OCR Text |
Show Is designed to answer some good purpose. . . . It was utterly .out of my power to refuse this appointment, without exposing my character to such Censures as would have reflected dishonor upon myself and given pain idl!ulL to my friends." Washington Accepts With. Modesty, tie spoke in the same tone to the I beis 4t may be rememcongress bered, he said, "by every gentleman In this room, that I this day drclare with the utmost sincerity 1 do not think myself equal to the command I THE STORY or HIE TOST TOESnBXT BY THE PRESIDENT l.w w evwtr u Installment 13 j j 'What he had proposed war done, and hta very opponents serred upon he committee charged with He It Das not going more Chan other colonies had done; it was I only saying morY) It waa only dealing more fearlesdy and frankly with K fortune. slow,' e.TiPrvaUVe men like r John Dlckl i of Pennsylvania, shielded the ' ,v-- behind tolyanTf." t olence on the part Atntatr !a America." they nr t a Ctelnpt to jclnforce , i 'Ca thh winter or next year, t thewhole continent In arms, pvi Scotia to Georgia. ' wttgulare Meet the Mliltla. TTfcat they (eared very speedily C.2, b to pass, i Ys hardly four weeks fromX.the. Ur. Henry proclaimed a state of Y la the convention at Richmond C e the kings regulars were set at Lexington and Concord and a back in rout to their quarters 7 Swarming mliltla men or Maas- accom-'jnshmea- f with 1L 11' meant more thanWashlngtoH thought thathe hadcomd 4o Philadelphia habited like a soldier It had not been his purpose to draw ail eyes upon him; It waa inertly his Instinctive expressiotLof-hla-owyw sonaTfeeling with regard to the crisis that had come But it was in its way a fulfilment of prophecy When the first Virginian convention Chose delegates to attend the con gress of 177i, "some of the tickets on the ballot assigned reasons for the choice expressed In them Randolph should preside In congress; I,ee and Henry should display the dlfferen kinds of eloquence for which .they werecenowned , Washington ihoQTi! command the army, If an army should he raised; Bland jhould Open the xswtts. Ca fbw itb of April they had aet treasures of ancient colonial learning; aeroai a peaceful country to' aelse Harrison should utter plain truths; I military atorea placed at Concord. and Pendleton should be the penman the day was out they had for business . thirty thrown back Into Boston, Saif Polsa of IHs Virginians. e upon three hundred of their No wonder the gentlemen from Vlr to a last reckoning; and gin I a, coming with auch confidence to next morning dlsetoeed a rapidly the congress,-mad- e the 4nstant"1m-presslorowing provincial army drawn In they did for mastery and Oreatened siege about them. elf poise I Lord Dunmore Foiled, ' There are some fine fellows come la .the darkness of that very night from Virginia," Joseph Reed had re Aprtl 20), at the command o7 "but they are very high We a force of marinea waa land-t-- ported, understand they are the capital men from an armed sloop that lay In of the colony." Tames river, In Virginia, to aelxe Washington alone awaited his cue be gunpowder stored at Williams-,r- Now he was to get It. without expectit. ing The Virginians in their turn sprang A Struggling Army, r-- arms, and. Dunmore was forced, The irregular army swarming bev ere he could rid himaelf of the busl-Pi- , fore Boston was without standing or to pay for the powder taken to government. It had run pay Captain Patrick Henry, at the (tether out of four polonies lustily was subpeed of a body of mliltla under arms. ject to no common authority; hardly Ethan Allen Hold Two Forts. know bore; might On the 10th of May the second Co- fall to what allegianceIt Itwere pleces,unleas adequatentinental congress met at Philadelphia, With business to transact, vastly diffe- ly commanded. The congress In Philadelphia was s rent from that to which the flrat called upon to recognise and adopt It, of committees" had addressed not protests and resolves, but give It leave and authority to act for all the colonies, give It a commander, '.ilck and efficient action. and summon the whole country to re, The very dsy It met, a dar-'J of body it. cruit provincials under Ethan Allen had A Leader Outside New England. a --Iked Into the open gates of There waa an obvious political neand taken possession of the Yout fortress "In the name of the cessity that the thing should be done, t Von 'Jehovah and the Continental and done promptly Massachusetts s and later a aim-- - did not wish to stand alone; New EngV. fr''"ieourl Crown Point to the land wanted th active assistance Tf ' the other colonies; something must be wge attempted to secure common action Country Unltod. . The first thing to do was to choose an begun; array pat down before Poston a rude army an acceptable and efficient leader, and had grown to be sixteen thousand to choose him outside New England To John Adama the choice seemed rong within the first week of Its Jilt: the country was united In a gen- simple enough There waa no. soldier In America, outside New England nor ial resistance, and looked to the to give R organlxatloi and gutd- - inside either to be compared, whether In experience or distinction, with - . oee. Colonel Washington had come to the Washington, the gallant, straightforagrees in his provincial uniform, ward. earnest Virginian he had lonrp found himself a great deal sought ed ao to esteem and trust there in in Its committee. Philadelphia Not only the drawing f atate papers John Adama Names Washington. Jch would once more Justlty their He accordingly moved that congress "adopt the army at Cambridge." and declared that he had "but one gentleman in mind" for Its command a gentleman from Virginia, who waa said, and very well amongus7-h- e known to all of us; a gentleman r whose skill RnJ experience as an whose Independent fortune, groat talents, mid excellent universal char acter. would .com m Ao (Ion of all America, and unite the cordial exertions of all (he Glottic bet n ter than any in the , -- " :V' i tr n c7t tra 'e - am honored with The 1st of June saw her last bouse of burgesses convene; for by the 8th of the month. Dunmore w as fugitive had seen the anger of. a Williamsburg mob blase hot against him, and bad taken refuge In a man-owar lying up the river. The province waa ready for revolution, and Washington was ready to go Ills commission was signed on the 19th of June; on the 21st he was on 'the road to the north the road he had traveled tVenty years a,;o to consult with Governor Shirley in Boston upon questions of rank, and to fall Into Mary Phllipses snare by- - the way; the road he trad ridden after the races, but three years ago, to pul J ao k y C ti s tt Mjrol teg T TtfN e w Y or k John Jams Delighted. There is something charming to me in the conduct of Washington, exclaimed John Adams, and it was wholesome for the whole country that stirinniiaii should be put at the head of affairs M.vignoble things were belpg done in t..e name of liberty, and an ugly tyranny had been brought to every mans door "the tyranny or hia next door neighbor" There were tnen by the score in the colonies who had no taste or sympa thy for the rebellion they now saw afoot common men who knew little or nothing of the mother country, as well as gentlemen of culture who lovwTher traditions nnd revered her crown; farmers lawyers as well as merchants!-- The ports who saw their living gone and ruin staring them in the face Rule of tha Majority, But the local committees and the Ifems of Liberty" everywhere saw to - and-vltla- while leisurely preparations In Boston to occupy the hills of CbarJestovfi, It was discovered that the provincials had been beforehand In the project. There they were In the clear sun, working diligently at .redoubts of dtaetr own upon however, were At a Faarful Cost. thousand men'" were put across .the water to drive them off Though they mustered only seventeen unfinished hundred behind their works, there were several assaults and theTossof a thousandmen was the cost of dislodging them. They withheld their fire till the redcoats were within fifty nay, thirty yards of them, and then poured out a deadly, blazing fire which no man could face and live. They were oust ed only when they failed of powder and despaired of reinforcement. ai VeteranafflcerB the regulars of France were not more formidable than these mliltla they had despised as raw peasants There was no desire to buy aaolher .American position at that price; and Washington had time'Vnough for the complimentary' receptions and ad dresses and the elaborate parade of escort and review that delayed his Journey to headquarters lie reached Cambridge on the 2d of July, and bore himaelf w ith so straightforward and engaging a courteBy In taking command that the officers he supersede, could not but like him' Jealousy was disarmed . -- whahad-leL4he-- jault-deelare- m Many ttertaeirfioldTirs. neither the preparations nor the splrLt of the army to Jvls liking Ills soldierly sense of order was shocked by the lose discipline, and his Instinct of command by the free and eaay Insolence of that Ir regular levy; and his authority grew stern as he labored to bring the motley boat to order and effective organi' sation "The people of this government have obtained a character," his confidential letters declared, "which they by no means deserved their officers, generally speaking are the most Indifferent kind of people I ever saw. I dare say the men would fight very well (If properly officered), although they are an exceedingly dirty and nasty people . . . It is among the most difficult tasks ever undertook in my life to Induce these people to believe that there Is, or can be, danger llll the bayonet Is pushed at their breasts Not that It proceeds from any uncommon prowess, but rather from an unaccountable kind of stupidity In the lower class of me, prevails but too generally among the officers of7 the Massachusetts part of the arrfiy, who are near, ly of the same kidney with the privates " f Improva on Acquaintance. He had seen like demoralization and slacknesaln the old days at Winchester, on the wild frontier, but he had expepted to find a better spirit and discipline In the New England levies Ills first disgust, however, soon wore off He was not rlow to see how shrewd and sturdy these uncouth. In tractable ploughbovs and farmer could prove themselves upon occa But he found ge 5 e, g Farmers Devote AH Attention to Heh. Excellent Plan for Getting Rid of Weed Is to Bury It So Deep Will Never Sprout AgHm. Their ) Ora syjdSiilL FORGET YOUR TROUBLES tht good results When hatched, the goslings are taken from the hen, and placed in a warm box for a couple of days. After they are taken out to a spot where there is plenty of tender grass and given a shallow pan filled with Do this for a few days, and water Quack at.s n Gras. ot coc ked .u p J3 CL ed g e , .We dj they"wtlt'teafrr'wBefe"tfierrq'uarter8 must also use a roller coulter large fl and sharp vnough to cut the quack roots off clean to the the bottom of the sod, as explained by an expert in the Farm and Home. Quack roots are usually all in tha first four or five Inches of the top soil. We do not want to pull any of these roots out with a dull plow or coulter ao aa to bavelhenfstlck up and grow, During the winter top dress the ground with "manure, and in the spring seed either to pats and grass again, 4r to any quick, crop that will come up before stray spears of quack gets a start Follow the samo system again, this time putting the plow down twelve Inches, and go right on over again until you have the plow down fourteen or sixteen inches if necessary. In this way we not only get rid of the quack grass, but we also get a good deep soil and mulcb, and at he Bametime we get the benefits of are, and they may then be allowed to run where they please. Losses are usually caused by ignorance on the part of the keeper. Goslings are unlike chicks, for they requite little feed. Tender grasses and similar greens Is all they require, and the feeding of othef stuff will soon- - cause bowel trouble and death: Neither do geese require - running -- rank-growin- 1 "con-Cres- QUAJK . GRAS -- TO , ERADICATE Our plan of getting rid of quack it grass Is to bury It so deep that of the to light come up will 'jnever we have a hallow Excellent Opportunity Oftered to Se- day again. But if to turn up the raw do soil it will not cure Profitable Results Losses all at once. A deep soil is subtoil Uusuafly Caused by Ignorance very desirable, and will make the of Keeper. qUack grass supply us wltb it. In the fall we plow the ground More and, more our farmers are be- fully ten ihches deep, being sure to coming interested io-- ' the poultry use a low that lays the furrow down business, and the hen now reigns supreme on many farms. Nearly all seem to devote their attention to the chickens exclusively, thus making the opportunity for obtaining returns from geese all the better. Ileve many 111 - find It profltable to give tbls Hne uf Work a trial, writes an Ohio farmer in the Farm Progress. Many seem to have gained the impression that geese are bard to raise, but I do not think Bo, as experience has shown them to be much less bother than chickens. 1 always use hen for batching, giving each one six eggB, and 1 usually get - & , d- men.-who- corn-gon- Dun-'rar- ' the height. GEESE HONEY MAKERS g sub-soilin- PULLETS BETTER THAN HENS7 Enthusiasts Take Opposite Sides on the Egg Laying Argument Few Good Points Given. Cease to latent for that thou cans not help.Shakespear. What if the thumb you pounded hurts you etlllT Does fretting help to stop the painful throbbing T But yeeterday an old friend used you 111 Yet la the bing? matter mended by your sob- ' 4 The maiden whom you loved has run away With one already married to another; . But will your grieving or your wild dismay Restore her innocent to you, oh, brother? The fortune which you hoped X to ou , Has all been lost In 'foolish But it will not. because you Return to Set you free from might come speculation.. make ado. deprivation. The eye you lost by Jumping era you . thought Will not return, however you regret it. Why fret about tpe worthless stock youve bought? The money's gone, you may as well ' forget it. - A question that Is being 'debated What If your bank 'account Is overdrawn much at present among poultrj'men la Bend word that you did not Intend to whether hens or pullets are capable do It. it (hat such men should know and of greater egg production Some claim And bo that trouble will at once be gone Fleck of Teulouae Gets. It can't be helped and so there's nothdread and 'fearfully submit to the that, while hene lay fewer eggs than ing to It. Tlcon-TOgvlewa of the majority. Government water or large ponds, as many be- pullets, they lay larger and heavier was suspended, there was nowhere so lieve Just enough water for drink1 eggs, and because of this fact the eggs ASIDE FROM THE EXCEPTIONS. much as a Justice of the peace acting command a better price than those tng purposes is sufficient under the authority of the crown. laid la It true most that - I by pulleta. prefer the White Emboden or large All men are poets, but only those -JThere jnJgbt have been universal liToulouse geese, as they are larger, hens do lay a slightly heavier egg who get their stuff printed are looked cense had the rabble .not seen thelf more hardy and reach maturity - In than pullets, but In many sections ol with contempt by the others. upon leaders so noble, so bent upon high a less time. At two months of age the United States eggs are sold with and honorable purposes It was an out and grading, consequently the full and they are nearly grown A. man who truly loves hts wife object lesson In the character of the slon feathered except the wings. As soon smaller egg commands as good a price doesn't care much whether the trousrevolution to see Washington ride Material for a Good Army. as one the larger as the feathers are free from blood ers he wears to work bag at the knees "I have a sincere pleasure In ob 111 Jthe-quthrough the colonies to take charge of Others are In favor of pullets be-- the be may geese -6rnot. an Insurgent armv ijd no man or serving," he wrote to congress, "that cause so many eggs which, they lay picked, and tf (hey were hatched woman, or child even, was likely to there are materials for a good army early they may be picked four times they claim, possess a better flavor The only Ingenuity that ia ever djs-con-iea- a a great number of able bodied men, before cold weather than those laid by hens. No one din played by some men la In- - dodging That noble figure drew all eyes to active, zealous In the cause, and ot The feathers obtained wifi soon re- putes the fact that pullets are better creditors on the way to the saloon or it; thst mein as If the man were a unquestionable courage the geese lajers than bens. pay the cost of the cigar store. There was time enough and to spare and as their keep raising prince; that sincere and open counteThe laid do not eggs by pullets Is a very atnall nance, which everv man could see was In which to learn his army's quality Item, thereafter the feathers hatch as well as those, of hens. The are It does no good to quote an adage lighted hvs good conscience; that "Our lines of defence are now com neatly all profit During the past chicks from pullet eggs and not, as to a cross dog. cordial pfise In salute, as of a man pleted," he could tell Lund Washing few years geese have come to be very a rule, nearly so strong and lively asr who felt himself brother to his ton on the 20th of August, "as near so at the holiday season and those from hen eggs For this reason popular When a girl marries a fellow who friends at least as can be we now wish them bring it seems to be advisable to use pullets prices that mean a big profit whipped somebody else to get her, sho Shows Himself to the People. to come out as soon as they, please; for layers and hens for breeders should at once learn the art of reducz There was something about Wash but they discover no Inclination to ing blackened eyeswlth raw beefIngton that quit kenod the pulses of quit their own works of defense; and KEEP POULTRY HOUSE CLEAN For the Asparagus Beds steak. a crowd at the same time thaL It as It t almost Impossible for us tc The land for an asparagus bed must awed them, that drew cheers which get at them we do nothing but watch be well drained, warm, itch soil and were a sort of voice of worship Chll each others motions all day at the GETTING THERE. worked For a home thoroughly dren desired sight of him nnd men distance of about a mile " patch, deep spadingjnajL dochutcare felt lifted after he bad passed it was An Immense Correspondence. "I hear that be taken to get the manure well rfflust good to imp suh a man ride all the com id No use to expect the best results in f mixed son Is having rut away from ctctt your 4tf with the -ft a rr-spH best results are .Tyom Hi iladel phi a to Cam t tv it f ot affairs to advise remaTkable maUer ft,low military rmir quite . "sjlu - the, , dewed- -. For larger beds the manure hitdge In sight of the jitvpb to success in litera! pullets to stay in dirty, quarters, savs shoaM'giffoi wlth.aU.pos should plow" hr sumo eei.mni' 'u)..of the peoples nrmv sible L on ture atr Colemans Get Rural the estate with homo despatch the lately." busy Mher-perso1e(.p ploins ia advantageouiTin most It gave character to the thoughts whitewash brush and :"Ye8. If kerosene things " q he hist plowing should be jjte him ('ton of all who keep goTng' as well Vashlngton, taken unawares, rose Matters had not stood still before though u sli;mliLI,tU.lat.e,liu-d.4o- g -for him as they tnside the hrtraFTbumte mlyj premises in the Ppnng r,ood 8trong one )ear atd slipped In confusion from 7 the I to s to rtJoa ail-- it eemmnoder -st -Ttt-bv -jrTt ill around it are going now he old root8 are the beat A , room. bed eoneresh If jou have fifty pullets for our expects soon to have earned as much 8ingi rowfor the-bo- me While Washington waited for hts Washington the Unanimous Choice. garden w Lt with his pen aa he spent for stamps hunch til ahonr take two ; htter and more h'.'Jng Some of his own friends doubted than 111 missionvmUm.Mli his. I welo,-e- f rarrvtng i difficult readfor before he had anything accepted to dust the .. and tune cannot a 8hort bed of a easily managed hours enterprise' the expediency of. putting a number of rows The Jo'vrev 1b. rc bad been fighting done .forward bv eomvpondence tm better spent Let one person l , d Letters should New a of plant8 head St the ha,e plenty of Fnglam arm; . whtih was to s mplifv hts task to the Continental Congress at FhiLi- - the pullets bv tm legs while the otli i Poor Thing." but the more clear-sighted General WUlnm Howe had reached among the 1. 1. rs to rho tires Into dephu the provincial con. feathers Mrs. powder insect, Younglove Oh, dear! Such is not did and the se- Boston wvth r "lfor. menta on the gre'-oLth- e Tise and their resqr. to arms In the New Englanders Ground Phosphate Rock. colonies, with a powder gun Get it undu th life! uife married George a sa of the word, but tha actual mus-.dn- lection was made, I.cforewegot and-qVvv Ground of h. ten Tifh th. uand loiters to suhoriiu ate sph iterockisa- - phosj wings, around the head, neck anj jiv around after me all the waslagging and equipment of aa army, tion unanimously h. id th. ntv while a Mrong j Mmuitnuti'! o"'..i at (sometimes of lime la phate its natural form distant posts rry place where the feathers are soft I couldnt get lek fortification, tha gathering or awaj from him Washington accepted his comnits fic. t of in n o' ar lav watchful!) tn,,-tt,r- s untreat. il with acid, it has for vears time. u mtlma'c friends and e ts for and where there fine, the nutes a minute. for That waa three months y coitions and supplies, the raising of sion with that mixture cf modest v and h irbor been tv used expentnent-tllm .v.-ra 'tUienMi! feitil where .- - setting and lice love to cuddle and feast t, The Briih Hesitate. pride that made men love and honor joey and the organization of a t'er. et.peu.ill) in the south, but gen agoforth the mod .ml situation of to the use of Referring kerosene Her Dearest Friend Poor child! Inwav Mm 'You btlieve me, nn dear the restraint of the Thr wa no Iwnv it tried rm-n- ; n sures.of orgmia Miray. fill the roosts Afid atl the cracks erallv with unsatisfactorv results What has the wretch done? ins upon the frontier, was the Patsy," were his simple words to his about ai'.icl nc U' s'xtun thousvnd lion 8'iplv yid fen-After proper acidulation it parts with e, "pointing ont around the nests and roofing with It. Mrs Younglove He said last night liness la hand, and Washington's wtfxwhen I assure ou In the most rvw prov nni I wto-- tone tines w i e nn ans ll.nt n tvlf he used s phosphoric acid easily aiuT is ot and ts for it mis there the he pesafeious mites recoKmze1 wed move next spring vice was Invaluable when such mat-r- solenuCo)anner that, so far from seek tlY.vw n loo-- t tv about M'e town, from takes that mtot he It does not carry to some thought 'dlu minted, .command hide You know body lice remain on where he can have a den were afoot place e Ing this appointment. 1 have Ctirl' own rrh to 1 vnniou IT wn lU x. nd'ng. forecast!-- ! ; the fowls 'all the time, but the mitts nrr,n 'ammonia! like animal bone, sq, as to get by himself once trr a while.' mv to Act. endeavorNfn (1 s h l.H'k. power toaveiil tUt tOI'M 111 Washington Prompt ery" .lil'iss lotu.d st ad.lv from tho-phesphortC'Tu'Td' th tu v seek the roosts and craekslor-m- o (le showed nn hesitation aa to what It, not only frommv unwillingness to be vMt!ir o hand m CluHes tu .ubia.u ets wn acidulated is a useful article roK r- Ctiiumiui. 8i'ctusron of fnmtsr -ould be done. , Another Combination Against Genius. .h part with you aniithe famtlvbnr town or '1 aTw.Tva to be found in .n'chrcrvrra n own co . "I am willing," said the poet, "to mind hat. long ago been from a 57t rt'd H u oil'd scions nest-- of. B s being'- a WrtX si" Ilia he tent die td) v.d calmly Import1. in a garret if I may become faw . It. How. starve saw to M.ine lh.ii h H to Time Sell npj and. the sessions of the con- - Tfust 'too 'great for my c.vpa,.i' Proper Hogs. n.v.r never i. 4.u hcMiating " were not ended before Virginia But as It has been a kind or dtinv thev shinin' he cm i pu d tv the m-mous a As nev.r etotiitiii; a leader and master general propositiou. it seldom 2 committed beyond all possibility of ( that has thrown me upon this "Ah, yes" sighed his wife, "but how serH.f, g.nt of men ard altails pays to cairy hogs long after they g I shall hope that my undertaking it are rawing back. On 'he ii'; c ' the 17th of June "you" going to do thatks long as are readv for market Feeders who UC wntim'iti i you dont earn money enoughjtq liva have held their hogs for a rise in the L The squealing pig sucks the profit market have found that the expensive . Discard the filthy sweat pads that at anywhere except in n flat?" er nonh Yto on h being (which Hsnit'-'- s breadth feeds all the of wipeout advantages ways make sore necks Tee nnUv wide l Lie 1 fneset t mind flillv lo,t All in the Family. I"o not put the colts in a pasture higher price later ai.d hav ne - a K i tront , distr.it He rises early and ia gone 5 i Gains must or be made will profits fenced with barbedwire 000 to w.st of ioi h-- s ttvn Natural Gas m Kansas Before the quits her bed; be materially reduced. Light feed - . The heavy draft team should 'tttTi Timber Land ia North and ed the forest area of central Africa. inte- nevei She. works ef natural qaunt.ty a, fancy things while he a is j, because pr.v g.ts rikky speculation, ing be driven faster than a walk Couth America, Central Africa , In the valley of the Congo, Biots the .trees ducod in Tolls for their daily bread. including; I r.Lk, .qt.Ko-iaUI ,an according j be cannot to earned without they and Siberia. It inexcusable along to have is the headwaters of the Nile to the of the Siberia,- tat- lousy, colt art mumlv con the lined Stat-- s turvev expensive grain feed Heavy feed- -! but such things are often seen northeast and Jhose of the Zambe.--- i if. r. (ompr.stng p nes of several She-weTJJ.tO-- i Op ) eubjc Teet. value! ars .Is a sealskin coat-f- or which ing ean be continued profitably to Clean water, fresh air and good feed Tfcer la an immense and conti- on the south According to , reliable., variein-- - firs In the rat Three The hundred Jt esHmated plfinka'were as as paid; eonuir growing ptgs long nue tract of forest lying north of the estimates. Central Africa contains a'lee.-.- i supplement is the best horse medicine yet found He wears an L,.na and Oitn, k rton- - t.oa c( gaa at overcoat that cost. .ivnts was U- - feeds are fed along with the fat put Get the suckling pigs to eat whole Lawrence river, in the provinces forest region not less than 3,0i0 miles, ther, are thousand- - of -. miles! -c-u Nine t val.c.1 at $7"9. Jt.sn.OOO ready-maddollars qiare ;, com In 150 i the this way in by to on w dean platform as soon as and Ontario, extending Inlength from north to (. ' Quebec south, and of wh.re to human hnng has ever been Uu, an average m,ee of 7 a e its one 200 a Lab-can be and conttnuel pound hogs oft vast although not fully known width j The long stemmed tomfers rise to a , thousand cuhte t t possible ;ward to fiudroq ihy ( ".inc s.u. iters fhU feed to a weight of 200 pounds Watch the sheep carefully during r region mtay'jrir a boat 1,700 from east to west of 150 feet or more and they ued aa estim.U.4 height more and pay large profits quantity of U 186 m the ?r lambing season, for a dead lamb (a length fronl.icASt to wed And The question which continent pos stand Jo close together that walking i t,. 00J cubic fc,H of gas. valueiLa't 7- Bortfc and i a live loss the ' d. Tjcrand miles la Har-- ; amorg them is extremely difficult greatest forest, says jesses an 4 30L 12 cents ' of $'.U average price Y. to thggrazmg will II l.uth. per a Weekly, has been placed m an-The dense lofty tops exclude the one thousand cubic eex.-theHatching Eggs Smalf End Down P'Close( attention price insure the most .Tut. Ulve value from Oh, I always waq unlucky." other light by an explorer who ts pale arotfc sunshine. a.nd the straight fangtng from 1 A Brirti-aTtiinTi, ' "Pshaw! You "merely think ao. competent to speak ofBtllI another dale alike" glass works used an estimated 3,594,-2S- 7 Tgg is placed on side 'or Jargeithe Pa8lures a ,lke shoft bte forest No, there is no imagination about of not ,el 'heep lhe globe. This scF bew tldejM the eye tn the obscurity regtotT great 000 cub'c feet of gas. valued at end hekvy yolk wiH settle to the bot- It tn my case. When thing were authority baa painted a vivid picture that all sense of direction is soon lost (191.140, an average of 5 3 cents one tom and come in contact with the I llM! paature grow to hlh beior them on it. of tha vast pine, larch and' cedar for- Even the most experienced trappers 'heap I had dyspepsia so badly that I thousand cubic feet, the price ranging shell, which admits the aid. If1 it lj tmg Fat lambs could eat a square meal, alw a tnever ests of Siberia. v ays good bring of sable dare not venture In the dense from 1 to 9 cents price bjjt AlthougVno new placed on the small end, it will them grow ing every minute not long ago I got completely Keep Siberia from the plain of the Obi taigas withowv taking Jihe precaution w fields-we- re froq have s of hi be te oyerlt, tween way layer for Kansas gas In ow Scr reported and-nr Yheirfirsr"breath; tny appetitr i'kuch that I river on the west to the valley Q(j.he of blazing" the tree constantly with 1911, considerable development work It and the "shell. A barbed wire cut always leaves a rever can satisfy it." . Indlghirka on The east, embracing the hatchets as they walk forward. If was accomplished In the old fields ol scar, A scar always takes the value great plains or river valleys of the lost there the hunter rarely finds his the t the discovery oi Make Great gg Strains. off a young horse. Yeaesei. Olenek, Lena and Tana way out, but perishes miserably from somestte, resulting,) Easy. very goc4 wella a total of 301 .Give almost any unmuzzled' dog a Proper selection and breeding are Collars should neror be. swapped rivwrs, fa oca groat timber belt, aver-1,00- starvation or cold. The natives avoid a ! veils having been com- - what products miles lu the yake the great egg strains, and from, one horse to al er any rirr bad name, and he will be a .jy. twlfwnd have a name for them pleted roar.. I'1"11 thst C 3 d. lf y j- id ' t 'r olfl-ce- w as-tn(t-ig u turned-midervvittr- . - ctir g Now-Engla- nd IHle-hesfta , in-th- Cora-asana- the-anti- , tht ni-e- di-C v to-t- ,Ut nr -- -- -- -- - 'Je LIVE STOCK T MSfcNgrBS-g- -- Leagues of Vast Forests - -- -- . 1 J i.v-'l- !tat 1 e nd-lart- hes j - , , J i -t- te Pt , -- 0 rS derlj nV-A- |