Show GEORGE 1 l CANNON EDITOR AND PUBLISHER wednesday hlay may 31 21 1871 THE success or nonsuccess non success of the commune at paris will be felt by other nations eions to nearly as great an extent as france should that body be successful the republicans in germany and other continental nations will be greatly strengthened even in englad england nd the effect will be to embolden agitators g ta t ors orb and malcontents mal baal contents and to give force to republican schemes it is generally admitted by correspondents writing from england that the feeling of large numbers of people in that country towards monarchial institutions is one of grow ing discontent there isa is a yearning for a wider liberty than is now enjoy enjoyed edi and open manifestations of dislike cislik a to the idea of paying members of the royal family such heavy sums of money as salaries queen victoria has been a prolific mother e and aud every one of her ol 01 mus children il d re m must t be provided for her daughter in law the princess of wales has made an excellent commencement also in this direction she has a number of children these will all have to be furnished in their turn with salaries and the prospect be before fo r e the people is that their taxes will continue to be heavy for at least a generation to support these numerous offshoots off shoots of royalty mr E yates an english novelist who is also a post office official has spent eighteen months in the provinces in in making inquiries which brought him in contact with large classes of people speaking of the popular discontent with monarchy he says 1 I haire have talked to pitmen in thes north factor factory operatives of all kinds in yorkshire agriculturists in east anglia fishermen and miners in devon and cornwall 1 have talked to 1 working in gangs to lazy stage coachmen driving their teams in regions be yond railways to the porter at a way stati onon on a but little used line awaiting the advent of the last train and whenever the subject has been recurred I to and it is astonishing what a favorite it is with these people I 1 have always found the same sentiments expressed relied and pretty nearly in the same i words this report ia is more significant from the tche fact that mr yates is himself a acon con eon serva berva tive and being an official less lesa likely probably to admit the existence of ot such a condition of feeling as he describes than he would be were he a radical ai u j newspaper published in Jj london ondon is very popular among the i working classes of great britain it i boasts of having a weekly circulation 0 of four or five hundred thousand but ja whether these figure are correct or ti enot not it is well known to be the leading 71 horgan morgan of the rapidly growing roy aalta sally hating party in in england for amore than twenty years it has been a i thorn not only in the side but over the whole body of royalty and its supporters and the present odium almost execration in which the titled and privileged classes of the realm are held by millions of the people is in great part the result of and can be traced directly to the teachings Z and views so boldly and persistently promulgated in atho columns of reynolds in the reign of the georges su buch such eh a paper would have been suppressed and its writers I pilloried banished or executed but however no wever strong the will of the government today to day may be to pursue a similar course radicalism lisIn now so thoroughly permeates the masses of the people that any attempt of the kind hind would precipitate that chichin which ehin chin in a few years yearb judging by the present appearance appearances st is inimitable ini namely a revolution in which royalty and aristocracy in england will be for ever abolished and reynold I 1 newspaper ems by its course in eul eui enlightening ig te I 1 ng the minds of bf the biassey masses with regard t to tha the profligacy and extravagance bf bof t od their i gyal and aristocratic rulers the great causes of the abject and widespread wide spread poverty which prevails eo bo generally among imong them has become a power in the and with which its ita rulers dare not interfere ter ier ler fere fero one extract from its pages will give ive lve an idea of he ibe strain in which it alks talks every week such reading widely spread must produce its effects after while awhile a leaven will be engendered th that t will not cease to work until it permeates the whole substratum of so bop 1 lety clety it says t for geor more than four years the people of england have endured the horrors of restricted trade I 1 bad wages limited food penury and starvation all this time the people have been told that the country was prosperous because the chancellor of the exchequer was able to extract the usual amount of plunder in the form of indirect taxation from unhappy y commoners who were not permitted permit permitted tei teg to eat and drink till they had poured pouted some part of their heir small earnings into the eoff coff coffers ers era of t the he customs custom s or the excise with empty cupboards at home no wages to receive at the end of the wee week kand and no prospect of improvement pro the artisan was asked to listen to proposals in a slavish house 0 commons to endow a princess with and a year for life and there is a young prince ready to takee twice aa wa much because he is of age 04 on the 1st ast of may next tiie the thin pre tence that a monarchy and court made it good for fot trade has been rude rudely 11 swept away by a queen who divides divida her time between osborne windsor and balmoral the people have been asking themselves what they get in exchange for all this outlay and with the exception of a trial in the divorce court they have no evidence whatever of the application of the funds with which royalty ro balty is so amply endowed at the best monarchy is supposed to be something exceedingly exceeding y useful if it does doea nothing and allows the lords and the commons to have all their own way at the worst it ia is a contrivance in the form of an alliance between all the sections of the blue blood aristocracy has its subsidy out of the revenues set aside for royalty and is pleased with the appointments of lords in waiting and ladies of the bedchamber bed chamber whilst the plutocrats of the house of commons are gratified with an occasional invitation to a garden party antwind at windsor 1 bro D W jones of this city elty hag has given us a method of preserving butter which we think should be made public it is a method which he learned many years ago in mexico and which he has followed himself in n this country with marked success if the object be to preserve butter in a keg barrel or other vessel he covers the bottom with flour and packs it solid to the depth of two inches he then puts in four or five inches of solid butter this thia done he takes a paddle and loosens the butter from the sides of the vessel until he obtains a space of two inches this he also fills with flour and packs solid by the aid of a square ended piece of wood or pin spreading two inches of flour on the top of the butten butter he packs it solid and then puts in four or nive five inches of butter again and follows this up until the is filled to within two inches of the top which space he fills with flour by this means the butter batter is completely surrounded by two inches of flour so excellent a nonconductor non conductor that it can be left in any place where flour will not spoil and the butter will keep sweet and good A vessel of any size or kind in which flour can be kept will answer to pack butter in but if too small there will be more flour than butter when the butter is unpacked the floun flour that has beben used for packing it can be made into cakes or pastry and no loss oss osa ensue some persons prefer to ke keep ep their butter in rolls and not nov break breau its grain by a little pains and expense it can be kept by this thia method in that form each roll ought to be put up in a cheap common sack such as table salt is sold in then when the two inches of flour have been packed in the bottom of the keg or barrel these rolls should be placed in position endwise and two inches of flour packed around them to prevent the upper layer of flour from settling down between the interstices of tze the bags a cloth can be spread over the top of the butter upon which the flour can be packed by this method of preserving butter no extra salt is needed the butteris butter is ia put up in the gondi condition tion tiou in which i ia desired to be aeed and it opens sweet swei and tand palatable butter suiter can a also aiso I 1 so b be e ii ept fres fresh a at a any n y time ime by burying it in a flour bin we think hink this method worth a trial and if is as good as described as we conclude t must be it will pay for all the trouble either for ones own use or for the pur lose of selling it where tithing butter s sent in from the settlements for the use of the workmen on the temple it would be an excellent plan of packing it BRO BENJAMIN JUDSON whose residence is on the bench informs us that he has a hive of bees which the last time be he examined it previous to yesterday contained about five quarts of active workers he had occasion to go to his hive yesterday and was much surprised to find his bees reduced so much in quantity that there were not more than a pint of them he proceeded to investigate the cause of their decrease and noticed a number of swallows ar ur round these swallows were watching the flight of the bees and be seizing izing every one they could pounce upon he saw them catch dozens of bees while be he stood there he has noticed that thai the swallows were very numerous about his place but until yesterday never suspected that they were destroying his bees As many of our citizens are turning their attention to the culture of bees it may prove to their advantage to know that awal swai lows will destroy them for knowing this they cantale can take precautions against them THE following correspondence is from the pen of one of our danish fellow citi zens a man of culture and one who has had extensive experience in the business of which he treats some borne of our agricultural readers may think that the system advocated is too expensive and would not pay but experience has demonstrated that such euch a system of high farming pays wherever revar it 1 is tried and there is no doubt whatever that it would pay best here FARMING SOIL restorative there has been a great many maDy kind of soil restoratives restora tives recommended for ex exhausted busted husted farming land and many have been tried with varied reul results ts there are however certain fundamental principles for rational farming which can not very often be deviates deviate from without certain loss losa the best preventive for exhaustion and the beav beat restorer we think 14 15 is 14 manure manare but production of manure does not agree with I 1 EASY FARMING which ae gording according to western fashion in bome dome respects ie is repair roads fill holes with or in any way to get rid of the manure burn the straw and chaff send the cows into the herd while they give a little milk starve the calves and when the cows give no milk send them out on the range to take care of themselves and in farming raise daise a little wheat a few potatoes and a little corn barley or oats without any system and mostly without tor for teams have a band of scrubby ponie on the range likewise to take care of themselves elyas yes and when you want a span hunt hulit them up take them home tame and use them until they get worked down then send them on the range again take another span home if you can find them to be used likewise have the sheep also on the range summer and winter and let them decline in wool and degenerate until they are worthless this is a process by which manure cannot be produced it is neither nomadic nor agricultural it is 16 at it best a bastard principle of both itis it is ruinous both to farming and to animals and is a sure means of decline for both in this climate and so is all that kind of easy farming SHEPHERD TAKE CARE OF YOUR HERD Is the motto put over the stable door inside the eagle gate in salt balt lake city that is the cue to husbandry in both branches and maintains the equilibrium between exhaustion and restoration in agriculture which is called HIGH nian FARMING A B 0 keeps a full fall blooded short horn sow bow for this he wants a stable ventilated in summer and warm in winter with a floor that can be kept clean feed that cow in summer all the lucerne or red clover it will barly four or bix six times per day add bran or corn meal etc if you want more butter do not nob cut the lucerne or clover before it is in blossom feed green rye or rape until lucerne or clover I 1 ia ready it must blust be sowed bowed the year be fore in AS gualT in li n the fall fail when lucerne and clover stop growing commence to feed roots man golds carrots artichokes etc or if you yon raise cabbage for that purpose feed that to it first with cut clover hay and with boiled chopped grain bran or meal according to the amount of butter that may be wanted when animals are well kept the year rund their own appetites will prescribe the quantity needed when they have as much as they will eat given to them care only being needful needa I 1 about changes of food if the calf is to be raised and brought up without losing the qualities of the stock it must have as much new milk for three months three times per day as it will drink which will not be eo so much as may be supposed by those whose starving calves once in a while will steal a mess perhaps more than two cows milk at a time well fed animals have moderate appetites have a partly shaded corrall adjoining the stable where you can put your cows owa at liberty several hours every day keep white oil cloth blankets or better perhaps bome some kind of close neti work blankets on the cows cowa during summer to keep off flies card them at least twice a week all the year coundi round with cards made for that purpose clean the stall before milking milk three times per day equalizing the interims inte rims aa as much as possible to eight hours wash hands and teats teata before milking where the cows are ard constantly kept tied it is an advantage to keep the tail tied up so that when the cow lies down dowum the tall tail will not get soiled boiled EXTENT OF LAND NEEDED DEEDED TO FEED ONE COW depends on the strength of the soil and the cultivation put on it il forty square rods of lucerne in mellow warm well and watered land and top every november is enough for a cow of soo SUO pounds bred red bed clover about three times as much or square rods lucerne is to be preferred as green feed in summer and the rods of red clover and timothy to be cut twice and made into hay for wInter winten feed together with BOOTS ROOTS twenty nive five tons of man golds carrots or artichokes per acre is an average crop by the high farming system artichokes may be e made one of the heaviest yields indeed it is a very productive root but like lucerne must be kept in the same place and manu annually in proportion to the size of the crop about ten merino sheep can be kept on the same quantity and kind of food that is required for an pound cow fowls and etc ete can also be kept on the same kind of food there should be a rational ROTATION of crops red bed clover and timothy two years yearb y e a r B I 1 and top both years plow it th the second year first in september ten inches deep and subsoil as deep as possible third year wheat plow the stubble as ag soon as the wheat is harvested and plow ten inches deep cultivate it well sow as much rye or rape or both as is wanted for early stable feeding next spring top manure in winter fourth year roots cabbage vegetables vege tables etc let the land be pulverized to perfection deep and |