The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, March 13, 1903, Image 6

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    Ana :
# a tent nr of atoms taliing form
LN ti
Bla aA des
. ful ; ade and patients thess,
nid as fo bis wisdom ¥* he fuqaired,
cells cipend, and dolony wake }
Sha bare with thee, as well,
sus wil shall ing thy fate
made the men spend the rest of the
{night searching with him through the
{root but with so result
| were naturally rather frightened; there |
1 had been a number of suiall 1obbecles, | 88 he wished
} | and the Governor, a righ old mariner, |
Pwas determined to put crithe down
g ro bird aud
tetlency looked
pect mare,
“Why don't they et fata
—eh¥*
epuntive Ignored the Jeer-be
haps, as wise ax the gular
on. “Pelban’s bad a roputa-
® be sald, milly: “ir you
Fo bow he acquired HY
HCY nodded and resumed.
te ome government
Hong win the
in my dny. Po
§
© with an
fairly adored
Yer, a strict and
1th a down on ein
‘He had once
4 alt French
fore him for
ort he pald roy
wd the old chap
| th orldly |}
fhe J Judge & his
Aiked as her
8, being a great
0 good works and
td his menagerie
giving him eres!
The gular must have
el in bis native wilds
he. He wax a highly
. conld give out tags of
3& air of a bishop, aud
in English, while
100, eer
nitate anything,
ee ot Misa Pelhari's
ve ud rn
the Judge 2
vould yell out to
a, Fanny! Bere; # the
table by remind
ot out with hie
; he'd get sunstroke.
Te tH
fy ree then and ihe
in the family deve.
_j gust are the time when the phenome
t, went up there by
and sot \ tremendous haul of |
¥ ed back to
| and find where the donor had gone to,
_. | #0 that he might be informed of the!
value of his discovery. Then he went
1 off to bed, leaving the pearls in a dis
{ In the night a tremendots storm came
| regiment In keeping order in a half
and be almont died at the thought of it
bh. Meantime, there wig a row rovsl
tion, and the pearls kept out of sight,
fi Misa Pelham went to the Governor
the necklace. She was sifling on the
veranda one night with the Judge, talk.
it {ing and wondering.
Know.’ replied Peikam, gloomily; *
ittle Connolly won't last three Ada
“i've jacked ererywhers) sald Mies
1 Pelbam, and es looked up at the gular, |
pe He wits sitting demarely on his stand,
fant winking his redoritimed eyos as
srder the table!
s | patel box bad been left and the car.
4 pets hind Been taken up, The tioor kad
El the covering was removed the
1 houses, was raised a litle on piles ta
: dropped on the top step. Then the
through the steps and right under |
ened. “That's the very way the pearly
1. went” he sald to his sister ‘and not
cone of us had the sense to think of it
England is the disappea; sini island of
{ above the surface of ths water ix not
{ more then a few inches, and its area
{ tor by the nature of the lake bottom,
1 When the weather has besn very warm,
i cently In the lecture hall of St, Sa
{and Dumb.
im at the sam tinie to try
patch bax on the table, nnd forgetting |
to lock I. In his usual ahsent way.
down, aud swept through the house in
a hurricane, carrying eversthiog into
the verandas The chak Connolly |
came rushing in, shut the windows and
doors, and picked vp the scattered |
books and papers, pselslod by the hate
ler. another time-explred man. The |
dlepatch box was found lying on the
{ floor, 11x contents Blown awey and the
pearls gone. Polliam insisted that
they nuet be somewhere near and
Hoth men
with & heavy hand.
“He was very fond of ihe cat. “The
eat” he used to declare, ‘Is worth a
eriminal vommunity like this Pelham
wits opposed fo it with oll hile might,
and the two were constantly at logs
gorhends. The Governor got wind eof
the digappearance of the pecklace, and
fustantly sent a guard and shat up
both Pelbam's men lo Voges, sayiog
ho would give them five domn aplece
unless they owndd up to the pearls,
“Connolly was a delicate little chap
The other chap confessed on the spot;
said he had been standing of the door
and seen Connolly fake cot the string
and put It In his pocket, a statement
whlch the Judge declared was a lie,
ard ane egronraged hy the Governor's
use Of xuch a brotal form of punish
ment. He didn't blame the butler, bat
he sluck to it. Convolly eouldn't have
trikes the pearls or he would have seen
between the law add the administra. |
and begped him to give Connolly a
| woek's respite before be was brought
un for sentence. And In that time
fle falely turned the yellow stone
house foside out, and still no sign of
#4 eannot fmagine,’ sald she, ‘where
they ean haste got to
“Td give a bundred pounds I
Hf be goes back to the quarries.’
{it he know alt about 1.
Mo! ho! he! Le chuckled: ‘look une
y fer {ie fabde’
“ake sat Jeoking un at Ie in amaze.
! ment while he hept repeating, Loak
“Fhe got up. 1 wil ete sald; ‘eve
ery table in the house,”
"Now, she had renioved everything
ott of the dining ream viliere the die
been Inld with very greon wood, and |
{beards were found to lave shrunk.
It wax sunset, and the Tight came in
level with the hooss, which like most
Seep out the white ants. Bhs walked
aeross, Jooking down, and suddenly she
eriesd out aud the Judge rushed to her
side. ‘Loak? shoe gasped, pointing
downward. He put en bis spectacles
ard looked, and there hetween the
tracks they could seo the siring of
pearls Iviog on the black soll beneath
tie floor,
“Connolly was returoed to the Judge,
of eatrse, but it was still a mystery
how the pearls got there, and for a
long time no one found out. Then one
night while they were all at snpper
2a great storm came down, and the
wind tore through the French wine
dows and earrled, among other things,
a silver goblet off the table. It was
rolled slang the floor, out of the win.
dow and across the veranda and
blast veered and the golilet was blown
hese
“The gular screamed as it rolled, and
Pelbam stood gazing as one enlight
but my wise old gular) "~Tadies
Field, en
ve Brom,
A Disappearing Taland,
One of the curlosities of Routhern
A
Derwentw rater Take. It risss in the
lake at intervals of a fow years, and
after a while disappears. Its height
varies from a few square fect to two
sere. The phenomenon {8 accounted
which Is of peat, and the Island is
really a blister-like upbeaval of the
bottom. The months of July and An.
non ds most likely to occur, espéclally
Deaf and Dumb Ten Party,
Boma 230 persons, all of them dent
and dutab, were entertaloed at tea re
viour's Church, In London, by the
Royal Association in Ald of the Deat}
Finger spiccchas wera |
given by Bir Arthur Pairhaira and oth.
and an exh bition. of Seigaton|
A warwloon,
8 wehid unt
° e A dvordure.
| _COOLNESS or ¢
CONRAD.
* HE recent death of CE. Con.
rad, one of the plonecrs of
Northern Montana, and ene |
of Hs Les. known and highly
respected citizens, recalled many inter:
esting stories In which hs wag thie pen.
tral figure. He was a member of the
convention which framed the Constita.
tion of the Rais, he founded the tows
in whieh his beta gtinl homes was balls,
he was the procldent of the town site
cvnpany and of the bank, bul large
interests In many im ant busliess
enterprises, but nover aspired to pabile
office
nig of Ble friends, sooaliing of the
dead man, gail: “He was ahi of the
conlest wen In the fare of danger that
I ever knew. Jie wan alea one of the
best Indian traders that evor ese io
this country. Tle had pregt power
over the Indians and made them de
He was a member of
Mosebis's band, which become fainans
in the Civil War for i's daring ab
though he was only gixteon vesrs oid
whom he Iolned the eovsiraml
“1 remember” sald one of Wa old |
friende. “one time, whesi be was one of
a small party gent to the Blackfest
Reservation to arrest an Iodlan boy
who had heen charged with killing a
calf belonging to the Conrad Company.
There was at least Hye thousand war
riors camped at the place, We found
the boy, and neither be nor hls father
denied that wo had ths elglit person,
Just as I had put the boy on a horse
rod was binditig bio thers the father
raised his rifle. levellsd it at my hesd
and sald something 1 conid not nade.
stand. The leader of our party
whipped out bis six shooter and wes
about to shoot the Inlan wha was
flning at re. Another Indian gave
ahd in a mement we
wore surrounded by a thousand wae
thors, nearly all of whom were armed.
Things looked pretty serious for us
and f Healy, our leeder, had shot we
would bave bein wiped off the face of
the earth. Bot Mr. Conrad grabbed
his gun and ovtpelled him to put 1
np. told the Indians that the ley
would not be larmed if they allowed
him to go with ue; that he would be
tried at Benton for killing the esif,
and that, even if he wore found gulity,
be would be returned safe and well.
‘Anil If sou kill us’ he sald, ‘the sol
ders will come and kill you all. Make
the father of the boy put down his
rifle and we will proinlss not to bust
the boy.’ The rifle was taken from
the angry father, bat the crowd would |
Bot minke rows for ue to ride awsy
Conrad, after patieving with then for
quite awhile in vain, oid us to raw
our guns, but not to shapt vat we
had to. Then be told the lodians that |
the first mag who touched the horse's
reins he would kill tnstantly, and that
Af they gave us any trouble we wanld
kill the boy. even if we bod all to te
killa] in return. After a moment's
hesitation they began to glee way as
we mivanced. When we were clear
of them we pul up our guns, and were
thankful that throngh the courage and
i good maagement of Mr. Conrad we
had escaved with our Hyves, The hoy
got two years In the penitentiary, and
returned to his tribe a better mss
baviog learned a trade in prison.”
Another friend told a story of how
Mr. Conrad had been taught a lesson
in hospitality by an Indian “Conrad
used to have a cabin near his place of
business.” sald the story teller, “where
he allowed the Indians to ‘put up’
when they came to trade, One day an
oid Indian, known as Tall Feather, a
famous hunter, came with an un
usually fine lot of skins and furs, and
Conrad, being anxious to make a good
trade, told the old man to make him.
self and his family at howe in ths
cabin, which they did. The next day
the Indian's wares ‘were examined,
and a trade, highly satisfactory to
the wiite man, was consummated
But Tall Feather was so well pleased
with the eabin and (ts comforts that
be told his host that he would stay
several weeks, Conrad hinted that
other Indians mish! come and ro
quire the place but the old Indian
would not take a hint, and finally had
to be told that he must wove on.
“0 will go,’ sald the crafty old man,
but you have tqught me a lesson
Next year, when I come with a load
oi of skins, 1 will trades when 1 am ready
to return home, snd not when 1 ar
rive. I have learned that you like we
better before than after the tends!
Mr. Conrad sald that Tall Feather
bad taught Bim a good fesson in polite. |
poss as well as in Indian business |
matters. New York Tribune.
RAILOR GIRLS ADVENTURES
A siugunlar story of the sea was wld
at the Bristol police court. A pir of
fifteen, who fst gare her name as
Ellen Gorden, but afterward admitted |
that she wag Esther Mellwan, waz
charged with wandering abrond with:
out visible meding of subsistence. The
prisoner, who was ¢isd in a rough
Enit of men's clothes, erled bitterly,
aud hid her face 8s ie stood in the
dock.
A river policeman stated that when
fn Prince's street that morning he
heard some men talking about a wo- |
man dressed ag a man who was being
pall off at the board of trade oflevs,
His inquiries there proved fruitless,
but outstde he saw the prisoner stand.
Ang among sone other sailors. When
%e spoke to her she burst Into tears
and admitted ber sex. lle belleved
she had salled as messman and stew.
ard. She was being pald off from the
steamship Gem, which had just ar
rived at the Biistol docks.
At the police station the acensed
stated that her sister lived at Wish.
art, In Scotland. Ble admitted ‘she
at Wisiare
CWas susp]
Pored friesds were helping themselves
Be yas poking aver bin opels,
to her sister, fo whom they
* telegraph, the prisoner sald she
aia not wish to do so, as she left on
acovant of her sister's harshnwes,
The magistrate's clerk: “Could not
youn get into a Saoteh ship as steward:
chu ¥!
MsEwan-"When mr hair pots
longer.”
Tle bench ordered a remand until
the sext day,
McEwan, it 8 state]. had acrome
pHslied only one of her Ygrages upon
the Geom, which vessel she jolned at a
port in Scotland,
Further Iunutiries into the coes have
brotight to Might a remarkable story of
wr gdventores In boy's clothes, Bha
badl heen living with a married sister
thoes she semetimes worked as a boy,
bist the peasan of this (x not clear. A
book chime into her bands tnntaining
the story of a girl who, unhappy at
Brevi, raf Seay to sea dressed sa A
near Glascow, and while |
EN ABE SS dnb i hI SS ob al
a
i
Wn A ME np
Esther MeEwan thenght this |
ren a similar eseapade.
Bier of 1807 she ran sway to Dundes,
ad there went as cabin boy on board
In the process of Professor Hofrath's
Mosellg moiftification of the bones of
the leg is cured by removing the dis
ensefl part and replacing it with a
filing of jodeform, sesamoel and sper.
nigeltl, Roentgeo-ray pletures of cured
lege were lately shoe to he Vienna
Medical Boclety.
ma ——
Roller bearings for marine engines,
Dr. PP. M. Tasker suggests, shoud in
crease the revolntions from seven io
fen per cent. &r more. Ball bearings,
} We hilig even further Jesmening friction,
“have disadvantages for heavy work,
aud are pat to be ciawidered for eny
but the saallost engines of launcher
The priticipal comsiercinl sonroes of
starch ar veredis and potatoes. Of
the coreni. corn i the most Imperiant,
PH : , + | 183 por cent the starch uae
dan so atiraciive that she resolved | T68.3 por cent of all the starch mass
In Beptoms
factured in this country in the federal
L OEnSsUR year laving been produced fram
Fit Potatoes were the souree of four
A consliny steamer eailad the Hacoy.
ery. On this vessel she remained only ©
a fortnight. jsnding at Newport. 8he
ghve her home as Alan Gorden,
Foom Drandes she shipped in a boat
bound for Valparaleo, and, having com-
: : oe 1 oout among the w w Fork Cathe.
pleted the voyage, she was Mseharged | wl sang the windows of Yorke Cathe
#1 Cardi. At Penarth she soon obs
tained another berth, this fins on
boar! the steamship Gem, where she
acted dy mess oom steward, No one
suspected that she was & girl until
Alexandria, the vessel x destination was
reached, and here each member of the
crew hind to pass the doctor, with the
rexnlt that the girl was compelled to
admit her sex. The captain of the
fiom, therefore, brought her back as 8
fablil passenger. but she appears to
have continged to wear the boy's |
clothes during the return vorage. It
ia probmbie that the reason of the
Treas recm steward” Belang trans
ferred to the cabin 41] pot remain a
fered shoard, and it 8 not surprising
that the enliors talked the matler over |
oi reaching port
The girl I» now recetving kindly care
and attention. Khe In a gulch witted
child of fair education, and from re
marks which she has let drop 1 1s
clewr that the rough manners of sald |
ors 1m the ships on which sabe sailed
were very mepellant to her Rhee 444
fot ke the sen a! all, and Nad she
only known the way in which abe |
wontid have had to rough It she would
sever have ron away. Thedtwe dis.
hate notes which are in her povsess
won relating to her voyages ta Alex.
sadeia and Valparsiss are made ont
in the name of Alla Gordon london enuld not penetrate, and nature gave
them & Jong snout, 8 Hide that 40 tough |
Telegraph,
INQU ISITIVE E MOOSR
Not infrequently the pine lumber
culties fire surprised while at work
by the propetve of inquisitive moose
a) deer. who evidently cannat wader |
stand the wranicg of the rythmle fall
of flix a%e Jastancex safe on record |
in which choppers have bern killed by
the 1ufuriated onslanght of ball moose,
prolially vexed at having been hroughy |
ong Gialancss to sve aothing more In.
teroiting than men chopping dows |
trees,
Ar frrascible sportsman, dlagusted
with Incompetent geidos snd uncon. |
genta] entipanions ia former years,
set pt an bls aulumn campalen with
only a lad, wha was to 5ct as camp at-
tendant. The est chap was Ture
nisl «1 with an aficlent tin heen with
wiih te summon bls master to meal
ar when Hie presence was desirable at
he tent, :
p evenins Ble eall was angwersd
by a loarse Dicer at» Mlstance, and the
tad, not knowing what it meant, kept
on repeating his Blowing, ont] to bia
amageaieat and fone a Luge mooss
sane asking ont of the woods in 3
inte of wild escitianent,
The ervature stood staring j= aston.
fshimient at the caller Tor a full ninate,
Surte which the old hunter il wit!
ety tes! of him In most po erect
$Y. is hunter had the long.
coveted chatee to KU rn moose apd
socnre 8 sfopendones bead, and kis
weapons were a fishing reddy 8 shat
un amd an empty cartridge belt
Ils survey ended, the lordly moose
Faves a snort of disgust and tured
away, aml the hunter's opporionity
Was pons,
- AN AGAIXET ALLIGATOR.
A Clore
ts Poultry gd Binek Parm Bad a
ively srienee recently. Mr.
Char ser has a umber of gogts. OF
ate he has missed two or thre, anid
mite thor same of hls ool
bis West. This morning be cauglt the
hielo the acl Just lowk of his
house Is Lake Copeland. Far a year
fie has at times patios] a food: siged
mitigaror In tne lake This mors ne, 8%
‘Ng ats
tention was arrested Ly the hieating
of a goat at the margin of the izke.
He ran to the spot, snd found the
‘gator with the godt In bis jaws, bat
tangled In some grapevines, so that he
feoubl not get Into the water with io
Mr. Clouser seized one aml of the ani
wal, while the ‘gator stuck to the
other, Finally he succeeded in forcing
the ‘gator to loosen his hold sand get
back into the lake. The goat was ak
ready dead. Now Mr. Clouser has a
shark hook, halted with the viscern of
the dead goat, and set in the lake, He
hopes to secure a ‘gator. — Florida
Tine lnlen and Citizen.
The mission of France, according to
Leroy-Boileaw, is to build a trans Sus
baran railway to the Lake Chad res
glon, which he looks on as a Kind of
Edey, with fertile soll and valuable
metallic e depostta
er, proprictar of the Oak
i fnshi: “Me all the same slum
Guy --New York Held,
and a sovereign In his pocket.
paper baskets are wow scarce In that
tern per dot, the remainder soming
from wheat and roots other than pe
taloes, among they casas,
According 16 the Lancet, a peeniiar
“glass disease’ Ir s5ld to have broken
dral, Romie of the thirteenth and fours
teenth century windows have already
| been removed with (he hope that the
spread of the epldemie, which spade
to be due tos funiga, will be arrested
Bae of the panes are perforated and
FALE AWAY to such Hn exions that tha
Siasw crusabics at the slightewt tach,
The Westinghouse magnetic brake |
Acty In three ways by applying resist.
wane to the wheels It lols them
down: the (orrent for energizing the |
silpper msgstr ta dovived from the mas
tors which, In the einergoncy, ron as
generators. The brake is operated hy
the mavw handles whieh controle the
motors. In a series of recent testy on |
2 slat, and cattle te often fed on
ing fifteen niles an Dour were stoped |
4 Leeda elevtrie line. heave ears run.
“dead” without sein
sand, In twenty.
five feet,
When sas! was peed the
distances wis reduced to fifteen to
twenty fost,
: Ar
A Bstaraliet explains wir hogs have |
& tough hide Ly refersnee to this habits |
of the anlinal's predecessors. They |
Gepetided for thelr sumtenance on roots,
acorns and ast, which they got in the
woods, but they encountered thers
various wikl beasie from the atiacks
of which they needs] protection. To
encape them the Bogs sought refuse in
thickets that other Iarye animals
all over, but particularly along the
back and the shoulders, and & cont of |
bristles along which thorns would |
slide harmicesiy,
Chilasse Naming,
A Chinese woman, Joins and pretty,
with a girl companion of about ber!
own apd Was makitz 8 tour of ne!
spection throagh New York Ir could
not be determiioed by an enloker
what er obifect might be. Bhe was in.
teusely intersted in the sky serapors,
Land went In and out wf buildings with
the activity and persisiency of a book
agent. However, she carried nothing
in ber hand but e& paper fan, which |
she opened and closed duintily with
8 rattle of Jude bracelets. She and ber
frivad went In and out of elevators
and rode to giddy bewmhis. With no
purpose that any one consid detect, they
peered bere and peeped there-all of
the time opening sod shutting doors
With siy engerness and much enrioaity.
Firally some cos, whe had met hem
repeatediv in the course of the day. i
gskedl what they were dolng The
Chinese ronald Atgwered Guick as a
ming to
Oh! Such a Sadoess!
Employes about the courts sre tell
Ing a story ut the csyense of Levy
Abrams, (interpreter In the Crimipal
Court.
Mr. Alranis was anxious to get some
cual
*¥es" sald the deiler, “1 can giv
you some, but all my tea fis are or
Can you got & wagun!”
Mr. Abrams went fo Lis friend |
*Johnnie” Beart,
Certainly “Johanie™ cond turnleh
an a wigen, Le svonid send toto
the coal yeni,
Mr. Abiagzs went 29 the con! yard
trivmpbantly and tid the coal man
the Ho bad the wagon ready.
"Where's your wap? asked the
coal oman, COU “out and foal lug
alwut
Mr. Abrams nearly fainted whan he
found provided a skeleion laomber
wages, with bape bulsters and reach,
such as are peed for hagline telenbone
pois ~Baltiniore News
a of » Top Mat.
A lady wlio lives (na fashionable
saburb is of 8 saving turn of mind, and
manages to combine ber love of on
ny with a due regurd for ber hus
band's sppediranee by turning his eld
top-hats into waste paper baskets, The
ether day she saw ob the hall table a
prehistoric lat, venerable with age
Ehe seized it in triumph, and bad just |
removed the brim, covered the body
with light blue silk and was finishing
It off with a tasteful arrangement of |
lace and bows when soe was foters
rupted by the servant: “Please, mam,
the piano tuoer says he can’t find his |
top-hat nowheres; he left it in the hall,
Be save” Tun minutes later that tuner
left the house with a cap on his Bead
fessor Thomas Bhs
Waste
ot Ee i the of dons po
conait of a4 rarity. A 98 of coe
tarniie may improve ansimsl mone
than mediving Alwas resort tH -
chanite of fool when thialmals ore
to kaw appelite :
FEODING TURNIPEO cows ‘
It is stated that if wps are fed
after, instead of befo milking (he
odor nit bpartedd (de nest mille
ing. A tenspaonial of Hipeive, adde
th a pall of Jukews: Wailer a8 8
i drink for the cow, elated aro
remedy for the ditional when the Die
Bipm re fed
ROTATION FOR FOTO GROWE
A very mood rotaties fo grow pow
ercia) fertibeor; thoex! year ood
whith sriln, mised wi sleike orf oy :
y tlover, the third soarit ote Crop :
i tlov rel and plow adda ths fal
have it ready to grows potatoes om
agin, You get the lvanioge of #
large amount of mittencus melted
in ihe sail from Ue ds and stable
of the clover, Wa apprsanars Pemds :
east and work tole ith 8 eddie i
cial fertilizer we plarwhh slintersy
and apply in the pla ar the Thing
the pitato 5 planted. rolessor O, 0
Woods.
POISONOUS RAGE.
The bad repotation second-zrowtly
rForghinm seems to hamtified by The
| results of recent enfeal tests
which the young anstonted stalks
and Maver were {Onno contain pn.
gle mold, one of the roost of ail Sy
onk It has not be fod in ful) srowy
plenty, but only In t stunted plants
that come up after ¢ main oon hae
been removes Theold Is gulekly
changed by the plamnto other cole
poundie, fo that thedsoncus period
the sional growth ‘hou: lnjory In
fields which a few oka later caused
many deatha,
MARSH PASTURA! FOR SHEEP,
Nearly all the dises of sheep are
parasitic in thelr pate For fustadoe,
sich Jisrases of she as gid, grub in
the head liver fakad tape worms
an all of taal elewe seb parasites in.
fest iparely Janda Vhen the sheep
pasture is In the nity ther fake
them up, and the peites at once hes
gin 1 do their dow work. Sheep
enn be Kept on mary land, providiog
it ia ear the wea. hey are m5 Lops
in Lineoinahire an Kent, England.
The snitne particles hich come down
fir ther rain, seem fe destructive to
such parasites. Fant is also pore
troulilesotie on neby 1andt~Prow
HOW TO FI CHICKS.
Met of the Jom among young
chicks may be traceither 10 the food
| given or the way Is given. Teo
mach of the best of will sooner op
Inter bring abou: dnders, sand when
cove & young chick begine to droop
It Ix Alsons fonosel to testose it too
healthy condition. We have found
that side fron thecvssary heat ree
quired for the fest x days the chicks
weed bat Hite, TE need Bo food for
the first twenty-fo hours, bat prefer
| to remain tucked wler the folds of
the Novem, where 'v can have quiet
amd warmth. Do t dletarh them In
trying to forre th te eat. When
rattive demands they will begin te
oak shout, and th we most supply
sone Kind of food 3t in sasily digests
ef. Bialé erackeroroken mil wolste
endl with sweet diner staked
make & very good at fool. Croshed
or rolled cats arsise good, but ne
Hattie what is gin, do net have i$
too wet, Sestieene grit over foor
or brooder and gt them fresh water
or milk. After tudays lot the prin.
cipal food be nul oats soattered
smong chal or ken straw. The
Uttle fellows wilat once learn to
scratch lke the | fowls, and this
belpa to Kern thethenlthy. At frony
seven th nlve wes they should be
ready to market me and Farm,
WINTE EGGS,
It often seems too & hard provision
of mature that o hens shoold hay
pleatifally in the mover, when egw
being ten cents a den, and go Dock or
us cotapletely, in t winter, when the
egRs are worth Im twenty-five to
fifty vents a dozer Bur the truth ie
that It is the faglef pelther nature
or tha hens The sole tronlile is that
we da not get eur ne into the propee
condition to lay ex. We are not fale
to the her 4
If there is one wot estallished In
Chesology, it Is th the fondness of
fowls for bags an wonos is not an
unnatarsl taste. Ge ankmal matten
thus secured suppl 3 mest Poportant
element in the ofa toed, And WB
is Inrgely Deciuse tn Bets Ginuol pte
cure this food Inwinter that toy
cease to Jay eggs. nother reason for
few ers In winter that the hens are
rot only Bot in the at physical condi
tion, hat the food wy ger does nef
contals the properdements for egg
making.
Fool! containing « necessary eles
ments must be supded of we are to
bave full egy basket is for this
reasol that the feeng of green out
bones bas become s popular among
nopey making ponitwen and woe
en. Green cut bone spplies this needs
ed element as does bother food, and
at a less expense tha grain can bey
fol. It keeps the twis healthy, it
makes egps, and is, lsbort an indlse
pensalile food —L. AW, in Orange
Judd Parmer, :
ta loon with either farmanure or cone