The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
♦ 1 M The Cedarvilie Herald. W H. BLAIR, PubUiher, CEDARVILLE, s : : OHIO. ’CO-OPERATIVE WRITING. - Walter UeswutVi Schema to Outwit finup* 'a Inc I’utH!*h«r%' .« Co-operative enterprises have not in . this country boon successful. Their stockholders have not been able to hold them to close, economical and pushing - management. Conflicts of interests and insufficiency of rewards have spoiled the theoretical beauties of the schemes •ad driven high-class talen t away. In •no branch of Industry, however, co operation should reach a high plane of satisfaction. T h e profession of author ship has boon grumbling from the carli- • sat days of literature over the troubles • t publication, Most toilers in the bus- { - isess of rejected manuscript have a pet plant which. they teriderly cherish in their souls—the suspicion that there is a combine of| “ins" against them. It frequently d^es happen th a t literary vybrlt of high {merit is rejected by pub lishers and editors. Sometimes, after repeated rejections, it finds its way to brilliant succfesB. If instances of suoh fortune were not frequent, literature and publishing would be superhuman trades. Most i great new productions, discoveries and inventions ihiart, commerce and Tndus- -try have been- rejected a t first by the ex perts. Experts must bo guided by well- established rules. They must, in the •ourse of tbqlr avocaton, reject thou sands of crude and worthless innova tions and mutt hold baok their patron age from ideas which have already been hatter carried out by men with standard reputations As much genius is required ' to analyze, weigh and make a place for . . ■» new work of any kind as to construct- i t Genius is as' rare among expert judges aa among vlrtuosL Besides, there is a heavy risk in exploiting a aew inventor or author. I t is an un dertaking which involves hot only money, hut the reputation of the man who assumes the responsibility. Money and reputation are precious to publishers aa to all other respectable men. Mr. Walter Besant, the English novelist and editor; has organised the Incorporated Society of Authors. For the purpose.of fulfilling the desires and ambitions of the members, the society will publish a magazine. Mr. Besant expects that the co-operative magazine will outwit the inimical publisher, and present to the public the works of authors at small cost In the commer cial parlaneo of the day, the society of literary producers will deal directly with their customers, and eliminate tbo middleman. The vast and increasing •umbers of American writers—too vast •and too rapidly increasing for the capac ities of the present publishing and read ing machinery of the Nation—might take up Mr. Bcsant’s co-operative scheme, and get at tho public by a short a n t In this, as in all- co-oporativo ex periments, human selfishness and van ity would militate against success. • The able writers would oxpect more ttcognition and porhaps more pay than an equal division of honors and profits ■ would adm it Tho inferior ones would grumble at any thing but an equal di vision. Civilization has not leveled -tho natural and artificial inequalities of mon and women, and a cooperative ao- aiety of authors would grind against that deep-founded truth. StllC the authors might take some chances upon th a t weakness of the co-oporativo ‘ theory. They would not bo risking a , great deal, and in sight of all would be She prospect of getting boforo the pub lic, whoso admiration and monoy are the dear prizes of endosvor.—Kansas City Times. ______________ Bleetrlc Visual Police Slgaals. The new electric visual police signal system has been thoroughly tested a t New llaven, and the results are so sat isfactory th a t a number of tho signal loxes have boen ordered for the use of the London (Eng.) police. The diffi culty in police signal systems has hitherlo been th a t while thp officer oa patrol could immediately communicate with headquarters, the latter was never sure of being able to attract the atten tion of the officer on patrol, especially s t night. In the new system the tele graph and the telephone are united, and the officer a t the desk can attract the attention of and communicate with any policeman in any part of the city, and so matter how far away ho may be. By the touch of an electric button a t head- . quarters a red globe is made to rise from inside the alarm box; At night this change of color can of course be seen on the street for Along-distance, ■ and during the day a colored signal will I s equally conspicuous. The patrolman s * his beat is thus notified that com munication with headquarters la de sired, "and ho promptly responds through tike telephone. The patrolman on his Boat can also summon assistance from s sy adjoining beat by opening the iron signaling box sad releasing the arm- • ta ta which controls tb s movements of tiwoolored glass.—N. Y. Sun. —Potato Fritters,—Two cupfuls mashed potatoes, three eggs, two table- sppdnfuls flour, a pinoh of salt Beat the whites of the eggs to it stiff froth and add them the last thlug. The bai ts* should be quite stiff, but If too stiff may be thinnedwith milk. It must be dropped from a spoon Into boiling lard, and skimmed, out as soon aa the cakes awefried to a aloe brown.—OldHome* iUS^S—J| THE BATTLE FIELD. THE TWO OLP SOLDIERS. You don't quits remember? Ah I modsst Old fellow? Eih? Ye*, we orv gray and a little bit mellow; But If from tb s shade of yon sheUetiag thloUat Should creep forth the enemy's vigilant‘pleket. We'd prick up our ears, and we'd ram down tbe cartridge, And scent game that's different from squirrels and partridge. Old fellow I Think!—Aye, now you’ve bit It—there.Aod “been some fighting," ’ Old boy, where .the ball-storm of bullet* was blighting ... • And doadly, One half of the company shot there. i All heroes, whose blood baa mado sacred the •pot there. Ah!' now you remember.. Ye», Death wo# de lighted. • (He’d held a reception, and we'd been lnvltM, (JOldfellowl) We rested,that nlgbt on the field, In our place*; The moonbeams seemed trying to kiss the dead faces' That lay there; while slowly I called the roll, giving The.names of the dead with the., names of the • ■living; And when I called yours a strange feoUng came o'er me;' I dreaded to look a t the thinned ranks before me. Old fellow.! { • I called yon—no answer! But who was that • crawling ■' Across the torn earth where the shot had been falUngf "He's beret" answered some one, and up yon . came, dragging You* poor, wounded limb; for you wouldn't be lagging * At roll-call! "I'm present," you answered, and sank there. The truest o'f all true heroes In rank there, Old fellow! "I cared, for .you?" Bleas your old buttons don't say it! I owe yOumucli taore, but I never oan pay it. For wo twq.wore messmates. Eh! Yes, 'll# warm Weather, And tears come from dust and tobacco to gether! Come; let us' go In. Bark! the children are singing— . Our grandchildren!— Time baa been swift In hit winging, Old fellow! • ■— 3. C. Macy, In N. E. Magazine. ( WEEPING L ITTLE LOG. A T ouchin g In cid en t In th e P anoram a o f th e G reat R eb ellion . I t was in January, 188!, tho wind min- glod with rain and sloot, swept mourn: fully through tbo forest of cedars that bordered Stone river. The roads, called pikes down there, deep-Boamed and.fur rowed by |h e wheels of heavy army wagons, woro soft or sticky with tough clay and almost impassable, yet artll- lory was moving to the front, cavalry and infantry soldiors hurrying forward silently, but.w ith a storn purpose,' to check-tho expected attack on our le ft Not a calnp-firo oheered the dismal sur roundings, not a buglo note or a loud Word of command, for Koaocrans was quietly massing his forces on the left center to mow down without meroy tho thousands who woro soon..to fall a sacrlflco in* the droadful harvest of battle. Long rows of dead, side bysldo, lay alongside the pike" for identification, a sad commentary of tiro axiom th a t tho bullet is no respect,or* of porsons and a mournful Illustration of the soldiors un- knelled fate. Nor were these all. Alone, forgotten, with no soft hand to smooth his war-worn brow, or breathe a prayer for his gallant soul, hundreds of miles from the proud, loving circle of his homo, in the dense eodara of that bloody battlefield lay many a soldier dead or dying for tho cause ho gavo his llfo to win—the splondid flag ho. died to save from dishonor. Elsewhere, across tho fiold of tho still unburled dead, from their rain-sodden,' muddy-tronclies, tho shivering sharpshooters kopt up a des ultory firing that boded no good to any 'rash' enough to expose his person to their aim. No fires to warm, no rations, but dry field corn. Men slept wrapped in wot blankets, in the cold, clinging clay, while their loadon hearts were*as gloomy‘as tbe leaden skies above. Off near another pike, and out far from the scene where the glorious pbil Sheri dan’s division saved from utter ruin tho panic-stricken veterans of that grand army, stood a small house, used as a temporary refuge for tho wounded, marred and splintered with bullets and shell, one cinnon ball having plowed over the floor, spattering the room with its red work of destruction, i t was scarcely tho place to find an old woman and a little girl eight years of age. <She was standing by the house with an offi cer. lie found hor sobbing as if her heart would broak. Her father, like many others in th a t region, had fled .to the Confederate side with bis rifle as soon as'our army drew near. A prisoner had told hor th a t her father lay dead between our pickets and the enemy, and Indicated to her quite plainly just about Where he fell on the skirmish line. She was sobbing and pleading to go to him. In vain the officer warned her she could not pass- tho lines—or, if -she did, the danger of being shot, but she cried she must go find hor father; that her mam ma was dead, and papa had mamma’s picture with him, and if she did >A>t go and get it some, one would steal It. The officer, dooply affected by the poor little creature's distress, hurried away from the spot. Thcn might havo bqen soon a strange thing, W illi a little old faded shawl about her wan-plnchod face, her cold, etqcklngless feet in wot, mud-covered Shoes, flitting from tree to treo through tho dark cedar aisles to the front of the line, tills little ghastly sp irit sped along on her mission o f ,love. On past the trenches, while the spinning bullets whirled and sung above her hood, she poon revealed herself to the opposing sharpshooters, but was .she'safe? Safe?' Not in the halls of wealth, in the guard ed thoroughfare of the most peacoful spot on earth was ever a child safer and freer from danger than that poor little orphan of war, aa with anxious look and hasty tread she peered about among the clay-disfigurod faces for the feat*, urea of her dead father. Like the lu ll before a storm th e rifles cqasod thoir wloked crack, .and I know th a t many a powdor-blackonod face was streaked with a hot, and un checked toar, when a t last they saw this little maid haaton to one body and help to raise it to' a sitting posture, and then saw the gentlo, tender motion of a child ish hand wipe the coarse stains from tho dying soldier’s face, saw hor plaoe a canteen to his feverish lips, saw him fold her to liis h ea rt and thon fall baok to earth, saw hor Btoop and kiss .th e silent lips,. and takings something from his hand, silently drew baok to the shel tering codar grove once more. The soldiors called her ‘’L ittle Lou,” but. like tb e scenes and events of those trying and soul-thrilling days, sho too lives, but in the memory of tho past—a faint, fantastic mitb in the panorama of *tho great |ebollion.—Major R. W. Hub- boll, in Amorican Tribuno. TRAVELS OF A PIANO. t .. E ven tfu l War Experience o f s Union I s . < stru iu en t In th e South. Dr. J. D. Ilalo, formorly of Hole’s Mills, Tonn., afterwards General Thom as’ chief of, scouts during the w ar,.an^ now residing at Bowie,- Md., tells a re markable; story of the..experiences of a piano; which is still in possession of tho family and in good .condition. I t is exceedingly doubtful if any other piano in tbe country has such a stirring and romantia history. In tho- yoar-WXL,the instrument was brought to Iiale’s Mills, Tenn., from Al bany, N. Y., and when placed in posi tion and. trlod by Miss Acberman, the children’s teacher, she declared "there is an angel in the- house." The senti ment was echoed by tho entire family. Tho piano remained, and also the angel, until the .Hale retreat in July, 1881, whon Hale’s neighbors, fearing the reb els would burn tbe hamlet, ns tbey Were threatening,1waded thS river, carried it across and concealed it in a corn-field, whence other neighbors carried i t to Mr. John Wells’ residence, near tha Kentucky line, whore it remained sev eral inohtbs, and was thon removed'to Albany, Clinton County, Ky. In April, 1808, when Mrs. Hale’s experiences bad taught bpr that she must removo her self in order'to retain any means to live on, or oven docent clothing to covor tho children, Rhe went to Croesboro, on the Cumberland river, leaving tho piano, minus the legs, packed in a box with clothing, and. a United Statos flag,'tho one hoisted over tho mills, July 4, 1801, in Major Brent’s house, where she had boon living. The next nows tho Ilalo family heard of tho* piano, clothing, flag and cover, they had been captured by a Confeder ate force and taken in an ox wagon to tho town of Sparta, White, County, Tenn. Tho flag was fustoned to n horse's tail and dragged through .the streets of tho town, amid shouts and jeers; the clothing was disposed of, tho rubbor piano cover cut in the middle and worn by tho Captain, and tho piano, after bo- ing fitted on pieces of bedstead logs, was sold to a Mr. Anderson, of White Coun ty, Tenn., in whoso possession it was found by a company of Federal soldiers tho latter part of 1805 and convoyed to Livingston, Overton County, Tenn., Where it remained somo months, and was thon removed to the Halo's Mills site in the year I860, and placed upon its old legs again, the samo "angel," though battered and rather out of tune. Tho flag that was so maltreated a t Sparta’was replaced by an old garrison flag from tho United States ordnance department, by order of General George H. Thomas, in I860, but is only display ed on special occasions. Tho piano remained a t the Mills sito until somo time in tho 'year 1870. when it was shipped to the manufacturers in Albany, N. Y., for repairs, and then to Stoddard, N« II., where it remained un til 1885, and was then shipped to Bowio, Prince Goorgo County; Md., whero it now is in tho possession of the Hale family, and remains, the "angel in tho house.”—Washington Post RANDOM SHOTS. T ub official history and roster of Min nesota troops in the civil and Indian wars will bo published during the cur ren t year. G eneral G ordon , who is once again prominent in tbo fmbllc eye, is a man of fine physique;'who looks "over/in ch a soldier.” He has a strong face, to which a scar just below the loft eye—a sou venir of Antlotam—adds impressiveness. He is said to be the most popular of the surviving Confederate Generals. J udge C alvin E. P ratt ,.of Brooklyn and the State Supreme Court, led a regiment to tho war. And carries In his head a bullet which he received in the seven days’ contest near McchanicsvHle, Va. The wound was believed to bo fa tal a t the time, but hts oxcellont consti tution enabled him to pull through. M ajor W illiam II, U dh A m , of Racine,- Wis., is said to have been the only sol dier who ever took-off his .shirt in the ptcsenco of President Lincoln. He was wounded in several places a t Bull Run, capturod and confined in Libby prison for eight months without having his Grounds dressed. After hearing h u story Lincoln asked to see his wounds, a IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. A CONSERVATIVE VIEW. E w n t JOU llM t T rium p h ! « f W om dn Ip . th e H ig h e r B raaobM o f L c s r a l i f Wet * • ju r p rla lp c . A fter All. Echoes of tbe rapturous applause, with which the success of lady students in recent university examinations was greeted in England, have reached us on th is side of tbe Atlantic. All our read ers know how brilliant th a t success Was. Miss Fawcett, daughter of the celebrat ed professor of political economy, se cured the highest-place in th e mathe matical tripos a t Cambridge, outstrip* pinghho senior wrangler by a considers* bio percentage of marks. This victory, notable under any circumstances, was rendered all the moro notable by tho fact th a t i t was won in an exceptionally good year of mathematical ’scholars. Hard after Miss Fawcett in the race for glory oarao Miss Alford, of Girton, who stood in' tbe first division of the first class in classics. She, too, belongs to a family honored in llterary circlos. Her father is an eminent London clergyman, and her undo was the Doan Alford, who contributed some works of permanent value to English literature. Both thoao young ladles showed ex ceptional powers of acquisition and as similation, hut they havo scarcoiy done enough to justify tho ecstatic eulogies which have been paid them, Some of thoir admirers go the length of declar ing, th a t they havo already done more for thoir sex than all the women who procoded them. Rhapsodies in a similar vein fill columns in newspapers and magazines, John Bull is usually sedate, enough, but whon any thing powerful Onough^to excite him happens, ho shouts with whoopsof delight which would put a n ' Indian on tho war-path to shamo. That a lady should snatch the blue rib bon of Mathematical scholarship from the favored sox, scorns to him almost a miracle. I t opens up possibilities for women which makes him. intoxicated with wondor. He seos dim visions of women delivering speoches in Parlia ment, lecturing in university class rooms, and sitting on the bench clothed, in judicial authority. Such revolutions arc to be wrought by the phenomenal success of a phenomenally gifted girl! The wiso gontlomen, who wag their heads in editorial chairs and enlighten tho world through edlto'rlalColumns, gravely announce that Mrs. Poyser’a ob servation as to tho capacity of hor sex has In tlioso latter days received a new moaning and a Vorltablo fulfilment I t .will bo remembered th a t tho obsorva-. tion was to this olfoct—“G6d Almighty had mado ’em to match the men.” Wo thought such a truism would by this tithe havo boon shelved in tho closot .of commonplaces, but wo find it trotted out in laudatory articles as a sentiment now invested with striking significance. Thrashing out thoroughly thrashed out straw 4s a less hoodless task than a t tempting, in .our day, to explode tbo notion of inferiority of tho female to tho male in tellect' An ago which boasts of Goorgo Eliot, Elizaboth Bar re tt Browning ambvTIarriot Boechor Stowe, can hot bo in ignorance of tho range of woman’s mental power. Attention is also called to tho zeal displayed by English girls in classical studios, as if that zeal woro something unheard of boforo. I t is not so strangely now. I t is but a revival of- what ob tained in the good old days of Quoen Bess. “History reposts itself,” and cer tainly tho Victorian porlod is In this re- spoct tho Kllz&bothan period. A knowl edge of Latin and Greek was counted an ossontial part of a lady's education, dur- ii j tho roign of Elizaboth. Sir Anthony Cooko, who onjoyod the distinction of being tutor to Edward VI., had four loarncd daughters. Their accomplish ments wore shared, though in a smaller degroo, by thoir companions of similar social standing. Katherine wrote Latin hoxsmoters and with the ease of prac ticed knowledge. Mildred, who became tbe wife of Lord Burleigh, Is described by Roger Aschara as, with the single exception of Lady Jane Gray, tho best Grcok scholar, among the young women of England, A third daughter, Anne, was the cleverest of the four. Sho was equally atliome in tfieology and classics. She carried on a long and interesting correspondence with Bishop Jewell in Greek, and translated one of his books written in Latin, so accurately th a t he was unable to suggest a single altera tion. Such a woman was worthy of the honor of being Lord Bacon’s mother. We advise the journalists/ who write of devotion to classical studies as some thing new for English women, to learn a little about the studies of ladles In the Elizabethan period. Mathematics Is generally supposed to require more mental power than clas sics, and so to he beyond the range of woman’s capacity. Here again history may he summoned to administer a need ed rebuke. Within the last century, a t least thAse women won renown through thoir mathematical ability. Marla Gotanla Agnesi wss professor of mathe matics a t tho famous University of Bo logna. She was so beautiful th a t she had to draw a curtain between herself and her students, and so learned th a t her commentary on conic sections and her analysis of finite quantities and of infinitesimals became standard treatises on the Subjects they discussed. Her lectures are said to have been remarka bly lucid, although scholars bowildered by her personal charms often ran the risk of confusing angles with angles— an error into which students of our day are in no dangerof falling, Many read ers must bo acquainted with the work done by Mary SomervlU* la gsoauetiy and algebra. * H*r mx could no t bar her out Iron a first place among the mathematician of her time. The story of tbe achier*. moots of Ellen Watson is less famllls*. Amid the stress of home duties, one of which w u shirked by hor, sbf pursued a strenuous course of prints' study, which qualified beg for th» highest mathematical class in Uni. veraity College, London. At college she was remarkably successful. Bht took tho first prize for applied mathe matics and physic, a t tbe early age of twenty-one. A brilliant "career wu opening up before her when consume, tion claimed her for its prey. Other women could be adduced, as proofs of wbat is unnecessary to prove to all un prejudiced observers of ttys facts of life —th a t there is no lack of mental power in woman, to .unfit her for,grappling with mathematical problems. ‘ The recent successes of women, in fields of study hitherto monopolized by men, vviil undoubtedly give an impulse to female education, and lead to far. reaching consequences. One sox is not Inferior to the other. There should be a fair field and no favor in tho race oi life. If women are able to win prizes jealously guarded in the past for men, they should be not only allowed to win them, but to enjoy them. Miss Fawcott tops the list in. the examination, but one- who stood second to her reaps the advantages of the senior wranglershlp. Why should this he?—-Rev. D. Suther land, in Interior. . ^ • _■ F a t Vonreelf In H er Place. We often wonder how many man have ever really tried to put themselves in a woman’s place. Fancy a man brought to trial before a court composed entirely of women! Fancy a man going; year after year, to pay taxes when he was denied representation!{Fancy him bearing year after-year, the burden of work for the churches with no voice in their councils! Fancy' him sitting quietly listening to' tho average Fourth of July speoch, de claring this to be a government of the people, when he knew half the people : < were disfranchised! Can any ono imag ine a man in such a situation holding bis peace, and would any one respect him for a moment if he did? Yet he has no more a t stake in government than woman has. I t involves his dearest interests, but so it does hors. She ls*-* equally amenable' with him to every law. Who is more concerned than wom an in everjr law affecting the hbmej proporty, marriage and divoroo, and who has a greater stake in war? In Bbort, though woman can not lif t her finger to change the law, she is not therefore exempt The law does not let her alone, I t interferes in all her affairs a t every step from the cradle to the grave.— Woman’s Standard. WOMEN IN BUSINESS. M rs . K itasma , & Jowess of Bagdad, manages a factory which employos five hundred Jewish women and girls. Thoy make calico embroideries on covers, cur tains, etc. W o . mkn harbors are quite common ip > Sweden, both in Stockholm and in the jf country. In Denmark a lady barber has recently commenced business in tho small town of Svondborg. T he rotall book businoss in Nan tu ck et Mass., 1 b Jargoly controlled by women, Among tho do&Iors aro Ellen II. Coffin, Harriet M. Macy, Mary F. Coleman, Mary A. Jotioa and Pliocbo W. Clisby. Inasmuch as women *wriio the books, buy the books, and road the hooks - i t is only fair th a t they should sell thorn. A young woman who has a dress making establishment in East Thirty- first s tre e t Now York City, makes hor ren t by storing furs, wraps and winter dresses for .her customers during the warm weather. Tho garmont is clean ed, renovated .and packed away, and whon called for la freshened with new linings, ribbons, buttons or frills, and a sufficient sum charged to cover the bill, including insurance. M rs . C harrottk F owler W ells i r the president of the Fowler ie JVcIls Publishing Co., and tho only surviving member of an organization founded by 'her brothers, th e well know phrenolo gists, more than half a century ago. Mrs. Wells, who is now seventy yesrs-of age, successfully conducted tbe busi ness through a period of great financial depression, during the war, and, until lately, has read tbe manuscripts and proofs of all the books and periodicals bearing the imprint of her house. M rs . S ophie B raeumlich , who began her businoss life as type-writer lntheof- flee of Mr, Rothweli, editor of the Engi neering and Mining Journal, becoming in time exchange editor and sub-assist an t secretary and treasury, has lately been constituted sole business managor of th a t thriving publication, because of the remarkable capacity for affaire dis played by her, Mrs. Braeunllch super intended the preparation of the Govern ment statistics on gold and silver for the new census returns. M rs . M. V. T aylor , of Washington, P a .,is ono of the beat known and ablest oil speculators of Western Pennsylva nia. L fft a widow with a chifd to sup port, she began her business llfo as bookkeeper for an oil firm, saw that money Could be made In well-casings, seized her opportunity when the supply was small and the demand largo, and found herself a rich woman. In oil speculation and In real estate specula tion she has shown great "nerve” and judgment, and has proved her versatil ity by th e invention of an iron tubing, which will probably supersede that non la use, -v , THEFA1 BREf * Bait ’ Ifn deciding < mate th e breed# • ! in *11 other n a f t Gazette, tall prent e x te n t usually comm* oc seven mont pigs aro bred fr early *g«, b u tr of allowing tbe] xeaoh.the age. they arc used fc am aware th a t! mend th a t y elt teen months old the boar on tbe I ing tends to stol faith in its porn] effect; indeed l l the most prolific are those which] nal duties of p ig early age. and fj the best sows io latter quality portanco to ma this club, b u t l j account. For two reasol compelled to br«f sons of the y ea r| pigs of all ages,, with fifty to sixl to provide suffief styes in which -week before ana tbe arrival of h<l difficulty not enl so th a t for gene] able to try to : to arrive betwe inonthB of Fell By th is means i Of October won February, or all twelve days aftd main with her f | The bow would I *a few days aften and the second! August; thus the benefit of fcb days, and the nights. Octobel month for younj it be a t the la tt then to be soldi this is a profitle The spring pay the best; tt pels them to gt] food costs but they may tie si September, whf dearest. This tune moment littlo thought i by pig-feeders the footsteps of with their fami| and maids, used a ll tho pork m | pigs were turnc . living and tol eighteen montfl when the tail i and then later finished the enl Every thing is [ • a l t meat is 1| men servants farm-house, anl of them sold w| scores in wclgl| Ootid Farmers sp tile or stone I leave the outlcl protected. Col so the cattle-oi tion of the fro partly o r wholj the fall is bu| sometimes pr proper outlet 1 or more feet shown in the SECURE her of small i supporting tii| tion. If stop Wide piece long. I t will surface is fir not be obtail use blocks o f broken acetic rains, or a t If examine the cumulations < B ecause a I water th a t is | » stagnant i th a t In th a t mistake. I t | cow is much i of water, buj «he turns fro simply beeaul because it i**| Now i t is th a t the causes c a n f caused so th a t i t will 1*oon. * The | th a t i t has ca depravity of ■
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=