the The Sabbath Ohime. outforbedding. The animals first pick out duction are helieve4-to be First And mermen seerf to with mermaids waltz. United St -Ates was as a description .-,of the ting in groups quietly smoking their pipes, hens that are keeping arden of.Edeu beside that of As abar`& 0 let me feel Thee near me when some one noticed that the Loat was the chaff� empty - heads, leaves, joint,i and too Old; secon,-breedwj reticent, gruesom . e man, here was there -such. lo;nds The world is ever near.. any fugitive stalks of bay and weeds. Now, and in, or a failure to introduce - now 4� Ben Bluff-& Desk. N6w I see the sights that dazzle, settling in the water. from sources entirely outside of oneliaAoclis Who" weird eyes A inysteri�- where were such crops raiijed, suck-gameAr The tempting somids I hear The news spread like a flash that the as to results : The ewes have good, strong am beamed wit and third, keeping the flock too fire- 6 miiij conveniene-W. - "As. azmi My few are ever near me ferryboat was sinking, and a wild rush was 4mbs,. and he very seldom loses one. They lang i. 'jiath� pai 't A . .roundmeanw* thiL--­--­- nThe inen lost their are smill'Miiino sheep, and average eight same nt, was twou y -x),. But Jesu* diFaC* on nearer, made-frtheiffe belts, me e k - I ' i to egau' is of eight priva rest' "Id ray soul from sin., heads entirely, and fought �ike wild ani. q railroad, consi ted And pounds of wool. They are never constipated Tube. a'w rd P w in 'a' �a th -d he ate u e. like timothy -fed sheep, and come through Fe0di dancesi imine'salcons. one fiotel And"rneral mals to get, possessibn of the belts, There ng for a Object, en m ssma grocery and I post-offi . cee . oinb re 0 let me hear Thee speaking 11 to . e Z sm ;Zn - r Zeppliev ack or E' fned. There"We were a sufficient number of life preservers the winter in good condition. Possibly he -a ;�eeke�cli rd:One- In accents clear and still, get more wool by feeding hay and We must have an object in view when we two malls way, and a ilQ Above the -storms of Won, to'supply'every one, but the men were so might feed, cows, and should keep that object Mebbe I am "—and be made a pause, was being talked of,which waste give Lane -stricken that some of thein struggled grain, but this is doubtful He ceitainly The murmurt 0 ad panic 0 e6& to steadily in view. 'If we make butter our ha ly proved he was ill at ease Point almost metropolitan postal facilities. me, �.y L fiercely' to get belts from others. The T could not get a better quality of wool. choice- bf feed should include those kinds white, though, wi'out t. cause . The Lone Point folks made up their mind Captain rushed among his frightened pass- "Seven- years 0 speak,nd make me listen t' III don't t Mr. . Wilsoa concludes: best adapted to thil- purpose ; if for milk, I knowsga yarn as yei blood ad freeze- that if that Englishman -was catclooking for Thou Guardian of my soul engers, amd finall induced them to ago am sthen we should feed -those feeding 3tuffe that Summat wot P - y to go to and a 9) appened in this 'ere sea, a place- to settle, he must setple in Oat the stem of the boat. .no I fed barley -straw fr produce the greatest yield of milk. . While ere it is if ye'll list tomie. placeor ake he -consequence I s. -If he was 0 Jesus, Thou hast promised little I than two cents worth of r1ey some cows will give a good yield of milk, $ d no fault theirs. To all who follow Thee, This added weight in the stern had the not suited -it weal -be" That where TI.ou art in glom cffe4zt,vf-s1ig4tly raising the bow, where ttie par week, when barley was 50 vents a says the Stockman, --if fed on almost any kind. -'Mark you, before I the yarn begin, They 'organized infornig receptione" at bee , it, iva4loaking, out of the water and pre. bushel. Two of them never got a inbuthful palatable, . thei: whiell OLthe town WPM- There Flhall Thy servant be; 'f 'from making water as rapidly as of-graiii. They would not to Ae feed- of feed that is soaDd and r It'll fteye chills, 'coe it's rather queer pleased to. And"FAsus. I have promised v�n el her go yield can be improved in both -'and Taint all aUat wer I aint sibeen, ap To serve I&ee i� the end': quantity in pear ana en1dcav& to make thin& interest- would otherwise have been the case. After trough, When first turned to pastare in Nor one ye've seard far thisforty year. g for Ogive me grace to follow 8 . , every one of them was in so good quality if feed better adapted to the mak* thestranger. My Master and my Friend I the men had been driven aft the engines pring, of milk ling rt's ti,ne;` I'll voitch, as the Phantom, I!p given. For instance, some co Ship The Englishman had attached to him the cbildition that a, local'butcher wanted to fed on earn -meal and hay will do won 8 Seen round the Cape a'most evry trip." &k4far nient'a air,- - hi h d' t6 be 0 let me see Thy footmarks, were forced to their highest speed. The buy them for immediate slaughter. These in w to is suppose boat was so far out of trim, however, that milkVving ;substitute some linseed meal, the usual accompaniment to distinguish- And inthem plant mine owA1 lambs were snow -eaters, and would not MY hope to follow dulf slow progress was made, and she continued bran or middlings in place of part of the As condiment to the yarnster's speech, ed foreigners, with plenty of money, and is c f�llow a good path 60 rods to water. There Is in Thy strength.s, one! to sink deeper and deeper, and thou,ah her are several -witnesses to these facts and my com-meal and the yield of milk will be in. His messmates kindled their pipes anew, popularly believed to be acquired only by Oftatde me, call me, draw me, passengers were now quiet they were still creased. If we are feeding for butter and Then thered closer each unto each, travel on the continent. He received their phold hie to We -end; ga Ana then In heaven re ceiv eme, badly frightened. Fortunately she managed position is impregnable. I have no sheep to the� cows are fed a grain ration of bran alone, While Ben his hand, o'er his forehead attentions with becoming condewenIO-110 to reach a pier and all hands scrambled winter now ; if I had they would get good. then the addition of corn -meal or cotto drew, th My Saviourand My Friend. n. amd looked --at their doings wi SurPrUe -j. E. BaiDic. ashoreinahurry. Tbeyleft her just in the straw (preferably barley straw) and a­quar- And posed to them as a ghost -crazed man, through his eye -g ter of a pound of grain each per day. " There eed meal will pay well in the increased nick of tithes for the last man was hardly is a great difference, in straw. Late -cut richness of the milk. The price of different Ere thas his narrative he began 'The strangest people I ever saw,'dofi't '-for Every D ashore before she went to the bottom. 0 y ay is no in kinds of feed must always be taken into II Ws gone ten year since the Will -o' -the. ye know ; I can't make them out, bah jove", Golden Thoughts ay. early- ter ley raw. Wepresume consideration, it may pay bett�r to feed a , wiep I he remarked onfidentially to a stray drum- Monday- I . . ;- A Black Squatter. r. i son, wo re hisown ration n3t-qnite so good for the purpose we (A schoonerwell found an' taut an' trim) mer, who was stopping at the hot411 for a day The hands of the King are softand fair; are feeding for as some other more or two, and who. thoroughly understood the The hamds of the robber straw tior d ' a few emels of grain one, but the difference in expensive In ballast sailed, with the weather ensf They never knew labor's stain; The white squatter is bad enough -too , cost maybe so - - situation. redly wear bad, in fact -yet he has not reached that were left here and there, it is hardly likely much in favor of the cheaper- (Jint Jones was skipper-ye've "eiid 0*- The bloody brand of Cain; he 'would object one that -,the - him), If � that' Englisher ain't thi emd-6st But the hands of the man are hard: and seat. high state ofmeanness which the negro feeding a! it will,be the proper thii�g to do, Yar sai'ral ports uv this Northem 0 laziest cuss that ever set,;one foot afore - tered. - . squatter bas.attained. A travelei'not very - . ., , .. ":e . aaothe�s then rem 4ut.they ThIM theears Of toil and pain. far from Guthrie, Oklahoma, came to a mis- reeding the Stock in'Winter. - aimuig'gmi W to be. I We can klmost alft�ia mAe up a -ratiah A I'm imed,s ' arked old that will answer our Purpose and yet not Sim the prevaiiiig town ora6le erable shanty, built artlyof mud; and, de - e slaves of Pilate have washed his hands T116 two most tin a t times at the year have it too costly. A sp3all quauti�y of a 'I She carried seven uv a crew; an told - -851v- e t--th'Aiwlb and tha's what we'ri white as kingr maybe; I . . I . lighted with even tTlis reminder of civili- . hue itmill --he readily' seen,, tha Ba .has with wrists unfettered stands. zation, be rode up andlapped on the door. when changes in trertinifinal system make certain high pri�id` feed added.io me, ater another at Thepkipp&, mate ali'two boys an' h'b&A on opinion of tfki��h For the world has inalle him I.0&1 - Lrin ' ' , - , 9�- - &' er price may make the latter of'raach an D, an a wen as eac t er. free feeding an important and critical work are alow -,�A- P bold' I Who's dar?" a voice demanded - -worn Is an torn -the first the animals more value than if fed alone. Alwa�yskeeP- '. Ai-bever fbilered a man to sea. 0 Christ on Calvaryl -4Auorymous. If Open the door, please; I want -Ito see a the Spring and'Fall. In At b6 dance which the sirip,ger had been But the palms toil by us! are changed from dry feed to fresh gram ing in mind our, object in feeding, and ereFaded to attend, he rem ' arked to one of human being, I don't care who it is." ti -and any sudden change will proftee, suffer- watching the markets, we ca Shemas the capn's nieoe--an erphin lan he r It-aw-dou�t seem to T60ay n buy to better In=-yopftnou,,A1 she!dclass. An old negro opened the door poked his ing or disease i Another advantage than if we -merely buy the chpap- pt t cipaiits There is no love like Thy love, a the systems. be rule here to appear in full dress at Who lovest to the cross - head out, and said: change is, in, the fall-, , when they are taken est feed we can get without regard to its .11 We'd been out, mebbe, a month or more, a ball. No love so pure and hikh love Yere I is, sah. " -from the pastures and the,open fields to the adaptability to our purpose in feeding. Ex- W'eu summat worried the Roosian -Finn, 11 Full dress ? full dressi did you say? If As thine whocountat lose And I am glad to see you, too, " rep! ied dry'Winter - er and-toeuclogqd stables. perience, founded on experiments, will s0ou Fur at the time Wen 'e'd ought to snore, there is any chali here that Malt in full dram Whatever pleasure bringeth the traveler. " I have been riding act -on Of sweetness and caress, y sudden radical change is bad for the teach us how to feed profitably.-Fam 'E'd jabber jest like a himp, o'sin,­ you 3ust P'int him outi And Isll fire him . so And emil'st while sorrow stingeth, this accursed country for three days and you stock, and in accustoming them to the new Fidd and Stockman. -�Urt up, asleep, in the to quick be won't . kn ow 'what iamwed � him'. pmost bank, If sorrowing, Thou canst bless. are the first person I have Eeen. Nlymission Winter life, thisshouldbe borne in mind. An' cut sich capers, ye'd think 'im drunk. Fulldress.? Well,I should say go. I'll out here is not a pleasant one. I am looking The animals should have the run of the bet -that nixie-teuths of the people here are 0 love beyond all praising, for a man that ran aw&v with mv wife." pasturm, when their own b9alth, and not ?Mtiod Hinta to Dairyznen. "'Bd bawl the -name ol the mpWaniece 0 life with love made fairl dressed in every rag they've. 90. My heart Is faintwith pazing Lady vrid 'Most load enough fur,to make !er year ; that he was not r. - the good, of the. gram land&, is considered, An open Winter is a blessing to coww if The Englishman saw Across the radianta r No, she has deserted him.' The more we-bld 'im. to 'old 'is And back to that pure i1ory until late, in the fall. Late pasturing. is their owneis are slack enough to have open The more 'e gev us a cause Peace, understood but. he made no further com- Which in the eye of faith Tallman, is he?" -Ienirall� injuri6us tb the� piftturig, but this stables. to fear. ment. �;Tdpg simple story "Yes." We told the skipper 'ow- matters stood Later on during.the festivities,at the con- 0 y the can be overreached by selectingsome grassy Some of the shipping stations are are life and death., "Sorter got whisker on de side o' his field- that is going to be- plowed up next getting so much milk that they have a sur- only laughed, as we knowed'e cad. clusionf a very..energetic daice with the -4WadeRobinson... jaivs?" for corn. Turn the stock -into this pl s, which they are working up into cheese. -One belle of the evening, abduestled closely and dn (lay -When weare animatedby Yes, go on !" the traveler exclaimed. Ud,,�and, they can. do. no harm. Let;them any village people who buy their milk night ('twas blowin' a spankin confidingly to the lion at th3 hour and tho blear unkind desires, whenwe ­Lemme�see. 'Bout forty yeani o.d.,' -,!mtthreuv breeze; h November, and often up idur the tamil cow, bat by those who have wh* ered- 'I'Say mister, what's the are pro That's the man." y We'd let out every reef we dare), 16P wit' yer Did you break in ted to revengea wron tore - a iiiiie, keeping them in only tried her, especially those who have large matter h Tilks sorter slow?" The Roosia Finn at the wheel I sees, jeroacli -.ling, to say bitter worl" r to -The animals families 'excessit,443001d. days., of clATdren, she is pronounced . a 0 The very man. Now tell which way do or deeds, we should wait and suffer mt.from these late decided success. With heyes, like two red2ot coals; afl&re, The guest replied somewhat hesitatingly: these hopeful feelings to cool and better ones he went." 66 1-m*'nature, -ddw2y I limits their When we have cheap catt I le-tood, a good The binnacle light it was gone clean out, No me glass is all right." totake tbeirplace. But, iftbere is Who went?" - -91 ts- Iany Ho -ho.! Thees mischief," sez Is 4.abou go-thrit ber-taken- from grade of cows, and high prices for dairy pro Didn't brea em. yourself but some righteous deed to be done, any justiep to es- Why, the man. mmfe - ffr - I od to.dry fodder. As the food grows ducts, dairymen can lay up money for a Afore I. turned -in, I 'urried aft, other suckef did - and you don't want to tablish, any kindness to express, any love to What man?" Uoi-1-gentifut in tha -se the rainy day. These conditions largely exi 'the man you saw." grassfields, increa at Auas .'ow.. -?e steered wisonta light.- voe. im Well, I'll tell' you, mistpr,, manifests any joy diffuse, we should hasten WILY, ordry-fodder!giveir -those who have to fd �t to givi it form and voice aAin't seed nb, to ihim- Im the at this period, and buy E lookediifwild- a ai a', man gone ; daft, 'Bayifi-' that I'm hitd` gone on knowing well The exercise which the stock gets butter, cheese and milk should not begrudge An' save;ge, as if 'e meant to fight. you, 4 you be . a fernner, �au if you'll k there is neither time to waste nor space to Oh, blast it, you have Just described iiLthe Fiall of the year by being turned loose dairymen their good luck, &r it y dead quiet about it, and not in the blessed work of doing good.- the ma who ran away with my wife. Now, P41M 0 pa, -fure low prices. lit th . a field* is also qui1e an- item for merited through past seasons of is r2eld C I Says' sez 1, Iwot d'ye mean to do? w You jest steer righti or 1-'ailwthe crew.' she's around, I'll hook granny'si a for [Dr. Cayler. tell me when you saw him 6,nd which ay considertbiqn, It keeps their systems in Which is better, to take your milk to a -you he went." and . wont be in pain fbrom.. in, Taesdaj- goodcondifAon and makes them ready for creamery whose butter sells for 30 cents per :cc PE ed, the fiends but 'e'dida t speak one glaai.-�k' he knows what's fit for fis f Had fate Neber did see him and neber did know --:efanding.the enervating infiviences.of con- pound and above, or to manufacture it at finameR44 for td.call the Oh, but me deah-girl, I couldn't thirik Proposed bliss here should blimate whicher way he went." _.duoRg thewintry-4YS- home and get 25 cents therefor ?. If you 'Ther! was a erbah--she'd sprung & leak I ofii, ion't ye know." My being; had I signed the ond- "Look hore,,I don't want tocall you a qftwng, -6we ild'ba be- think best to if was todL VZL beyond- * h vir, shou -ome I e XigI&A Still-onle must leads i Fel make the butter at home, why ThgVe right, youbet I'm"' r dear Have a bliss to die with, dim-descrio4p, gun very early, f6r the� mights- of -66-ftll notadoptthe creamery plan and--, -t the 'is sbheine w'en -late. _the liar. 6#7 ge The mate an'skipper they rushed on 4ebk and keep yer tmp abet, an' float'gitL This foot once planted on the goal, Den whut O do it fur?" are alwo -to I -no coldas to tax ? To find the schooner a 'opeless wreck. specs. I kin do anythin . This glo2e,-garland round my soul Because I y U gw'ne led to. -94on as orTmPurelonetively to all -that you hear in fer a feller 1 like. Couldl escrysuchl' Tryandtest. a ,ga inclined compel �,agh Mister -mister -say, w at is your - first I sink back shuddering, from the quest, What fur. ,they are.�gwlm tw,qhelter 6 -littli.� dry the institutes this Winter in, regard to The- bows was jammed in betwixt, two naine?". She had gradually drawn the En- Earth being so good, would Heaven seem best 1 Because you say that yzan haven't seen roe 8; feed shdu1d1,;qjpiq1k -&-them.,morning and -dairying. If you wish to reject any.. ofthe dazed k glishmam to one side, and took his -[Robert Browning- th -a man you describe. 3111 very gradii- 'sentiments as unpractical, that is your 'Er faternast, snapped an'clear overboard, rfor bashfulness. Friday -I like to think of Christ as a shep- Didn't see him." any until the pastures yield very little privilege, but the bulk of the institute talk Was swimmin' round with the ropes aae I'Me.1ratname-aw, yes. Mechristian herd. The duty of a shepherd is to take How, then, do you know that it was gram Then ai apriount. ot. ft. food is golden grain that you cannot afford to blocks, � - I ea very throw away. najrne--aw,--yes-Claud." care of his sheep, When. a bear. attacked tW sort Of a man?" y Ate sich like tackle, which sold it moored. .111 don't set much by that nmalep David's "-he seized a spear and slew the .,:: Vkuse you said so." must be tei to A6 t litple dry food so long as- the gross is of -any ordinari - cows do. not yield butter in The surt an' spray, w I 'y it &sbed as 'igh lisped the maiden;' "but Ihall 00 You intmder ; and your shepherd will take as Because I said so! Why, you old fool, 'length and swestesii. � Their own deswiie.for Winter that has a natural golden hue, deep As the mizzea crosstrees orprett� nighi Clauey for shork Did they call you Claud much care -of you. Oh, v hat joy in the new I didn't sav a word." dry fedder-W411' regulatei-the matter largely, enough to satisfy the buyer's eye, so it is L I - a be se you was a scratcher -a hustler? If to those who, can say, " The Lord is my "Good day. 91 for they will come to thatables t night expedient that a little commercial color be you farrin' jabber Is the skipper cried,' t67did it mus -t have been hen you WAS a hii I iiiry1filfeirass hMnot-b&D"tifficient, to shepherd I's As a rule, shepherds kpow Hold, on, there," the traveler cried, bat added-.tq the cream An' whipped a pistol. from out'is belt derned sight younger than you be now- But their sheep by their defects ; and I'think it the old rascal was gone. The traveler got nourish their Sy-SUML. The -dry fedder Thi amount of work entailed Before the Roosian 'ad time to side, that's nothin' to me, Clauey dear." is so with ou� Heavenly Father. Heknows down and eat on the door, jwnd threatened through the shoiA&b6 cuts I-suRt bran or grain mixed with Winter care of cows depends on how you An' banged away with the gun so 'elt. IIAh!ah!rea1 I ly,this is an awful surprise. 11 us all by our defects; and yet, with a1 our to break it down. ke,ftinuiep4latable. -by it to ma. only begin in the Fall. , If you do not make & But safe so stood on the windlass still: Don't let it staggeryou, kmey; there's faults,', he loves us. Oh, let.us give thanks I'De interview' s closed, sah,?'saidthe such gradual intelligent transformations thorough preparation, and then carry out an It's 'ard the Devil's Own son to kin. swads of surprises 9 this ciounfiy. But here that we "i-ve such a good abepherd to guile old negro, " and if you injures Ast do, I'll from.-green%adry-fodder that the -health of organized plan, you will find- the care of comes . Long Ike for me to dance a break- and protect us ! and though affliction may hurt you, sah." the i1tockqawJi,e, reserved. There. is no cows very laborious and the result uneatis. The girl then come up the cabi n down: withhim, so I must go. Don't git come upon us and seem hard at the time, The traveler went -on cursing the old go 3y*de,v, rrm,` strain b6iijbi upon their iy-atemL . nor any factory. Calm as yer please, though 'a t;re,lar- sudden cli'' The Winter health of the Have the stable warm, keep the - cows ed. Jeery, Claney, cause I -dance with-1ke, but let us remember His great'meray and loving scoundrel and swearing that he i would see come to the house ter-morrer night and weW -kindness, and bow and kiss the rod. -(D. L. him in chains a thousand years before he stock- in much upon the early icon- bedded from the start, and clean the drop- ffainti allus women wot satin vears -dition, the when first -sheltered in As flinches least in the d spark a lettle, and I'll give yer iranny's Mo�4y. would again lift a hand to secure his free - Ling from the stable Wt least once a day, and anger shared the Itall that pi�qtice o�ght to be uni-. you have,reduced the time to be, afterwards The girl. for pluck I ud rather choose "am -Saturday- dijo.-4Arkanpaw Trkeler. Who dre ses plain an' wears low-'eele' "'Deah. me! deah melts Without -Thy presence, wealth is bags of cares; spent in keeping the aninials clean and com 8 . moauedthestertled d Wisdom-buttf 11 j uIllet--sadness 0 y; JOY, IL j?. SmrrZ. fortable, to 'a i;�inimum. There is; always shoes.) subject of the Queen ; "that young person Friendship is treason, and deZirlits are- snares; 001M WAVE HYGIENE. less real work about takina care of milch seems to think she marr- me Ali A-16 Pleasures h— --in and mirth butow, mates, this. 'are is the strict ,pr W�, animals properly than there is in the neg- eat nie!V and without more adieus he sli ed madness lectf ul, eiloveinly -way, where a general diff - truth -to -the hotel: thout Thee, Lord, thi*13 be not what they Danaer in coming 1�rom eu"f-Dol6rs into _bfth, "it. I . out and went be,. o madman mallefur the tremb] a warm'Zoom. -P 'Roliot Wy a,hus ing tle g!ng out becomes �iniperative after .1A g1r s - 'The next- day there *as a select huntLgot- Nor have the!r being, when compared with Vial _1engrh Th --time. -of 1h iaone-of those -Sititeraiaking factori"�; m4blighed, invow An' grabbed the- barna-uv our little, Rdthj-�-- -ten �q f6ilhe benefit' o at -a of Theo Dr. U. -Wi -th- That was t e Ong opinnVinter -.Vrea er do not 6rie "mirable papei in which he is wont, in his AM on . 13 'Work- Pearl. h iis�inounted on the finest the "bLhaykng iiill things, and not Thee, what have the-chme- --to av t a b teaching the: listake' of , 'turning The cap'nAked4ith -unsteady haim own we your. ifforded--a wild brute not half brokew--and rds, er anirr y -10i MiMA6we -'Into at having Thee. what have my labors got I y principles, and y making i he i V6 a Urny'ard for ih6 eAttle� AiesbiCdO.- Pdrmv�u,�'ewarn'btoblanie. tgo ilju6tj,6U L' h I a. guest wout to grass at t 0 lot me enjoy but Thee, what farther crave 11 I lemental! the MAN so' re,6 g e winter. Thousands: 4 dairyinen in the past have first buck. Wen, for his safety,. he was And having thee alon& what have Inot I - unlearned the participators in h:v own I isped- iana ; nor would .1 be Down f6A our pet with,4 muffled,thud The farmers,or am according amaking just such. grave mistak�,.a,�d Er ;- nor sea nor features - blanched as: g mounted on 6 mule. This mule had a habit, Possessed of heaven, heaven unpossessed Of learvings" investigates the reason why a moat enthusiastic anipport- to the proje-et at what is worse they are still coqtin'uing in 'of cringing or squatting when. anythi cold wave is invariably followed by increas- - :B%* . J. Dillon and V . died. Ing Thee I Mt� in -ro mf where Y W. the error. The grass c p of 180 will i - ed.'er corpseftom &pool & blood touched his Bank. The first time the Eng- -I Francis Quarles. ed mortality, and gives a few siinple rules Hunt of said the Winter milk_fiow of We raio t which can advantageously be borne in the dairy commissionees staff Are fer thereby, Ans buried it in the rock's bleak side. Habra", in trying a keep up with i9e ­k'an4 tv;en4 farmers fu"h over this present, season will be our -tailed b3 th . hem -dug h in chary - is hpels in the mules fiankff-l' A WEDDING PREMNT. mind. Clothing is the first thing to attend a W -yell- d �'of milk dially The milk is 2 W.1 bad. practice. Then why continue stem The madman dove with a dyli' squatted, imd at that inotant a bevy of to. To have the body, during variable rutt through animpraired Z;trifugal cream so replete wit. Aamage to theaten Next took the skippers; iry in crazy Spun. ralne chickens rose in the air. The London Vorporatlea Will Give $16.530 weather, such as rw obtains, well en vel- sspu-4tor, and the4kimmilkis immediate- terests? ro a up; Wbat made him do �tbat?" asked the,: to Prince Allwrt Victor andr'bls Bride. oped from head to foot in non-oonducting iN That day, the hull 61 the &' h k vei�A- to; the � Urmeft'tQ be carried If you use a thernibmeter in the house'to Eii lishman. While there has been much talk concern. substance is essential, and the clothing of The mate an' capn they ,:R got: dron. w0e,sam coam AtWoodstock the- gage the temperature -the -100m,by oU living 91d. Sim who was ne6rest to him ever liq the financial resources upon which the poor effectively is one of the best forms ed. t&te of Arkansas, r3ined L ' ' toes- why. nov hiig one in cow stable.'and. i ya not a J�ite-mor sup -1b In sitting bet* t ready to atand up for the 9 A ftt Victor and Princess Victoria that philanthrophy can take. give Is Fur threalogAL Yo M ary, 6 66-k ied 94"Ah,-tlafs. all r4ht, minter. -q -_ If- t 6uld giv - - ' W'so dread, fire empera are is t ua can, it,ALMuaLg1Anee-n#w and then 9 Th Mph will have to� depend after rooms and in bedrooms the maintenance of ndif little ' ' k silver anpie tnbe4 the corporatip of the city an equal t Mo ther* i0!q*ia& equally essential, Py , - 4 -,g mule ?Is rear - ts. -the --conift ladto," In'thiti-me , eximple'which, should -he bedroom encourages venti- eattheWoodstockc A lefi the.dead.- of. Unda''n Itai. set an and a, W -t In kol%ro"a-kpep eW on,tbe day it, was Y to set on game. a one. 0 T viiited­­ The e. condition 6f the stable.' es, tral lik i-l]4,fMlcWii4-by the other municipal car- lation, and gives health no less than com- ie Idrtirethe 1 cc* likat' rockfiva-year- thim-'aetteirdogs.' 47butter, in U-0 t i out two. or.throe -�f I-passecl t mme potatioitit roug�out the country, would re- fort. In going from a warm into a cold at - go. balk-diwy to drinkleesedid, 4ater, They the The-E�glishmau was. interested at once� - a t in� -a very heavy addition a now mospftere, III to,th' in breasting the wave of low 'ket' shipped. 0 0 isli mar -and Mr. aed the waters, liut�' ceaIta- emg,tempera- and'old'Sim dwelt at -'t t great lengtb upow. ilmos L meagi�e coffers of the young couple- telawrSture, no one can haxm by starting 01 -blasts -Arop -;-Vie was saidin' d6w, the trouble and expense of training a mule, It has hien­­ U that t e r of Wales y -Bobe! ped 10 nayaffirms,,thite �tum sad -their rtt thorougbl warm but t -exposure. to. Winter -is The Wijd h P ince in re urn In On f This'. With 'eaffly 'so feels a �heeitsucyabout asking Parliament to u -their com art 9;lqd, pro t. on t,.e h .ary to Away enough to steer, a jack -rabbit he rode i!lp besid from the cold into the warm the act shoull ib t. form -to cd -it IkL. -be aceom�lhrhed gradually. in , : -with my trick at: thkwhed in 1riglit, Oe mule and pve it a kick in -the flank m jr �n alwait IT" - are in .1 quit 'a t'far thp proper support of his terk iok-of the.. Dbwii went the mule elde per If d sewaii b.4 d g7wt in wWit�'i with his' too. at The wave of low temperature requires to Fur haunte an thatmay [*In erase Our great cheese son �after his marriage to Princess It -has been suggested in be inet by good, nutritious, warm fool -Your m r give awayent tha rabbit?" Upon the wound that still mark Ratws siek- of--ther­*4WQhey wi t. a -cad, sugar, . . t�­ - - .1 I- L . ''I I 11 The-foreignor?s interest increased,- ka soute.quarteii-that1he Lord Mayor of Lou- Heatef6rining foods, such as bi I'" 0 :W Ihn" "T. 9 L R�iftk*ate awroin to , a - e d 1M ral, rap Ong lon -oW for a fund ge, and'potatnes, are gi ad -big -,r Ad'9 o nift le nesti A ri lion eraturwat �tfi" ­'­ buttei, oii1j�ieal porrid A but iked -i - 4 a, subse p. coltdm a ted-agg eesw e.. awititick- a -il I.- T- b4� ­ , L , ". I.. - - thgm�' - - is an entire 'mistake to suppose that the -le royal:cou^- butit is :(if a ed - use -at this time of the year. It, nil' tO7 _p fear 'is 44A Vilh:w 106hy Md. As the ifordin ef, the curied o"a 9m, ray% I the Queen orthe y were go eek Wales! wbidd Aons eLt to any such mesas to aummerst vul Qs&'"k=;M- 174 'Twas ha t lishmali, sl6holics. When a glass of hot wful, mates can see it ift(LW, pre, ty rapid; the Bug of Whicliwas to .-ft wave� of cold is neutralized in any sense by R, theuse of q -Wt -. f -! - ad lit eer the Wzboiwd, how. t% huM &a muk ur him on the, tb an &at, touch brand.N warm the cold man, the credit be ion,howeverthought Do - he'went, stuphled ina j# hi rat TIATI K. WU it loligelothi�hQt, water, siid-any discredit 0010. Niettrust. aiiisoft r fiihifian dver his !head, -",A ast's-paw 62611ton6d 110POW 5&4 -ad thii T &miss. to make a handsome our, . - e' --L g -1hW.9cp&aion of the marriage, that.mayfoll -in r dji,e,w& w t -do resent Oil .9 me- I gn the cold in action it goes inan 9 -6 ep wn 16w'to the brandy. go far from eAoesuv' eke -an' 'wail ling.: and so, �inabeiid of voting a sum to , acw purchase alcohol cheekink 0 Jt0m the -fi�theL 8, in_a twimk Came f dibreath the �'16t'Of �jd*j@ something else that per- with it,'andherewith aids in arresting the As soon as, he. 4eci6vefed W theld& -w 4ne'ver, be of use to I _"t1W _t - good wai awminer ha the royal motion of the hewt, in the living animal, t qs� -ot .been�th& oence ig .1i teVW ftd fAs Oft no took a practical view of the beca unty of either *&6 y, an overwork then-oudd A o4oxidation. Zzeessive ex Oe&. -F104, ifflhea#8 --sig4r the share, andL; atuit 16u: afia, thin -thit-p raps the whol ir. was � hi �Aitod the sum of f,295M erciseif the Nod w c -ill w -able, bat -not only accept J�plovto murder hibm -dove -un er again an 'king duiing thisi-�Weiasons whew a sadden fall of body ormind, should be alrSided, especially -�01& friends i are best. -W& if iW I wedding -gifts that fusio or e were 8 �Ou Ong - e temperature is of frequent occurrense. For inta eon h exhaustion, whether phydw! w mental, Tbe, his old she for some evM ]p for him� muckintere s�" _ - . _ _ ; ­_ ;'...", . -1 , AZ 0 fl Um stedin okilag, . 1. means. -Chaniber of Depu 7t -rise-td the a e e ew as an. otion is the same a& of heat. y'L ey ipaiiiiti�bjl iji%bhiting any public experi- 10 Of im di 110tv see- bin -,liat e id him ere rMaay�' iW e; -111Visfoolish foryourfather -whOw I- j4d up 0 jQt­ �fg�ivas'6f . Mrs. Biown v-huited up to be -the coming in Witjf i r' ng- the seirmon. 1AWe �&hnie U fean r' We etion am WARMP 1!�lrs tl;e e5oet is very rA MR. :'I -V413 iM &- - In hou W -Ner -to -W ih far -,,-v a. *p the bt 'M to wake up when Witelb is jgomg much attentism aj h an emer .ell a %t�ke ideal Still-�Uter odorleesand invisible, say inSports Afield. Uniortu in this case, impossibie, b required condition can bi be tter the h un ter's chan ce -can walk through woods mg properly shod; and bi selection of a bunting sui self practically invisible Danger of detection by ti the woodland deer can - t with a certainty a' a r setctlaa of suitable CloLi is of prime iLnport&nce an neglected. Most sportsmen jump that a tan -colored suit of is just the thing for a worse mistake could not ments approximating the must be avoided -there b can hardly be over -rated some careless or excitable it a rule to shot first and Hence, the color adoptd ly as possible the color o: and this, of course, chang, of the ground hunted ove the forest growth, and the hunter will learn to sider-always supposin ; selected be not too near for the reasons given. While deer -hunting, a thould be closely watche( Lity is established, A g )ften misleading, as the3 in different lights. A I the sun shining fairly i Loo, hite for a deer ; whi I seen in the shade wi tround, will appear &In ffie circumstances under wen will sometimes dece nost expert wood an. My own experience tat �ue may be mistaken. "ar for a calf but, follov .educing possibilities to bred in error in time ILgain, i saw, in some In to be a skulking buck. ' to be sure, the animal ca; -a wliail', big" gray we wer to fire a gun unless, ty what they are shootit weeptable excuse to be brother hunter. One in In he ordinary transact in this. W nEn hunting, walk a without making unnec never go more than 100 ping and looking carefu for at least five minutes. line as near as you can, a thicket, or any natun front; for by this mean from any deer that r Most amateur hunters ; for tails --stalking throt swinging galt with thei ted ahead. This is a v deer tails, but, while yo you cannot hope to Green hands at still -h anxious to see deer, cover too mach ground. The golden maxim : "Don't hurry." Three hunt over and back ii tails a six miles walk, spent in walking can be ing to great advantage. well-established pass -w of woods to anuther, an to hunt along these, r4 clay; for the deer will ( near their regular pi against. the wind when I unsteady or very high 4 much, but sit d7own an� are restless on windy foot, keep moving alt fault with many hun� know better is, that tE place to kill a deer and particular spot at a M Jumping a deer or-tw( might have been kille hunting instead of through the woods. Ti to profit by all the cha, be always on the look, though you had a big bi making a sneak on hii Deer axe often found looking places-wherev hunting, anti thorough t3 of deer from years of i never think of looking woradthink that an ol( over miles of rough woo of dense thickets to lie broad glare of day, wit�,, main road where wagg�cl most hourly. I once �, five long hours and at 11! public road. He was lyi of p rsimrim bush e 'e' and would have let me, opportunity had been Asa rule, amateur selves to be guided too that lacki-,bstantial f� through the woods wil slit.tulders, they often � that they will declare deer. Ask them why they will have no senj Deer will sometimes gq hunters -for deer wi sometimes, a well as Pend on a blunder for i on a deer razge, the fir find out where the gam, they are feeding on ant Afterwards determine i on the range, their age�l you can hunt iutefligeg the signs, Cracks, et wasting any time in hul a fellow who hunted fai in a sc-�o ;f oodland I seen a deer track-mu�l unnecessary to state th, to spoil on his hands. Some good hunters avoid getting blood on ing. They fear that a d farther if they did so, i a correct belief ; bat ni so much -s tl-.v smell 1 when a deer gretsexcite, foolish things. The s readily and.! ough; = smell snort and bound wildly though trying to locate very CuLiou;t) out deer's nose is his best , vrere not for his acute s4 deer co-ZA be easily ap] when fe--4m-, As to 4!ie best kind shooting, pages have be, moat cvse � Mau who ev rifle has Zma kind of -. the suk�*itL The write will nwkv ar level a tr 7 I77777M appearance of their combs, wideliL. -sad walked tw enty mil . estb-the next tiwn E ON A FEARy. AGRICULTURAL. eMOUSE OF TNE.'W1LL-r-Ti1Ei-,AWV19R-- 0AT0MRG- A.-SETTLEL,-' bright and red. Where the cqmlPhiis& dull, ,and started on the back - track for "Old sickly color, and a kind of flattened,ap . . ..... Hii2glapd " without sending for his baggage The Bout Begins Sinking ill Midstream., t Pear-- A ummr tue Nekth Sm Half a. down j,ears ago _an ngliahmaill, And to -day they tell a story PanIcAnions the P Winter Care ok Sheep. ance, no amount of feeding or care willforce atWone bin eps. Poin mver with the laying of eggs as long as these coadi- as in this country lookingitk at Point about a wealthy Englishman 4- de��h rom Glasgo -An Galen Wilson, in the Cowdry Gewleman, BY W111IT. JAIM& by 861110 exciting scene Occurred I says oing to settle there and marry - tions exist. Again the legs shouldbesmooth an, air of it A ve sheep. i,ft 9 on who m � tells hovv Mr. PeterDubois winters his e gab AAJ i 4- �*-",U Atk andelean and -free fromwales or the boat ply th - , chance strayed to Lone Pe, L6b >wned iik -the- 4*ri�. oat straw, aD. favored "T' li)ne&�thi but was dn ing an the e, and had it He feeds them nothing but bright iver the 4�utry lit Edwin 1610 �10t' been 16i" the coolh ness of ;�t pearance ot spurs, oth,.,ol which in&cite JHilietland-Isles bik a i He wanted to look creek hunting.--[ except occasionally grain is added from -and, of come,; isaster te, t,L! j: vaptain a qew t -a ad pleal 'durftd On that the hen has pan _%I- a w Point. _,o -Collins-i* Tex4 Siftings" )U", t have 0c. y tlle April to grass. The straw is run ua&--Wver laying age. The beld M 0!.- ell Is A a cock should be bro*Jght­9Ut­ol F- ty to tin him, eke�-in jl� miniky. d country he had in. besi es the crew from the thresher. - It is led in Uiiiiks, flock and be as purely tired as possible. -'fight. attim 4ei *04 en,*'ho were returning quarter more than the animals will eat UP he hheirhomesi'mii-Refifre. Themenwie-.esit- clean. Before feedin.a the refuse is thrown The principal callses of failure in egg,pro- Their yarns of wrecks were and sirens false pared wil h Lone Point, . t , balance- Of the The Sabbath Ohime. outforbedding. The animals first pick out duction are helieve4-to be First And mermen seerf to with mermaids waltz. United St -Ates was as a description .-,of the ting in groups quietly smoking their pipes, hens that are keeping arden of.Edeu beside that of As abar`& 0 let me feel Thee near me when some one noticed that the Loat was the chaff� empty - heads, leaves, joint,i and too Old; secon,-breedwj reticent, gruesom . e man, here was there -such. lo;nds The world is ever near.. any fugitive stalks of bay and weeds. Now, and in, or a failure to introduce - now 4� Ben Bluff-& Desk. N6w I see the sights that dazzle, settling in the water. from sources entirely outside of oneliaAoclis Who" weird eyes A inysteri�- where were such crops raiijed, suck-gameAr The tempting somids I hear The news spread like a flash that the as to results : The ewes have good, strong am beamed wit and third, keeping the flock too fire- 6 miiij conveniene-W. - "As. azmi My few are ever near me ferryboat was sinking, and a wild rush was 4mbs,. and he very seldom loses one. They lang i. 'jiath� pai 't A . .roundmeanw* thiL--­--­- nThe inen lost their are smill'Miiino sheep, and average eight same nt, was twou y -x),. But Jesu* diFaC* on nearer, made-frtheiffe belts, me e k - I ' i to egau' is of eight priva rest' "Id ray soul from sin., heads entirely, and fought �ike wild ani. q railroad, consi ted And pounds of wool. They are never constipated Tube. a'w rd P w in 'a' �a th -d he ate u e. like timothy -fed sheep, and come through Fe0di dancesi imine'salcons. one fiotel And"rneral mals to get, possessibn of the belts, There ng for a Object, en m ssma grocery and I post-offi . cee . oinb re 0 let me hear Thee speaking 11 to . e Z sm ;Zn - r Zeppliev ack or E' fned. There"We were a sufficient number of life preservers the winter in good condition. Possibly he -a ;�eeke�cli rd:One- In accents clear and still, get more wool by feeding hay and We must have an object in view when we two malls way, and a ilQ Above the -storms of Won, to'supply'every one, but the men were so might feed, cows, and should keep that object Mebbe I am "—and be made a pause, was being talked of,which waste give Lane -stricken that some of thein struggled grain, but this is doubtful He ceitainly The murmurt 0 ad panic 0 e6& to steadily in view. 'If we make butter our ha ly proved he was ill at ease Point almost metropolitan postal facilities. me, �.y L fiercely' to get belts from others. The T could not get a better quality of wool. choice- bf feed should include those kinds white, though, wi'out t. cause . The Lone Point folks made up their mind Captain rushed among his frightened pass- "Seven- years 0 speak,nd make me listen t' III don't t Mr. . Wilsoa concludes: best adapted to thil- purpose ; if for milk, I knowsga yarn as yei blood ad freeze- that if that Englishman -was catclooking for Thou Guardian of my soul engers, amd finall induced them to ago am sthen we should feed -those feeding 3tuffe that Summat wot P - y to go to and a 9) appened in this 'ere sea, a place- to settle, he must setple in Oat the stem of the boat. .no I fed barley -straw fr produce the greatest yield of milk. . While ere it is if ye'll list tomie. placeor ake he -consequence I s. -If he was 0 Jesus, Thou hast promised little I than two cents worth of r1ey some cows will give a good yield of milk, $ d no fault theirs. To all who follow Thee, This added weight in the stern had the not suited -it weal -be" That where TI.ou art in glom cffe4zt,vf-s1ig4tly raising the bow, where ttie par week, when barley was 50 vents a says the Stockman, --if fed on almost any kind. -'Mark you, before I the yarn begin, They 'organized infornig receptione" at bee , it, iva4loaking, out of the water and pre. bushel. Two of them never got a inbuthful palatable, . thei: whiell OLthe town WPM- There Flhall Thy servant be; 'f 'from making water as rapidly as of-graiii. They would not to Ae feed- of feed that is soaDd and r It'll fteye chills, 'coe it's rather queer pleased to. And"FAsus. I have promised v�n el her go yield can be improved in both -'and Taint all aUat wer I aint sibeen, ap To serve I&ee i� the end': quantity in pear ana en1dcav& to make thin& interest- would otherwise have been the case. After trough, When first turned to pastare in Nor one ye've seard far thisforty year. g for Ogive me grace to follow 8 . , every one of them was in so good quality if feed better adapted to the mak* thestranger. My Master and my Friend I the men had been driven aft the engines pring, of milk ling rt's ti,ne;` I'll voitch, as the Phantom, I!p given. For instance, some co Ship The Englishman had attached to him the cbildition that a, local'butcher wanted to fed on earn -meal and hay will do won 8 Seen round the Cape a'most evry trip." &k4far nient'a air,- - hi h d' t6 be 0 let me see Thy footmarks, were forced to their highest speed. The buy them for immediate slaughter. These in w to is suppose boat was so far out of trim, however, that milkVving ;substitute some linseed meal, the usual accompaniment to distinguish- And inthem plant mine owA1 lambs were snow -eaters, and would not MY hope to follow dulf slow progress was made, and she continued bran or middlings in place of part of the As condiment to the yarnster's speech, ed foreigners, with plenty of money, and is c f�llow a good path 60 rods to water. There Is in Thy strength.s, one! to sink deeper and deeper, and thou,ah her are several -witnesses to these facts and my com-meal and the yield of milk will be in. His messmates kindled their pipes anew, popularly believed to be acquired only by Oftatde me, call me, draw me, passengers were now quiet they were still creased. If we are feeding for butter and Then thered closer each unto each, travel on the continent. He received their phold hie to We -end; ga Ana then In heaven re ceiv eme, badly frightened. Fortunately she managed position is impregnable. I have no sheep to the� cows are fed a grain ration of bran alone, While Ben his hand, o'er his forehead attentions with becoming condewenIO-110 to reach a pier and all hands scrambled winter now ; if I had they would get good. then the addition of corn -meal or cotto drew, th My Saviourand My Friend. n. amd looked --at their doings wi SurPrUe -j. E. BaiDic. ashoreinahurry. Tbeyleft her just in the straw (preferably barley straw) and a­quar- And posed to them as a ghost -crazed man, through his eye -g ter of a pound of grain each per day. " There eed meal will pay well in the increased nick of tithes for the last man was hardly is a great difference, in straw. Late -cut richness of the milk. The price of different Ere thas his narrative he began 'The strangest people I ever saw,'dofi't '-for Every D ashore before she went to the bottom. 0 y ay is no in kinds of feed must always be taken into II Ws gone ten year since the Will -o' -the. ye know ; I can't make them out, bah jove", Golden Thoughts ay. early- ter ley raw. Wepresume consideration, it may pay bett�r to feed a , wiep I he remarked onfidentially to a stray drum- Monday- I . . ;- A Black Squatter. r. i son, wo re hisown ration n3t-qnite so good for the purpose we (A schoonerwell found an' taut an' trim) mer, who was stopping at the hot411 for a day The hands of the King are softand fair; are feeding for as some other more or two, and who. thoroughly understood the The hamds of the robber straw tior d ' a few emels of grain one, but the difference in expensive In ballast sailed, with the weather ensf They never knew labor's stain; The white squatter is bad enough -too , cost maybe so - - situation. redly wear bad, in fact -yet he has not reached that were left here and there, it is hardly likely much in favor of the cheaper- (Jint Jones was skipper-ye've "eiid 0*- The bloody brand of Cain; he 'would object one that -,the - him), If � that' Englisher ain't thi emd-6st But the hands of the man are hard: and seat. high state ofmeanness which the negro feeding a! it will,be the proper thii�g to do, Yar sai'ral ports uv this Northem 0 laziest cuss that ever set,;one foot afore - tered. - . squatter bas.attained. A travelei'not very - . ., , .. ":e . aaothe�s then rem 4ut.they ThIM theears Of toil and pain. far from Guthrie, Oklahoma, came to a mis- reeding the Stock in'Winter. - aimuig'gmi W to be. I We can klmost alft�ia mAe up a -ratiah A I'm imed,s ' arked old that will answer our Purpose and yet not Sim the prevaiiiig town ora6le erable shanty, built artlyof mud; and, de - e slaves of Pilate have washed his hands T116 two most tin a t times at the year have it too costly. A sp3all quauti�y of a 'I She carried seven uv a crew; an told - -851v- e t--th'Aiwlb and tha's what we'ri white as kingr maybe; I . . I . lighted with even tTlis reminder of civili- . hue itmill --he readily' seen,, tha Ba .has with wrists unfettered stands. zation, be rode up andlapped on the door. when changes in trertinifinal system make certain high pri�id` feed added.io me, ater another at Thepkipp&, mate ali'two boys an' h'b&A on opinion of tfki��h For the world has inalle him I.0&1 - Lrin ' ' , - , 9�- - &' er price may make the latter of'raach an D, an a wen as eac t er. free feeding an important and critical work are alow -,�A- P bold' I Who's dar?" a voice demanded - -worn Is an torn -the first the animals more value than if fed alone. Alwa�yskeeP- '. Ai-bever fbilered a man to sea. 0 Christ on Calvaryl -4Auorymous. If Open the door, please; I want -Ito see a the Spring and'Fall. In At b6 dance which the sirip,ger had been But the palms toil by us! are changed from dry feed to fresh gram ing in mind our, object in feeding, and ereFaded to attend, he rem ' arked to one of human being, I don't care who it is." ti -and any sudden change will proftee, suffer- watching the markets, we ca Shemas the capn's nieoe--an erphin lan he r It-aw-dou�t seem to T60ay n buy to better In=-yopftnou,,A1 she!dclass. An old negro opened the door poked his ing or disease i Another advantage than if we -merely buy the chpap- pt t cipaiits There is no love like Thy love, a the systems. be rule here to appear in full dress at Who lovest to the cross - head out, and said: change is, in, the fall-, , when they are taken est feed we can get without regard to its .11 We'd been out, mebbe, a month or more, a ball. No love so pure and hikh love Yere I is, sah. " -from the pastures and the,open fields to the adaptability to our purpose in feeding. Ex- W'eu summat worried the Roosian -Finn, 11 Full dress ? full dressi did you say? If As thine whocountat lose And I am glad to see you, too, " rep! ied dry'Winter - er and-toeuclogqd stables. perience, founded on experiments, will s0ou Fur at the time Wen 'e'd ought to snore, there is any chali here that Malt in full dram Whatever pleasure bringeth the traveler. " I have been riding act -on Of sweetness and caress, y sudden radical change is bad for the teach us how to feed profitably.-Fam 'E'd jabber jest like a himp, o'sin,­ you 3ust P'int him outi And Isll fire him . so And emil'st while sorrow stingeth, this accursed country for three days and you stock, and in accustoming them to the new Fidd and Stockman. -�Urt up, asleep, in the to quick be won't . kn ow 'what iamwed � him'. pmost bank, If sorrowing, Thou canst bless. are the first person I have Eeen. Nlymission Winter life, thisshouldbe borne in mind. An' cut sich capers, ye'd think 'im drunk. Fulldress.? Well,I should say go. I'll out here is not a pleasant one. I am looking The animals should have the run of the bet -that nixie-teuths of the people here are 0 love beyond all praising, for a man that ran aw&v with mv wife." pasturm, when their own b9alth, and not ?Mtiod Hinta to Dairyznen. "'Bd bawl the -name ol the mpWaniece 0 life with love made fairl dressed in every rag they've. 90. My heart Is faintwith pazing Lady vrid 'Most load enough fur,to make !er year ; that he was not r. - the good, of the. gram land&, is considered, An open Winter is a blessing to coww if The Englishman saw Across the radianta r No, she has deserted him.' The more we-bld 'im. to 'old 'is And back to that pure i1ory until late, in the fall. Late pasturing. is their owneis are slack enough to have open The more 'e gev us a cause Peace, understood but. he made no further com- Which in the eye of faith Tallman, is he?" -Ienirall� injuri6us tb the� piftturig, but this stables. to fear. ment. �;Tdpg simple story "Yes." We told the skipper 'ow- matters stood Later on during.the festivities,at the con- 0 y the can be overreached by selectingsome grassy Some of the shipping stations are are life and death., "Sorter got whisker on de side o' his field- that is going to be- plowed up next getting so much milk that they have a sur- only laughed, as we knowed'e cad. clusionf a very..energetic daice with the -4WadeRobinson... jaivs?" for corn. Turn the stock -into this pl s, which they are working up into cheese. -One belle of the evening, abduestled closely and dn (lay -When weare animatedby Yes, go on !" the traveler exclaimed. Ud,,�and, they can. do. no harm. Let;them any village people who buy their milk night ('twas blowin' a spankin confidingly to the lion at th3 hour and tho blear unkind desires, whenwe ­Lemme�see. 'Bout forty yeani o.d.,' -,!mtthreuv breeze; h November, and often up idur the tamil cow, bat by those who have wh* ered- 'I'Say mister, what's the are pro That's the man." y We'd let out every reef we dare), 16P wit' yer Did you break in ted to revengea wron tore - a iiiiie, keeping them in only tried her, especially those who have large matter h Tilks sorter slow?" The Roosia Finn at the wheel I sees, jeroacli -.ling, to say bitter worl" r to -The animals families 'excessit,443001d. days., of clATdren, she is pronounced . a 0 The very man. Now tell which way do or deeds, we should wait and suffer mt.from these late decided success. With heyes, like two red2ot coals; afl&re, The guest replied somewhat hesitatingly: these hopeful feelings to cool and better ones he went." 66 1-m*'nature, -ddw2y I limits their When we have cheap catt I le-tood, a good The binnacle light it was gone clean out, No me glass is all right." totake tbeirplace. But, iftbere is Who went?" - -91 ts- Iany Ho -ho.! Thees mischief," sez Is 4.abou go-thrit ber-taken- from grade of cows, and high prices for dairy pro Didn't brea em. yourself but some righteous deed to be done, any justiep to es- Why, the man. mmfe - ffr - I od to.dry fodder. As the food grows ducts, dairymen can lay up money for a Afore I. turned -in, I 'urried aft, other suckef did - and you don't want to tablish, any kindness to express, any love to What man?" Uoi-1-gentifut in tha -se the rainy day. These conditions largely exi 'the man you saw." grassfields, increa at Auas .'ow.. -?e steered wisonta light.- voe. im Well, I'll tell' you, mistpr,, manifests any joy diffuse, we should hasten WILY, ordry-fodder!giveir -those who have to fd �t to givi it form and voice aAin't seed nb, to ihim- Im the at this period, and buy E lookediifwild- a ai a', man gone ; daft, 'Bayifi-' that I'm hitd` gone on knowing well The exercise which the stock gets butter, cheese and milk should not begrudge An' save;ge, as if 'e meant to fight. you, 4 you be . a fernner, �au if you'll k there is neither time to waste nor space to Oh, blast it, you have Just described iiLthe Fiall of the year by being turned loose dairymen their good luck, &r it y dead quiet about it, and not in the blessed work of doing good.- the ma who ran away with my wife. Now, P41M 0 pa, -fure low prices. lit th . a field* is also qui1e an- item for merited through past seasons of is r2eld C I Says' sez 1, Iwot d'ye mean to do? w You jest steer righti or 1-'ailwthe crew.' she's around, I'll hook granny'si a for [Dr. Cayler. tell me when you saw him 6,nd which ay considertbiqn, It keeps their systems in Which is better, to take your milk to a -you he went." and . wont be in pain fbrom.. in, Taesdaj- goodcondifAon and makes them ready for creamery whose butter sells for 30 cents per :cc PE ed, the fiends but 'e'dida t speak one glaai.-�k' he knows what's fit for fis f Had fate Neber did see him and neber did know --:efanding.the enervating infiviences.of con- pound and above, or to manufacture it at finameR44 for td.call the Oh, but me deah-girl, I couldn't thirik Proposed bliss here should blimate whicher way he went." _.duoRg thewintry-4YS- home and get 25 cents therefor ?. If you 'Ther! was a erbah--she'd sprung & leak I ofii, ion't ye know." My being; had I signed the ond- "Look hore,,I don't want tocall you a qftwng, -6we ild'ba be- think best to if was todL VZL beyond- * h vir, shou -ome I e XigI&A Still-onle must leads i Fel make the butter at home, why ThgVe right, youbet I'm"' r dear Have a bliss to die with, dim-descrio4p, gun very early, f6r the� mights- of -66-ftll notadoptthe creamery plan and--, -t the 'is sbheine w'en -late. _the liar. 6#7 ge The mate an'skipper they rushed on 4ebk and keep yer tmp abet, an' float'gitL This foot once planted on the goal, Den whut O do it fur?" are alwo -to I -no coldas to tax ? To find the schooner a 'opeless wreck. specs. I kin do anythin . This glo2e,-garland round my soul Because I y U gw'ne led to. -94on as orTmPurelonetively to all -that you hear in fer a feller 1 like. Couldl escrysuchl' Tryandtest. a ,ga inclined compel �,agh Mister -mister -say, w at is your - first I sink back shuddering, from the quest, What fur. ,they are.�gwlm tw,qhelter 6 -littli.� dry the institutes this Winter in, regard to The- bows was jammed in betwixt, two naine?". She had gradually drawn the En- Earth being so good, would Heaven seem best 1 Because you say that yzan haven't seen roe 8; feed shdu1d1,;qjpiq1k -&-them.,morning and -dairying. If you wish to reject any.. ofthe dazed k glishmam to one side, and took his -[Robert Browning- th -a man you describe. 3111 very gradii- 'sentiments as unpractical, that is your 'Er faternast, snapped an'clear overboard, rfor bashfulness. Friday -I like to think of Christ as a shep- Didn't see him." any until the pastures yield very little privilege, but the bulk of the institute talk Was swimmin' round with the ropes aae I'Me.1ratname-aw, yes. Mechristian herd. The duty of a shepherd is to take How, then, do you know that it was gram Then ai apriount. ot. ft. food is golden grain that you cannot afford to blocks, � - I ea very throw away. najrne--aw,--yes-Claud." care of his sheep, When. a bear. attacked tW sort Of a man?" y Ate sich like tackle, which sold it moored. .111 don't set much by that nmalep David's "-he seized a spear and slew the .,:: Vkuse you said so." must be tei to A6 t litple dry food so long as- the gross is of -any ordinari - cows do. not yield butter in The surt an' spray, w I 'y it &sbed as 'igh lisped the maiden;' "but Ihall 00 You intmder ; and your shepherd will take as Because I said so! Why, you old fool, 'length and swestesii. � Their own deswiie.for Winter that has a natural golden hue, deep As the mizzea crosstrees orprett� nighi Clauey for shork Did they call you Claud much care -of you. Oh, v hat joy in the new I didn't sav a word." dry fedder-W411' regulatei-the matter largely, enough to satisfy the buyer's eye, so it is L I - a be se you was a scratcher -a hustler? If to those who, can say, " The Lord is my "Good day. 91 for they will come to thatables t night expedient that a little commercial color be you farrin' jabber Is the skipper cried,' t67did it mus -t have been hen you WAS a hii I iiiry1filfeirass hMnot-b&D"tifficient, to shepherd I's As a rule, shepherds kpow Hold, on, there," the traveler cried, bat added-.tq the cream An' whipped a pistol. from out'is belt derned sight younger than you be now- But their sheep by their defects ; and I'think it the old rascal was gone. The traveler got nourish their Sy-SUML. The -dry fedder Thi amount of work entailed Before the Roosian 'ad time to side, that's nothin' to me, Clauey dear." is so with ou� Heavenly Father. Heknows down and eat on the door, jwnd threatened through the shoiA&b6 cuts I-suRt bran or grain mixed with Winter care of cows depends on how you An' banged away with the gun so 'elt. IIAh!ah!rea1 I ly,this is an awful surprise. 11 us all by our defects; and yet, with a1 our to break it down. ke,ftinuiep4latable. -by it to ma. only begin in the Fall. , If you do not make & But safe so stood on the windlass still: Don't let it staggeryou, kmey; there's faults,', he loves us. Oh, let.us give thanks I'De interview' s closed, sah,?'saidthe such gradual intelligent transformations thorough preparation, and then carry out an It's 'ard the Devil's Own son to kin. swads of surprises 9 this ciounfiy. But here that we "i-ve such a good abepherd to guile old negro, " and if you injures Ast do, I'll from.-green%adry-fodder that the -health of organized plan, you will find- the care of comes . Long Ike for me to dance a break- and protect us ! and though affliction may hurt you, sah." the i1tockqawJi,e, reserved. There. is no cows very laborious and the result uneatis. The girl then come up the cabi n down: withhim, so I must go. Don't git come upon us and seem hard at the time, The traveler went -on cursing the old go 3y*de,v, rrm,` strain b6iijbi upon their iy-atemL . nor any factory. Calm as yer please, though 'a t;re,lar- sudden cli'' The Winter health of the Have the stable warm, keep the - cows ed. Jeery, Claney, cause I -dance with-1ke, but let us remember His great'meray and loving scoundrel and swearing that he i would see come to the house ter-morrer night and weW -kindness, and bow and kiss the rod. -(D. L. him in chains a thousand years before he stock- in much upon the early icon- bedded from the start, and clean the drop- ffainti allus women wot satin vears -dition, the when first -sheltered in As flinches least in the d spark a lettle, and I'll give yer iranny's Mo�4y. would again lift a hand to secure his free - Ling from the stable Wt least once a day, and anger shared the Itall that pi�qtice o�ght to be uni-. you have,reduced the time to be, afterwards The girl. for pluck I ud rather choose "am -Saturday- dijo.-4Arkanpaw Trkeler. Who dre ses plain an' wears low-'eele' "'Deah. me! deah melts Without -Thy presence, wealth is bags of cares; spent in keeping the aninials clean and com 8 . moauedthestertled d Wisdom-buttf 11 j uIllet--sadness 0 y; JOY, IL j?. SmrrZ. fortable, to 'a i;�inimum. There is; always shoes.) subject of the Queen ; "that young person Friendship is treason, and deZirlits are- snares; 001M WAVE HYGIENE. less real work about takina care of milch seems to think she marr- me Ali A-16 Pleasures h— --in and mirth butow, mates, this. 'are is the strict ,pr W�, animals properly than there is in the neg- eat nie!V and without more adieus he sli ed madness lectf ul, eiloveinly -way, where a general diff - truth -to -the hotel: thout Thee, Lord, thi*13 be not what they Danaer in coming 1�rom eu"f-Dol6rs into _bfth, "it. I . out and went be,. o madman mallefur the tremb] a warm'Zoom. -P 'Roliot Wy a,hus ing tle g!ng out becomes �iniperative after .1A g1r s - 'The next- day there *as a select huntLgot- Nor have the!r being, when compared with Vial _1engrh Th --time. -of 1h iaone-of those -Sititeraiaking factori"�; m4blighed, invow An' grabbed the- barna-uv our little, Rdthj-�-- -ten �q f6ilhe benefit' o at -a of Theo Dr. U. -Wi -th- That was t e Ong opinnVinter -.Vrea er do not 6rie "mirable papei in which he is wont, in his AM on . 13 'Work- Pearl. h iis�inounted on the finest the "bLhaykng iiill things, and not Thee, what have the-chme- --to av t a b teaching the: listake' of , 'turning The cap'nAked4ith -unsteady haim own we your. ifforded--a wild brute not half brokew--and rds, er anirr y -10i MiMA6we -'Into at having Thee. what have my labors got I y principles, and y making i he i V6 a Urny'ard for ih6 eAttle� AiesbiCdO.- Pdrmv�u,�'ewarn'btoblanie. tgo ilju6tj,6U L' h I a. guest wout to grass at t 0 lot me enjoy but Thee, what farther crave 11 I lemental! the MAN so' re,6 g e winter. Thousands: 4 dairyinen in the past have first buck. Wen, for his safety,. he was And having thee alon& what have Inot I - unlearned the participators in h:v own I isped- iana ; nor would .1 be Down f6A our pet with,4 muffled,thud The farmers,or am according amaking just such. grave mistak�,.a,�d Er ;- nor sea nor features - blanched as: g mounted on 6 mule. This mule had a habit, Possessed of heaven, heaven unpossessed Of learvings" investigates the reason why a moat enthusiastic anipport- to the proje-et at what is worse they are still coqtin'uing in 'of cringing or squatting when. anythi cold wave is invariably followed by increas- - :B%* . J. Dillon and V . died. Ing Thee I Mt� in -ro mf where Y W. the error. The grass c p of 180 will i - ed.'er corpseftom &pool & blood touched his Bank. The first time the Eng- -I Francis Quarles. ed mortality, and gives a few siinple rules Hunt of said the Winter milk_fiow of We raio t which can advantageously be borne in the dairy commissionees staff Are fer thereby, Ans buried it in the rock's bleak side. Habra", in trying a keep up with i9e ­k'an4 tv;en4 farmers fu"h over this present, season will be our -tailed b3 th . hem -dug h in chary - is hpels in the mules fiankff-l' A WEDDING PREMNT. mind. Clothing is the first thing to attend a W -yell- d �'of milk dially The milk is 2 W.1 bad. practice. Then why continue stem The madman dove with a dyli' squatted, imd at that inotant a bevy of to. To have the body, during variable rutt through animpraired Z;trifugal cream so replete wit. Aamage to theaten Next took the skippers; iry in crazy Spun. ralne chickens rose in the air. The London Vorporatlea Will Give $16.530 weather, such as rw obtains, well en vel- sspu-4tor, and the4kimmilkis immediate- terests? ro a up; Wbat made him do �tbat?" asked the,: to Prince Allwrt Victor andr'bls Bride. oped from head to foot in non-oonducting iN That day, the hull 61 the &' h k vei�A- to; the � Urmeft'tQ be carried If you use a thernibmeter in the house'to Eii lishman. While there has been much talk concern. substance is essential, and the clothing of The mate an' capn they ,:R got: dron. w0e,sam coam AtWoodstock the- gage the temperature -the -100m,by oU living 91d. Sim who was ne6rest to him ever liq the financial resources upon which the poor effectively is one of the best forms ed. t&te of Arkansas, r3ined L ' ' toes- why. nov hiig one in cow stable.'and. i ya not a J�ite-mor sup -1b In sitting bet* t ready to atand up for the 9 A ftt Victor and Princess Victoria that philanthrophy can take. give Is Fur threalogAL Yo M ary, 6 66-k ied 94"Ah,-tlafs. all r4ht, minter. -q -_ If- t 6uld giv - - ' W'so dread, fire empera are is t ua can, it,ALMuaLg1Anee-n#w and then 9 Th Mph will have to� depend after rooms and in bedrooms the maintenance of ndif little ' ' k silver anpie tnbe4 the corporatip of the city an equal t Mo ther* i0!q*ia& equally essential, Py , - 4 -,g mule ?Is rear - ts. -the --conift ladto," In'thiti-me , eximple'which, should -he bedroom encourages venti- eattheWoodstockc A lefi the.dead.- of. Unda''n Itai. set an and a, W -t In kol%ro"a-kpep eW on,tbe day it, was Y to set on game. a one. 0 T viiited­­ The e. condition 6f the stable.' es, tral lik i-l]4,fMlcWii4-by the other municipal car- lation, and gives health no less than com- ie Idrtirethe 1 cc* likat' rockfiva-year- thim-'aetteirdogs.' 47butter, in U-0 t i out two. or.throe -�f I-passecl t mme potatioitit roug�out the country, would re- fort. In going from a warm into a cold at - go. balk-diwy to drinkleesedid, 4ater, They the The-E�glishmau was. interested at once� - a t in� -a very heavy addition a now mospftere, III to,th' in breasting the wave of low 'ket' shipped. 0 0 isli mar -and Mr. aed the waters, liut�' ceaIta- emg,tempera- and'old'Sim dwelt at -'t t great lengtb upow. ilmos L meagi�e coffers of the young couple- telawrSture, no one can haxm by starting 01 -blasts -Arop -;-Vie was saidin' d6w, the trouble and expense of training a mule, It has hien­­ U that t e r of Wales y -Bobe! ped 10 nayaffirms,,thite �tum sad -their rtt thorougbl warm but t -exposure. to. Winter -is The Wijd h P ince in re urn In On f This'. With 'eaffly 'so feels a �heeitsucyabout asking Parliament to u -their com art 9;lqd, pro t. on t,.e h .ary to Away enough to steer, a jack -rabbit he rode i!lp besid from the cold into the warm the act shoull ib t. form -to cd -it IkL. -be aceom�lhrhed gradually. in , : -with my trick at: thkwhed in 1riglit, Oe mule and pve it a kick in -the flank m jr �n alwait IT" - are in .1 quit 'a t'far thp proper support of his terk iok-of the.. Dbwii went the mule elde per If d sewaii b.4 d g7wt in wWit�'i with his' too. at The wave of low temperature requires to Fur haunte an thatmay [*In erase Our great cheese son �after his marriage to Princess It -has been suggested in be inet by good, nutritious, warm fool -Your m r give awayent tha rabbit?" Upon the wound that still mark Ratws siek- of--ther­*4WQhey wi t. a -cad, sugar, . . t�­ - - .1 I- L . ''I I 11 The-foreignor?s interest increased,- ka soute.quarteii-that1he Lord Mayor of Lou- Heatef6rining foods, such as bi I'" 0 :W Ihn" "T. 9 L R�iftk*ate awroin to , a - e d 1M ral, rap Ong lon -oW for a fund ge, and'potatnes, are gi ad -big -,r Ad'9 o nift le nesti A ri lion eraturwat �tfi" ­'­ buttei, oii1j�ieal porrid A but iked -i - 4 a, subse p. coltdm a ted-agg eesw e.. awititick- a -il I.- T- b4� ­ , L , ". I.. - - thgm�' - - is an entire 'mistake to suppose that the -le royal:cou^- butit is :(if a ed - use -at this time of the year. It, nil' tO7 _p fear 'is 44A Vilh:w 106hy Md. As the ifordin ef, the curied o"a 9m, ray% I the Queen orthe y were go eek Wales! wbidd Aons eLt to any such mesas to aummerst vul Qs&'"k=;M- 174 'Twas ha t lishmali, sl6holics. When a glass of hot wful, mates can see it ift(LW, pre, ty rapid; the Bug of Whicliwas to .-ft wave� of cold is neutralized in any sense by R, theuse of q -Wt -. f -! - ad lit eer the Wzboiwd, how. t% huM &a muk ur him on the, tb an &at, touch brand.N warm the cold man, the credit be ion,howeverthought Do - he'went, stuphled ina j# hi rat TIATI K. WU it loligelothi�hQt, water, siid-any discredit 0010. Niettrust. aiiisoft r fiihifian dver his !head, -",A ast's-paw 62611ton6d 110POW 5&4 -ad thii T &miss. to make a handsome our, . - e' --L g -1hW.9cp&aion of the marriage, that.mayfoll -in r dji,e,w& w t -do resent Oil .9 me- I gn the cold in action it goes inan 9 -6 ep wn 16w'to the brandy. go far from eAoesuv' eke -an' 'wail ling.: and so, �inabeiid of voting a sum to , acw purchase alcohol cheekink 0 Jt0m the -fi�theL 8, in_a twimk Came f dibreath the �'16t'Of �jd*j@ something else that per- with it,'andherewith aids in arresting the As soon as, he. 4eci6vefed W theld& -w 4ne'ver, be of use to I _"t1W _t - good wai awminer ha the royal motion of the hewt, in the living animal, t qs� -ot .been�th& oence ig .1i teVW ftd fAs Oft no took a practical view of the beca unty of either *&6 y, an overwork then-oudd A o4oxidation. Zzeessive ex Oe&. -F104, ifflhea#8 --sig4r the share, andL; atuit 16u: afia, thin -thit-p raps the whol ir. was � hi �Aitod the sum of f,295M erciseif the Nod w c -ill w -able, bat -not only accept J�plovto murder hibm -dove -un er again an 'king duiing thisi-�Weiasons whew a sadden fall of body ormind, should be alrSided, especially -�01& friends i are best. -W& if iW I wedding -gifts that fusio or e were 8 �Ou Ong - e temperature is of frequent occurrense. For inta eon h exhaustion, whether phydw! w mental, Tbe, his old she for some evM ]p for him� muckintere s�" _ - . _ _ ; ­_ ;'...", . -1 , AZ 0 fl Um stedin okilag, . 1. means. -Chaniber of Depu 7t -rise-td the a e e ew as an. otion is the same a& of heat. y'L ey ipaiiiiti�bjl iji%bhiting any public experi- 10 Of im di 110tv see- bin -,liat e id him ere rMaay�' iW e; -111Visfoolish foryourfather -whOw I- j4d up 0 jQt­ �fg�ivas'6f . Mrs. Biown v-huited up to be -the coming in Witjf i r' ng- the seirmon. 1AWe �&hnie U fean r' We etion am WARMP 1!�lrs tl;e e5oet is very rA MR. :'I -V413 iM &- - In hou W -Ner -to -W ih far -,,-v a. *p the bt 'M to wake up when Witelb is jgomg much attentism aj h an emer .ell a %t�ke ideal Still-�Uter odorleesand invisible, say inSports Afield. Uniortu in this case, impossibie, b required condition can bi be tter the h un ter's chan ce -can walk through woods mg properly shod; and bi selection of a bunting sui self practically invisible Danger of detection by ti the woodland deer can - t with a certainty a' a r setctlaa of suitable CloLi is of prime iLnport&nce an neglected. Most sportsmen jump that a tan -colored suit of is just the thing for a worse mistake could not ments approximating the must be avoided -there b can hardly be over -rated some careless or excitable it a rule to shot first and Hence, the color adoptd ly as possible the color o: and this, of course, chang, of the ground hunted ove the forest growth, and the hunter will learn to sider-always supposin ; selected be not too near for the reasons given. While deer -hunting, a thould be closely watche( Lity is established, A g )ften misleading, as the3 in different lights. A I the sun shining fairly i Loo, hite for a deer ; whi I seen in the shade wi tround, will appear &In ffie circumstances under wen will sometimes dece nost expert wood an. My own experience tat �ue may be mistaken. "ar for a calf but, follov .educing possibilities to bred in error in time ILgain, i saw, in some In to be a skulking buck. ' to be sure, the animal ca; -a wliail', big" gray we wer to fire a gun unless, ty what they are shootit weeptable excuse to be brother hunter. One in In he ordinary transact in this. W nEn hunting, walk a without making unnec never go more than 100 ping and looking carefu for at least five minutes. line as near as you can, a thicket, or any natun front; for by this mean from any deer that r Most amateur hunters ; for tails --stalking throt swinging galt with thei ted ahead. This is a v deer tails, but, while yo you cannot hope to Green hands at still -h anxious to see deer, cover too mach ground. The golden maxim : "Don't hurry." Three hunt over and back ii tails a six miles walk, spent in walking can be ing to great advantage. well-established pass -w of woods to anuther, an to hunt along these, r4 clay; for the deer will ( near their regular pi against. the wind when I unsteady or very high 4 much, but sit d7own an� are restless on windy foot, keep moving alt fault with many hun� know better is, that tE place to kill a deer and particular spot at a M Jumping a deer or-tw( might have been kille hunting instead of through the woods. Ti to profit by all the cha, be always on the look, though you had a big bi making a sneak on hii Deer axe often found looking places-wherev hunting, anti thorough t3 of deer from years of i never think of looking woradthink that an ol( over miles of rough woo of dense thickets to lie broad glare of day, wit�,, main road where wagg�cl most hourly. I once �, five long hours and at 11! public road. He was lyi of p rsimrim bush e 'e' and would have let me, opportunity had been Asa rule, amateur selves to be guided too that lacki-,bstantial f� through the woods wil slit.tulders, they often � that they will declare deer. Ask them why they will have no senj Deer will sometimes gq hunters -for deer wi sometimes, a well as Pend on a blunder for i on a deer razge, the fir find out where the gam, they are feeding on ant Afterwards determine i on the range, their age�l you can hunt iutefligeg the signs, Cracks, et wasting any time in hul a fellow who hunted fai in a sc-�o ;f oodland I seen a deer track-mu�l unnecessary to state th, to spoil on his hands. Some good hunters avoid getting blood on ing. They fear that a d farther if they did so, i a correct belief ; bat ni so much -s tl-.v smell 1 when a deer gretsexcite, foolish things. The s readily and.! ough; = smell snort and bound wildly though trying to locate very CuLiou;t) out deer's nose is his best , vrere not for his acute s4 deer co-ZA be easily ap] when fe--4m-, As to 4!ie best kind shooting, pages have be, moat cvse � Mau who ev rifle has Zma kind of -. the suk�*itL The write will nwkv ar level a tr