The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52

I The Cedarville Herald. nr/ B. BtAlR, PuMiiMr- CF.DARv/i%B> '*-■ » * ou,a TURKISH FOLK-LORE. Curloa* U«p*r*tltloi»» Held In >^iww tlon By tho Turkl»|i 1'eople. 'WhsroveVthere are humnn boings, it matters not of what nationality, there w ill always be found, legends, sayings, customs, signs and tokens, more or less absurd, which have been .handed down from generation to generation, and in which the ignorant implicitly beliefe* The following have, been selected from a gyeat number held In veneration in Turkey; , The Vulture and the StorkHp® good God said one day to a vulture and a storkr •'Ask mo whatever you wish and it shall he granted you.’' “ Let us reflect,” said the two birds. “ Tho vulture, and the Btork took counsel togothor and decided ,to ask that they might live for a thousand years. Then they returned to the Lord. " I wish to live a thousand years,” said the vulture. • “ And I fo r one year,” said the stork by mistake. God granted these demands, and that is tho reason tho vulture lives a' thousand years and tho stork ono year. The New Moon---When one secs for the.first time the new moon he must take a piece o f money, look at it for a moment, raise it toward tlic moon and put it again into his purse. By this means your purse w ill always be full o f money. Vampires—I f a cat enters the chain, her Where aman lies dying and posses over bis body the.man after death will* become a vampire. Bread—When one finds a piece of breed which has fallen uponthe ground he must pick it up, kiss it and put it in a .hole, To tread upon apiece of bread is a terrible sin. T h e ,Dog, Cat, Mouse and Grocer—A xlog having found a written letter placed it in the care of a cat, The cat hid the ■.letter in a hole. The mouse stolo the .letter and hid it in, a bag. The grocer found the letter and used it to wrap up -a piece, o f cheese. The dog demanded the>letter of the cat. The oat said the mouse had#talcn it. The cat requested the mouse to give it hack. The mouse :s:iid the grocer had taken it to his shop .pud used It in making ■up a parcel of .cheese. That is the reason -the dog 'pursues the cat for the purpose of re-1 .claiming the letter, the cat runs after the mouse to demand tho letter, and the mouse introduces himself into the bags of the grocer for the purpose of finding it. The King . of tho Serpents.—Chali- Miran is tho name of the king of the serpents. When anybody sees a serpent he should, say: “ In tho name of Chilli- Miraa. go far awav and hide thyself.” The. serpent will disappear immediate­ ly. Chali-Miran is dead, but. the ser­ pents do not know i t Otherwise they would devour the whole human species. The fear of this great king is the only thing which prevents them from dc- niroying all munkind.—Boston Herald, THE~'wEbDrNQ“ RING. «tu f unlittitc o f the flel|ifulueni o f Ifomo Encouragement* A bean*’ fu l’and suggestive romance o f home has for its heroine the wifo of- Avisscau, tho potter of Tours, Tho se­ cret of enameling gold had perished with the great Palissy. But Avisscau determined torediscovcrit Such were Jus eagerness and resolution, that ho went on experimenting until lie had spent liia whole substance; and the ob- .jcct.of his close quest still'eluded him, *pne day as Avisscau sat in his bare hovel, plunged perhaps in despair, his w ife noticed a sudden change. Ills manner became agitated;' his frame quivered. It was an idea that shook him. The poof potter, so often baffled, was almost sure that he had mentally h it on a combination that wonld sue- ■cccd. ’ Bat gloom was soon hack upon his brow. Like the ancient alchemists,, he needed gold to cast into his crucible. He had neither money nor goods. Avis- .seau's wife divined the need. She drew her wedding-ring from her finger. “ It is our own; take the, gold and melt it down,” she said. Surely in a new humbleness o f hope Avisscau worked again at his problem. His guess had this time gone to the mark; the brave sacrifice had won its recompense, A supreme love had found the opportunity to serve and Save, Occasion came when most likely unexpected; and it is often so, . Tho crisis may be a very small -one, but if wife, or sister, or dear home friend of cither sex lias the g ift o f in­ sight and the w ill to forget self fo r a little space* well w ill it be for all who make up the family circle. Moreover, many a spring of Christian and phil­ anthropic work has possessed the power o f leaping into beneficent life before men because o f the systematic use o f home opportunities o f help and en­ couragement.—Interior, Velvet Again In Vogue. Silk velvet comes to the fora this * season as a fabric pre-eminently adapted for trimming the new dress .materials. Velvet skirts are also highly fashionable once again, and are worn beneath open-fronted coats o f : satin brocade, that have Testa o f white tor ecru silk, embroidered, and finished -with a lace frill that goes around the heck of the high collar, and is jaboted all the way down the front o f the vest —Chicago Poet THE BATTLE FIELD. LITTLE JACK TWO-STICKS, 'T ubs n terrible day, and we spent it fighting the third division of Hilt's command in the WJIflariKMWf Ihnu, just us night was •fnini.fT, we finished tho cpr.ihat bund to buml.u a Our ranks were ilimited, and tho tnon had fasted hour after Hour of tho bard-fought day. With csntoons empty nnd knapsacks lying on the ground In camp when wo marched- away. Corporal Hunt had ttood beside mo alt through' the tight as our men went, down— That tall, blue grain la Its long stvaths lying, the earth \yhore it had been brown. The cleft twigs dropped from the trees above us, cut by the bullets which whistled there, . And with labored breathing we clambered for-’ ward, muttering sometimes a curso or pruyer! , Little Jack Two-Stloks, the company's drum­ mer—you soo we had nloknumes among tho boys— „ ' Was drumming away lit my left, and- help- - leg to deaden the shriek of those louden toys. ' Jack whs a lad, and a little fellow about the size or my youngest girt I bad loft at home; ayes the same color, and hair that was always trying to curl. •‘Look at. that boy!" the corporal shouted. "Look at . that little chap .drumming away! ' And wo sort of smiled in eaoh other’s faces "He lukes it us cool as it it wore play I" And tho- powder-grimed face of tho.corporal softened, .then suddenly hardened, and down ho fell. “ tVlrnt! Hunt, are you hit?’ But he mndo no nnswor. imd 1heard In tho trout the foe- man's yoll. And our colonel shouted. "Charon imyqnote, men! ' 1rushed through) tuo thicket .to inks ray part, ' . Loavlng.thu corporal lying quiet with a Mlnle ball lodged In his gallant heart. We fought and we won with the .little handful left of our brave old Company Q. Our colonel dropped, half rose, und 'shbu’O'd; "Follow them, boys! Not a' man'stays with me!” But after tho cannon Had slopped their rattle, and after the bullots.had ceased their play, ' ., • And we searched for our comrades, I hoard tho drumming of little Jack Two-Sticks far away. Queer that Jaelc wasn't up with tho company, us the sharp tattoo of the drum wu heard. But it suddenly changed to a muffled long roll, aud tlvo of us sturt,od without uword And followed tho sound through tho Wildorness shadows. There, with his back to a fallen tree. And six of his comrades dead around him, he ' was beating the long roll.for Company G. “ Why, Jack, old clmp, sr.e you hurt!" woques- ■ tloned; his jacket was torn und the front was red. I thought of my girl as I watched him faintly beating the long roll lucre to tho dead. “ How did It go—who beat?' ho whispered. " ‘We saved tho day nt the last—we won! “ Write to mother obout It"—his'hands fell life­ less.'and little Jude Two-Sticks'drum­ ming was done. Tho night came down with Its blessed quiet, and 1said u pruyer for my Utile girl, And the little chap iri the darkness sleeping, .with linlr too stiffened with blood to curl. But of all the sights that tho Wilderness shad­ ows wore trying to hide as tho smoke clouds.fled, ■’ Tho saddest of all was that little fellow beating . the long roll,there for the dead, —Marlon Mnnvlllc, in ImllnnnpolWSentinel. BLOCKADE OF THE POTOMAC. How the remcicolu ltnn tlio Gauntlet o f . • Batteries. During1 the summer and full o f 1.&G1 tlio confederates lind effected tho com­ plete blockade of the city of Washing­ ton nnd tlui Potomac river. Not mi ounce of provisions or munitions o f war could get into Washington except by railway from Baltimore find undergo­ ing transshipment at that place. Tho Potomac river was closed and tlio rebel batteries could only be passed by a few small crafts at night. Tho sloop-pf-war Pensncola lind been fitting for sea at tho Washington nnvy yard lo r nearly a year pas!, and in the month of November her engineers pro­ nounced iter ready. Tlio rebel batteries swept thft channel of tho river through a distance of nine miles, nnd this was tho gauntlet the ship was to run if she was to join Farragut’s fleet below New Orleans, where she was ordered to-ren- dezvous- The confederate officers of thi&long line of batteries on the right bank of the Potomac had possession of the Coast survey charts and they were thus en­ abled to train their guns accurately on mid-channel of the river, not very wide at this place. The elevating screws of the guns were made secure after the aim had been carefully adjusted and nothing was left for the gubner to do but to watch until the ship should come in the line of fire and pull his lock string. Nine miles of batteries seemed to make the destruction of tlio ship a pretty sure thing. On a star-lit November night, just as the moon was sinking in the west, the ship, which had been lying at an­ chor off-AleXandria, got under way and headed down the river toward the bat­ teries and to try the fortune of war. John Walters, the only navy yard pilot who remained loyal to tho government, stood by to steer the ship through her dangerous course. Two navy yard tugs were Secured alongtho off-shore side o f the ship to help the ship's own engines and to be ready to assist in the event of their being disabled.' It is impossible todescribe or tounder­ stand now the intense interest excited by this attempt to break through the rebel blockade of the federal capital, not only in Washington, but through­ out the eountiy, and especially in the confederacy. That night, therefore, but few people in Washington went to their beds to sleep, as they listened to the booming of the great guns on the banks o f the Potomac. President Lin­ coln, Mr, Seward, the secretary o f war, and indeed nearly or quite all the mem* bers o f the cabinet, embarked in a steamer at the navy yard and followcc in the wake o f the Pensacola down the river, until she arrived off Shipping point, where the first gun was tired from the rebel batteries. There they stopped their engine and peered through the night at the reeedihg hull o f the ship, amid tlio flashes and booms of guns. Never,, perhaps, in the his­ tory of our navy had so much and so intense an. interest been centered upon a ship o f war. Orders from the navy department had been issued to the captain o f the Pen, sucala that no reply should be given to the rebel batteries. It was the mission of that ship to pass through the fire of the enemy as swiftly and as safely as possible. Think of being under the fire of an enemy’s guns for one hour or longer and forbidden to fire back, The grand old pilot, Walters, understood his business. Tlio throttles of the engines wore opened wide; tho tugs were only to keep speed with the ship, and to g iw neither sight nor sound to the« encrayt and, by a flue, shrewd trick of seaman­ ship and piloting the Pensacola was near ■ to the very1edge o f the channel nearest tlio batteries, on the right hank of the river, and every shot passed just over “ the Hmoke-stack,” aud plunged in the* mid-channel water not the length o f the ship from the hull. There were times when the Pensacola’s keel •had not an inch o f water under it and a lump of sand or a big stone lying there would have insured the ground­ ing of tho ship under the confederate butteries und her certain destruction, it was hold seamanship for nightwork,' but It saved the ship •. * At early daylight tho Pensacola re­ ceived the last shot from the enemy off Aquia creek, which fell-short and spent itself in the water, but it was the last shot received by her without a fierco- reply. The batteries were passed and the ship was safe. But, .though no shot was .fired from the ship, what a victory this was for the union cause! Tho confederate gov­ ernment at Richmond, in its ignorance and wrath, blamed the men and officers of the butteries and accused them of palpable neglect of duty. The best men in its sei-vice were dismissed, de­ graded, court-martialed and the gun­ ners distributed to tlio four quarters of the confederacy dishonored.' Nothing could have been better calculated to demoralize the confederate army at this early, period of the war. Tho batteries, erected at groat expense and 'labor were abandoned and the blockade’of the Potomac was utterly broken. The federal capital was once more free and tlio pathway to tlio ocean was clear. . On the morn ng after the passage of the ship, a lady of Alexandria.lias told me. she was on the streets of 'that city, and.on tlio sidewalk met a group of colored boys in animated discussion over the great event. Through tlio 'night they had heard tlic distant, thun­ der o f the'confederate guns. Armed with it broom stick, she heard one of them say: “ Doan yer see? Tliar’s the rebel guns, and thnr’s the river, and thar's whar. she's got to go!” and he brought his stick down on what he sup* posed was the channel of the Potomac river. For all that the seaman’s wit and courage saved tho ship, and oil the 24th day of April, 1803, she led the ad­ vance column of Farrugut’s fleet in the tremendous buttles of Forts Jackson nnd S t Phillip nnd the Chalinctte be­ low New Orleans. During that night of one of the greatest naval Engage­ ments known to history tho l’ ensacolr, led tho “ forlorn hope” of that magnifi­ cent conflict. Cnpt Henry W. Morris, of New York, one of the “ old-time navy captains,” commanded the Pensacola, and Lieut F. A. Hoe, also of New York, and the writer o f tills paper, was the executive officer;—Rear Admiral F. A. Roc, in United Service. Hard Fare. A confederate soldier, of Gen. Bragg’s army, has much to say of the state of semi-starvation in which he and his comrades were much of the time kept "While we were at Chattanooga my father paid me a visit Rations were mighty scarce. I was very glad to see him, but felt ashamed to have him know how badly off wo were for some­ thing to cat. We were living •on parched corn. Finally I hit upon a plan for getting him a good dinner. I invited him to go with me to the colo­ nel's tent ‘Col. Field,* said I, ‘I wish to introduce you to my father, and as rations arc ft little short in the mess just now, perhaps you will be good enough to invito him to dine with you.* ‘Certainly,* answered Col. Field, ‘I shall be happy to have both of you remain to dinner,* 1 accepted the invitation with many thanks, and just then a young Negro came in with a frying-pan of parched corn and dumped it on an old cloth. 'Master,* said lie, 'dinner is ready;* and we all sat dowh. The colo­ nel, like the private soldier, had noth­ ing to eat hut parched corn.*'—Youth’s Companion. _____ —Dismissed.—Canvasser—Madam, I am a hook-agent——,. Lady of the lldtise—So you shy, tout if yon really are, 1 wouldn't believe that or any other statement from your lips, and if you are not, yon are a self-convicted liar. Good day'—Epoch. —“The consonants are Vetter than the vowels,” said a father to bis son; “I mean that L S I ) are alwayspro- fenced to 10 L V IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. STILL ADVANCING. Women Jtttplifly Tnklng a More Independ­ ent j'liiee With Beneficial Results. Among tlio crowds that entered Okla­ homa when a pistol shot proclaimed that the new lands were open to settle­ ment, were a twenty-onc-yeur-old girl who had walked fifteen miles to the border,n negro woman who liad walked twenty miles with a baby' in her arms and led a six-year-old child, threwwom­ en on horseback with childrea strapped behind them, and a woman sixty-live years old on horseback. This Okla­ homa incident is only one indication of the steady advance woman is making toward an independent position in the life and work of the world. She con­ quered the professions long ago, and woman lawyers, physicians, preachers, and editors are no longer a rarity. Her right to have as good an education as her brother is also conceded, and that she is taking advantage of it is peon in the constantly increasing classes at girls' normal schools and female col­ leges. Ono of the latter in Massachu­ setts has an entering class of 941,where sixteen years ago the class numbered only twelve. Probably every female college and seminary can show a simi­ lar growth in its classes. The demand for -increased educational facilities for womon is not peculiar to this country, It is seen in England and France us well as here. Tho encouraging fact in this, latter advance of woman is that it is directed more toward the practical and not so much toward tlio theoreti­ cal. The demand for the ballot is no longer the one avenue along which women are directing tlieir greatest ef­ forts for place and position. They have found other ways. I f woman can prove her fitness and inclination to make her own living in the world, she will gain a new independency in- making a mat­ rimonial choice. and-more women will contemplate with serenity the chance they have of marrying, as estimated by an English statistician.in the-following table: - • Percent. Between the ajfOBof .15and 20years...... 144 Between tho ngos of so nndS3years..... ... 52 Between tho nires of85nndSOyears...... 18 Between tho ages of SOand 55yearn...... J54 Between the ages of SI nnd 4) years; .... -84 Hetwoon tho orbs of 40nnd 45years..... . 24 Between tho ngoa of 15and 50years.... of 1 Between the nges of 50 and 00years,... . , ‘■4 of I Marriage will be looked upon as less o f a necessity, there w ill bo more de­ liberateness in choosing nnd.-'conse­ quently fewer unhappy marriages will result. There is no advance which woman can make which will benefit herself and society at large so much as a greater independence in .marriage. And, whether she gains this independ­ ence by making horse-shoes, as Miss A lido Wilder has done in 'the suburbs of Brooklyn, or by taking the post of engineer on the boat of which her. hus­ band is captain on the lower Mississip­ pi, or by managing a horse railroad, as Miss Dow did in Dover, N. II., or by presiding over the best arranged hotel on tlio Jersey Beach, or by joining the Oklahoma boomers—tho groat majority of uicn will applaud, provided, of course, that these occupations do not lessen the chief charms of female char­ acter. No one would wish to see that result, and natural laws'may be trusted to prevent i t —Philadelphia Press. A WOMAN FARMER. Slie Finds Kalalng VcgelnlilM a profitable and Pleasant Occupation. For the past six years Miss Mary E. Cutler has carried on a farm in Hollis- ton, Mass. The farm was bought in 1841 by her father, who made a'specialty of tho, nursery business. Miss Cutler, however, has been gradually drifting away from her father's specialty, and now pays much attention to the raising of vegetables for the enterprising man­ ufacturing villages roundabout Miss Cutler superintends the farming, keeps the books, hires the help and directs what shall be done day by day. . She docs not by any means make1 a drudge of herself, hut finds time for occasional travel and the exercises of her taste in literature and art Site plays the piano and paints. The farm contains 08 acres in all, but only 19 are under cultivation. Miss Cutler .believes that ono of the first es­ sentials of success in this kind of busi­ ness Is having a good-looking team; consequently a market-garden wagon, bnilt expressly for the purpose, with a pair o f good hOrsCs, is employed in dis­ posing of the produce o f the farm, all o f which is sold within a circuit o f not over six miles. From July to Novem­ ber the team makes daily trips, earlier in the season semi-weekly. Her suc­ cess is due both to the quality and the uniformity o f the produce and. to the fact that her customers can rely upon her team calling upon them with posi­ tive regularity. Miss Cutler intends to work the land for all it is worth and tohave twocrops a year in nearly every ease. Planting is going on every week through the whole season to secure a succession of crops or two crops per season. Squash follow beets, turnips follow spinach and Hungarian follows early potatoes, with such other •modifications as the season and the condition of the soil de­ mands. Strawberries, blackberries and currants are also grown in consid­ erable quantities. There are also orchards o f topples, peaches and grapes. In the early spring the" greenhouses and hot beds come into use, and as there are some 9,000 square feet under glass on the farm, this gives an oppor­ tunity for hiring help the year round, and Miss Cutler finds that she gets fcgt. ter employes by making yearly coo- tracts with as many bb possible; "gr^* house work in the winter, hot-beds S» the early spring, to suy nothing of win. ter jobs in-cutting tho wood and clear­ ing unreclaimed land, furnish abend, nut occupation for three or four men the year round, although it is nece* sury to hire some extra hands through the summer.—Springfield Republican.'' WOMEN AT THE ^EXPOSITION. Tlieir Worl. There Will Answer Ootids. ttlvely A ll Questions tu JleKuril to Theh Ahllitles. A careful reading of Airs. PotteiVl Palmer’s address before the' World’*; i, Fair Press League will give an ideaort 1 the great work that is contemplated' "■ -under the direction of the World's fair board of lady managers. Nothing to compare with it was ever before under­ taken by women; and if carried to a I successful completion it will afford a conclusive answer to all questions in regard to their executive ability, their capacity for management and all tho cold stock o f arguments against extend­ ing their 'sphere of action. The wom­ an’s building, erected, at a cost of 8JOO,- 000, is now beingjjlastered. The urcliU tcct was. a woman und.the statuary and interior decorations will be selected • from designs submitted by women. < No articles will be placed- here which are competing fo r 'a prize, but there will be a number o f exhibits made by request because of tlieir special excel­ lence, and these will be grouped in the great central gallery which is to reach from the,ground to the dome. Committees of women will bo form­ ed in all countries' for tlic purpose of securing a representative international exhibit of woman’s achievements There w ill be a library filled with books written- by women, the Unest specimens of manual labor, an exposi­ tion of the kindergarten system, model hospital/methods, novel object lessons in the charitable and reformatory work conducted -by. women, practical demonstrations of the science of cook­ ery. In the large halls and spacious par­ lors will be held congresses and conven­ tions, lectures, concerts, etc., while the ornamental garden's upon the roof will- offer- a restful retreat It will be the headquarters for the women of this and other countries, a place for social: and business meetings, a sort of center where all may feel at home. The de­ cision was a wise one to place woman’s work in the general exhibit^ They a’re competing not with each other entire­ ly, but with men also. Their, prodiic-; tions should stand alone upon tlieir merits, and prizes should be awarded without distinction of sex. Arrange­ ments will be mafic, however,-to dis«. tinguish the exit'bits which are in part or wholly the work of women, so that the proportion :.ut the quality of their work may be ascertained.—-Indian­ apolis News. . A Southern Novelist. Christian Reid, tho southern novelist, lives in an old-fashioned gray house near Salisbury, N. C. It is a relic of before-thc-warurchitecture,with its big Greek columns supporting the portico .1 at the entrance, and is ill a somewhat; 1 dilapidated condition, Surrounding*/1 tin- mansion is a grove of old oaks ami*' J cedars. Christian Reid is the daughter of Col, Charles Fisher, who fell at the battle of Manussas, andshe was married three years ago. at the age of forty-five, to Prof. J. M. Tiernan. WOMAN WORKERS. T wk . ntv young women, skilled in the use of the microscope,- have been em­ ployed by tho government as pork in­ spectors at Kansas City. A w o m a n , Miss Mary Snow, is now superintendent of schools in Bangor, and it is generally admitted that she is more competent to fill tho post than any man who ever held it. A soc iety of women has just-been formed at S t Petersburg, for the man­ ufacture of children’s playthings. This society has arranged extensive work­ shops, and proposes to open by degrees, in the Russian capital and in other large towns, shops for the sale of it* products. T he daughter of Congressman-elect Baker, o f the Sixth Kansas district, a young lady of twenty-four years, own* a one hundred and forty acre farm near Lincoln, Kas., and has done most of the hard work on it herself for several years. She has big crops this season, and doesn’ t owe a dollar. Miss Cr.ABA B a r to n , president of the Red Cross society, served in camp and hospital during the civil war, without pay or commission, Gliarles Sumner ohco Bald of this noble woman: “She has the talent of a statesman, the com­ mand of a general, and the heart and hand of a woman.” L ondon is said to have fully eighteen thousand newspaper women, and the Ladies* School of Journalism turns out fresh material at the rate of two hun­ dred a term. There are twenty-two press clubs where the fair scribblers meet to lunch, read and exchanges note* Sncesses are few andsalsriei lamentably smalL W o M k n are rapidly making their way Into the faculty 'of medicine in Eng­ land. No fewer than one hundred and seven students attend the London School of Medicine for women. Kins ladies who presented themselves for examination at the University of hen- don all passed and took thslr M. B. de­ gree. One gained triple first-el**. honors, and another had aremarkaWSf] success in the examination of the Boj*» University of Ireland. THE FARMIhl HANDY HABNI Lik* Jr W oui X b 5| “ “ • Every I'M “ Hay, I’ ierc0- Windowto yom'*ta] mark of * * « enL , f -excepting the wind *boutin this^way: I barn was overrn n wil putting everything eal •each they attacked t l hung on pegs in thd the stable. The &rs\ a breast collar, fii»f rbo'ut half eaten up, i L pair of work bare lired. It at once Jliat the harnesses ml But where? As dcorJ arranged there seenif place] For three w<* harnesses to the houl Of the women and ter fort and annoyance. I bit of leisure time tl build that closet, andl Finally I hit upon t i in the engravings and! k FIG.. friend' as a bay windo IV,-foot pine board, This 1 marked and saj Fig. 1, the lines a and out o f perpendicular) line e. being sawed o as to give a half-| then . went int stable directly bel in dally use, ail that "a rt of the nail 1 3— FIC. 2. A, C, side ol box. 6x2 nail tie, in which atj placed harness pegs, bottom nail tie. G. Bill1 stable. F, nail tie. joist,' lower one, E, 2x4. the siding previously it to fit: I then nailed on and the floor A, whi| shingling. Inside, cased around the d| plank, leaving an thirty inches wide i inches high. The d| f talies Above the sj jle to luyjjtlie col oor and also thq brushes. Three wagon spokes werl D, and the wholcl veniently unobtruT that just nicely holl ncsx.—L. B. PiercpI WELL MA| They Increaxe tlie ’ Hnndrcili Land speculator portanceo* good rd place a tract u{ they have improvcl driveways. Th is: why tho boom in cessful. Especial | the streets in all. were made attral every instance were put in place I chaser was invi premises. There is anotlj why the roads Mr. Isaac i>. Pott| engineering magd half the lG.oao.Oh the farms o f the I do the hauling ofl even the presen tl placed in good tion o f only an e| of draught aninl day would aintf tons of hay an grain, which, re value, wonld an.' or 8114,000,00ft a; the. saving in ani of 8254.000,000 i-el Considered frj may readily bj course of a few paid for iti thl make. In loculi been mneadatuix ty lias increase/ Add this itn-rea/ ed and there rt profit. How lr exist with fowl when tlie advan| 6o plainly evid* intelligently tii public. P oultry mail can I ks secure! fchould be etoFNH

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