{ title: 'The Otsego farmer. (Cooperstown, N.Y.) 1885-1910, January 23, 1886, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-01-23/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-01-23/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-01-23/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070110/1886-01-23/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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a H. 1. RUSSELL, Publisher. VOL. IX I FARNE AND FIRESIDE-JOURNAt: COOPERSTOWN, N. Y., SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1886. Rill-Land Horticultural Society. by Messrs, F. T. vis, y, James which -we had closely watched and the hotse led away, we turned to our uncle and said, 'Uncle John, what good does it do, to poke those sticks around that sore!\ He turned to us with a grin and said, \I will tell you,. Harvey, all. the secret there is about it; it keeps people from doing any: thing worse to them, and they get well themselves,. nature - works the cure.\ Whether the reader sees any point to this story or not, there ds a good one, At the best, bature can be but liitle aldéd, except by care. . She works the cure. ___. ___| __ In 1840 we took a medical lésson from Dr. McWhortei\ in a few words. - One day we were walking from his house to the mill, when we passed a bunch of very tall burdocks, We remarked that \'that weed was becoming quite too plenty for the good of the formers.\ . He stopped., looked at itand said, \I never passa burdock but I feel like taking off my hat to it. I am indebted more to that plant for my: success in medi- cal practice, than to any other medicine I ever used. True, the burrs of a burdock are not very useful or ornamental in a [sheep's wool, or im & horse's mane, or tail, but the roots and seeds are very valuable for many medicinal purposes.\ \'For what and how do you use It?\ w oughly with the surface soll and dragged 'it lightly, and sowed upon the field six bushels China 'T wheat, the first evér sown in the neighborhood: - It was done during the absence of the Judge, and we went many miles distant for the wheat, exchang- ing a larger quantity of another kind. .. The first the Judge knew of the new kind of wheat was when it began to head out. - It was the best crop we ever saw, It gave an immense yield, and its fame se- and one-half -- Reported expressly for Tam Orez0o Fazxrn. 'The Hill-Land Horticultural Society of Southern . Central New York, held its eighth manual meeting at Oneonta, Tues. day, Wednesday -and Thursday, Jan. 12th, 18th and 14th, 1886. __ > . Tussu&y President, Mr. Harvey Baker of Oneonts, being unable to be present on account of a broken leg, the meeting was called to: order by Vice-Presi- dent, Dr. W. A. Thayer of Cooperstown, Bundy, A. C. Bishap and D. W. Gallup; Thefollowing.aitiole on Hop Trad in fact, the tables presented many excellent [fouj’tlmyol Jan. 18th: - - varieties, . The Seedling Apples which |\ phere hus of course, been no business Id were exhibited are worthy of a trial. the: Borohgh Hop Market-sines THoreday, 'The papers read were able productiOn8; [ 5aq : ig not likely that there will- be m filled with valuable information: and 808~ | gorge for thp-next three: or four-«days,\ gestions. The discussions upon the vufloufi'muy- boweier; be intereflifig to take. subjects presented were unusually interest- gnpygy . the bop trade, both ab ing and spirited; which resulted in muCh | pome and abroad, with a view to see how. good, and was in perfect harmony.\ . {matters ataud in regard to the future. ~ Fort In every way the meeting was a 81CCeRS, | jpg InsE—twf‘f'w'eeknm—bu been a comind#- “(1.255le agtex'x'gied from all section8 10 | yemark that therégngwneli‘afixpéclnfimx- Tha meeting adjourned until Jur. 1897:_|some people connected with the : trade 84 ticipated a substantial advance in, valued with the agvent of the New Year. We - doubt however, if much faith is reposed in those who také this sanguine view bF ° the majority of holders of Kent \The mims-sort of- thing-was-fold-them.-I 1884, and many growers waited patiently he rorthfiMngdemdrwhich~wmabfing__._ them their reward; but the Bpring 'came and weat without making much impression on the market, sail prices did not improve one shilling. | It may very likely be that _. + choice hops will go up. in value, by reasort ° of their scarcity, and a planter who hat his growth on hand may well fee} justified. rm ___ Beminiscences of Farm Life of Olden ‘ . ' Times, Stories, &c.«-No. 5. Written expressly for Time Orereo BT -BARER 'The young people of the présent time, whose memories do not'take them back to 'a period anterior to railroads, can. realize but a little of the hardship of travel when out grandfathers settled in this then new --- ant wilderness country- To-day, go where you. will, fou will find conveniences of transit. The tjotimey of our maternal grandpa- rent to where Upper Lisle now stands, with his family and, household goods, was made in a couple of large log canoes. Not w inill dam. in any stream to- impede their progress., They first settled in what was then the town of Jericho, in Chenango ' county, nean where Bennettsville is now located, and erected a grist mill on the | from the saw mill one day, the Judgé him- sfream which passes through that valley. [self assisting. | The, distence was short, |__... Learning through Dr. MceKorter, before | put up a slight rise. Th cond load one mentioned, that a good opening for mills} of the horses droppearilcgdi instantly, when was to be found on the Otselic river, caused | about half way from the mill to the house, an examination and a purchase of t large | we hitched another horse in his place and tract of lad upon both banks of th@l| nauling the wood, and throwing it off as cured-its-sale dollars per bushel. The land: so ashed, so long as we knew it, was the most productive on the farm, The proof of the value of the ashes caused them to be soof 'All . hauld on to the farms in the vicinity, | 'We were re- cently informed that the beneficial effects of that heavy coat of ashes,are-visible upon. that plot of land even to this day, - Another lesson learned that spring must not be forgotten. We were hauling wood 4h the | ident from the manuscript, which had been |. sent to the Society. . - The Secretary, Mr. Edmund Hathaway of Otsdawa, made the following report: Another year has fled since we last mot. The Bee Tent. ~~ * One of the most valuable discoveries in 'There is no painful duty in memoriam at bee culture for the past few years is the this time, _ Thisis our eighth annual meet- bee tent.. This is a small inclosure, made ing, Thesociety is making progress in the | of wirs-alotli or mosquito ~netting-aud facet right direction; it is passing from its child- | tory eloth and is large enough to place over |-hood-into vigorous youth. -_ =-- - 'There haviobeen {More the annual gath- the bive and give room for two persons: to erings, besides the addresses and many val- work with the bees within the enclosed space. usable discussions, about seventy essays by . Yesterday (October 4) we were putting our own citizens, and which embraced up our college bees for winter, ~Bome are largely their experiences of horticulture and kindred subjects; nearly all of them, [tos ; very cross, yet we get no stings and foduc- ed no robbing. As I remember the old with other transactions, have been voiced time days, when awolle§\ hands and faces, to the world by our newspapers, | The cor- rect names of maby varieties of apples and other fruit have been. learned at our exhi- Cull. ”EWNm t ii . I «tream, and the removal to and erection of |g mills thereon, M +-- 'The boat journey of the ploneers was down the Susquehanna from near where Bainbridge now stands, to the junction of the Bu@quelimma-and Chenango,then up the Chenango to its union with the Onon- daga, then up the Onondaga to where that-unites-with-the-Oteelic; and up the now knownas Uppor Lisle: | The first _name of the place was Munson's Mills, then Sharp's Mills, then Whecler's Mills, and during General Whecler's ownership Upper Lisle. became its permanent name. Tt was then within the town of Lisle, but now Triangle. | >- Our grandfather, after clearing a farm, building a grist mill and saw mill, and fine frame buildings, sold the premises to a Mt. Smith, very soon after the marriage of my father to his second daughter, about 1810, and moved west to where Rochester now stands, - Smith soon sold the property to Mr, Sharp, who, after several years' owner- ship sold it to George Wheeler, a native of Keene, N. H., and whiledn his possession our sequaintance with the place began, and we might add ended, for he still owned it in 1841, when we chose this county as our future home, 'The house he erected for a residence was much superior to the one already described as built by our paternal grandfather, being ¢wo stories in height, dnd having the fire. places, three in number, in each story, and a large garret in addition as a family man- ufactory. This house, too, was finished wholly with wood, except the parlors on each floor were plastered walls. - The brick for the chimney and the lime for the mor- tar were burned on the place. | There be- ing no lime qunrfies in the county, small lime stone were picked up during low wa- ter along the river bunks for the purpose, mo one stone being found larger than n baby's head. It made the best of mortar. 'We lived in the house from 1883 to 1838. It was while tiving here in General Wheel er's family that we took our best lessons in business life. | For three yeats, while pass- ing from fifteen to eighteen years of age, we hsd charge of the managing a largo . portion of this property. | General Wheeler was a judge of the county court, a justice of the pesce, postmaster, and general land. agent for that section of the country, and a clothier by trade. Here we learned our best lessons of farm- ing, although we had helped on the farm from the time we could walk. | Here, too, commenced our first handling of money, Money then \was very different from now. No two States had money of the same value, and besides, counterfeit were plenty. Bo well did we acquaint ourself with pa- per money and its value, that during a life in which we have handled considerable; we can boast of never for ourself, or any one else to our knowledge, of losing a single dollar by taking bad money, teams, which we keptin con- | ey at less than -its commercial value; We claim it as no particular skil}, simply good luck. _ We have been far less lucky in judg- Ang of men, for by them we havemet many +to a-distant-place for burial, taking slong a Doctor, a good veterinary surgeop, to learn if possible, the cause of the sudden death. The horse was a good one, and in fine con- dition, 'and apparently in perfect health, en through his stomach in several places, some-of the- openings. being nearly two | ~~-OHéHC \to ~the~place- ~above-mentioned finches in dinmeter~ - The gurgeon decided them the couse of death. | He-also said that an occasional feed of cornstalks was a sov- ereign remedy for them, and that no horse would ever suffer with them which was occasionally so fed. fifty years ago and we hive never failed to use the preventative with all horses under our care, whether beneficial or not. Youatt, in his work on the horse, says bots do no harm; but they certainly had made a riddle of that horses's stomach, death or very soon after. one hour after death that the examination took place, and scores of bots were present and still alive. we drop the subject. Sprague . called rand burn the wood off the salt. oon as possible, went and drew the horse On opening, we found that bots had cat- That was more than either before It was about One other lesson on horse discases before About 1830 our father had a colt sick with what Dr. \yellow-water\; | what Youatt calls jaundice. | After prescribing for the sick colt and giving the necessary directions for its care, he turned to us and said, \Harvey I will tell you how to inquired, ''For any case of lassitude, or impurity of the blood,\ he replied. When one has boils, or carbuncles, or feelsa tired, dragging feeling, let him dig burdock root, scrape, rot. wash, the dirt off, slice or bruise them, put in cold water, and use as a drink, Tt his 16 bad Taste, and acte slightly on the bowels. Follow it for a drink three or four days, and if boils have «commenced forming they will often disappear without coming to a head. . It is almost a certain cure. - For a tired feeling it actsas a tonic. It will often make one feel like a new man. It is really one of the best medicines known.\ Like the butternut salt for the horse, this has been our medicine -evgr since. With a few exceptions it has answered all our needs for forty-six years. Do not for a moment think that you can abuse either your horse, or yourself and then by either of those simple means rem- edy such abuse, We very carly in life learned better than to expect nature would change her ways to accommodate any of our wishes, or remedy our mistakes, She will do no such thing. - We have heard man a funeral sermon upon the Insecruitable ways of Providence, when I knew that the death was cnused by the open violation of the simplest laws of health. We de- test the idea of charging Providence in any wny as answerable for nny of our trans- w avoid ever having a sick horse.\ - Boy like, we told him that ''we wanted to know, as we expected to own lots of them,\ His di-> rections were to \take young green butter- nuts, two or three inches in diameter, cut them in short pleces about ten inches long, and with an augur of suitable size, (usual- ly 1} to 14 Inch), bore the red or heart part of the wood mostly out; boring within ubout two fuckes endways through the sticks. When so bored, fill each stick nearly full of damp salt, tamping it in firm. Then plug the end with a butternut plug. Let them lay in that way for twenty four hours or so, nnd then put them in the fire, The salt will remain in a roll, not unlike n roll of brimstone, and very hard. | Pulverizesome of this salt and occasionally give your horse a level tablespoonful in his feed. Do It particularly in the spring and fall with- out fail. Follow this direction and you will never have a sick horse, | That lesson was given us nearly fifty six years ago, and we have followed it. Whether the simple medicine which scts as a mild cathartic, has been the cause, or whether some other cause has preserved the uniform health of our horses, we cannot say. | This much is true, however, the Dr. was right, we have never had a sick horse. We have owned horses of our own for nearly the whole time, and except from in- juries, have never had one unfit for service or refuse his food. - Even when. the \Ept gressions. 0 If we climb on a fence which is too Inse- cure to support us, and we fall and break a leg, all the providence we see in it, is, that it was not our neck. - We have got to wait nature's time to remedy the accident, - Men bition table, kinds to raise. desire to cultivate. od. matic influence on plant life. ing ravafres of insects make entomological investigation imperative. of the Influence of the manner of cultiva- tion on plant growth is needed. The cli- inquiry should be made owing to c There also information bas been gained regFectlng the most valuable the display of garden veg- etebles, kinds thit are indispensable to health and comfort as a winter dict, has at- tracted much attention. vegatable garden seeds, cases of insects, € beauliful stuffed birds and other things of | of inconio are suddenly dried up after a interest have been. exhibited from time 10 \ neriog c Amerity. they time. ’ 'The Lord God planted a garden eastward | in Eden, By this act we are given to un- derstand among other thitigs, that it is not the that . bonors the man; but tds man that must honor the calling. What we sut is a knowledge of things. | It is ve proper to inquire Into the relation the d?- ferent soils bear to the various plants we The inorganic world is the base of organic supplies; hence geol- should be considered. _ Meteoro epid- i Cans of fruit and The increas- More knowledge aching flesh, and & million of robbers caus- ed me to dread the October removal of. comb honey and preparation for winter, I could but bless the inventor of the bee tent. - Bees are are always terribly irritable at this seagon. - Like men, wheb all sources ' period of great prosperity, they are not {in amiable mood. During the season of gathering wquinndlo bees with no smoke, no protection, and get no~atings. | In the mod still-the smart of stings make the work not at all agreeable. QA bes keeper told me yesterday that this October work was the most unpleasant io the apiary, . With. a bes tent all is: changed, - Wo work with no veil, and yet sre safe. Besides this, with the bee tent the danger from robbing is avoided. - No outside bees can get to us, and so there is no more tendency to induce robbing than though we did not work with Tull wo use a vell, keep the smoker pulling 138 178.60 owt; compared wit - to £9 in 1884. | By far the bulk of sales: > matic and hydraulic influence of forests | | should be better understood. - Botany and vegetable physiology, plant structure and plant life, the production of new varieties f by hybridizing, grafting, pruning, &c., he bees ut all. f My tent is six feet high, six long and 'our and one-half wide. | Itis none too large. 'To rake this,' first, make two square are rantters of continual inquiry. subjects of foriculture and landscape ening have further claims uppn us. expressive to n man's mind and heart than his surroundings where they are of his own making, | The work before us is vast and varied, but God is a co work- er with its, and the delightful enjoyments to be had du it are scarcely found in any ing is more ther occupation. The Treasurer, D. C. Loomis of Oneonta, gave his report, which was adopted. Reports on Small Fruits were made by T1210 Horn. frames each way for the sides of the tent. Make these of light pine strips, brace well aud tack wire cloth on each one. Next, tack a plece of strong; factory cloth eighteen feet long and four aud. one-half feet wide to these frames, so that the longer edges of the cloth shall extend the entire length ot three sides of the frame. This done we have really a bottomless box, the ends and io refusing to sell at the current quotations which are very low indeed, though not quit@ so low as they ' were a few weeks aloce, The quantity of really fine colory hope. grown this year was so disproportionste to . the crop of ordinaryand inferior bops,° that one may indeed 'Woodér-bow it is they should fetch no more than they do. EBC highest price paid by merchants to a grow» for choice-East Kent hops-of-1085-bat of good East Kent growths have beet an average under £5 per cwt., and for a large proportion growers have to take less\ than 50s. per cwt. Consumers have more than ever particular in the matter of quality and condition, and while they have porchased freely» of the best 'descriptiort they 'have taken most unwillingly 'the mediin and inferior growths, and them- ouly at their own price. A good mapy brewers are now heard. complaining of the' quality of hops that they bought two of three months ago; in numerous Jnstancer it is stated that the hops have gone off con« present moment the market. is. well. supe . ['plied-too well supplied in fact-with me- dium and inferfor Boglistrand foreigr-hop though there have recently been 'geveral exceedingly hoary transactions, | The pricg at which healthy mediom descriptions.have .. tops of which are factory cloth, the sideo wire gauze. If about three feet at the James Bundy of Sidney Plains, and Asron Wilber of Portlandville; in which report will abise themselves. with: liquor and to- bacco, and then wonder that others who abstain are more healthy and prosperous. A poor man's body may accommodate itself to such mbuse, and his nature stand the shock, but his finances never. Our experience in horses has been that nome but the pony built, whether stall or large, are profitable for tite farmer or bus- Iness man. | Tho long-legged, loose-jointed, gnmler-nhankcd, kind, may do to chase lightening rod men, or for jockeys to trade upon, but are of little other value. | Be- | sides, the horse that caunet work and keep in good condition on twelve quarts of oats or its equivalent, had but a short tarry in our barn, or possession. For work horses, for a lifetime, we have made corn meal a part of their feed. For roadsters we have found oats preferable. POne can change safely the feed of a horse from other feed to oats, but the change from oats to corn or part corn must be made with care with most horses. . Corn and oats ground together, and then mix part whest bran, we have found as good for strength, and flesh, as any mixture of feed for heavy work. - Feed hay sparingly. - When onthe road for fast driving we feed the heaviest feed at night, but lightly, morning and zoota\ was universal, there was none for our horses. During those years we have tinued services on an average of eleven years each, or forty-four in all. We have also i had many others during the time, but none sick with any disesse to unfit them for con- noon. We should always remember that the profitable farm horse, and the fast road- ster, and the race horse, are quite different animals, and that our opinion of what has been best for ourself, may be far from sat- Mr. Wilber stated he barvested over one hundred bushels of strawberries off nbout one mere of ground. Turspay Evexixa.-A paper by J. M. Rockwell, on \Handling Fruit:\ Also a paper by B. H. Rose on Hedging.\ Both of which were very interesting. The report of the committee on ''Forest- ry,\ was given by Dr, W. A. Thayer of Cooperstown, and H. Baker of Oneonta, which set forth many usefal hints fu re- gard to the future flow of the springs. Wapnnzapay Monxtxo -Report of com- mittee on \Gardening by Culver Gillette of West Oneonta, and A. D. Ogden of On- conta, which brought forth many lively discussions. Report on 'Orcharding,\ by James Bun- dy of Sidney Plains; Alfred T. Williams of Cooperstown, and F. T. Jarvis of Hart wick Seminary. . Discussions were brought forth for the use of fertilizers and the de- struction of insect pests. | Mr. Jarvis pre- sented some fine illustrations in explaining his work and showing the best manner of trimming fruit trees. Paper on \A few Points in Sanitary Ser- vice and their Relation to Rural Homes,\ by O. W. Peck of Oneonts, which ought to be placed in every house, Report of committee on \Floriculture by J. 8. Rockwell of Oneonts, was a fine production. Report on \Meteorology by G. Pome- roy Keese of Cooperstown, was read. A, paper on \Future of Horticulture,\ by end of one edge of the cloth is untacked it forms a convenicat door of entrance. We now procure four small pieces, like a brovin handle, each four and one-half inches long; cut down the edges for a short distance 80 they will fit jnto a three-fourth: fuch augur hole, - These put across the ends at top and middle, and held by the ends sbutting tato three-fourths fuch auger holes in the end of the frames, hold the sides apart, . These ate only crowded in by using. considerable force, and so remain int place. When done the sides brought close together, and all cao be cartfed Indoors. | This tent costs but lit. tle, is invaluable at this season and will last indefinitely. years and Is as good as now. -[Prof. A. J. Cook to Philadelpbia Press Oct. 5. anno ages -_ _- Terscly Stated. To give some idea of the blighting effect of buttering upon the sales of legl- imate butter, we qaote the following: | \It was stated at the sonual meeting of the Nationa! Butter, Cheese and Egg Associa- tion, which bas just been held at Chicago, that the decrease in value of dairy products in the last two years was bearly-six millions of dollars, and this is spite of the face that the population of the country is in- creasing than the number of cows, which ought naturally to.Incresse values.\ 'The report attributed the result solely to the immense sale of substitutes for butter, \'Does it not seem a sio and a shatze, some- | that we all blash for that this Ours hes been used three [Dut if it be true, as stated,. that\ Autéric brewers are willing to pay doufle the price\ been selling has beeo between 408. and 50s, per cwt., which simply means a loss, to the to hear of Keut and Sussex farmers threat» enlog to grub their bop land and try some other crop. If we turn to the Continent we find a state of things pretty much akin to the position at home. 'The great Gar« man hop mart-Nuremberg-Is: fled -with badly dried low qualities, which rang value down to the miserable\ prige of 108. is moderate, while really choice qualities are not obtainable. We puotice that, \Ca: using the teat the ond-plecas ave removed, | nigu bops a o beginning to urrive in pretty large quantities at New York, wherejit is sald, there is an increasing demand forthem., We are not told what ducripflungueéha‘m, of the best of their own country's produce, we shoulil ery that there German Jop# went to New York must be a great destBat ter than the stuff that bas been seot-to Eng er through the- tieual medinm-6f a~-factof=-- @iderably, so as not to be worth nore than-- - half the money paid for them. At the ._ growet; and it is not surprising; therefore, - Jo . ;, Of good useful brewipg hops -the .> Tne 4 Iaod to compete with our own hop. latest reports by nisil from American do: bring any more cheerfal news th For some time past the trade tremely dull, sug no encooragei given by cable | advices froot the Borough market-being ° of which no statistics could be gathered. [4°C iefying the taste of others. | Circumstan- ces may entirely change what is best for individuals. | It is difficult to combine all { the valuable qualities for the various uses : D. E. Loveridge of Unadilla, was a beautiful and usefal production. WapzxEspay Eventxo.-Report of com- mittee on \Entomology by H. B. Haw- kins of Opeonta, and Addison Ellsworth of New Berlin, were good. A paper by Prof. J. C. Donaldsan of Gil. bertsville, on ''Ratal Adorament.\ Also a paper by Dr. W. A. Thayer of Coopers town. on \Plant Food.\ Both of which were interesting and instructive. | - presumptaops hould refase to tell statisticians bow much they are makif®ris 2.2 r boast that they are secretly selling it flax“ creameries to adaiterate their battefy G54, then. sell it to our wives and children, 378, | 3. ; éven to ourselves without our being: 196° in any reascoatile way tell we E awindled, by being Fooled. into twenty:frs to thirty cents and somélimes even higher, for eight ceot lard, atid -the peoret at. that, ade out Noga res: losses. tinued work- Of course we have had Upon this farm was an \ashery.\ - The | them lame from injury. making of potash, pearlash.and \salts was | - A few years previous to Dr. Sprague's ~Mearly time a regular business. Whileclear- | lesson, my father's brother, next yOunger Ing hard wood land, and burning allsuch [than himself, had gained great fame bytwehaveforhomincne. in the house, krgflqmnfififl of ashes were | \doctoring\ Injured horses or persons, | - Farmers, however, have little use for made. Men, merchants: generally, | with \sticks\ Harlenut sprouts were ob. | three minute horses, for farm work. 'We a _build an '\ashery\ and send, teams around | tained from one-eighth to one-fourth of an | can call to mind no instance in which a . the country and buy up all the ashes, and line in dismeter, cut in short pieces just | farmer has ever received gain from such haul ffem home to the ashery, where they {three -inches long, and the bark for about | except by their ale. Fast horses on race were lesched and the lye boiled down for | three- eights of an inch on threesides at due' courses, never earn money, they simply its potash, | The sales were generally paid end-onut off in a peculizr«b«pe. He would | make money already Earned, change hands Do eca y balr pate \ 2 M _ r whole, hide, hair gate sod aik 20-p for in goods, and their value was from siz than. ore ata time, rub those sticks mthvmmtomthen without increasing its ofimm mnelmommf on The hmmg‘ahmpm‘ndm with aside to ten cents per bushel, in our boyhood {and around the edges of the wound, andpmnfitymrulme. then wisp them carefully in @ piece of | | The Isbor of somebody has to produce clean while paper ard put them in his all gain, and the man possessing wealth not| President, James Bundy, Sidney Pixin; | ist VicePresident, Dr. W. A. Thiyun, wa: 9d \Vice Precdent, <3: 36 {oan Dai atetnsteday, and! #> Scosdithally with | without regret If is i water, ff ever faled of a | who earns his maney by kin CoL I pert its foss ia