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Show 0 K AJf FARM s'ble. remain as they are at present I DAISY AND PODLTBY.ls do not by any means regard thla as once a day. I say I allow them to calamity. On the contrary, I look upon MATTERS OF INTEREST TO tha fact that our Insect and fungous INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR go." It muw bt a very cold or stormy foea are increasing as direct proof that AGRICULTURALIST. OUR RURAL READERS. flsy foe my cows not to choose to go we are progressing, for, as Profefcor I i to the spring. Ia all urdinary weather Bailey has said, Our snemieq Increase Stow Tbt ay cow Hiatt A boat taltltt because FartMf Opermt fonmtd milk will pass oy a of cultivation giving Induces change Fo ttoa ( tha Boll aad Ttalda Tktnol Dvfwtmat ot the tmrm A vt full of nice water In the bi-- n yard habits In wild organisms; because It l BarUmUtan, Vltiaalton and nub presents an a fe k gate el Live Stack Hint go back to 'he u; ring with the dry of variety eows ; generally allow them to take caltsra. food, or host plants; because the food the tramp if tbiy so desire, and If they supply is large and In more ar teas sue some less milk aud eat more hay continuous because tor hnd Boats. areas; Fraparlac finally, Koto. I believe am the Indiana Experiment Station: The the natural equilibrium, or tension. Is guner in other ways. We ar glad to see that some of our The frst increased Interest In the sugar beet destroyed." It follows, therefore,, that thirty days after a cow the experiment station ar taking up i the ti" e to fully adopt th question has brought to the expert the more we put forth our energies to work of investigating along the line of er'iea Ha-- d Gould ' no exorcise" theory, ment station an unusually large num- improve our native plants or to change culture. W do not know of looked out Tor mother about ber of samples of sugar beets from all their habits, tha more we endeavor to poultry (lather Is science that any line in then), but after tl. it no need ot boxing sections of the state. Some of the Increase the variety and number of our shrouded in agricultural Poultry mystery. Up good stiong run - or beets were raised from seed furnished cultivated vines, trees, and shrubs; the diseases are greater entirely beyond tha refilm Mr Editor, Bore we extend our orchards, our vineam sorry so wise a by the station and some from seed obof books at the present time, though as Mr. C I, GabrlUen' cannot mortal tained from other sources. In the case yards, and our fields, just so much how to tell books many people pretend get over the id a that cows In perfect of the seed sent out from the station, More do we (disturb the .equilibrium In to treat them. Their advice is appa- health need that full working directions were furnished. nature, and Just so much more must Epsom based on limited observations salts!" I wonder nauseating If he dont mix in In most cases these directions were not ws expect to burden ourselves with rently rather than exhaustive Investigation followed, although those who requested the work of maintaining this unstable If one would be convinced on this point an ginger? Good be. I will writ work- condition by more or leu artificial AND 2K F0B WOMEN AND GARDEN. : HOME -- - rp-t-Dn- t. -- ir rltrr Ml non no. 1 rr 1 1 free seed agreed to fully follow ing directions. The most essential preliminary to raising good sugar beets Is the proper preparation ot the seed bed. The ground should be stirred to a depth ot at least IS inches. The best way to accomplish this is to turn a furrow about eight Inches deep with n common plow and follow with a subsoil plow In the bottom of the furrow. Very few farmers who tried raising beets, report that they used a subsoil plow or any other implement for stirring the soli to a greater depth than eight inches. The result of this is seen In many of the samples received. In- -' stead of a single tap root there are a number of small roots, and Instead ot the beet growing well under ground, it extends so tar above ground that of Its weight is useless nearly one-hafor sugar making purposes. Both these defects can be corrected by deep plowing and aubaolling. It la much better to do thla plowing and aubsolling in the fall. We therefore advise all those who Intend to experiment with sugar beets tha next year or who intend to raise them for any purpose, to plow the land now, and be ready to plant as early as the season will permit In the spring. This early planting Is a great advantage on the moderately light lands that are beat adapted for sugar beets atnee It advances the crop to' a stage where It can better withstand the usual dry summer season." In the distribution of seed In the spring, tha station will give preference to those who have land properly prepared. If farmers Intend to try the utraising of sugar beets It Is of the be most Importance that the work properly done In every respect. For every teat not properly conducted aad giving beets of poor quality la not simply useless; It Is directly Injurious since it seems to Indicate that the locality la not adapted for beet culture. Badly conducted tests may be the means of keeping beet factories away from localities that are really well suited for the business. They will certainly never be the means of inducing capitalists to Invest money In factories In any locality. Tha first step lnthe right direction la proper plowing and thla can and ought to be dons at once. H. A. Huston, Chemist. lf means. Where an Insect or fungus had one chance a hundred years ago to wax strong and spread, it bas now a thousand chances, for unbrokes orchards and vineyards and million of nursery trees cover the country where then only wild plants grew. It la but natural, then, that man, seeing jtbe onward march of his enemies, should look about him and wonder how It will all end, and how he, as an Individual, is to obtain relief. In many cases he has found a way of doing Gils' by adopting certain more, or less empirical methods. Again, with a fuller appreciation of the fundamental principles underlying plant growth, he has learned., partly by Intuition, to keep his plants in health, and whed he has reached this stage he stands far in advance ot his neighbor a ho waits until his plants ar diseased and then begins to look about for a spraying apparatus. B. T. Galloway, Tha Dg Pont. A Canadian exchange talks of tbs he bas but to read the Investigations carried on by the government eome years ago as to the disease known as chicken cholera The report.ln the annual bulletin Issued by the department showed many things that are not generally supposed to bo facta connected with that disease. . To Illustrate, It is generally given as s reliable Indication of cholera that ths fowl must die wtthia a few hoars, and that If ths disease causes ths fowl to linger for some time it may ha taken a granted that the disease is not cholera, but merely bas indigestion. The government shown this to be entirely erroneous, the fowls remaining sick for week and even sometimes recovering. Foreign nations are taking up this work with some vigor, perhaprf more than are we. What we need 1 a most thorough Investigation of the disease, biologically and otherwise. We have many problems that can be solved In no other way. We have a disease that we call roup. It is quite widely believed that there ar really several different diseases aH classed as roup, because they are similar to each other in some of their symptoma An Investigation of the germ would tell us what we really had to contend with and might point ont a solution. It might be found also that some of them were disease common not only to foqrla, bat also to the human family. W would thus be put on our guard against then?, Just as we have been against tuberculosis In cattle. There is another line that the stations can follow with advantage and that la the breeding up of fowls, or at least an Investigation of fowls as to their individual capacities. It la a long Job for any poultry raiser to attempt to keep a hundred or more fowls separate and record their egg productlot from day to day for a year or two. Yet such work would doubtless be a revelation when its end waa reached. dog pest as follows: One of the great drawbacks to ths comfortable keeping of sheep la Canada and the United States la the prevalence of dogs which worry sheep. Our dog laws are not so rigid as they ought to be. The farmers of Canada ought to rally round their respective ministers of agriculture and back them strongly enough to get good wholesome dog laws passed in every province in the Dominion. In Kansas a very use-fplan of frightening away dogs haa been found to be the putting of a cow bell on every third sheep. A writer recommends the following methods: "Get some small sponges and soak them In melted poisoned lard or tallow, and then place the sponge where the dogs will be likely to get them. The sheep or other stock will not touch ths sponges, bat the dogs will. You will be In no danger of poisoning anything you dont want to. The sponges are Indigestible, and will never leave the P f dog's stomach, and the owner of the tows Mid'ltwlirlaa. f (, dog will believe he has got a dog goMr. ing mad and will not only kill that dog, ever C. L. Gabrllsen of Iowa rarely gets a thing wrong about cow. but every other one he haa This writer also adds: "No sheepman should Hla letter on page 714 I hope ha hem be without a Winchester, and should read carefully by every reader These meth- Review who keeps a cow. He wants know how to use it, too ods are harsh; but circumstances might his cows to go dry from two to three months calves 8o do I. He justify their use. We should rather see believes between Tho Wafer Sopply. i . the one who gives his cows a laws effective dog passed. It Is safe to say that nothing Is of rest of from 60 to 90 days will have more importance to the gardener and equally good, returns for food and FOR THE HOUSEKEEPEK. florist than an abundant supply ot care as one who milks hla cows to withwater, and thla supply always under his When making pies with a bottom in a month of parturition. So do L control, writes B. 8. Hoxle In Wiscon- crust and you wish to prevent the Mr, Gabrllsen believes greed for a wo sin Horticulturist The man or gravy soaking through it, brush it over short rest between calves a as entailed man Who Wishes to cultivate flowers well on the inside with beaten egg. disease upon the dairy cow and weakand plant and who gives them a fine weather windows may ened her calves. I do too. He says During frosty of chance in spring and early summer, be cleaned with a doth moistened as calving time approaches the cowa late years suddenly awakes In midsumwith methylated spirit, which will give physical condition should be closely mer to the fact that they begin to a most brilliant pollBh. ' The asm watched. 8he should be properly fed wither and die. Resort la at once had method be used at all times for and well treated o sh will do well may to tha watering pot, and pallful after at calving time. So say L He believes of mirrors. the cleaning pailful from the well or cistern pump In oats, as I do, and be believes Epsom Ink remove To stains Is used. The earth constantly drinks tt or glander salts should be among ths a take silver from writing appliances In and every day calls for more, and medical stores of every well regulated of and of chloride lime small quantity tha wa bead our energies to supply make a paste of It with cold water. farm. But I dont Honor bright! I want, hut finally gave up In despair have never given sn ounce of either while we mourn the loss of our flow- Thla must be rubbed on the stains till Epsom or glauber salts, aconite or saltwill and silver the then disappear be they next ers and hope that year may petre to one of my cows, and one rarebetter. My memory recalls when one only need to be polished with chamola ly ever fan to do well. I prefer nice year I had as line a growth of Dahlias leather. cause a lax conetc., gruel, turnip, I Into stained decanter To clean a next as ever I taw, and the spring put dition of the bowels. I have asked planted out fifty hills which promised It a dessertspoonful of small pieces of cores of dairymen in the last five a fine show of autumn bloom, hut alas! washing fcoda and one tablespoonful of year If they make a practice of givnot a doxen blossoms appeared, and in vinegar. Shake the decanter well, but ing Epeom salts, etc,, to their cows the fall the bulbs were weak and puny. do not put In the stopper or close it about calving time, and to care garget Result, but few (and those of Inferior with the hand of It may burst Yon etc. Not one in ten make any calculavarieties), were fit to plant the next will find that the bottle is quickly tion of giving medicine. Men with 60 spring. The Gladiolus beds showed cleaned In this way. cows or more dont spend 25 cents a but Imperfect bloom and so on to the To waterproof cloth mix two ounces year for medicine. And they are the plants. of powdered alum and the same ones whose cows dont hare many afend of the chapter, for out-doBo the question had but two alternaamount of sugar of lead with two gal- flictions. I was "brought up" to not tives, either a permanent water supply lons of rainwater and when sufficiently take medicine or give med.tine. I get d end lawn. The, right or no garden-anamalgamated pour off the water from no "soothing syrup" when I wa a of the question for me wa a supply of this sediment which will necessarily baby. Father said babies do not cry nd elevated water with jhdmlll settle. Soak the garment In the liquid for soothing syrup. Mother ate a tank. 5 that now by aid of gravitation for about twelve or fifteen hours and great many turnips and and broths and rubber hose I never hatfe a lack when dry It can be Ironed and considerwhen I was pretty little. The no medifwater when I need It, though I have ed ready to withstand the rain. It will, cine policy worked well in papas famnse Our It sometimes lacked time to children tvelve are to Of fourteen wise last of be course, ily. subject only city does not boast a system of water colors to the treatment and very fine living, the youngest past fifty. The Work and even if it did my own Inthree-scosecond that died had fabric would be better left alone. dependent fountain supply la cheaper were horn right course wr Of ten. and a ot handsome such We qauntity than a 'water tax. and there la no brass get ornaments from India now that Mother weaned her babies before they "shut off" when wanted, for the winds were a year old, audtthen she had a ot heaven blow and the lower fountains It Is Important that we Insboutd know year on an aveiage to recuperate bethem best to the how keep . bright yield up their treasure atcalL There fore the next one. The fourteen chilare windmills on almost every farm In condition In which they reach ns from dren were twenty-si- x year means getting Tha of the simplest fast the country, but not one elevated tank here. It was! Major, 1124; Alva, In a hundred. A small tank bolding brightening brass is to cover It with a 1826; Anno c E,' 1828; Iiue-- 1, 1830; A, water, thirty .forty or fifty barrels, placed on solutionin of ..oxalic fieldof inonesoftounce M. B. and Sarah J. (twins), 1832; X., of made . a tower proportion ot trestle work, say ten or When the 1834, andy so It was continued to the twelve feet high, would in most cases acid to a pint of water. ctuld be well covered with 'the flnid, end all born in a year thatcwo metal is overflow The an afford ample supply. twm and about divided by year a with skin. chamois from thla could as well supply the yard polish it brUkly Father did not shut mother In tank as it now does, or It could he It must be noted that this oxalic acid apart. the winter for fear her room taken direct to the bouse and then dis- preparation la a poison and very strong exercise andduring would stop his babies cold so tt tributed. Of course a force pump In Its effect upon the brass, growing but I have digressed. would have to be used instead of the should not be used too often. What cows want ia to have been common lifting pump, but it costs only born Farmers. Caright, to be fed and cared for If the s few dollara more, and what connadian Commonwealth right, and when they become mothers venience! ivl succeeds In carrying out its benevolent it wont take any drugs to tide them TaorMUMT mt iMMt Knomlo. plan, an important advance towards re- safely through the ordeal of becoming Gabrllsen would bare It needs little argument to prove that ducing the depression , in cities will mamma. If Bro. had he thought of it the enemies of cultivated plants are have been made. They propose locat- told yon ah should steadily Increasing, and 1 think it can ing a hundred good men, already out of thrtime the cow waa dry be easily shown thlthey will continue work, on lands In the West, and paying taka a great deal ot exercise. (Mother to Increase so long as ths conditions, 12 per day for fitting the land for cul- rarely ever kept a hired girt) I prtio-tlc-e ' for which we are In large part respon- - tivation. Ex. allowing all my dry cow sad ul long-continu- ed ' or -- re if jat again. Imagining; Its feel music, roll gushing T The at ream of rapture oivmy soul; And when she start to welcome me. And when she totter to my knee. And when she climbs It, to embrace , My bosom for her hiding-placAnd when ahe nestling there rat lines. And with her arms my neck entwines, And when her llpa of rases seek To press their sweetness on my cheek. And when upon my careful breast I lull her to her cherub rest, I whisper oer tha sinless dove I love thee with a father's tovet" A. X HYATT. TTintFf - HE can me father!" though my That ihrillin name shell never hew. Yet to my heart afire Ion hrlnge The sound In sweet e, t Mrlnf. t During the coming winter the grain that will be for poultry will amount to thousands of bushels, yet giain la not a- essential to success as some other foods, pavs Colman's Rural World. Cut bone has given excellent success in experiments, and it bas been Maks Terra Cotfe demonstrated that when It la used In Modeling vases, statuettes and other Connection With corn and grass it ornamental In terra cotta makes the ration a very suitable one. la the occupation which eeveral New Exclusively grain is a detriment to lay- York women have taken up. Thla I ing because it warms the body, pro- not tie first advance of the fair lex vides a portion of the essential elein this Une of work, as women have ment necessary to egg production, but been employed for practical modeling is lacking In the substances that form In a number of large terra cotta factothe albumen, shell, etc. When the hen ries for aome time. 'The nse of terra Is deprived of a sufficiency of all the cotta dates to tha time to which elements necessary to produce eggs, our historiesprior It Is stated that reach. she wilt lay only as many egg as she the children of aon of Adam, the Seth, can supply the albumen for. With plenbuilt two pillars, one of brick and one ty of corn she la then provided with of stone, and they Inscribed upon each all the elements for the yolk nd to of them the dlscoveriee they mad conwarm her body, such elements being the heavenly hodtqeso that cerning known as "carbonaceous. Now if the these Inventions might be preserved carbonaceous elements are proportionto mankind and not be lost before they ately balanced by the nitrogenous became sufficiently known." The word materials (cut bone, clover, etc.) the terra cotta was then unknown. In 1765 hen may lay nearly every day, and-sh- an old well waa opened accidentally by will npt become fat because the some workmen in Porta Latina, at of tb eggs takes from her Rome. In It waa found Egyptian and production all over, and that which aha may need Roman atatuea In terra cotta, which for the support of her body, but If ahe were taken to England. Bas reliefs la fed liberal!) with corn, and is not were also exhumed at the earn time. given enough ot tha other foods, she Among the specimens of Roman cerawill not lay so frequently, hence the mic art are lta metope and historical loss of carbon in the form of egg will friezes. ' The of exquisite be reduced and the excesa of carbonLucadella Robbia ate known to all lovaceous matter Is then stored up within ers of the besutiful. The nam terra the body as fat. Sha may be apparenteotta waa first used by tba Italians. ly not too fat, find iay lay fairly up Terra cotta has great lasting qualities to the average, but If the carbonaceous when made ot the proper mixture of material ia not balanced with the and when well fired. In beauty clays proper proportion of nitrogenous ma- of color It has an advantage over terial she wll soon become too fat, and by the use of chemicals althis may haipen gradually, as she may atone, tor color can be produced, and most any lay a sufficient nnmb.tr ot eggs to preto vent becomlag very fat until the has they are foitnd to be less apt change done fairly well, but sooner or later under atmospheric Influences. she will cease Jo lay, succumbing to fi A Modoo Skating Big. natural law of supply and demand not being able to produce something The modest skating ' costume has a from nothing the corn being useful In skirt cut about four Inches shorter protecting her from cold, and serving than fi walking skirt It flu snugly as a valuable assistant in tha produc- - about the hips and flares a trifle at f are tlqn ot osas, but Using dofictent in lima i tb bottom, Bbort tur bolero and nitrogen, the farmer sustaining a ! much in vogue and (hey ar worn over loss because be doe not fortify hla I Russian blouse, held in place at tha corn with nitrogenous food. A flock of j waist line by a fancy belt, SklrU era poultry on any farm can be made the trimmed with bands of fur. Every source of a neat income; but, even costume for the Ice has a muff to should the farmer only raise enough match the fur which trims the gown, for his own family, selling never an A dainty evening frock la of a black egg por a feather, I buy will pay better lace over pale green silk, th lace on than anything else requiring same out- the front of the skirt describing downlay of tlms and money. ward points, enriched with sequins. i The lac forms a bolero over a full Prosea Milk Jodqsirjr front of green chiffon, and telling "In Sweden and Denmark, so say touches of crocus mauve are added In Lsdterie (France), has been created a tbe clusters of hydrangea and loops of new Industry that deserves notice. It satin ribbon. The eleeves are long, consists in collecting at a central sta- and consist ot black set over" green In tion the milk from farms within n chiffon. Tbe bodice Is half-hlg- 'a given radius, pastsurlxing It at 75 de- front, and is cut away In a big V In grees C1167 degreu ' F.J, and Ihen the back, - Another charming frock Is freezing It at the temperature of 10 de- of white and gold brocade wltn five Tha blocks of ruches of yellow chiffon .around the gree! (14 degrees frozen milk are placed In stout wooden skirt Folds of the chiffon are drape.? cask holding about double the volume from the left shoulder to the waist, of the blocks, and the extra space la filled with sterilized milk, after which the casks are hermetically sealed. As they are perfectly full and kept cool by the block of frozen milk, which melts very slowly, the shocks of transportation are poweilees to churn the milk Into butter, and thus It may be preserved at least twenty days, so that the Danes and Swed-- are now sending successfully to their neighbors, and even to England, whole cargoes of milk. We shall soon see, doubtless, Norway vessels unloading casks of milk In our port. Here is indicated a mean of utilizing profitably our French milk, of which there is an Excessive supply at certain points and a lack at others, owing to the expense and distance of transportation.- - Translated for th Literary Digest d Brle-w-Bra- bric-a-br- A a matter of epurse we do not carry the doctrine rigidly Into Are.", practice, but that is our underlying theory of what love between the sexes f Is. The Frendutheory Is 'that any two people of similar station In life, of similar tastes, hablU and general Idea can love on another and be happy la married life and grow more used to on another and happier as year pass, without any coequal and homogeneous fire to start with; that marriage Is a union of properties quite a much, as a union of soula, and that the probability of happiness ia Lrgely dependent on the stability of the family in- come. Conaeq ueatly the parents take the matter at once Into - their owfi hands. .mi Those who have son daughters old enough to be married M K be known what the marriage portion may be. The pareuts on bo'h sides, having first ascertained that their chip dren are not absolutely unwilling, enter Into diplomatic relations find Rebate the questlon of "dot, rnd whether the settlement shall be according to the regime dotal," W which the wife property la held In trhst under the most rigid regulations. or the com-- m unite des hlena," w here the wife and husband are equal partners. Thla last arrangement la genrraly made where the young people Intend to live from trade and manufacture In a small way. Calls are then mad according to a fixed ceremonial law, and be- troths! Is a solemn, public contract, aad the engagement is long enough only to enable the brides parents td provide the trousseau. , ' -- " Wkat a Olrl Wor. There appeared upon the Ice the other day s girl who mini have risen early these winter mornings In order to have designed so beautiful fi skating bas-relie- fs 1 costume for herself. It was not to very elaborate, yet It was tbs prettiest thing that the snowbirds have seen, Thgown Itself was a blue serge, rather coarse, and made upon the moat simple Hue, with the vralet coming to a tong point Vu tbe front It wit trimaoitd with ban its ot 1 ertuin iamb, put bn la Grecian de.gn f round the skirt. The waist bad broad lapel ot the lamb and the collar was a square one of the fur. The muff was of Persian lamb, lined with the most brilliant scarlet satin, A piece of the same scarlet satin formed the vest, which was absolutely startling In Its brilliancy. Th standing collar was of the same satin, made In a perfectly plain band. The girl wore a toque of blue velvet, with baggy crown. At each Elde of the toque stood lovely red birds. Her gloves were white dogskin, but some days sb wears a pair of tbb new heavy bright red ones. nni1L Another, womand American English women, Mrs-of the admire pjutk will too, en, ctetiKhter-lB-laWajkee, Andrew Barclay of Sir Andiew B, Welker of Liverpool. England, the wealthy brewer, fpr sueing her husband to recover possession of the Jewelry he gave her whea Mrs Walker eh waa hi fiancee. recently obtained a separation from ber husband and' 112.000 alimony annually, - Walker then took possession of Mrs. Walker's jewelry and refused to So ahe sued for It and tha- return-tt- . Jury returned a verdict in her favor,Welker 1 amply able to pay the allmony. - The young' man inherited a many othlarge fortune, which, like lser. Th er in England, was mad,-J- r Walkers ar Scotch, son) (times tficy are said to be Glasgow to th backbone. The grandfather of tbe deten i ant, plain Peter Walker, ass and bone merchant ot Glasgosri) Of eon, a thrifty turn of mind, Hogs for Slaughtering. Hogs to be Blr Andrew, saved enough out of the slaughtered should not be fed twenty meager profits of their tilfifaJ to hours before slaughtering. They will start a public house or ssldbnsiurlFith not bleed freely Nosr,ahould they beskill and business torertgJjjJJttl come heated by chasing or any other saloon ha grown Into one of tjie largcause. It likewise has a tendency to est brewing firms in check the flow of biood. Nor should a carried around the latter, and then ar.Andrew- - Barclay WalltH MfcUIBoyears hogbe scalded 1s Anvil fully expired. ranged TmAsaah with very long, wide old and- was graduaWdw0fpsri, Camhung np and the InAfter the bog ends edged with Very Imfill ruches. A whtsman. bridge. He Is not testines, lungs, heart and all art readmirable poln plajer Vs Well, an but moved and washed out, split the hog and It was a sur'pl iW MstehowklKg In Fiwbm, fpqame right through tha center, leaving a disof the philosophy of love known that The theory small attachment near the tall and at ia radically different in sipation. and marriage cujs eo as overof not to snout, ;he the end and America. In thla counrace werq occupytqg the puhuc mini balance it; and as soon ss the leaf lard France fundamental Idea la an unacWaflMePfi terns waa two years ago) air. try tbe la cold enough to be principally removand Irrational attraction constant on1 tf dips) ut iij ivahtpmen countable I This It out will insure the ed, take which (presumably) can arriae but on bothwldeslf (AhA lp!c, because perfect cooing Of tbe meat This last once In a lifetinie and can be felt only Bppossibifity that' thV1AilA Ave learned from our tbera,' large precautloa would become Ine lntbrhatTotmii cup a single person among the thoulumbering lopcerna and packers In the for of course life. In the met chIler1h'tffie& early sands IN, early days, when selling dressed hogs Thla theory Is a sort of "survival of the She would have beeinthe.Valkye under accepted to are a It Th have ,nd practice. W science of chivalry, tempered by Bid agreement mad by Lord Dun raven heavier the hog tbe more essential Its love of Plato's doctrine that had, h proved faster than thp latter reminiscence a lerfect cooling. Never alquick and 3 were sent Into this world In pairs, boau hi low meat t freeze solid, or pack It In souls H f circulated In this mundane sphere t , , 4 , ,t and com for sure is It to tlon, frozen spoiL Some men tell their wive disconsolate untlt the "Coequal and everymates Apple oi hards stand drouth much harmonious "happened to thing that happens; and there ar our of other many tha farm meet When they did each rec- some other who tell a gfeat many petter jneet. 1 encouraging to the ognized in the other a "homogenous thing that never did happen. crops, and this entf isiasf apple w - " . |