The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
Zfyken away Uious Ijeaflaehtk on, indigestion; d all derange- > stpmach and je contract, bnt in the world do ierco’a Pleasant. »e smallest, bat They go to 6 iray. They ite the system, ey do it mildly' feel the good >u don’t feel s a Liver Pill, Sugar-coated, nt up in vial% aled, apd thus, liable. . A per- . cnedy, in small ' necessary for a ’ a cathartic. tst pill you can *guaranteed to your money is ’ the good yon’ r plan all Dr. are sold on, nan ;t, W atertown, in io n o f a man store, sells all d ire c t contact th e ir families, an anyone else ind w h a t tru e e h ea rs o f all esses, and can I know o f no , Sore Throat, d done such ef- e w o rk in my r a s fioschee's anSy rtip . Last r*k la d y called Store,who was ing irbn iav e iy td h a rd ly ta lk , 3erm an Syrup tvou ldg ive re- confidence iu'U old h e r to take su its w ere not lak eno charge fter sh e called in g Chat she t i t i n fu tu re as hd rre lie f." ® OKE K 071M . u b ik front lurtogMU- UtmTbiMd; •men*ad MW. p rlo * . lea bottle, to fa Men *$ni|xisca. m * im nuc I B o x * tem perance notes . the UPS THAT TOUCm UQ lfbff. You may smile at n r. «SS Uiak ft qultaitrMfe, . f. But, if you’ll bo patient/Til Ujr tow itafo , * In prose or in rhyme. though not overaloe, Atew staple thoughts a* a pleoeOfaivlos, Aod U they’re too potptod to s u ll plf ybur views v '■-* -*• ■' I hopeyouHriU listen and try to excuse,' « , For. as you nil know, 'Tm a foe to the wise, Aud the lips that touch liquor shall never touch mine.” ... ... The tales of deep sorrow bow oltsn we’vo (V w“a* * ' • i,; Sol a heart-broken womanawaiting the hresd ‘ Of him whopromised to love and protect; -* When, a fewmonths before, as his bride she wasdecked, But who nowhas damped all tho-tara'othec life • • • ’ Byterrible blight—a drunkard's wife— Which she would not have been had she said this in time, ; . ; "The Ups that touch liquor shall never?teusb mine.” ■ t i •There are hundreda ot mothers all overthe Who are pleading today, wlthlpennlless hand. For help to support the children they love, . Whose fathers have- left home, beggars to rove. Although it seems hard to censure or blame, Yet ’twould have been better to all’tls qulte plain. v f , Hadthey said this when young: “I’m a foe to the wine, ~ - And the .Ups that touoh liquor shell never touch mine1” ... There is many a one whohas worked long ah*. well « Vi \r,> This terrible fiend of Intemperanoe to quel); :-f But what oau they do—young ladies will wed ■ Drunkards In.spite of all that is said l Then, if youwould aid in this caUiug dlvlue. Say: "The Ups that touch, liquor shall never touoh mine!” ' * Oh, take this advice, yotag lady, fromme, l • No matter hpwwealthy a young man maybe; No matter how handsome, how gay, or'how nice; % Nomatterhowgrsnd.be his station ln.Ufet * Nomatter how seldom a glass he may take— If he takes It at all, foryourhappiness’ sake, Say, when you are wooed: ’T ina toe to the wine, Andthe Upsthat touch liquor shall nevertouch mine!" Vou may say it’*all nonsense; m yhearttsa stone; And lf l act thus, I wiUspend life alone; I care hot for that; mymind Is made up . To dowhat I can 'gainst the poisonoussup; And, U I must weda drunkardor none, Of the twogreat evils 1’U ehooee tire less one. Yes, 1'U live an bid maid to the end of my time, * 'Bra the “Upsthattouoh UqcqrshaUSvtrtouch nsinei” , , —Ida. W< Ballinger, In ToledoBlade, \Q TRAFFIC IN PRINK. A Very Xgirse laerease la Foreign Impor tations and Domestic ^Production. General prosperity shows itaelf more quickly in the consumption o f- wine than in any other product, and accord ing to the figures which have just been made dp in the custom-house 'tljf list; year haa been, one of unusual activity, The importations of expensive wines were greater than in any previous j tar. When times are dull and money, is hard to get the average American doesnot drink so much champagne and. compromises on beer, while even in the **400” “Chateau Lafltte” ialikelytogive -place to the excellent but oheaper prod ucts ofCalifornia. Last year, however, was apparently one of high rwwVand enough rare winewasoonsafmed te float .one of the new Americanw ar vessels. • As nine-tontha of the wine importer tiou so f the United States come to this port the figpres of the New York cus tom-house represent the tastes of the country a t large. There were 4,800,000 ‘bottle*of champagne Imported into this •country last year from the viuejfarflaOf Eraooe, being an increereol 909,000 a* -compared with the importatiore of the previous yew. The larger part ed this wine was consumed in this city, and -most of it was consumed within a ra- -diua of onemil* from Madison square. I t is notststed how numy sore hemltre sulted from the imbibation, * : The reoeipts of sherry for lMd .Amounted to 886,000 gallon*—more timn in any previous year sine# 1088, and 900,000gallons more than came in last' yeafc I t was also the biggest yew for port th a t the country has ever had, showing a big Jaap over the importa tions -of 1889, the to tal reoeipts being 111,78? gallons in wood aad #70,900bot tles. Seven figures are required to de note the quantity of German and Hun garian wines which arrived in the United States last yew, and was pre sumably consumed, being 1,191,900 gal lons In wood and 707,109 bottle* o r a larger amount of theee wines than ever before came to this,conntry in oneyew. A few yews ago Italian wines were -almost unknown in the United States, Tmt the remotest corners of Europe are now giving up their choicest products -for American oooShmptiou, aad Italian wines have a large aide here which is .•growing steadily. The im portations o f these w ines la s t y e a r were 100,000 gallon* ha wood aud 61M00 bottles. Of re d w ine* from Spain more came in la s t y s a r th an ever before, th e aggregate being 947,700 gal lons; N o t sines 1888 have th e im porta tions o f brandy been m large as they w ere l i l t y ew , fo r a g reat qu an tity was purposeljr brought in before the Mo- K inley b ill w en t Into operation, in o rder to save th e heavy duties imposed by -that measure. T he qu an tity o f brandy Im ported w as 910,000 gallons fa wood •and 000,780 bottiea. The Importation* <of B ritish gin war* larg er th an in any preview* yew , being 41,000 gallons in wood aad 900,000 bottle*. Holland .g in (bowed a sligh t kmresae, the Impor tation* being 901,000 gattoa* la wood aad 180,000 bo ttle* flh Croix ram w as Imported to a 'la rg e r ex ten t th * a ever before, 90,000 >gallM)mvlag*eiMii^wJdte »** ram th e re w ere k a fo rte d 10,400 gal* Iona fa wood and 19,000bo ttles. JSeofck a n d Ix!*h whisky jhow a failfpg 9 « o f p tifo rt* th e totufla bslng gf,9bo gaUonf » -yraod and pAfOO} b o ttie a O f cor- th e re were 4|^i00c**0« krteorted. . leh ale and; b*er «ame ih3o .the amotiwt of 19,800packages in b ilk and 09,700bottled, and German ale and beer 69,900 package* in bulk and 9,000 bote tied. Of glnger ale 96,700 psokage^^ar- rivedi of-cherpy juioo 6.600 casks. Of mineral waters there were 8,600,000 gallons imported and of Cette wines ^ O l^ ^ ^ - ^ I lK d s ir d Y r * * ^ * only < & ' ■ thht4bowed , pf flmsbrtitimi* 3.100 having arrived^ But it isin the native California wine* that the most yKqndeyfpl growth lnooa- sumption.|n the emt.is shown, - There* ceipts last year by watw were far in ex; cess of what they ever were before! Tbe 4emand,ioii California wines, it la thbpght, will 'lb a^fewyears exceed the supply. The receipts a t New York last year were 8,608,000 gallons by water, while the shipn)onto by rail amounted to 4,900,000 gallons.. The arrival? o f wwv»:,(^A*v*sjp.:.jw1y auiSf'-Atev siy oelpts a t New York domcstid'yvjlusky la st yew were 87,*400barrels and’of al cohol 107,675 barrels__N. Y. World. . Ai^CQHOL AND CHILDHOOD. An iS tH M tin i I sm tils U o s o f th« Effects *V>A lcoholism . Etoof. Detnme,. of Horne, a t the re cent International Alcohol Congress at^ Christiania, presented an interesting report of an investigation which he had mad* as to the influence’ of alcohol upon children. Having unusual oppor tunities for this study from his position as superintendent. of> a hospital for children,-he selected'two group*; o ften families each, under similar external environment One group of fifty- seven was manifestly affected more o r less by alcohol; the other of sixty-one wSs unaffected, or a t least very little affected. O f.the fifty-seven who ex hibited the effecte of alcoholism, twenty had inebriate father* the mothers and grandparent* beingmoder ate drinkers. ■Only forty-five .per cen t of these (nine) had healthy constitu tions; thirty-one had inebriate fathers and grandfather*, but temperate moth ers, and grandmother*. * Only two of these, or a little ' over six per cen t, were healthy. Six children had parents and grandparents intemperate; one of these survive* a sufferer from epileptic seizures. In remarkable contrast is the state of the sixty-one children belonging to temperate tfamilie* eighty-two per cent, of whom enjoy goodhealth. Three have died and eight ate iifbad health. Href. Demme alaore- pteted the results of an experiment on several children, from whom all in toxicants were kept during eight month* and to whom the usual allow ance of wine and water was given dur ing theremaining four months of the year. These children were reported to slocisoiie eighbmonths tban during the StedhoUo four month*—Journal of Iptfwrtety* & ’» •. ’!v ; - NOTES IN GENERAL. Sotrra A mxsica hat but one regularly organized W. C. T. U. I t is in Con ception, aud does good work. Within a few months forty men have been in duced,. to sign .the to ta l, abstinence plAKf* A Loysl T*mperanoe Legion, m teharlng thirtyvfiva, meet* every two we*k*~W. a T. U. Bulletin. No mattx * hbw . psrmlytically ine briated a man may be when picked up by the St. LoniS polioe, they always ex tract from him his name and address "by pinching the sine# th a t ,r*na on the intide of the knee.” 'I t is abetter Precipe than that of clnbbingths soles of a prostrate citbwn’s shoe*~Albany Axgn* T ax Austie’s iim itof hoalth was two ounces of alcohol a day. This quantity would increase the pulsation* of the heart five thousand beat* and diminish the exhalation of carbonic atid from the lungs twelve per cent. The people of England, according p3 statistic* are using on an averag* over three ounce* daily of alcohol.—Jcromal of Inebriety. Now r r turn* out th a t *11the blame for the recent .mine horror in Pennsyl vania rest* upon the shoulder* of a drunken fire-bos* who was too maudlin to look after his duties. Men in whose hands are (ntrasted the lives of Others can not be- allowed to get drunk, and fife-borne* Will hive to Hb added to railroad engineers on the teetotal list —Intyr 6e*w* . - - ■. Medical Ffegress,** Fpr a oehtury Of more physicians were accustomed to use alcohol in their treatment of all sorts of disease* re garding it. is a “sheeiranebor'’ 'in .the medioil agents. Bnt after an obstinate contest that fond delusion ha* been shattered by the relehtlsss hand of •tiene* Whisky has long bean re garded as of value in the treatment of pneumonia^ but a oompAtison of the re sults attained in different hospitals by ite use in this capacity show that ite employment is not desirable. I t i* found that In the New York hospital* stifeaty-Av* peeMmtt b t the pneataonla patients die under tiooholie treatment, OF GENERAL INTEREST. ' >'—A .b u g la v w k e Stole tw o eoat* amhreUalmd o ther artt*U* from * S i Louis residenoe this o ti^ r n igh t a te a hearty luncheon before h is oepaftrire and le ft the follow ing note: "Thank fu l for w b a tl got. b u t wish yo* had more to giv^.’,’ , ... . i •■ -r-Tho orange was originally imported to this’Bountey years, agorby the m ission1 fath e r* wjhp brought th e seeds from Spain. They- were planted abopt the old mission, the fru it being; used fo r domestic purposes, and the crop being | simply suitable o r largo enough fo i : these purpose* —M.JL. Levi, near Newtonvllle, Ind., had an apple tree which bore thtee Crops in one season, .This led .tp news-, paper comment, and* paragraph fell under the eyeofMrs. LouClifford, ofMo- Cordsville, his Sister, whom he Msd not seen nor heard of fpr th irty yepr* and they were reunited, , “ Many a recent visitor has brought back from Europe a collection of quaint teaspoons, each retailing, some city, by engraved name, historical emblem or motto. I t I s not surprising that the’ first Amerioan city to manufacturesnob a souvenir is filatem, Mas*, and ite em blematic figure ianaturally a witoh up- ossbroom . —A new flash-light fire alarm has re cently appeared in Copenhagen. I t con sistsof a smallcartridge filledwith Ben gal light composition, and provided with a fuse which carries a small cap- sule of strongsulphuric acid. When th« temperature of the room rises- above: the melting point of paraffine, the sul phuric acid is liberated aud ignites the fuse, which,, in turn, set* fire to the Bengal light The device eaa bemp- .plemented by a piece of fusible metal, whiob in melting will establish' an" electric current and' Hag a belL —A curious story of “spontaneous hypnotism,” s a lt is termed, comes from Hahoock, Minn. The husband of Mr* Edward Dsy lif t the honae one day last October to go to the barn, and on his 'return his wife shrieked and hade him leave the room. He expostulated, hut she denied, ever having seen him, in sisting tha t her name was Margaret: HlU and that she- lived in Philadelphia. All efforts'of friends and phyeiclans to convince to the oontnsry were un availing. . Being asked her age ehe an swered; ’’Fifty-six,” though she is but twenty-four.- She was sane on all other subjects. Three Weeks later she was again in her normal mind. A week; afterward she once more fancied her-' self, Margaret Hill, spinster, of Phila delphia. y -—At precisely twelve o’clock every day, the Naval Observatory a t Wash ington telegraphs the time a ll’over the country. The instruments of the West ern Union are in the room where the computations ere made, and just three; and a half minutes before noon, ope rating ceases In telegraph offices *U: over the country, at great. Ibis and in convenience sometimes. The wires are then put In unbroken: ednneotton with Washington, A note of warning tesent a few seconds in advance, and a t the second when the observer nbtes the passage of the sun over the 76th merid ian, the electric current flashes the news il l Over'the oottntry, and thou sands of clocks—seven thousindin New York City alone, i t te said—are daily regulated by ibis-record of solar time. —Love laugh* a t irate fathers. A de voted couple eloped from Plainville, Ind., in aback. Tbe coupleWereyotukg,' but the hack was old, and broke down after a few miles bad beenpassed. This accident enabled the girl’s angry father, who bad pursued thism on horseback, to overtake them. He drew<a horse-, pistol, and aiming H a t the jroung man, threatened to bare a bote in himAntes* he relinquished all olaim to lfls daugh ter. Mary shielded the formed her be loved Jams* sad clung to him with iratitio devotion. She whispered in hi* ear a t the same time. Them tills undo- tiful daughter hurriedly palled off her boot* and started on a run. James fol lowed and in a few moments both were scudding across a railroad bridge, over which a hone could not pas* A clergy man was found, and they were happily married. —A friend of James Johnson, Quebec street, Kingston, O at, brought him a swarm of California beer bee* Hived In self-sealers and given a mixture of syrup, sugar and Water, the colony manufacture* about three quarts per day of hear, equal, it is said, to malt, and enough drunk will put a head on a fellow a* big aa any one could desire. Jams* Johnson, Jr., Factory street Odessa, came here and took a swarm home. They jure in. an elghfe-ojxnee bot tle, and resemble a "baby’s own” spdnge, 'When placed in the sun or a warm place they shoot rapidly from their bed to tile top of the fluid, then return languidly to the .bottom again. When hundreds of them shoot a t once they make things atesle. About twenty- four hours Completes the edake and the beverage 1s then fit tor turn. ......... . ftegleotedMusste* "1 want to see the professor," Said a father faded-looking woman a* she went into the gymnasium. 1 "I ain he.**! " "Could I offer a suggestion?" "Certainly.” "Well, It seems to me th a t it m ight be a very good Idea to flXupsonie arrange* i THE FARMINGWORLD. , f ■ - ; .-'HRn....million, * ' ■1 GRAPH-VINE CULTURE, Tfcs HorUpntal-Aru, System Growing' In Fo*alar Favor. This system of pruning grape-vines is'usedla te ly b /, growers and gives, njuch satisfaction. yVheh the vine is sot |t is cut back to three buda and only. one sprout is a l- lowed t o ; grow . ' Fijg. l represents a vine two ^rMira a lte r ' being set. .T h e first year it won c n tb a c k .to -C aUd two Shoots lallow ed to g row ..from there ■ th e _second summer, "A t the endp f the secoud y eto the twobraUches are. , cu t off ati A A and toe vine is : th en ready to p u t :©jr■ to e lf '■ il s .l i a t t h e e n d o f the. first year made a g o o d g row th j'it is cu t back to th ree buds in stead o f to C. Fig. 2 represent* th e vine a t the end o f the th ird season’s grow th. If it has grown strongly since first se t Out it w ill have borne • ’few d u ste rs o f grapes th is season. When p u t on the tre llis the tw o arm s are' spread a p a rt.a n d tied on th e low er w ire which is VH o r 9 f t from the ground and the second’w ire is 9 o r i g f t sbove i t A t th e end o f th e th ird year th e branches are pruned a t A A A and during the coming se u o u a good crop o f fru it may be expected. • By th is system of pruning It requires a t least ode-third less vines to th e acre th an are usually planted, s a d a saying o f labor 1*made In th e spring In ty ing the vines to th e w ires. A sth eg row ing parte o f the vines are above this first w ire, there ' is a free circulation o f d r underneath, which is a g re a t help In .CN. while in Loftddii -it th* Object-Lesson ...... .. . . ...... T cm p em S ^ sp iU i, whetotieohol in «tente In th . shapeofcoalscuttles, lo*l aU tom * te repudiated, only five per them up pretty heavy aad offer aprtes cent, of the pneumonia cases are fataL After making due allowaaoe for differ ences in severity the great advantege off th* Tto*F*fiaHte to«thocl j i ohvten*-** I1m*ndtofteaI^«iMrn*h.’ to th e young m an who can lift on* th* often**b I t doe* look n* I t th * gym* rnitium didn’t do mneli foytheiaiM ele* yon hav* to to* hi liNtuc«>*o*hNui> & M-*-WM0tli»gtonftot, keeping the fru it and vines free from mildew. As the fruit grows justahove the loyrer,wire, it is, a* a rule, uniform in size and quality and also in ripening, and very eonventent lq picking. There teroom tor the’ vine”to grow and de velop its wood, .fruit and foliage, and a* the vine* grow along the top wire they serve as a protection to the fruit from storms, sun and heavy dews, thus obviating the necessity of the use Of paper bag* to prevent ro t and mildew. —Farm and Home. DAIRY SUGGESTIONS. [Farm, Field ana Btookmsn.] —A hole in the shelter of stock wastes feed just as truly aa doea a hole in the grinaty, •—There Ore men who consider it cheaper to raise the barn every few years than to draw out manure. They raise lest crop# each year, I r the milk has a "oowy” odor itte because you have gotmanure in it; tha t always makes a very "oowy” odor. The. remedy te to always keep th* milk sad the manure in separate receptacle*— not by straining the manure out of the millq though; te a t kiad of odor doesn’t strain out. , I f your cow, after behaving lik*a lady for months, surprise* you with a kick, don’t kick hack, but find out why ah* kicked; she had a good reason for it, else she wouldn't hare done it. Per* one of her teats may be cracked or scratched and very sore, or her udder may be inflamed. W hen cream i* kept too long it un dergoes a chemical change whkgi may develop a cheesy taste, which may be putrefaction; or It may developanother form of putrefaction, as indicated by a bitter flavor. This is the ease when, cream Is kept too long, evdn though It may be kept so cold that the ferment which develop* the sour principle or lactic acid Vflll not be apparent, or evsn exist a t alL Ex-Govxnxoa H oard said tha t profit able dairying cam* from full recogni tion of the officeof maternity, and any practice th a t ran contrary to th* full performance of that function resulted in lob* , Motherhood mean* warmth, comfort, laxative foods, aad the most uniform oare as regards sadden or vio lent changes, and the dairyman who comesnearest recognizingmatt adminis tering to these wants, come* nearest being the tuooessful farmer. A y the' annual meeting’ of the New York titeto Dairy Association, J. B. Dodge, of th* Agricultural Department a tWashington, after reviewing the fluc tuations of our dairy trade with Europe, gave U as his opinion th a t the most ac cessible a id promising market* in tit* future extent of our export dairy trade were in South America. There must b* increased skill In mahufactow, in var ie ties, in meeting the ahangihftafetes and exaction* a t the eotummers abroad m well a* a t home. OF GREAT INTEREST. • An A sstffD ea Dealer's Wejr eT TeUlny m '*■' - GqeiMeiwe?"' * A correspondent of Town and Coun ty, AttstraHa, siy*: '" I ean’t explain what a good horse Is,” says a wpll* known dealer. "They are as different a* jasm in buying » horse you must lopk first a t it&head apd eyes for sign* of intelligence, tenjpfer, courage and hone can,l than you < that ta ll bay there, a fine-looking an imal, fifteen hands high. You can’t teach thai horse any titibg. ''‘Why?’ Well. rU ahuw yaa a difference in heads, but have a care of bis*heel* Lpok a t the brute’s head, that bropd, full place below the >eyes. Yon can’t trust him. - i / > ■ . "That’s an awful gwd max1*,", h i added. "She’a as tiiie aB the.sun. Ydi lean see breadth *nd/ fullness' between the ears and eye* You toulfln’t hire that mare to act mean "or'hhrfc/aiy- hofly. The ;eye should, be' full,, a id hazel I b a good color. ■ I like a small thin ear, and want a ' horse to throw ears forward. . Look out for the brute that *want* to listen to all the oonversition going .dn' be hind him., .The horse to st :turns back hte ears t i l l , ' they . almost meet a t the points, take nty word for it, is sure to do something wrong. See th a t straight .elegant face. A horse with a dishing lac* te cowardly,’and* cowardly brutels usually vicious. Then I like a square muzzle, with large no»> trils, to le t in plenty of s ir to the lungs. For,fhe’under aide of the head, a>good horse should be wellcat underthe jowl, with jawbone* broad and wide apart under the throttle. . . . . . . "So much for thehead,” he continued. “The next thing’ to consider is th e building of toe animal. Never buy a long-legged, atllty horse. Lethim hare a abort, straight back, and..*,straight rump; and you've got a gentleman’s horse. The withers should be high, aad toe shoulders well sat back and broad; bpt don't get-them too deeptln tlie chest Th* foreleg shonld besho rt Give, me a pretty straight hind leg, with 'toe hock low down. short pastern joints, and a round,mulish foot. Thera are a il kinds of horse*; button animal that has these points is almost sore to he sightly; graceful, good-natured and serviceable.” , , SIMPLE SHEEP HACK. A ar Farmer C*k ~Matce l t I f .BteVifellaSrs' -. D irections. ‘ The practice of feeding hay and corn- - fodder to Sheep by scattering it on the ground is very wasteful,, to say the‘;s least . The shOep 1s very particular about it* food, refusing *11 soiled parti cles, and I have found tha t by feeding ; on toe ground We lose about Otte-half ' the feedingvalue, W* have tried vari ous kinds* of rack*, but have settled down-to a simple slatted rack that any farmer can make, jvfaich I frill describ* fo r the benefit of your reader* ■ Four pieces of scantling three feet« long for corner posts, two hotted* one foot widi and sixteen feet ,long for the bottom, and two six inches wide and sixteen feet long for top, with six-inch boards two and one-half feet long, placed eight ihches apart, perpendicu lar; toe space between the top and hoi- tom hoard* on each'ride is eighteen inch**; the width of rack should fa* two and one-half feet. When the hay > is properly put in tote rack toe sheep * corasr post, ShrM fset; b, bottom board, twelve ieebee; a top board, six lactose; 4 eight-laohspaoce; * su iaob uprights. eats from the top of it, avoiding the falling of dirt into the wool on the neck. The upright strips keep the sheep from crowding, and knowing this a sheep takes her position and keeps It until through feeding. The following rude draft may rid tornread er In getting s correct idea of this sim ple rack. I t will answer for a partition fenoe and can be raised daily as the lit ter and manure accumulate. We have been the heat suited with separate grain troughs made with on* tiV Wv,: 7 right and one nine-inch board put to gether in a V shape, with legs sttfD* ciently long to keep them a foot abov*, ground. These can be -turned over after feeding and ton* kept clean.-— George McKerrow, in Breeder'* Ga zette. ■ The Element o f Deswtjr i s H o n tt. The element of beauty cut not fa* dispensed with in our horse* hut w* shoialdpot try to apply the same idee* of beauty to all breed* We must learn that those qualities whloh Constitute A standard of beauty for Acoach horse do not hold'in case of drafters, and’ con versely. There are, or should be, as many ideal* as there are purpose*to be served, and when there are kept in view we ah*U have better horses. A* tongas thefe are "scrub” horses—ia quality—in this country, solong is there room for any thing that ia an improve mentthereon. But we want ottr "im proved” breeds to be improved in truth} sad aathereareplentywhichanswerthis description there ia no need of an in- A. *> 1 ^ - >f.v \,. • r\' . *■ - F fertor stallion doing service in Anypart ‘ ttiy , Good sto ek h o tre* fr*t* never *o plrittyAnd re remonhh)*^ toprire re »ow,---N«tionri too*femri*
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=