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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1897-02-03, Page 7....._ P w .11 ._ . <.. . ,e , . - . "M- --. I 1. t,,, ��� ,, --__ &I. �____� GR AMMINGAND SHAPING. How tiro Process Is Accomplished by l'outlerers in Europe. "Exllain in detail the process of cramming. ' so that a nuive nut ex- - Y erim p emtawith it without going to the es,pense of purchasing a machine." & In Europe there are three methods I, r• w - of Cramming poultry. � First, by hand.—In this case the birds are placed in cages, usually in a dark I` 'place, and are fed on real mixed with soured skim milk and fat, and made [' , Into a stiff paste. The operator• usual- ly has prepared a number of pellets 1, or boluses, about the size of the Utile finger, and has a bowl of milk before 1,,r,, him. Lifting a bird from the pen he , Irelts upon a stool, places the legs and t Par of the body between the knees L and grips it firmly with file same so KK _ that it cannot struggle. Then Open- FlIng the mouth with his left hand thumb and forefinger he next takes I',' one of the pellets in the right hand, , . dips it into the milk, then places It ,, in the mouth, presses it down the throat with his finger, and closes the 1' mouth. The pellet is now in the throat and can be felt under the beak. V . With his .eight hand he runs it down "O k�7 ;r FIG. I—T' UN N E L. hausted by protracted sickness—if, in bassY—drives up in front of the tarn- 4 into the crop, which can easily be crib ort Egypt. Those cornolrbs are done by the thumb and finger, if the 'i neck is stretched to the full limit. The '„ , 'full. process is repeated until the crop is in the husk, for .those who have travel- The plan here described is not a '.)speedy one, but some of the beat ✓� French poultry are so obtained, and ?_'• it is more 'common in that country our reception; and the Lord of that than 1n England, though there are a look into heaven and see Him standing few of the best Sussex ,fatters who 4' adopt it, ,' Second, by funnel,—For this system not Paul speak of Him as standing a specially made funnel (Fig. 1) is em - 1 ployed, with a long, narrow spout, and all our glorified kindred seated at which must be perfectly smooth, for cession for us? O Benjamin—Jesus! any roughness or sharp points would your father? Is this Benjamin, the graze the throat and set up inflam- '') oratory action. It has, also, as will I be seen from the illustration, a turnet M1 mouth, so as to enter the throat easily. .11 The food is made liquid, about the Clature. In your prayers plead His consistency of cream, The funnel is and bedusted of the way, 'and ser -tears; inserted into the throat of the bird, 1? • taking care to have the tongue on the his death. If you refuse to do It all lotver side, but to make it enter � ,_ smoothly it is first dipped into milk. be glad If he has seen Of the travail of soul and been satisfiedW.fo, and not The food is now poured into the fun- ven will be bolted and barred against nel by means of a large ladle and the arrived travelers, washing off the dust crop filled. Care has to be taken to • get the funnel right down the throat, "You shall not see my, face except and only to put a little in at a time, 11 I or there Is danger of the bird being ,"I choked. The funnel must nor be kept My text also suggests the reason too long- This system is chiefly .,;Iril , .. e loyed in Normandy, where hun- Wed Mfriends, you see it is either s of birds are so fatted every real Comfort. You meet tem people; , year. The funnels can there be a tray; all the luxuries from imperial bought for about 40 cents each, It banquets spread, and to one of them Is speedier than by hand. of condolence. There Is something I Third, by Machine.—In Fig. 2 Is I. shown ,the Hea.r:;on cram.iner, which tic and think far a goad while as to which In several directinns is superior to the I Neve crammer. The references are: A, the time for this prime minister if food vessel; B, cylinder, or force - here 1t is feasting or starvation. If pump, C, spring for returning pedal world's symipathy amounts to absolute- In -to •position and thus• closing the 11 pump; D, foot pedal; E, piston rod, you might say, "I prefer the 'Crea- connecting pedal with -Pump; K, noz- crib or they go in the wrong way. I zle (made of India rubber); M, nut to ;� regulate quantity of food passing -1, through cylinder. The food is made 11 much thicker .than' when used in the 11 Funnel, like very thick cream. The me- WUI you live or die? Will you start thpd adopted is as follows: with the ldtanies of Gregory the Great ` Take the tube in the right hand, the 111mer por don to Bemiarmin, or, as the Bl'b7e "Benjamin's bird's head in the ]eft, the bird itself perish amid the empty barns of the famine? "Ye being held under the left arm; then and yet notatop plague. : all the music of thId world cannot halt . with the assistance of the finger and of tllefms." Be quick and send ward thumb of the right hand, open the with you." bird's mouth, then slip the forefinger I come to same one whose ailments I Of the left hand into it, to hold down ,- : the tongue; quickly insert the end of i! the tube, and push 1t down four or You will nelver be sick." That does five inches (according to the size of !b` the bird; at this moment ., depress the heel of the right I toot (which up to thI•s time 1. has been resting on the treadle), and ' force the contents of the cylinder Into you? I come to you and tell you that the ,bird's crop, If the crop be full any face unless your ibrotber be with enough, the tube may now be with- divorce for her turned again to his drawn, taking care, however, to re - 1 41 sieve the pressure on the treadle for a Well, my friends, this World is earns second or two before taking the tube ° out, otherwise a small quantity of }'• the food will continue to flow after the �.tube Is removed. It may be mention- Uncertain, coy, and hard to Mase!'" ed that the quantity of food can be .11 1 JG. 2—FIEARSON CRAMMIDR. , qu ker than either by hand or fun- nel, ,r .thus labor and time are econ- omized. The cost of these me/- ,. i. Iubou't $18. "Dnmcribe the English method of ,rg}yaping• poultry for market," As to the method of shaping, I have 'b• prevlolisly given illustrations, both of the boards used and the appearance of the birils when in the troughs. The 11 I; . 1 regulated to a nicety, and the great point is to cease the moment sufficient has been placed do the crop. This plan has the advantage of being much - -.. _. _- ­­- --------....,----.-.,. -.,a._..,..-..4.,..-.--•_"•--------...•_.-..•- Wds are killed •by dislocation of the ( (� Tj1�T/yp p (1�l [}1 /^1 iY1 dy'#ig. It is hiAn-ger blttm. Tho fact you want is sympathy now—present neck, and plucked at once, while slill ' CORNCRIB 1,�J,t EGYPT. � that at dges not, Q4LA not, foal s, tAIWa help. I come to, thoso of you wr-o warm, the feathers coining 'out much , heart was well Illustr&ted in tog life have lost dear• friends, arid say: "Try more easily than if the body hard cot,l- of the English c*rmedian. All the world to forget them. Da not keel) ilio de• ed. The modus operandi is as follatos: NO ADMITTANCE TO GOD'S BOUN- I' honored' lilm—did everything for Jilin parted always in your mind." II, I As soon as the bh,ds are plueltcd, I that the worlds could do. He W,44 up- canyo�t forget them when every pic- w•hich should be dine carefully and TY UNLESS CHRIST GO WITH YOU, plauded In England and applauded La ture and every room calls out their thoroughly, the hocks are tied loosely' the Unitp-d Slates. He roused up tri- name? together, so that the legs are,: -.flat! tions Into laughter, He had no equal. SUPPose I come to, you and say by against either side of the breast. Be- The r4mluo That Iva* Soso. Ili all thio' And yet, although many people'sup way of condolence, "God is vi e., fore doing so, however, some of the L,rird Tho Coudltlou 1nrNuMed lira) posed lairs entirely happy, 'gird,plat "Oh," you say, "that gives ma no more skillful Patters draw the breast this world was completely aa.tlatl}i)fr his help." Supposu, I come to you And meat upwards by means of the hands, ISe,!a•.ruin Blloulrl l,io Into lYgypt With soul, he sits dawn and writes: "T pever say, "God, from all eternity, had gr- and this undoubtedly improves the all- Ills brethren. In my life put on a new hat that Jt• ranged this trouble." "Ah!" }•ou may, ea ne ri P lA a of the must bird, though It mu did mot rain and rule lt. I never we t I "that does me no good.,, Then 1 say, be doe carefully to prevent breakingWa;hingtun, Jan. 24.—The cabled re- out In a shabby coat because it was "With the siki.ft feet of prayer go ill - the sb.ln. The operator strikes Lhe sterni tern poa•ts or taurine in lndra aird the meta- reining and thought all who had the rect to the corncrib for a heavenly against a wall, thus flattening and I ul•y of the vast cr„p, of 1• po'nrug choice would keep indoors that the Bun supply." You go, You say, "Lord, help makln 1 fl �, It t the he Bha in ,trough marti shaping g a. 1 me Lord, ca d d not b epos rain carat Porth in it txen n t me." But 1•to hes easily, tach bird is laid i the trough, 1 h woleo llr•, 1, haa'V saw during s s girt and u p breast downwards, with t e neck and his tour last fail, Iruve UaLl.l e•d to fashibrino�uwhom It with tknlewhantluwho�iknew e-5 of yet. No comfort yet. It is all dant:. h turn his thoughts !,Atli W t,tat paui- What Is the matter? I have found. head hanging over the front, The flrst me. I never consented to accept a YOU ought to go, to God and say: arches! rinse ry en h al the � rid �• nt b I l e vu e bird is pressed firmly against the end to E "Here, U Lord, are the wounds of sty art I bated. - ed au P Imfl an � F t a kindness to t to buy corn Of the trough, and a glazed brick car gY1 Y c as and to suggest soul, a.nd I brie g a Gospel lesson, Hls text is C;uuasls other, that T did not get hissed by the g with me the Wound - weight laid by the side to keep it in aliif, S, "Ye shall mot see my face, ex- PUiyI1c and cut by the writer. I could ed Jesus. Leat His wounds pay far my Position. When -the second and sue- 01 111 not take a drive for a few minutes I wounds, His bereavements, His lone- ceedln birds 'are laced in the trough, 1 Your brother be with you." with Ter g p Last sulrlmer, having crossed ei ry without being overturned linear for my heartbreak. O God! for the weight Is moved along until quite teen of the Ual'tedg Stales—north, and. having my elbow bone hroken, the sake of the Lord Jesus Christ— full. It Is necessary that they should south, east and west—I have to report though my frle;td got off unharmed. I the God, the man, the Benjamin, the be packed firmly and tightly together one of the mightiest harvests, that could not make a covenant with Ar- brother—deliver my agonized soul. In this Way. N O Jesus of Y• ext a the r rn loose boar w• a wear foot t..se. d, four this country Or any other country ever Hold, which I thought w to make Y Y inches wide- an fatigue. O d tits Jesus a length g P the c111n head n h of the e a g m fortune �s i g e with cat making 1 - rea Y a h his n ped. But while this is id In our p g heal my aching head. O Jesus of the trough, is laid upon the backs of the own country, an the other side of the stead, that in an incredible splaice of fowls, just behind the wings. Upon I Atlantic there are nations farrdne- time—I think thirteen montihs-fro ll ea•.rnBethany sisters, roll Awa the stone - m the door of our grave." That is this are placed three or four heavy I stricken and the most dismal cry that ed for him twenty thousand pounds fra kind of prayer that brings help; glazed bricks or weights (66 lb. for is ever heard wail, I fear, be uttered— and for myself one. I am persuaded theand in how many of you are , help; preference), and the fowls are allow- the ory for breed, that if I were to set up as a beggar, nes help o all, for the reason t]'at ed to remain 1n this trough for rev- I pray God that the contrast between every one in my neighborhood would there is in your soul perhaps a secret eras hours -4h fact, until they are Our Prosperity and their want may mot leave off eating bread," That was the trouble. You may never perhaps a secret quite cold 'and set. When taken out, lament of the world's comedian andhave they have the shape and a be as sharp as in the lands referred to tioned it to a single human ear, or p appearance by my text. There was nothing to Joker. All unhappy, The world did you may have mentioned it to sorue- desirable for marketing purposes.— eat. Plenty of corn in Egypt, but evQlytiving for Lard Byron that it one who is now gone away, an,l that Gtephen Beale, of H—, England, in ghastly famine in Canaan, The cattle could do, and yet in his last moment great sorrow is stili in your souk Af Country Gentleman. he asks a friend o come and sit down moaning In the stall. Men, women fi ter Washington Irving was dead th ty and children awfully white with •hun- by him and read, as most appropriate found a little box that contained a EGGS IN WINTER, ger, Not the faifin.g of one Crop for to his case, 'the story of "The Bleed- braid of hair and a miniature and one summer, but the failing of all Ing Heant." Torrlgiano, the sculptor, the name of Matilda Hoffman, and a The Conditions Under whleh Hens win the crops for seven executed, after months of care and A years. ic nation so carving, "Madonnaand th•e Child." the memorandum of her death and a re - Consent to Lay. dying for lack of that Which i6 so mark something like this: "The world common on your table Aird so !!tile royal family came in and admdred it, after that was a blank During the winter fresh eggs are Everybody that looked at it was in o me. I less i 'aPprectated; the product oP harvest went into the country, but found uo plentiful P and sell for higher field and grist mill and oven; the price ec�4tasy. But one day, after all th'a.E. °'"peace in solitude. I tried to go !trio price than at any other season of the I of sweat 'an•d, anxiety ,and struggle— tail and all that admiration, because society, but I found n° peace in so - ear. How w to obtain a supply at this '! Jacob the fatiher has th.e last he did not get as -much compensation clety. There has been a horror hang - time is a problem well worth the ear- I report from the flour bin, and he finds for his work as he ,had expected, he ing over me by night, and by day, and nest attention oP every owner of pool- that everything is out, and he says to took a mallet and dashed the exquisite I am' afraid to be alone." try. his soars, "Boys. hook up the wagons sculpture into atoms. Tho world is Haw many muttered troubles! No The breed has a Cod des doith g 1 t ° w, ami start for Egypt and gest us some- Poor compensation, poor satisfaction, human e'er has ever heard the sot - the egg yield and leghorns and minor- 1 thing to eat." poor solace. Famine. famine in fill the row. Oh, troubled soul, I want to cas will give the best results if tliey I The fact was there was a great corn- earth; not for seven years, but for six I tell you that there is one salve that are provided with warm quarters, but crib in E•gypt. The thousand. But, .blessed be God thera can mre the wounds of the heirt and the management has a greater inituence I, people of EgyptIs t than the breed, Some ersons vitt get I have been largely taxed in all ages, at a gnat carnet Nb. The Lor built that is the salve made out of the p I the paying between 70 it It as in another land. It Is a largi I tears of a sympathetic Jesus. And very few eggs from the best layers, i and 800 per time place. An angel once .measured it, and yet same of you will not take this Bo - per Cent, of two products to you try chloral, and you try whsle brah�mas and cc -chins and other the Government. No wonder in that as far as I can calculate it in out lace, and heavy breeds, which are not noted for I time they had a large corncrib, and It phrase that corncrib Is fifteen hundred morphine, and you try strong drink, their laying qualities, will give sur- w•.as pull, To that crib they came Pram miles long and fifteen .hundred broad and you try change of scene, and you Prising results in this direction, in the I the regions round about—those wh'o and fifteen hundred high, and 1t Is try new business associations, and hands of others. Plymouth rocks, an� Push Food Par all nations. "Oh!" says anything and everything rather than my favorites, after a goad deal of cab- i were faml'shed--some paying for corn flys people, "we will start right away take the Divine everything companionship and servation. IP I in money; when the 'money was ex- pltit re man urin they • hausted, paying far the corn in Sheep and ,get this supply for our soul." But sympathy suggested by the words of wintewill give monthexcels. int results during thI stop a moment, for from the keeper of my text when it says, "You shall not hardy months. They are naturally a I and cattle and horses and camels, that corn,orib there comes this word, see my Pace again unless your bro- hardy bred and have heavy Peathering and when they were exhausted, thou sarin toes be with which protects them from the cold ; i selling their own bodies and their g', "You 's'ha'll not see my face you.,, Oh, that YOU rnlltes into slavery. except your brother be with you." In might understand something Cf the they mature early, and pot the ordinary faThe morning for starting out on the ofherc words, ,;here 'is no such thing as height and depth and length and farm, where chickens as well as eggs crusade Eos bread has arrived. Jacob g'ett'ing from heaven pardon and com- breadth and immensity and infinity are wanted, they are hard to beat, fort and eternal life unless we bring of God's eternal consolations. It is not wise to depend entirely up gets his family up very early. But with us our Divine Brother, the Lard I go further, and find in my subject winter, old hens a one wants eggs early In E-0 before a elder song start they say Jesus Christ, Coming without Hdtm we a hint as to the way heaven opens to winter, as many of them have not sof R that malted him tremble shall fall before we reach the corn- the departing spirit. We are told that flctently recavered from the exhaustion : with emotion from head ,to foot and crib, and our bodies shall be a pot- heaven has twelve gates, and some Corn - of the moulting season. But some ,)f burst into tears. The fact was that heave infer from that fact that all the old hens will be noticed which ' these elder sons dead once before been tion for the jackals of the wilderness; the people will 'go in without refer -- have maulted earl and these, if w.al in Egypt to et cora, and the had but coming with the Divine Jesus, all y 1 g y the granaries -of heaven will swing encs to their past life; but what is the tended, will commence laying early. , been treated somewhat roughly, the g use of having a gate that is not some - All hens' of this class should b4 nut lord of the corncrib supplying them open before our soul and abundance times to be shut? The swinging of Ili a pen by themselves and special with corn, ,but saying at 'the close of shall be .given us. We shall be Ln- a gate implies that our entrance into pains taken with them, Also u!1 t; the Interview, "Now, vited to sit in the .palace of the king p you need not and at the table; heaven is conditional. It is not a tmoT he hatched in early May, if they have had ' come back here for any moreamoree able; •and wh}de the Lord ry rn tarn un- mentacondition. If we cos to the I I f heaven s appoTln•ning from His Free range, will be matured and vigor- less you bring something betters than odoor of an exquisite concert we are ),us and should be put by themselves money --even your younger brother awn table to Other tables, He will not not surprised forget us, and then and there it will nothat we must pay a fee, when about six months old. Th.y Benjamin." Ear we know that flue earthly music need special, feeding and regular at- Ah! Bef ja itin--that very name was be found that our Benjamin's mess Is is expensive; but all the aratorlos of tention to obtain the best results. They suggestive of all tenderness. The larger than all the others, for so it heaven cost nothing. Heaven pays no- >hould have a morning mash of cook- mother had died at the birth of that ought to be. 'Worthy Is the Lamb thing for its music. It is all free. ed vegetables of some kind, such as ' son --a spirit tannin and another that was slain to receive blessing and There Is nothing to be g spirit g paid at that potatoes, turnips Or beets; into which '. gain g g roos anhonor and glory and power. p g—and the very thought of parting fhd " . door for entrance,; but the condition s mixed wheat bran, middlings, oat- i wlt,h Benjamin must have been a hart I want to make three points. Every of getting Into heaven is our bringing meal and Cornmeal in about equal I break. The k-oper of this oorncnib, frank and common rense man will our divine Benjamin along with us, pasts. The mess should be mixed in i neverthole'ss, says to there alder sans, acknowledge himself to be a sinner, often dying Do you notice, how oftedying peo- :he water in which the vegetables are � "There is no need of your caming here What are you roing to -do with your ple call upon esus? It is the usual soaked and seasoned with salt and ' any ,more for corn unler;s you bring sins? Have them pardoned, you say. Prayer 'offered—the prayer offered pepper and fed warm. Benjamin, y -our fathF•r's darling," Now, How? Through the mercy of God. What mo -re than all the other prayers put They should not get so large a feed Jacob and his family very much need- do you mean by the mercy of God? together—"Lord Jesus receive my, >f this but that they will ga to I ed bread, but what a struzz,le it would Is it the letting down of a bar for the spirit," • ,eraAc•hing immediately after. . Then be to give up this son. The Orientals admission of all, without respect toOne of our congregation, wa hen . sk- luring the forenoon a few handfuls of i are very demonstrative in their grief Character? Be not deceived. I see a ed In the closing moments of lits life, )ats, wheat, barley or buckwheat , and I ,heax ,the outwailing of the fat.he-, i soul coming up to the gate of mercy "Do you 'know us?" said: "Oh, yes, I ihould be scattered over the floor of as these .elder sons keep reiterating in and knocking at the corncrib of hea- know you.. God bless you. Good-bye. .heir house. The floor should be cov- : his ears the announcement of the venly supply, and a voice from within Lord Jesus receive illy . spirit"; and tred t he depth of three or four he was on . o f h see r. e Ohi, i) n g es l isle closing E Y n tion lard. says, o g gYp "Ye shall not ,qee my Y "Are you alone?" The sinner 'nches with chaff, or hayseed from the I face unless your brother be with you." replies, "All alone." The volee from moments of our life we must hav•: a hangers of the cattle, so that they arc "Why did you tell them you had a within says, "You shall not see my Christ to call upon. If Jacoby •ompelled to hunt far every kernel. I brother?" said the old •ma.n, o rnplain- pardoning face unless your Divine , gone 'tornfatrd Egypt, anal .had Plenty of fresh water and sand an ] I Ing and chiding ,them. "Why, father," Brother, ,the Lard Jesus, be 'with y0a1." gone with the very finest equipage, ;mall gravel or oyster shells, sho•ull i they said, "he asked us all about our Gh, that .ls the point at which so many and had nor taken Benjamin along i.lways be within their reach. Once family and we ;had no idea he would are discomforted. There Is no mercy with them, and to the quostion they )r twice a week they should be given should have been obllgt•d to answer: make any such demand upon n as he from God except through Jesus Christ. "Sir, we didn't bring him, as father t raw cabbage' or peeled turnip at I has made." "NO use of asking m.e," Coming with Him we are accepted. ;which to peck. Cooked meat once a g g could not let him go; we didn't want. said the father, "I camloC, I w'LLl Hol, Corning without Him, we are rejected. �eelt and mixed with their mash is al to be bothered with him," a vales from give up Benjamin." Peter put it right 1r1 his great ser- excellent but not indispensable. The fact was that the Old man had mon before the high prieists when he Within would have not "e. , 'away Such .feeding as I have described, lost children; and when there has been l.hvndered forth: •Neither is there this supply. You shall not see nth from us. YOv shall not have any Of A-tth a warm place to roost at nights, vill, Nvith proper stock to begin with, bereavement In a 'household, and a salvation in any other. There is no face because ,your brother i not with Child taken it makes floe other child- other name given under heaven among lot be disappointing for the care and men whereby we may be saved." O you." abo•r bestowed,—G, I -I, Burnett, St. ren in the household more percfous, So And s,1 we conte up toward the door the day for departure was adjourned anxious slnnerl" O dying sinner! O r Cohn, N.B., in Practical Farmer. of heaven at la,•t, though we come and adjourned and adjourned. Still lost sinner! all you (have got.to do Is from all luxuriance and brilliancy of the .horrors of the falm,ine ,increased, to have this divine Benjamin along Packing Eggs for Hatching.s,un•oundtngs•, and knock For admit - and louder moaned the cattle and with you. Side by side, coming to tante and- ,it is found that Christ is Many poultrymen receive orders for wider open cracked the earth and the gate, all the stonehouses of hea- �gga for hatching to be sent by ex- moret with us, 'the police of heaven will pallid became the Cheeks, until yen will swing open before your Mn-a,n- beat nes back from the t>rtad-house, Jacob, In despair, Cried out, to .his xlous soul. Am I right In calling saying: "Depart I never knew you." sons. "Take Benjamin and be off." Jesus Benjamin? Oh, yes! Rachel liv- If Jacob's sons, coming toward Egypt, The alder sons tried to cheer up their ed only long enough to give a name had lost everything on the way; if father. They said: "We ,have strong to that child, and with a dying kiss they had expended their last shekel; arms and a stout heart, and no harm she called him Benonl. Afterward if they had come up utterly exhaust- wil:l come to Benjamin. We'll see that ' Jaccib changed his name, and he called I ed to the corncribs of Egypt, and it he gets back again." "Farewell!" said him Benjamin. The meaning of the had been found that Benjamin was the young men to the father, in a tone na,m'e she gave was, "San of my Pain." with them, all the storehouses would Of assumed good cheer. "Farewell!" The meaning of the name the father have swung open before them. M�vr___­A sold the old man, ice the word has gave was "Son of My Right Hand." And so, by fatal casualty we may Dr1ICE FOR SHIPPING EGGS. press. It Is of the greatest importance that such eggs should be packed in the very best manner, that they may go safely and hatch well after reaching the purchaser's hands. The "best plan up to date" is shown In the accom- panying illustration. A common cheap splint basket, such as is figured, is filled partly full of chaff. In this is set a section of a pasteboard egg fill- er cut to the size needed for a sitting of eggs. Put in the eggs, small end doom, and sift in chaff to a height of two or three inches, then lay a news- paper or two over the top, tucking the edges in carefully about the edges of the basket. Over this lay a piece of pasteboard, cut to lit the tap of the basket, and sew the edges to the rim Of the basket. The latter should have a newspaper la!d in the bottom, at the beginning, before chaff is put in at all. Two sittings ran be packed In a deep basket, one above the other, with a thick layer of chaff and newspapers between.—American Agri- culturist. . Sick Fowls. Never waste time over a sick hen. Is will not pay. Behead it at once, lest others become infected. An "ounce of prevention Is worth a pound of cure" every time in the ohleken bust - nese. Well, the bread party—the bread em- when she gave her child over into the hausted by protracted sickness—if, in bassY—drives up in front of the tarn- hands of strangers was noA[In.g corn- that last moment, we can Only just crib ort Egypt. Those cornolrbs are Pared with the struggle of God Sullen stagger and faint and fall into the filled with wheat and barley and corn He gave 'up His only Son. The omni- gate of heaven—it seems that all the in the husk, for .those who have travel- potent God in a birth throe! And was corncribs of heaven ,will open for our ed in Canaan and Egypt know that not Christ ,appropriately called,- "Son need and all the palaces will open for there is corn there corresponding with of the Right Hand?" Did not Stephen our reception; and the Lord of that our Indian maize. Huzza! the journey look into heaven and see Him standing place, seated alt his table, and all the is ended. The lord of the cornorab, at the right hand of God? And does angels of Gad seated at their table, who is also the prime minister, comes not Paul speak of Him as standing and the martyrs seated at their table, down to these arrived travelers, and at the right hand of Clod making inter- and all our glorified kindred seated at says: "Dine with me to -day. How is cession for us? O Benjamin—Jesus! our table, the king shall Vasa a por- your father? Is this Benjamin, the Son of ,pang! ,Son of vietoryl The deep- tion from his table to ours, and then, younger brother, whose presence I de- est emotions of aur souls ought to be while we think of the fact that it manded?" The travelers are Introduc- ' stirred at the sound of that nomen- was Jesus who started us on the ed Into the palace. They are worn I Clature. In your prayers plead His road, and Jesus who, started us On and bedusted of the way, 'and ser -tears; His sufferings, Ills sorrow, and the way, and Jesus who at last gain- vants come in with a 'basin Of waterh his death. If you refuse to do It all ed admittance for our soul, we shall in one hand and a towel in the other, I the corncribs and the palaces ofhea- be glad If he has seen Of the travail of soul and been satisfiedW.fo, and not and kneel down ibeflore these newly ven will be bolted and barred against ball jealous LF 1t baPound that be at at arrived travelers, washing off the dust your soul, with the annoumcerrlent, our divine Benjamin's mess Is five of the way. The butchers and pout- "You shall not see my, face except times Larger than all the rest. Hall. terers and caterers os, the prdme min- your brother be with you." anointed of the Lord, thou art later -Prepare the repast. My text also suggests the reason worthy. The guests are seated In small groups, why so many. people do not get • any I Mfriends, you see it is either two or three at a table, the food on real Comfort. You meet tem people; , Christ Orr famine. If there were two a tray; all the luxuries from imperial nine of them are in need of some kind banquets spread, and to one of them gardens and orchards and aquariums of condolence. There Is something I only you might go, you might and avla)ries are brought there, and g in their health, or in thein state, or in tic and think far a goad while as to which are filling Chalice and platter. Now is their domestic eanditiom that demands,invitation you had better accept; but the time for this prime minister if sympathy. And yet the most of the here 1t is feasting or starvation. If lie has a grudge against -Benjamin to world's symipathy amounts to absolute- it were a choice between oratorios, show It. Will he kill him, now that he ly nothling. People go to the wrong you might say, "I prefer the 'Crea- has him in 'his 'hands? Ob, .no! This crib or they go in the wrong way. I tion',' " or "I prefer the 'Ale'slah.' " lord of the eorncrtb ib seated at has When Ute plague was In Rome a great , But here it Is a choice between hfar- own table, Sind be loops over to the many years ago, 'there were ei.g+hty • mony and everlasting discord. Oh, table of his guests, and he sends a h men wale chanted themselves to death I WUI you live or die? Will you start Portion to each of them, but sends a with the ldtanies of Gregory the Great ` for the Egyptian corncrib, or will you 111mer por don to Bemiarmin, or, as the Bl'b7e "Benjamin's —literally chanted themselves to death I it did the AnA perish amid the empty barns of the famine? "Ye quadn•tly puts it, mees was five times so much as any and yet notatop plague. : all the music of thId world cannot halt . Canaanitish shall not see my faoe except your brother be of tllefms." Be quick and send ward the plague of the human heart. I with you." ba.Ck wlhh the swiftest Camel to I come to same one whose ailments I - Cianaan to old Jacob that "Benjamin are aht+onie, anti I say, "Til heaven i she and Be. Is well,all is well; he Is taring sumptu- You will nelver be sick." That does "Your bill is too high, sir, and I ously; the Egyptian lord died not mean not give you much oomfort. What won't pay it!" snapped the young wo- murder and dearth; but the meant de- you went is a sootbling power for your . man; and, she turned sharply on her liverance and We when he announced present distress. Lost ahUdiren, have heel and strode out of the office. to us on than day. "Ye ohaill not see you? I come to you and tell you that The lawyer who had procured a any face unless your ibrotber be with in ten Years perihaps you will meet divorce for her turned again to his you." these loved ones before the throne oil desk and merely remarked under his Well, my friends, this World is earns God. But there is but little condolence in breath: kne struck of eln It does not yield a that. One day is a year w4thoud kfi,b���e�ntiA� "'O, woman. in our hours of fees tingle crop of sold satleflwetion. It is tan years is a whall eternity. WhO) Uncertain, coy, and hard to Mase!'" Sick. Headache' Pei anen* Ireel "I Nvas troubled, n long time, rvit'-1 sick he;ulaclle, It wits uhuifily W. companied with severo 1)u611n in tlfo teulples hild sicknes;i at the ::tofu_ Itch. I tried a f;•outl neatly I lui'dirs ,`"' 1•CCuLI111e11dell 'i;r t1li.i coluplaiut; blit �i• it tv:t; l,ut until I be � . gals t.tkiug . 5t 5 , f I� �� , s IS, �. , , i.s :t 11: Pilhi tl:ut 11•:ccived R. . s Lin' il: '1113't Z e :1;:.. I 11t•ut bcrc.,t. :1 Tin- gle box of the:.0 pilh; tlitl the ',ver:; fur iue, and, I ain llow ;t \Cell Inall•t, C. 11. Iit;•:•cnl NCS, LLISt A uburrl, 2l(l. I, I'ct iat, t, 1.1 euro )P (' !, c ulatil'a- t 10 ) .. 1 Dyspepsia, 1.lelor^lcSs, Nati - Sea, Sea, alld all disor(ICI-S Of btoillach, Liver, and L'owel:+, takes A. . i - . 13 ER" Cathartic Piiis • Medal and Diploma at World's Fair. Rslt your dru9gist for Jtyer's Sarup.--viOL --- ----- The Huron News -Record 1,46 a Year—shoo in Advance — _ ` `— WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3rd, 1897. fort Albert. TEa-MLrTING,—The Church of glig- land tea-lneeting held in the basement of Christ church on the evening of the 1901 inst, was agrand success, notwith- standing the severe cold evening, Which however turned out a beautiful, bright and starry nightwith a full moon iia light its day, it lovely night for the people; young and old, to return to their homes. For seine reason best known to themselves several speakers whose names were on the boards did riot put in an appearance, much to the disappointment of our worthy pastor and chairman, Rev. Mr. Armstrong, who was ably assisted by the Rev. Dir. Fairbairn, of Dungannon, This Rev. gentleman has never failed tis in all appointment of this kind, always will- ing to extend the right hand of fellow- shipp with words of peace and good will toward his fellow men. This con- gregation aro under is debt of gratitude to the rev, gentleman. St. George's choir of the Circular City are a host in themselves and made up for any losses there 'may have been by the non-attendance of speakers, and I beg to snake special mention of the solo "Tile Holy City" by Mrs• (Judge) Toms. It wits in fact sublime, as also was one by Mrs. Jonathan Miller, "•U, Holy Night," excellent indeed. We missed the familiar faces of Dowd- ing and Banker Williams in the choir. These gentlemen have been often here on former occasions of this kind. The social for children the following even- ing was well attended. It was a beautiful night; and abundance of good things to partake of. Table receipts $00. The church people are thanking their stars for having the tea -meeting on the 19th inst., as it has been almost a blizzard every night since. Our be.t' utift rl little clluceh seems to pros- per anyway. aa ,,Ind Nve re thankful to be able to say so. ,-, • - Will Carry the Scar srto Her Grave. SPLNT THOUSANDS FOR HEALTir, BUT DID NOT OBTAIN THIS GREATEST OF ALL BLESSINGS UNTIL SHE USED THIS GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN RIJELTNATN' CURE, SUFFERED INTENSELY )-,'OR 12 YEARS. All's. F. Brawley of Tottenhami Out.. st:atcs : " I suffered almout.continuallyy for 12 years with Iheuinatjsul, the ef- fects of which I will c.u•ry to illy grave. ;Ind while the ,joints at Illy elbows and wrists aro yet stiff I am entirely freed from pain in the use of South American Rliehinatic Cure. It ]las indeedproved a woriderful cure in my case. I have spelt thousands of dollars in doctors' Bills and inklicines withoutavitil, Five htittles.of this wonder -worker has cur- ed all pain. I ale better in health gent 1,411y than I have been for toil year by Watts & Co. Sullivan Convicted, Jiro. Sullivan of Dorchester, N. B., was Wednesday found guilty of the murderof Mrs. Dutcher and her little boy, Harry, at Meadow Brook, on Sept. 8 hast. The prisonet• was apparently unmoved when the verdict was an-' nounced by the ,Ivry, which had been Ont only two hours. Later oh Judge Harlington refused tt> stay the sentence, and Sullivan was sentenced to be hanged on Friday March 12, The ,judge's address wits a touching one, but the prisoner seemed the most unconcerned wan in the court room. The crime was otle'of the most hor- rible ever committed in Canada. After murdering his victims he fired the house to conceal the crime. He also attempted to kill nine-year-old Maggie Dutcher, who was rescued from the fire and recovered. Alaggie Dutcher was the most important witness for the crown. _-- -_ __ For ` c!ak i3;icks, L 1.111 '! 11;lck;, P;Iinful Backs fir an%— Rill)] of, 13a(1 Backs, Niarl?cy's Ccicry-Nerve. Compourd ;,i the Grtnt Rick Strcli�t1w!,, :;-. v; rn. r..Cers, 8 ottaws Street, Toronto, Ont., wrfllFs: "Fur a number of years I l:.av^ been tronbled with a lame back. ".om.: of the dost, rs I consulted called It Lnmbazo; others, Kidney Divac,). I received no benefit from thdr treatment. Ifine months aeo I was lucky enough to try Manley's '' Celery -Nerve Compound, and, after taking two or three bottles, the vain entirely left me, and I have hnd no return of it for s months now.,, Sold in Clinton by J .H, Combe . 7 _ .. ... - . ,.. - tN y; ' t . , - " '1 ,1 ., tai, a ,p _�.. e..:��.,.� `�.,iM•v' d!"J.. �' , Lim �,,, - �_.,.i.. i._ .,..:_ w — - = " Aar (l- i:,ar ileth ._.. -e .. ... � I.','i un A6 , __ M. ._. _. , ., .i,.A�......,.Lrk_