The Goderich Star, 1907-01-25, Page 2(
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LEGAL
1?,:ktflUISFOOTslIATS*111.4.11t, Barristers
Selleitem, ;counts k'utitc, Ofillso
thglietairo"tue MSc Rosa Iliguilton
vottlitocn. eitiValtetiltatila to oao at lowest
MOW.
14, RelOOPPOO1. 11.0o &Mama B.F. Mare
1.4,01 -2 -up DANCEY. Demister, So-
licitor. La. Proctor tn Ilaritims
MM. 1.c.„ Jou Idoney to man st
mit rates. Offito. 14ort on's Block. cur.
North street and Squaro. Cloderich.
sristMEROSaKILLORAN, RARRISVERS
‘..reIfigicitars.,Notarliatonc. Mee, 'lawny=
84. third eatir from tquare, tioderieb, Ont
IL O. CatisnOst. K. 0. J. 0, Yawata
lfla 14EllkEON & BARROW, Brierlssers
1../1 koliciteut. Coe. Hamilton St. and
a %tam. Glair:deal. 0fet,
Dartentgos.
estastute ge220W. La
g XMAS. SEAT Serriatar Solicitor. No
• tar/. sad yammer, Oars- la the
Court users, oderiett money to tendon
wcat ine sum.
k140. A. 'J. PHASED, nAnnterrEn.
g- Solicitor, Proctor in tho liaritiens
t.ourt (late With Philip Holt, K. E.1
W ilco mutt side Court nous, Square.
tiodarich.
ME DICAL.
DRS. WHITELY 11, HOLLOW.
Physicians. Surgeons. an,
Ordmia-Ilorth Stmt. formerly occupe
▪ Proadtoot & Say*.
hmers-9 o..m. to 10 p.m.
Hate. 00
Phones Dr. Whitairs residence% 80.
Dr. residence., 119.
j. Ranson Whitely. M C.P.
8.0.
W. Sallow. 31.8., • 8.0.
•ann.,1).•••
MARRIAGE MENSES
11.4.,..M.1d1110b1/.;at.31ARRIACHI
ILUOTIONERE
Tvosue SUNDRY.
Live Stockanathipteral Anatomist
Riuntlton Street. 0 *dead'.
Palm matte everywhere and all efforts mado
afire you satlafaotion.
a taxmen' isle noteadtmetunee,
VETERINARY
Dn. W. 31` CLARK, V. 5., graduate of the
Oporto Veterinary Golhesa, Toronto. I
mapootal ly *MI the attcation of horm owners
ktatb. It supply of veterinary modicum'.
I o expiFed ins, hod of oporatingon horses
W ere,' as end, Oates mitt etables-Ninvetta
ttoot.Goderichs
TONSORIAL
--------
WHUTCHINSON, TOUSOrild Art -
tat, Montreal street, 0 °Merlon.
Weaving. hair cutting. 'shampooing. sta.,
In up-to-date style. Elmore sharpened
ittld lioaad. Satisfaction always amour -
1908 -7
BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES.
d WIRT GODERIUK, No. 82, 0.0.P,
Tsui; a qf ovary month. Parties
'-keiguorr motley' the 1st lood fird
te join can gat full particulars
from Inman Cameron, Arable Sadden.
. Taft, Thos. Burrows. Jamul
ers w a welcome.
WI W. 31cOmenth. Visiting Broth.
THE DIVINE VOICE SPEAKS
It Is Ever Speaking Through the
Things of Daily Life.'
aho at sundry UMW and di
divers 11141.111lee5 spoke in Moe post unto
the fathers by the prophots."-Heb. I., 1.
Througo the uses men have welted
for voices to speak Iron; out the great
unknonn. Answering to lliss universal
t longing fur larger light, to ttus starch
, lot truth, them has been the conviction
nun, w.hers our own scanty knowledge
ended, there something akin to revela-
tion would give us light. We have
Leen listening for voices that would
speak with au authority tramcending
that given to our knows.
Cold reason muy mock at revelation.
but the soul struggling in darkness,
LaPlani by Its problem, lost in tho
still looks up and hopes. For what.
awalts us but despair If the mysteries
o' the universe aro forever sealed, our
questions forever unanswered, and no
higher appeal to be known than that
t; our own selfish interests? It is not
strange that men have heeded those
who, though often mistaken or but 1m-
posotors, have cried, "'thus saith the
Lord I"
it would be strange if tn a world f
spletts there might be no communica-
tion of spirit. If the fairest thought tI
our era Is that which was given us
when man was taught to think of the
omnipotent es father, it would be
in. way by wkiich such a father might
speak to his children. Such a world
would contradict all our best instincts.
Such a world would mean Mai man
was better than Ins maker.
J.13110PHEY &SON
LEADING UNDERTAKERS
AND EMBALMERS
GODEjtiOsitire.t: ONT
Goderieh Planing Willis.
Contraoto3rs
and Builders
Manufacturers of and dealer.
In an kinds ot Building Ma-
terial, such asLiimber,Doors,
Bash Lath, Shlokles, dec. etc.
Mtn and estimates furnished an ap
allatabltahea ISSLI
Buohanans di Lawson.
PY
McKILLOP
Mutual Fire Insurance Co
Irarm and Isolated Town Property ln.
eured.
Value of Property Insured Up to
january, 1901, $3,048,975.00.
ornouits and DlltEUTODS-J
bte.Laaa, President, Kippen P. os T.
Fraser. VIce-Presictent, tirucetteld P.,
O.; T. E. Hayes, Seeretary-'Freaeur.
er, Seaforth P. O.; J. Connolly.
Porter's Rill, I'. O.; 0. Dale, Cite -
ton P. O.; J. Watt. 1Iarlock I'. 0.3
.1. Evans, lieechwooid. P. O.; J. G.
Grieve, Winthrop P. O.; J. Benne-
Decohwood P. O.: W. Chesney,
Beaters!' O.; each tho Inapector of
Ores nearest to ,which they occur.
AGENTS - JAW. Yeo,
J atnes Cumming, Eguiondvillo; E.
Einchley, Seafotth; R. Smith. Her -
lock.
Policy Solders can pay assess-.
talents stnd get their cards receipt -
ed at W. Coats, Clinton, or at Mc-
Lean Eros. Pnlaice Clothing Store,
Ooderich.
CALL UP
Telephones 15
%Warehouses
nod yards at
dock
Of
4 Up town office,
corner West St.
and Square
, When you want the best
to be had in
'
A
•
'
COAL h\
All kinds of COAL
ways on hand.
MI Coal wolghel on thy Market
Scala% where you sot 2000 lbs. for
OD.
WM, LEE,
THE DIVINE V
but we too often lisle
rection. It fells not
coitus not in strange,
visions and portents.
speaking through the th
life; it is ever revealing truth
to the Inner ear, for it comes
without but springs up within,
by the heart rather than by the ear.
The hest things have not droop
down; they have grown up. Life Is no
from without, but from within. God
speaks not In thunders, but In the
lopes and the longings of hearts. Even
the voice welieur In the sighings of the
wind or the messuge we read In tha
rays of setting sun must be In us before
it means aughl to us.
The ten commandments owe their
ICE SPEAKS,
in the wrong dl-
•oin the slaes; it
nusual ways of
ut it is ever
s of daily
nd beauty
lot from
eard
force not to any corning on Blone, but
1 their writing on our hearts; tu them
the soul of man answers affirmatively.
The only moral code we can lullow
that which speaks with the authority
of a conscience convicted. That dues
not mean that man ls his own God, uur
that he knows no law higher than him-
self; 11 dues IlleDil that by the laws
spiritual development the law ts being
written on every heart.
Every real retelation is a tilthie re-
velation. since ail truth is divine. Once
we thought the scientist the enrol!, ,,f
religion; now we know that wtiene‘er
science lays bare one of the facts of the
universe we but look on what the r
of the infinite hes written. When re-
ligion flghtS truth simply because truth
speaks an unfamiliar tongue or falls to
respect her traditions, she is fighting
against God himself.
Our need ls not some strange. cm --
inspiring voice that shall break the
silence of the midnight sky; our need
AN EAR TRAINED TO HEAR,
a spirit lo understand and reverence
the sublime voices that are ever speak -
Ing In our world. the voices of the
beauty of nature. the Joy of living, the
SIOIrleN of everyday divine heroism, the
forces that are making a new world to-
day as truly as ever one was made long
ago.
The lif of our day has not less of I he
divine than the life of long ago; hut
the messnire hank'. to read; it Is for
an educated race; it is spiritual rather
than merely material; it k from within;
It is found in every good Impulse, In
every outgoing sympathy, in the kind-
ling of eye as friend greets friend, in the
good that men are doing, in the tolera-
tion that is becoming wider, the love
stronger between man and man.
God speaks to men now as Ile spoke
to Moses or to David, I holit7h the man-
ner may have ehonged. But the poor
0 spirit, those with whom pm le of the
St has nut served to • hein 1111-
w Mg to 101111. .'e hear the voice:
the p see film: the seeker,:
oftor truth find Him, and to all ile
eornes in ihe thrilling moment or in the
quiet hour when the yoiee uf the heart
!mikes itself hear•d,
HENtlY F. COPE.
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
JAN. 27.
Lesson IV. The Story of Cain and Abel.
Golden Text: t John 3. 15.
THE Le:SSON WORD STUDIES.
Based on the text of the Revised
Version,
The Book of Origins. - The Book of
penesis, as the name implies, is primar-
ily a book of origins, or beginnings. In
Chapters 1 to 4 this Is especially evident.
Here, following the story of the creation
and the origin of the human race, we
have in order the account of the institu-
tion of family life, the prase. :o of sin
lit the world, the fall of man from a state
of innocence, the custom of wearing
Wonting, the peculiar gait and !titbits
of the serpent, the subject condition
(among ancient peoples) of woman, the
beginnings of agriculture', tho existence
in the world of suffering ond pain, the
beginnings of city life, polygamy, music.
and metallurgy, and the beginning of
publie worship of God. Not all the arts
or institutions known to the writer are
explained, but typical examples are
taken with wh.cli oonstruct the gen-
eral picture ot the moral and material
prOgress of early man as conceived by
the Hebrews. From the vary beginning
of the narrative, however, it is evident
that tho dominant interest of the writer
religions anti moral. It is not scien-
tific or historical accuracy about which
the author ts chiefly concerned, but
rather the ethical iMd religious signifi-
cance of the fact that God is the Author
and Source of all things. of man's con-
Seqnent relation to God his Creator, and
the place and task of man in the world.
The author's acocunt of the tall ot man
from a state of primitive innocence Is
wonderful both„ in its psychological in-
sight and Its poetic power. With equal
skill he next portrays the rapid down-
ward progress of fallen man. Dis-
obedience In the first parents became
niurder in their firstborn, and it is
worthy of note that to the descendants
of tho violent Cain "the arts and °meal-
liee of civilization" are truced (Oen. .1
Thus also the first eon of the
Order* loft at C. C. LEE'S Stortie
East aido of Sotatro. promptty atA
tended to,
CI 1 Lk ; .11E \ I AT ION.
Tito Monied-0HD fir stultgarl. Ger-
eilanY. dee:aliened vat the high prices
eVell the WO Merest of tile ppm, -
given to pay for rimer:Gs,
ltReiltrell he IOW 0 city ereniatorium.
'and to Wife crefitairem 10 tho poor of
41a4VII Wile% even MOM,
inIttlinnil.$ (tap. (mep44
rhirgAit.l.billt,110 tor burial and grdvo.
5°" elghtil'efive Merkel.
it is .1eNnifite the peur of
1131t.,;it',nt Ma amount
4. litoohlw *Atom,
-
CANADIAN BATTLEFIELD
ALSIT TO CET.ENIFE CREEK By A
SPECTATOR OF TUE FIGITT.
Scenes and Incidents of the Famous
Siege in the Rebellion
of 1885.
°With the biggeSt hand, and it svOn Ikere
khak Nopatoloeils (Moto-Withonle-eyel
Wan Met Ho tY00 Cooningnioy's fa-
4her. and was on old mon. AB the In -
diet= Were going to chow their bead.%
and he Bald, 'Don't show till I see,' He
Pitt We head up and a Millet went into
Ida ehesl." Pointing to the crest
itivi the tar slIde of the coulee, I say I re-
lalentber htivIng seen Oring at
las front that exposed positiOn. "Yes,"
Ztlye Placutch, otter thinning a tittle,
"that's true; they were trying to hit
the police who were noing for our camp;
but when a man came from the tents
The Lucknow uf Canada, as Battle -
telling Poundmaker that the camp was
lc rd hue been called with pardonable
tti danger Poundmaker brought most . 1
exaggelation, bus been alniust totally
us up the coulee to save it." That, in
transfurined since the famoue siege in
dent of Ilan Lundun 'ranee. The old
the liebcillun 01 '85, writes a correspon- tact, was the critical moment of the
ren:whoogied.aa1dfair, Aateidapietaeluntdoihazisforeviadletnhtlya
stockede and bastions, the only prole°.
ilea ei the beleaguered peptheigth, have corteinty that we were bound to tie de -
we had pressed on instead of halting
thee, tat! ra ot n ct
totally um, peered, and even the line
ttsfeetni*or tIlliteirilfolsrcewheaft thweastiut
whei.e the stocleele then ran can only
be guee)tei at. Some of the police bar -
cooped up on th; hill, not only should
racks ant stables that stood within it
hay, a so van...shoe; end the only easily we have get eut of a most unpleasant
ituation uurseive.s, but we would have
recogeoal le inite-bellien &men re Ls the '
°Ili ere Mose, elan ling well out on the ca,,twed the enemy's camp and compell-
apex u( the triangutur promontory e I ate
fend it, to
Indians, if they wanted to de -
which juts ciut 01 front of the town- '
li eking eas' ward duwn the valleys ef , COME UP INTO THE OPEN.
the But le River and North Saslcatehe- „
It the police) heti stayed on their hors -
Wen, 011 the right and left respectively,
lo the point e.here they join, a mile ,.,. es." Placu.ch admit., "they could have
,,en eseg as 11 steed got through te the camp, for the In•
so below. Of the t,,
charts could only have fired one shot
vehen our column came to its relief not
ne they passed." But the chanee was
o hace remains visible, though I be -
thrown sway, and
lieve one or two fragments of the eld there was nothing
for us left but retreat as soon as the
buildings are built into the new. The
enemy could be turned out of the valley
tewn has certainly grown since 1885,
In our rear. When °seed how the In -
Ion not iemarhably, and it labors under
alans hnew we were coming that morn -
the disappointment of getting the go -
1 ing, Piacuteh says: "There was on old
by from the Canadian Northern Rail -
I Indian named Jacob-with-long-hatr, who
evay, which, passing along the north
always got up before, everybody else, He
some of the Saskatchewan, has called '
went out over the hill, and his horse
put up its ears, and then he listened
and heard wagons cciming; so he gal-
loped back and told us, and we strung
out as quick as we could, one by one."
Sc the enemies of twenty years ago sit
down and take pot -luck together on the
battlefield -pot -luck being a couple of
prairie chickens brought down from a
tree -top beside the trail -and when Pia -
cutch goes back to his farm the white
man sets out on a long ride of about
two hundred and thirty miles eastward
and southward across the great central
plain of Seuthern Saskatchewan.
The country round Cut -Knife Hill is
about as fertile as any in tho North-
west. If one travels south across the
pleilrie from the battlefield, however, the
trinpression conveyed to I he eye which
Wroth -Angry.
His ciountelinnee fell -- Ho became
downcast and sullen.
a. Why art thou wroth ? aed why Ls
thy oountenanee fullen ?---As 111 the ease
of Adam and Eve. God books ley means
of a direct question lo awaken tho con-
science of the guilty man and elicit from
hini a confession of 11111 guilt. ilia Cain's
answer (verse 9) shows how sin had
gained In power. for while Adam and
Eve sought to excuse themselves Cain
tells a dellberate falsehood and defiantly
denies hi.s obligation toward his
brother.
7. If thou doest well -Weil in the. sight
of God.
Lined Op -Bright and open, the oppo-
site of downcust and sullen.
Sin oeuclieth at the door -The figure
is that or an enemy, like a elk! unimal,
lying in wait, near the habitual haunts
of MaIl ready to spring at the tirst op-
portunity.
8. Cain told Abel -Heb., said unto,
that is, conversed with, grave
w.arning of Jehovah proved futile, and
in spite of Cain yields to the promo-
tinp of his sullen and envious thoughtse
he tempts les hnother to welic with him
to a solitary place In tho field and there
ettacks and slays him.
9. Where is Abel, thy brother^ -
Again Jehovah attempts to arouse the
conscience und briug Cain. now beeeine
a murderer, to a recognition and confes-
sion of his guile But a warning query
no longer suffices to awaken the heart
already hardened in sin. •
11. Cursed art thou horn the ground -
From in the sense of away from. Ap-
parently the word "ground" here refers
to the cultivated sell more particularly,
in oontrast to the face of the earth in
general. In wild and unknown regions
tar from the scene of his present pros-
perity Cain 1.4 to become an outcast
wanderer. The eucceeding ‘erses give
in detail the results of the curse.
12. A fugitive. 11 Mt a \vanderer-The
word translated "fugitive" means liter-
ally a man of unsteady or uncertain
pit, a totterer. like one not knowing
where to go, or fainting for lack of food,
or under the influence of drink.
13. Cain said unto Jehovah - The
severity of the curse alurinecl him,
though there is no intimation of peni-
tence unless -It be intended in the Hebrew
word translated punishment, which
means atao iniquity, as the marginal
reading the Revised Version indicates.
Into existence a new and rival own
called North Battleford. Is greatly to
be hoped that the railway company's
intention to throw out a spur So the old
town, the original capital of the North -
%Vest Territories, will soon be carried
out.
A few hours after my arrival at Bat-
tleford I again look the trail for Cut -
'Knife Hill, at about the same hour in
the afternoon at which, on May 2, 1885,
our little force, having raised the siege,
eel out for the same clesenation-to end
the be)legers, who had pitched their
camp on
POUNDIVIAKER'S RESERVATION,
40 miles away to the west. was a
hard march and an unxious one, that
of '85 All night we rode, now bowling
along over open prairie, IlOW plunging is incapable of analyzing soils Ls simply
into a ravine and Moiling the guns up that of Immense and solitary space. For
the other side by ropes, and often hoid. many miles at a stretch ths plain Is M-
ing our breath as w passed through Most Perfectly fiat. and (Alen we found
a patch of thick wood, where the lode It most inconveniently dry, yet it Ls
aris, if they liked, could have picked rapidly being taken up by settlers. On
Ile off one by one from behind the trees. 1 the first efterncan after leaving Cut -
'the day had barely dawned when, cross- I Knife we rode for hour after hour look-
ing the sandy bed of Cut -Knife Creek ling for at least a slough wah a puddle
and ascending the long, open, turfy I it to give our horses their nightly
slope of Cublenife 11111, we suddenly Cdrink. When it was Reality dark, re-
heard the cry from ahead "The Nichis ther than go on in our right direction
are on us!" The Indians, hastily rous- j with the chance of finding no water till
ed in their camp half a mile beyond , Slight we turned right round and pelt -
the hill. rushed to the hill -top from the 4- 1 back the way we had come, for there,
other side just as our vanguard of ; rising from the chimney of a little log
Sleunted Police dashed up from the house we had passed some while before,
bill to the left and right, and somie a column of blue smoke cut the red
o! them even crept down to the creek sunset sky in two, !fere al any rate
we had just crossed, completely sur-,sve were likely to find n well; and so
rounding us except in the direction of . we did, but there wee little in IL Never
their own camp. For flee hours our !Mind, said the hospitable owner. our
little force, chielly composed of velum 1 horses Could share that little with his
tiers and almost entirely of men who 1 oxen.
bud never been undei• fire before, lay That log -house and it: huniele inhabb
in ski/min:him/ order around the crest:tants formed as plensant a pirture as
or tital tnil under a blazing sun, illm-:banything I witnessed in a journey ef
grv, thirsty, sleepy, asd making them -I 16,000 miles. It was only nne-roorned
seives. whenever they rose on their (Swelling. end its OW1101' hail buill it
howe to shoot, tar4eLs for a deAdly fire !Isingle.hunded; but it was rich in clean -
front the enemy hidden in the brush- ! liness, cheerfulnees and comfort. The
wood below. A few of our men made 'erten and his wife were bolh Freneh•
a rush forward towards the camp, but , Canadians, who had eome in a few
were recalled. Towards midday, after months before from the United Statee,
suffering severely in this unequal con -Land 1 netted them if they were not lone-
thet, our men were allowed 10 claim! ly. "Not lit all." the man sold, "my fa-
ohteherneoxnt fianrernotonner;thri;
tlown and clear out the coulees, and In IfIshideer, haasnd tan17
the lull that 'ensued we saddled up- brt
not lo advance, but to retreat. None of cousin Is settling over yonder. and sev-
ue why sum lye are likely 10 forget the keial friends are coming in from !he
sight of the Indians swarming down .1 same place. Why, we terve had a couple
of dances already in my father's hnuse.
the open hill -side on our heels. The,.
ked by the rifles of our and people came from twenty miles
pursuit was chee
rearguard and the shells of tile only • away." I had. in fact. come upon the
seven -pounder that had not been die- nucleus of a French-Canadian colony.
,fibieil by its own discharge, and we ' and the presence of these people on that
made our war back to Battleforct even lar northern plain is a hopefully signi-
nmee quickly than we had come, with
,In harinony with this thought of /I con -
Old Tnstainent is a song of evenge
(Gen. 4. 29, 24), though this dark back- "leslun et guilt we would have to mans.
ground Of cruelty is not unlit hy a gleam late the phrase greater than I ran bear
ot religion {Gem 4. 20). "After the lopse lo read Ovule'. then can be forgiven,
of ten geuerations (chnp. 5), the world which Is permissible (compare marginal
reTil.inWg)hosoever (Indent me will slay me
had grown so otirrupt that God deter-
mined to destroy it by a. flood ; hut be -
melee Noah nes a good mail lie saved
le-arsir sue°11111csl'elnPre gtuoi I 11)n
h anna ids iheis taildiounsiektetilltde saanrcirrdinersaoalvi:Idr
with the justice of the punishment and
Though reveal to hue his preearioue position as
the blood of men tGen. 9. 1-17).
never again to interrupt the course of tt culprit from Justice.
neieire in iudgmeet (chaps. 11-6). In es- 15- ell genilee shall he ta1,011 on him
lablSohing the eovenaill with Noah , 514,e'res111111001 t1(1:eavnetilugrse
grace abounds. however. sin also
the deuth of Cain. Tho vengeance ac -
abounds. Noah tell and his fail revealed
esieling to ancient notions would be exe-
the charioteer of his children the an -
relatives, of the murdered mon.
cestor of the Semites, from whom Rio "led hy
Hebrews syvanes is blessed, as k also A elan ler Caln-Cleari). a sign for
Japheth, while the ancestor of the !leen- chtilereePtli;Oteatotlohlits tiptiedmoann•Parejtiii,111i-wilitialetethheiiat
tious Canannites is cursed iclinp, 9. 16-
271. Frotn those three nre descended the Sign WO1, however, is not stated, and 11
greet i(1111111e9 Of mankind !chap. 10) le whullY u$_e_lee_s
whose unity Was confounded and whosii
BURGLARS LOOT CONVENT SAFE.
embitions were ilogroyed by the woe.
tion of diverse Ian on gas whim. I 1. 1-0)." ----
-S1cForn.en. In 1111e ac'e^llulJutt Itentove to a Garden tNithout Awaken.
early beginninful, following the story of ino the Nuns.
the creation ond toil preceding the Abra-
ham nerratives, the aheirecter tuted The 0111` t100911.41 agitating Belgium
prominent ie the righleTilis pairIntsffi Is Al hat has tieenine Me Molex) in
Noah. To Ihe acenunt of his life and the miles and serurtties stolen from the Be-
ligh° enennr (ni e‘x\ek'legshsaoln1 .gt" ""i°1 aConntligellitit fit1:;tarr 14.
'germ. a. In firtieree of lime- 'Die pre- The eolieelli oeetlined by 30 nuns,
ceding veiscs of fhLs chapter record the who Care for the Mel: and insane 14 111(i
birth of hvo sotto to Adam Anti Eve, neighborhood.
The burglaie were 'Jimmied 00 Wry-
eles. mid entered through the garden.
'They ascertallied. Apparently. that
the coiivent safe elood tit a room npur
the mein entitmee. nest to the Pell of
Ihe mother superior, None of the In-
elele deers were shut, nnti they inattnged
to reach this room, remove the great
safe. which won allixed to the will, anti
toth of whom hnd 110%1 (VON%
nin. the older, beeonting a "1111er
04 the ground." or fanner. and Abel. the
yotittger, a "keeper of sheep." a shop -
herd.
Cain &ought tlf the fruit of Me ground
fleriii,--The word used In the
original tor offeritin is „She same OR that
tistd Let . 2 ober. elen oblotion • of elute II info the orden Without waking
f in " inside of tine flour with
oil and frog tineonse is Spoken of. Per-
,
haps wo ors Jo think of CoinSi offering
os consisting 4n; selected groins, thOugh
itio wording of WE text does not oxeludo
other fruits mid prdelneo of ille COIL
Unto 113110V011 Tthe author makes It.
plain that it IR the gad of
lsxnel. the ono and cow IMO God- whOnt
the first family of men tivilTsbdiVed.
5. Unto Coin rind to life ()titling 110
hrol riot Rs:poet-We ore not Sold Ike
rttc•1115 for God's displeneuro. non yet
how that dtsptitantire wal mode known
t row. We enn, therefore, only infer
from thc sequence a 1110 narrative Why
It woo UM the oVerlag ird Coln tlitig"Vels
levied Whitt* that ot Anal big nralliter
wag accepted. The rettunnithr illte
bleMerallee matacq plain old it 111114
have been the *pled tend iniethee Daktfiff
the oct. rather Nen the tuera deb MS%
which determined fhlt Value in ihe Sight
iot
the mother superior. them lhey Lrohe
it open. still without %oolong ertyhotty,
Tho safe conFnined hank notes and
Belgian. Ittotsian, and Egyptian
seattrities lo a largo tanount, of whit%
the numbers aro hnown, There was also
guantliy of silver Palo In It, of which
dm value ts yet determined, hut
ig suppaged to ha not less Man fin5S000.
At firot the mother superior estimated
Me togs ni 817,060, hut she has Nino
eblifessed thol the total amounted to
*MOO in non& anti 8100,000 in honk
notes and mnuey. rind n great quantity
letvelry and plate, Fortunately, some
netted \ a= of great ortistio value wen)
lett utlitnuelted.
ydiabieen Poolly brealanstrA 010
ganlen on egas and Tonal brel,
persnits were dreeqled af whom two
were fernalited ag Ming fin Antwerp,
4011 the booty hos not been recovered.
***********
HOME.
Nektlit-*
SOME DAINTY DISHES.
Stewed Carrots -Parboil some carrots,
teen alice them thickly and place in a
add one ounce of butter. Let. these shit- way of accomplishing what their hands
owe their Success tu their magnificent
orderline,ss and method, their systematic
(4' ewpan with suflicient broth to
cover. Season with pepper end salt and
and coler the gravy, and have found to do. And many saints -
trier gently until perfectly lender, taee
othveercaulZ1 tss*erveS. cli t Ler .chopped perste
Puur rQu'ILI I qebted for the utility of their character
more, perhaps, than we fancy -are M-
u') the carrots, set on a dish, thicken
two ounces uf grated chocolate, one tiful and the good.
to the me'hodical ordering of their daily
watt: and conversation. to their syste-
Chocolate Sauce-lialf a pint of mil:,
ounce of caster ell -ear, one egg, 0110 'imam.ti,ce ccaunintivoatieinxgp,cotf the true, the beau -
Put the milk and chocolate into a pan, bu iness or in the flne arts, or In house-
t‘ov idle() ime tu. c liveby spas -
small t &spoonful of vanilla e.ssence. modic entererises. are in
and stir mer the lire unit smooth and ke ping. nr what riot else, whatever
thick. Beat the eggs und sugar te- we ne d sy-tem to Ito our hest. Pert
gether, pour the coocota'e and milk of tile beauty of nature is fn the oriel. -
c ver them. return to the pun, and stir I/ luirmorty of Its movements, the pos-
ovavenrinathearldiresourvneld it thickens, add the session of the eenses, the revolutions of
its wight in flour, butter, caster sugar, at hnein sdlitigrs acinidid tphlaenetrtsn; thioeng, mdweetahy, balonsd-
Bakewell cheesecakes -Take an egg.
and a teaspoonful of baking-puwder.
ni IL the butter, add the beaten egg,
sugar, and flour, beat all well legekier,
thee add baSing powder last. Line
small patty tins with good short pastry,
put a teaspoonful of jam into each and
two teaspocuifuls of the peepared but-
ter on the top. Bake In a good oven
for ten minutes, and serve hot or cold.
A Simple Breakfast Dish. -Take the
remains of any fried liver and bacon,
chop very small, and mix with two hard-
boiled finely minced eggs, a teacupful of
dried bulled rice, a dash of curry powder
made mustard, pepper. and salt. Stir
over the fire, and when hut add a small
teacupful of good gravy ur tomato
sauce. Serve on slices of fried bread,
with a little chopped ham scattered
over.
A Good Fish Sauce -Mix a dessert-
spoonful of cornflour to a smooth paete
with a teacupful of milk and water.
Pour into a saucepan, add half an mime
of fresh butter, a pinch of salt, and stir
constantly till the sauce leaves the sides
of the pan. Take uff the lire, drop a
raw egg in, stir again for u few min-
utes, add six drops of vinegar and a
little chopped parsley. Heat all thole
ctiaelgootiltyl. together, tied serve 111 a eery hut
alaeuroni Shepherd's Pie. --Take toy
remain.. of void meal and mince it finely,
l'ut 1)114,11PN] of the quantity of limey
chopped bacon and onions iwilh, if You
have it, a little sheep's kidney) iiitu
frying -pan, and \ellen browned add the
meat, u eetisoning pepper arid salt.
and last of all a little stock. Cools some
macaroni in faet-boiling water, and
w hen lender ley it in a buttered pie -
dish, placing a toyer of meat Lin the top.
Cover ugain with macaroni, sprinkle.
with breaderumbs, pour a little inelted
butter or beef over all, and bake in a
quick oven till a nice brown,
Braised 'Detail -Thoroughly wash an
Wail and divide it into four -inch
lengths. Melt an ounce of butler in a
stewoun, and fry the pieces of tail in
it till nicely browned. Peal. kind cut
is slices, three carrots, a turnip, mid
an trei ‘typiiiito10 , on %iiedr I awyll nin al h bmortttoop of I aa
MaeAltora 11174 llfaealnemFrY a Platter' Of
hreaMast beneon, told loOur most of tbet
red pepper, ann Stir until it Is well heat -
en in the greaSQ, Pile la the centre tf
01 Plain boiled ineinaroni. =slut with 1 ON TI1E FEM.
g.,,,„ tram the Skillet. Drop In a Pint
hot with graham gems. 111A0A911AAN.Afte
platter with the bacon all around. Serve
THE BEAUTY OF SYSTEM.
Besystemotie even in being good and
in becoming good. Businese men often
son sto Forto under arms Worn to Ow
4110$04090 il* istereaboulls.
three waggon -loads of dead and wound-
ed.
A LOVELY COUNTRY THIS,
Sloping down to The Battle Myer, with
many a lake rind stream among its mea -
doe: glades and wooded hills. Several
coneideroble tracts are held by the In-
ficant fact.
FOOD IN TIIE " GOOD OLD TIME
Testimony Before a Commission
London in 18e6.
S.''
in
death, of the trees. all moving under
immutable law and order.
We are wise in emulating the great
and goLd ways of Mother Nature.
tithe more we syetenialize the routine
nt out. everyday procesees the more we
can do, and the more harmonious is our
living. Bedtime and rising time, and
moul• times should futlow eath at its
fixed hours; worleing hours should be
orderee with like precision. A French
physician hae (mid° an inquiry into the
liest conditions for work. And the fixed
hour for beginning work was one of the
primary requisitee he stipulated. tie
faill that the world geniuses o ere na-
turally great viorkers, and thet all el
to- should practice the habit of working
ai regular fixed hours, so that the mind
would hunget• for its daily exercise just
aa the digestive apparatuses hunger et
lee regular hours_fo_r dinner and break-
fast.
•
I 10.11E -MADE BAleING POSVDER.
This is another ' wrinkle" for the IVO -
man i111 a frugal mind -and the beauty
of it is Ma: it is not adulterated with
anything harmful. Mix together two
moires of tartaric acid, one pound of
cream of tartar, tert ounces of bi-car-
tamale of soda and sixteen ounces of
flour or twelve oinie,.s of rice flour. Seal
vol the ingredients together five times
and put holit cans or bottles. For
itaPy use, take tiut a small quantity '11
quartes-pound can, so that the bull<
of the powder does not lose its strength.
Sixty vents' worth of this preparation is
eelintate.1 to last a year even in a good-
sized family- d of two Or more
dollars at the least calculation.
RELICS OF OLD CIVILIZATION.
--
Exploration of Ruined Sites Yields Val-
uable !Manuscripts.
Further news winch 1108 now reached
Bombay, India. with regerd to Dr.
Stein's ex pion' lions of Kholati, show,
that the excavations at the ruined tens
plc on the I itingnya Tuli resulted 10
discovery of many interesting sine 11
pound of bacon cut in shces. and on tiled the temple The stylo of thee.,
terra collo. eelle‘OS, W111111 once decor-
obfrilti'si,jel. as SI 0°‘tVir- CMS Craeco-Buddhist arts. and agree,
sculptures 1; plainly derived from nic
le ae P0,34ble 44 tna-rnonitesiss-PerfeetilY closely with that of the !timid: lime
tender, which will Le in about three relie‘os, 4.1uting approximately from the
Iwurs. Arrange the meat on a dish, filth or sixth century A.D.
Thicken and flavor the gravy and pour A snecially not ivvorthy•feature of th..
over. Garnish weal a little chopped sculptural remains which huve been tits -
pickle or borne freshly boiled sprigs of cevered tile prevalence of richly set:
pieces. This strikingly contlreis Ors
cauliflower.
hypothetical explanation given by Dr.
Stein of the origin of leaf -gold; Tiamely.
that it was obtained by washing from
the culture strula uf the old Kholari capi-
tal at iutley.
Proceeding to the ruined sites east ef
the Medan oasis, Dr. Stein examiniel
the leliedalik site. where he recovered a
I .rge number of paiier manu.scripts .11
with a Mlle corn-Aarch. and salt and samskrit. chinese and ow unknown 1011
pt pper lo taste, with u tablespoonful of gliugo of old leholan. The great maim..
tattier. Drop in the macaroni to heat ilv of the manuscripts contain portion.,
of Buddhist texts, which have Leen &-
posited as votive offerings.
The style of the remains of stucco-
relievos, frescoes, and painted panels
made it highly probable that the slims
belonged to the same period as ,the
temples excavated by Dr. Stein at Ban-
dannilig-that is to say, the latter por-
tion of the eighth century A.D. The sub-
segtzent discovery in a seoond shrine
close by of stringed rolls of Chinesc
copper money supplied definite numis-
matic proofs of the identity of date.
The same temple also yielded portionF
cif Sanskrit manuscript on birch bark.
which were of far earlier dale, and hod
A UNIFORM MILE SUPPLY.
Great progress has been made in out'
411113uotVitlhedogegreu::ebste pdairy
producer, and in the methods that should
be used in handline the cow, in order
from her feeding cow as a milk
machine; she possesses individuality and
or cot rcue,aYwrbiteeadoerri.veEd,
13. Voorhees. The dairy cow 1.s a
machine, in the sense,that the amount
amount and kind of food consumed, but
Of Mills depends very largely upon the
her care and handling regard must be
had to the fact that she is an unimate
niter characteristics, which mu,' be
reekoned with, in addition to her treat -
nein as a machine, and el tho many
!nuts that have Wen established in re-
(erence to the successful handling of a
,itury., no one is more important than
he fact that the cow must Lie treated
ee to encourage) her to maintion a nor-
mal flow of milk, that is, as touch as she
Li capable of during her entire period of
.actation. Thls requires constant care
rind watchfulness both of her needs, in
reference to food. and the conditions
which make for her comfort and health.
With the practice commonly adopted
this point has not been sufficiently em-
phasized. In other words, provision has
nut always been made to meet these re-
quirements. For example, under the
conditions that obtain in general farm
practice, where a dairy is a part of the
business of the farmer, there are two
pet•tods at least In the year when the
entinals reot receive such treatment
ele fo encourage them to make a normal
quantity of milk. The first, occurs in
epring, between winter feeding anti pas-
ture, a sort of "between times" period,
which is very important to provide for,
and the other is in the fall between the
period of pasture and of housing in win-
ter.
In many cases the owner does not re-
gard it as of importance to make special
provision fur those, in a way, critical
periods, It very often happens that the
two or three weeks before the usual
time for pasture, the animals are
INSUFFICIENTLY FED.
WITII MACAFIONI.
Macaroni, Plain -Boil half a pound • I
the slicks well broken up, and when
fully swelled and tender (usually in
twenty minutee) drain and rinse in clear
water. 'rhict,eil two cupfuls of milk
lluough and serve at once.
Mac avoid and Cheeco-Boil and drain
III:. macaroni, place luyer in a baking
de.h, thee a layer of cracker crunibe,
nett. red pepper and grated cheese. Al-
ternate macuroni end seasoning until ell
is used. Pour a cupful of milk or water
over and belie one hour.
ivIncarord wine Tomatoes -Place a lay-
er of sliced or canned tomatoes in a
The present revolt cif the people pudding dieh, then en inch of boiliol
dans under treate, and at last we Page edeltelated food is by no means macaroni; season with salt, pepper, and
out of the white man's land into Pound- Ric first umesing of the 11111d. In the lirei Sutter. Cover with toniatues. then ma -
maker's Reserve. Poundmaker (Ohs man half of the met century there was just cationi. sprinkle the top with cracker
who took animuls to the pound' Is a midi another outbreak, and a war crumb, and I al:0 one hour; very good.
' • t a labon of Ms Indian name) against the tainted meats, ''..lbctored" lt g aIsi mixed with stewed on-
.
54 114 nominally the leader of the Indian fish and "fake" foods was waged he Ione and 1 'e mi • no doubt been imported from India.
rebels. and was kept in Jail for a few Ismks, papers and magazines. England elacaroni, tz'outhirn Slew -Slice two Thore were further discovered some ex-
yenrs accordingly. To what extent he and France were ibe centres of the storni sloes of bacion fine and fry in an Iron cellently preserved large rolls bearing
deserved punishment, however, is at that time; but America did not escape, kettle; then add four onions cut up flne Buddhist texts in Chinese, and having
. . 'd what was evidently
doubtful. I was present at the pow -
view outside Bellieford, and when,
having come In with other chiefs M
surrender, he was asked by General
eliddleton, to explain his co•nduct he
spoke as if his authority over Ms tribe
had nut Wen very effective.
When we cros.eed this reserve before
tlawn on that fatal May morning in
1S85, Poundmaker and his men were a
'horde of hostile savages with yellow
sear -pe n their faces. To -day these
svarrtor• a.1.1 huntsmen are a peaceful
community of farmers; and the first a
1 men we tneel 10 11 ple(1411 Ilt•1001,111g gen-
Mullen, In what have the conceit to
call civilized clothing, driving a farm
'wagon with a good team of horses,
and appiirenlly differing only in com-
plexion from any of his European neigh -
bore. Altheugh the land is held in
curnmon by the tribe, one Indian who
wants to fence off purl of it for farm
IS free to do so; and here in the middle
el a wide stubble field we eotne upon
a steam threehing outfit, bought by the
eribe wtth their earnings, and in
eporetIon, the whole of the work
being done by the Indians themselves,
nod now, however, 00e Interest. per-
force, Is leo; in the wheattlelds of to-
day then in the battlefield of twenty
y oars ago. end there it Is, sloping up
to the west from the other side of Cul -
Knife Creek, On the turfy wind-myent
elope where wen) caught by ethe
rebels we now meet Colonel \McDonnell
of the MounINI Pollee, who rode (Wee
forn-mIle canter 19 nothing out here)
to hunt up smile old Indian who had
been In the fight, With him are hie.
warden, the Indian agent. end hie son,
Who Mike Cree lik5 (4 native, nnd,
but not heal, a worthy gond-hunicrgl
nibesinno with long toilet: Mar nnil a
blanket suit. This Is Pineutch,
ONE OF PrIt'NOMAKI..R'S MEN,
who did Ills hest or his te,rst 1,1 delSat
us, end oho quietly elmehles olonever
Ile recalls their victory over "Ilie Police."
Plainly, ,lenvever, his teelmg tho
moiler is purely nesidemical; he bears
110 sort of n grudge atainst either white
men in emeriti or the pollee in part).
cffinr; and we go oier lite field together,
emnpnring notes and correcting each
other's InformntIon in the friendliest
fashion. At the top of slope wa
Identify the snot where ihe guns were
!Vaunted, the peer little brass 9000414
pound, rs. Whose condones collapsed
oarly Hp fray, nod the Galling,
braved), handled he Captain 'toward
(who ofterwords fought fop us South
Ofelent, hut gi101 ns utioless when 1110
indieno hod token cover.
"And wheec Were yell?" 1 atilc, Pin-
eldeli leads t»e deem !he into
the ontee an the ‹euth of our post.
bail, (urns rotund, ond healing S.kuling
sintyly up the slope, sinoping loW and
pointing tan IMOginary gin) at obaut the
Mini 'PM wkif)11 I well seinenther
waich1f11/ POC-AcAq ovet1t9.
k.Pounchinalier Tals down here," lap Sqs.
and an old newspaper of the time as- lind fry Mown. . ir n .
sorts that "two-thirds of the catimba t• eut fine, and one quart of hel n translation into the unknown langunge
wine manufactured ln Cincinnati is el1111- water. Stew one-half hour, odd a ran of old lehotan. It may prove that these
posed of sulphuric acid and water, with .1; tomatoes, sail. pepper, and a pinch will furnish the long -desired clue where -
Just enough of the real Juice of the grape of allspiee and eook twenty minutes. It by the latter language may be de -
added to give It a flavor." then should be cooked down to a rich. ciphered.
Here Ls a bit of testimony before a quite thick stew. Just before serving
commission appointed lo inquire into the stir in one qtiart of boiled macaroni.
sales of tainted meat in London in 1850; 'Pap on a large hot platter and serve
"DIsease/1 meat is hmught Into London ai once.
in great quantlties, and Is purchased by Mcvaroni Omelet- Take ono cupful sf
the soup shops, sausage -makers, beef -a- cookei macaroni. rut up fine, teat six
la -mode and meat -pie shops, etc. There
ts one firm selling £500 worth of dis-
eased meat a weik, This firm has a very
large foreIgn elle trade 111 die -
eased meat is vele. alarming. I ain cer-
tain that If 100 e(leellS.9..9 e0W4 were
lying dead in the neighborhood of Lon-
don I could get them all sold within
twenty -tour hours, it doee not matter
what they died of."
There W119 any amount of testimony of
Ns sort given before the commiseion.
It was aseerlained Hint there were in
London three large Ineuranee companies
‘vhich men, a specialty of Insuring
cattle against disease. When 5 cattle-
man reported one of his nnimals sick
the insurance compane. which 115.1 taken
the risk paid the Insurniice. look the dis-
eased animal and sent it to the large
slaughter-houeee which the rompanies
maintoined in the country, o Sere it was
killed and prepared for the leindon mar -
het. The great slaughter -home of the
three insurance companies were 1'441-
ployed entirely In the killtna and mo-
oring for the market of diseased
The oMelnIs and slochholdeN of theee
Insurance companies were all "eminently
respectable people.** "moving in the
highest social device." Some of the
sperimens of food purchased nt random
In the markets were found to have been
healed thug • A fish W119 found to have
been painted o ith orsenite of cooper ; a
pigeon Wag colored with bisulphate or
mereury and cromate of lend ; a foist
acnir Illailreeeoro tll leenrd cgtnivm!eb°11ogis•onveeri;lialln.
orange) svith red lead; an apple with a
dengerous dose of cremate of lead.
Beer Wag found on sate guthlege of
either hops or malt and composed uf
avtaarnioonaus. chemicals ated foreign sub -
The peacock is found in a wild state
tn India, Ceylon, Madagascar, and many
ollter parts of Asia and Africa.
, The oid soldier had been telling his
`eIlso'l 10 itui'• "Pr"Is nephews terrible stories of battle, and
milk. a lidileepriosful ,i1" flour. end one ilu,y hod listenetd spellbound for an
02 Stir till %Nell tegether. I nor hour. 'rben said the eldest :-"I s'pose.
uncle. that V011 never ran away from
anything. did your The old man
thought great deal before he answered.
slowly :-"My boy, If you live long
enough you'll iltid out that it's never
well to run away. fron danger -no mat-
ter whet. but )ou will probably meet
with occasions when you'll see what n
grand thing it Ls to right-aboubface and
FINANCES OF KNIGHTHOOD.
Sordid questions of finance enter 11110
the eonsid.rnlion of lite elf:tinnily
'Hulse upon whom King Edward wauld
Minter the distinction of knighthood.
and there are many tehf) might uso the
mooted peens. "Sir" did they 908.40q3 a
!larger Um min. 11 Is. eau/silly speaking.
is rule fital lininhlhood shall not no eon.
Perrot, upon anyone who hno not on
inconto of al lenst PPM upon which
14) maintain hlq knightly dignity, Witte
g baronet, bfz.br,, his ;trailer), must nut
111111,alsyt bitofnAndatoyehaory,eboulti ninucostmetuntkel
nhlo to purchase country seot and
tt in o position to suitably provide for
elde$It son.
. 0
into It A. greased fryiog pan, nod when
vvell set, 1111,511 on the kip grule of a
hot oven.
Raked Sfasnronl, fead-This ran be
sreoids I in lhe morning and makes 5
.010e supper dish, One quart of boiled
sivirerom fee tech pieces; one quoin
et milk. two tnilleepoonfuls flour. salt.
end pepper to taste, and one cupful '0
n ted cheese. Bake in a covered
about one hour and set away to co
dish harge in the oppostte direction as last
01. eq you can (M."
..S• '•
41's\A, ;, 4.1
),,\\)111.
•A
A
• tl\t
.; 1.1,b•
•
,,„„,„
- •
••.
v ' r.
ifir:3!1.‘"K114411....41'f,
- •
Tim tinairit cov Aft4NA7r-M1NREDNES4.
"I oltvay3 kirieW rny husband W09 0 berlt Istit II he tuistin now giv-
en Otir coon a conlly hit boa, And Wit non ine that Fun diSeltarged Imm the
61'5k of next Montlir
rhe foliage on hand has run low, hence
1110 animals are turned upon the pas-
tures before they are properly inalueed,
and enough food is not obtained of the
right Ivind to maintain the milk now, and
very often, in addition to this, the uni-
IIIMS are allowed to run down in fleets
In the fall it very often happens that
pastures fall short. are frozen, dried out
und poor. and yet no provision is made
for supplementary food or extra care at
this period in order that the ordinals
mu have a full eupply of food. Besides,
they are frequently left in the fields on
cold. charm frosty nights with the conse-
quent additional reduction in the ilow
of Now, when these things occur,
two things happen : First, the vitality of
1110 animals is reduced; and second, and
a% a consequence. the milk flow ls not
only reduced, but because of the loss ot
vitality, it requires much more feed,
proportionately, to bring them back lo
Weir normal now than It would have re-
vived to maintain them if care were
Ishen to provide supplementary food
a :Id to give extra care.
'I'he argument, used in support of this
old method, if any occur to the farmer,
:lee/ that, it is a short period anyway, and
it will make but -tie difference if they
ere not properly. cared for for a few
,lays. This is false reasoning and re.
sults in reducing the net incume from
the product of the cow without material -
redwing the cost of maintenance.
dhe difficulties which seem to be in the
way of maintaining the flow of milk
during these periods are nut serious,
out. require mainly that foresight should
beinusethde.
spring this "between period"
which results in a decrease in the flow
if milk, may be overcome by a little
larger use of fine feeds, if succulent
iuds are not available, or if roughage
:as been reduced. and the injury that
may be caused by the use of pastures
iefore ttley ure fully matured may be
...cry readily met by the use of supple-
inentery crops, such as rye, which are
..,,enerally ready for feeding by May 1.
in the fall, the shortage of food for this
,eriod may be supplemented by a few
roots, by corn fodder or by an earlier
ise of silage. together with a careful
lousing of the animals at nights as soon
Hs the weather becomes raw and cold,
:liming them to have their exercise, and
ti secure such feeds as !nay be available
.1uring the warm part of the day.
At the experimental farm, the prac-'.
'ice does not correspond with that gen-
roily followed, because pastures are not
rsed. but the seasons occur just the
-aline, and the methods that. are adop-
ted are just as applicable as where
inimals are pastured during the sum-
•ner. It is largely
A QUESTION OF MANAGEMoser,
Ind it is of the very greatest Importunce.
•or example, in the spring, if the silage
eas been used up before it is tinie to
pasture or before green fortige Is ready,
we usually purchase dried beet pulp,
soak it and use it as a succulent ration,
ur if convenient secure wet brewers'
grains, which. as a rule, at that season
the year, iceep well and maintain not
only the succulence of the ration, but
provide a full supply of nutrients.
Under these conditions we have not
observed any failing off in the flow of
milk, and the extra cost of food end
care is very small. When the time for
pasturing hns arrived, which is usually
about May 1, a sudden change from the
barn to the pasture will frequently re-
sult in loss, because, while the pastures
rney appear to be abundant, the food Ls
Insufficient because of the Immaturity of
the grasses to supply the nor-
mal needs. Hence, in that case a
larger proportion of dry feeds aro used,
or the pastures are supplemented by the
feeding of green rye. Green rye Is usual-
ly ready by May I, and when cut at the
proper 11111e, is one of the most useful
of spring forage crops. We begin with
a relatively small quantity, feeding at
first at the rate of 15 pounds at morn-
ing and night feedings, gradually in-
creasing the amount as the animals ad-
just themselves to the ration.
A sudden change from the feeding of
dry rations or barn feeding. too great
Menge, is liable to disturb the digestion
and cause trouble, %Mush we have not
noticed any trouble when small quanti-
ties are fed al Inst. The same general
practice Le followed in the fall of tho
year When changing from outdoor to
Ix Inter conditions.
When pastures begin to fail, the suc-
culent feed is increased by a gradnal
feeding of silage, nr if silage is not
available the use of dried beet pulp or
wet brewers' grains until the pasturee
cease altogether, when the full winter
ration mny be substituted without in-
jury to the animal, keeping the cows
housed nights as soon as the weather
becomes fitly. By Iles system we have
no dimint on in the milk yield but a
very slight. inerenee in the cost of the
rations nnd a healthy condition of the
animals when they are transferred frorti
the field to the leen,
THOSE EXPE;7;:i-\7-E AFFAIRS.
In June they wed,
A man. a maid, '
The wedding hills
Are not yet paid.
0
tohnny "Whnt's silence, Flooldy ?"
Freddy : 'It's what you don't hear when
vou lieten."
"Flayntel. dear," ehe said, "I do home
you wilt Mop smoking eigetelles: you
don't know whnt's In Been." "Oh, es, I
do; why. for quite a trifling amen you
get nicotine, Via/Orion. possibly la 111110
morphia. and °Ay ornotint hf portion.'
She looked tufo his eye) and mormurivl:
ntlayard, dear, 11 doeg see) like a bac
gain, doesn't itr
•/'
„ie."
It.„
1