New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892
July 20, 1887 · Page 2 of 8
OCR Text
FABM AID HOUSEHOLD, PHILANTHROPISTS and handsomely*clad. He desired, as Ayrshire Anecdote. feeding finely-chopped eggs as the first far as possible, to relieve them of the meal has been abolished, experience On one occasion the minister of an' Great in His Fortune and Great In sense of being paupers, and by his The Thin "Substance Tailing: the having taught that such food cause? Ayrshire parish Carrying out an old His Gifts to the ToorHis Love for Breedidg American Horses. treatment of tiiem actually placed Place of Wood for Many Purposes. bowel disease. A mixture of one part His Daughter. custom, gave it out one Sunday that he them upon a distinguished footing. When the breeder seeks to create a corn meal, two parts ground oats, one There are few things that can not bemade The aristocratic prejudices of the inmates part middlings, and one part ground would visit the Balmurray on the Many years ago Mr. W. W. Corcoran family, his first care must be to place out of paper. Its adaptability is are the sub3ect of much sly joking, meat, to which a little salt and fine his stock on land'isuited to their peculiarities. said Tuesday, and all the herds and others astoni&hing, and the wildest speculations but Mr. Corcoran merely sm'iled bone meal are added, is ni.xed with Saddle horses are best reared lound about were to be there at the "I mean to be selfish about my as to its future are excusable at this. He wanted to reach a class boiling water or milk, and cooked in on broken, hilly ground, for the habit appointed time to be catechised. Adam? monej. It shall be all for my own enjoyment most difficult to get atgentlewomen, when we reflect upon the present ueses the shape of bread. This is crumbled of sure footedness ic insures. Harness M'Haffie was the herd there then, and dining my lifetime. I ska oor but proudand he did so, humoi and fed to the chicks every two hours, this material. As the delicate substance horses require for their development *ii their harmless notions. He spoke 1 the night before set off to the village give and enjoy the happiness of those except that one of the meals may consist can be made to serve for steel a rolling country, the moderate of them as his guests, and on New of mashed potatoes. After the first to whom I give. I shall not leave for some bits of things to mense thehouse or iron, it is not ffieult to understand irregularities of wh'ch give good knee Year's day his first call was always week, screenings, wheat and ground much behind me." aad entertain the minister and how paper is for many purposes now action, and render them able in after paid them. The gratitude and affection meat are kept 4n troughs where the others, for there was aye a tea after days to cheerfully breast a hill. On no taking the place of wood. Mention He carried out this programme of these old ladies was most touching. chicks can get them at any time, while account should a rich, deep, alluvial wonderfully well, and he has practiced the catchising was done. Among was before made of a new mill in He enjoyed, as they did, the gravel and water are kept within the noble and enlightened selfishness soil be chosen to breed saddle horses quaint pTetense that he was their guest Sweden for the manufacture of paper other things he had to get there wasr reach. of Peter Cooper and George Peabody. on. Having secured a desirable tract for the time. His birthday was invariably from moss. Paper of different thicknesses of course, a bottle of whisky, and After a few weeks they are fed only and pasteboard made of the Mr. Corcoran now lies at his home, spent with them also. of land, the breeder next must decide but Pate M'Ghie, the it,shoemaker,camowh three times a day 6n the mixed food when Ada was getting f. coiner of Sixteenth and streets, what class of horses he intends to produce Unlike many generous rich men, ~"j ^1 **.*^.v, *v.* ITUCU auaui naa getting ll, WHO CUIUS white moss have already been shown, ^^J^ partially paralyzed, and with the slim if saddle horses, the sire should l^TS^^ stea^d who, in giving, take one line of benevolence of cooked, though cooking is preferable. the latter even in sheets three-quarters and he treated Adam to a gill, and chance for recovery alotted to men of to the exclusion of all others. be an Anglo-Arabian color, dark bay, Three times a week a small of an inch thick. It is as hard as wood, Adam treated him, and the landlord his great age. He*is 88 years old. All Mr. Corcoran was truly catholic in his dapple brown or black in conformation allowance of chopped meat raw or and can be easily painted and polished. treated tbera both, and they both Washington is concerned for himall gifts, the Corcoran gallery, which the build should be close-knit, the cooked, is given, as well as chopped treated the landlord, and kept at it It has all the good qualities, but none possesses many superb works of art of the lich and all the poor. In the head handsome, with the dish-face of the cabbage, or any convenient green food. till Adam was hardly able to stacher the best foreign and American painters churches he is prayed for, and if good of the defects of wood. The pasteboard Arab the ears stnj41 and pointed, the, out of the village, with the bottle in. and sculpors, is liberally provided will could raise him up he would be raised can consequently be used for eyes prominent and full of intelligence rWeed Out the Flock. his breast-pocket and the groceries in for. Its last important purchase was up. For nearlv forty years he has door and window frames, architectural the forehead wider, the muzzel so small This is the best season for classification the pock of plaid. However, it the $15,000 Corot from the Morgan lived in the fine old home on street, that he could drink from a tumbler, ornaments, and all kinds of furniture. of ewes and disposing of the poorest. was a good moonlight night, and he sale. Its value to students is immense, just opposite Lafayette park. A great the neck long and graceful, cut in at got on finely till just as he was coming By this time a correct judgment Paper made from strong fibers, such every provision being made for study, garden runs all the way to I street, the throttle this will insure his get round his own house end he trippit as linen, can, in fact be compressed of the lamb or lambs reared by each Besides this, Mr. Corcoran may be considered and the most fashionable part of against being pullers the lips, when at ower a graip that somebody had left into a substance so hard that it can not almost the founder of Columbian ewe can be formed and the weight of Washington the old time garden blooms rest,firmly closed the back short and lying, and fell breadth and length on be scratched. As houses have been university, and his gifts to the each fleece is also known. The profitableness and blossoms. Formerly Mr. Corcoran straight, the withers rather low and the stanes and as he tottered forward made of this novel building material, University of Virginia, and Washington of a ewe depends upon the entertained much and often, but since round, the fore-arm and hind-quarters to fall the bottle came out of his pouch so almost everything requisite to complete and Lee university have been magnificent. number and quality of the lambs she the death of his only child, Mrs. Eustis, and went a' to smash and when he fell muscular the ribs deep, the legs large and furnish a residence has since He was a genuine friend to raises, her weight of wool, etc. One there has been no gayties in the great he came right down on the broken, been manufacutred of paper. After and flat,the crown bone short,the foreleg Washington enterprises. Any entertainment red, buck house. He has always been ewe may raise a lamb while another glass with his face, and cut himself the Breslau fireproof ehimney, it is that promised fairly he was measuring at least eight inches and glad to see his friends, but the death of loses hers yet the former will shear most fearfully. The wife heard the quite possible, for instance, that cooking certain to be a subscriber to," and was a half under the knee, the height not his cherished daughter has not been such a poor fleece that she is really the scraichs o' him and ran out and had or heating-stoves can be made of thus of great and substantial benefit to to exceed fifteen hands, three inches, forgotten. him carried in, and sorted up his face, less profitable. The loss of a lamb similar materials. These paper stoves the city. the horse well broken, and ridden in making a terrible lamentation over the are annealedthat is painted over Over Georgetown, in 1798, then often occurs through no fault of the It will be gald of him that as long as difficult ground. A steeplechaser broken bottle, and wondering however with composition which becomes part a mere hamlet, Mr. Corcoran was born. ewe. Nevertheless, prolificacy is a desirable he lived, he lived. Up to Monday afternoon would be the most desirable of all Adam was going to face the minister of the paper, and is fireproof. It is His father had been a shoemaker, but he attended to business, going quality in a ewe. A good ewe thoroughbreds, as his education would in the morn. When the morn came it said to be impossible to burn them out, afterwaid rose to be mayor of the down to his office in Riggs' bank, and properly treated before and after yeaning be transmitted to his progeny, in so far was decided to make the minister believe and they are much cheaper than iron town, and was a useful citizen. Mr. his head was as clear as a bell. He can rear two good lambs without as that they would be more readily that Adam was from home, and stoves. Bath-tubs and pots are made Corcoran's early advantages were not was fond of social visiting, and had an injury to herself. Some ewes are better taught than other horses. The dams keep him all the time shut up in the in the same manner by compressing great But he read what books he enormous acquaintance. Persons meeting should be selected for stoutness of constitution, mothers than others. box-bed, and this was done accordingly the paper made of linen fibers, and annealing. could get and improved himself and him somtimes got an idea that his docility of temper, perfect and when the people arrived and It certainly will not be profitable to The tubs, we are assured, soon saw a way to rise. He had natural faculties were failing because he did soundness jjnd abundant good looks when the minister came an evasive reply keep the interior sheep through next will last forever and never leak. Placed commercial genius, and from a clerkship not at once place them, but considering was given to his inquiries about highlj-, but not clean bred. The sire, winter. If the clasification is made on the fire they will not burn up, and he gradually acquired a business the prodigious number of persons Adam. now, the rejected class can be made to produce stately harness horbes, it is almost impossible to break or injure of his own. He was always a handsome, he had met during his long and busy ready for market on grass which them. Our rooms can be floored piesentable man, and even in should also be thoroughbred for heavy life, his memory was remarkable. He After going over the scandal of the makes the cheapest flesh. Many farmers with this wonderfully accommodating those eaily days, when social distinctions harness work, t, xlcen hands would not liked to sit behind a pair of good district, as usual, the minister set them will find the most profitable market material, as proved by the Indianapolis were much more observed than be too high, when combined with due horses. Only two years ago his carriage all up in a row and looked grave, and for these culls on their own farms. skating-rink, before refered to in this now, he had no tiouble in persuading horses bolted. The old gentleman size and symmetry of form. The first all the people looked as solemn as ii Truly there is a prejudice among consumers journal. It may here be mentioned the pietty daughter of Commodoie was seen sitting back quite cool and cross of such a sire fiom clean-bred they had set up to be shot. Turning to against aged ewes. But this is that cracks in floors, around the skirting-board Moms to many hnn. The old commodore composed during the runaway. He Clydesdale or Percheron mares, gives Mrs. M'Haffie, the minister said: "Well, chiefly owing to the fact that such are or other parts of a room, was wroth when the proposition drove those same horses pooh-poohing excellent results the second cross on Janet, as I think you are the oldest, often put upon the market in poor may be neatlv and permanently filled was made, and like Col. Caiy when the danger, until at last the clamor oJt these half-bred fillies, the sire being and therefore the fittest person present,. condition. A lean sheep does not make by-thoroughly soaking newspapers in George "Washington wanted to many his friends and acquaintances forced also thoroughbred, produces three^ I'll just begin with jou, and the lirsl good mutton, whatevei its age. It is paste made of one pound of flour, three beautiful Mary Caiy, her father mfoimed him to part with them. quarter bred beauties of much substance, question I have to ask yon is this: What not claimed that fattening an old ewe quai ts of water, and a tablcspoonf ul of the lover that his gul had Mr. Corcoran was an ardent democrat, was it that" occasioned the fall of and abounding in good qualities. will make her yield the best mutton alum, thoroughly boiled and mixed. higher aspnations. In spite of the and for many years had announced Adam?" Janet looked as if she had To create a type and preserve but it may be made good and palatable. The mixture will be about as putty, commodore's swearing and bluster ns, his intention ot living until a democratic seen a ghost, and'thinking that some its best features, is easier and more When the ewes are culled out every and may be forced into the-crasks with though, his daughter was obsmate and president was elected. His delight one had told the minister of her husband's remunerative than to do as farmers year, there will be soon no very old a caseknife. It will harden like papiermache. became Mrs. Corcoran. Afterward, at Mr. Cleveland's election was adventure, she replied: "Deed, ones. I his is not the season for the generally do, viz.: breed for general when poveity had reduced the Morris boundless. He and Mrs. Cleveland sir, it was the graip, sir! He wasna consumption of salt pork and all purposes because it is cheap and easy. famJy, Mi Corcoran had an opportunity were great friends, and on his last birthday Doors, which one would think were that up, sir, aither but he just trippit things considered, mutton will be a of repaying the debt by supporting he showed with pride a splendid polished mahogany but that they swing over the graip at the hoose-en', sir. It good thing for the farmer's larder. them all comfortably. But meanwhile bouquet of La France roses sent him bv so lightly, and are "free fiom swelling, micht hae happen't tae yersel', sir. He Make the F^tii Home Pleasant. the old commodore had found out that the lady of the white house. When the cracking, or. warping, are composed if#so pleasant that the hadna aboon three gills in him, but the the shoemaker's son was no ordinary Yes make The Cellar in Summer. project was started, som years ago, of each of two thick paper boards, stamped bottle made an unco hand o' his face.. man. In time the banking house of growing bojs and' girls will not be At this season the cellar must be kept a democratic newspaper (not The Post) and moulded into panels and glued Deed! ye ken evervthing, sir, an' it's Corcoran & Brisgs was established, looking forward to the time when they cool, dry, ventilated and clean. The being founded in Washington, Mr. together with glue and potash, and then nae use tryin' to hide ocht frae ye. but it was not until the loan necessitated will be old enough to leave,the farm in doors must be kept closed as much as Corcoran was enthusiastic about it and rolled through heavy rollers. These Adam, ye may come oot o' the bed noo, by the Mexican war was taken search of a pleasanter place. We know possible during the day, but they may furnished the money. He lost on the doors are first covered with a waterproof the minister has heard a'boot it, though up by the house that it came prominent a well-to-do farmer, having eight children, be opened about midnight, and remain venture at the rate of $1,400 a week, coating, then painted and varnished the Lord kens what limmer telt him." betore the public. Then Mi. Corcoian who, as soon as they are old open until early morning. During until it at last fell through of its own and hung in the ordinary way. Accordingly Adam opened the close*bed, foresaw that he would become enough to support themselves, leave the latter half of the night the air weakness. His three grandchildren are Few persons can detect that they are and came out and showed himselt one of the richest men in America. their home. Of the five boys, not one all grown. His eldest grandson, George is cool, and air must be admitted to not made of wood, particularly when to the amazement of the minister, who He was even then noted for his remains on the farm. They have gone Eustis was married this spring to Mary used as sliding doors. Black walnut keep the cellar dry and pure. If kept could not understand the situation till public and private charities, but he to clerkships and other positions, in Eustis, the daughter of Senator Eustis. is said to be getting -very scarce in this clean, not a great deal of airing will Adam related the whole affair to tbt had not arranged the vast schemes of The young couple are, therefore, first preference to staying on the much despised country but picture-frames are now amusement of every one present, and be needed. If the cellar is damp, fruits benevolence which have occupied his cousins. His second grandson, William made of paper, and colored like walnut, farm. A glance in the home may it soon became a by-word, "Hoo did and vegetables decay sooner, and it is later yeais. He had but one child. Eustis, is at eollege. His granddaughter, and are so perfect that no one could account somewhat for this. There has Adam fall?" "Ower a graip, sir." more unhealthful than is generally supposed. Louise Corcoran, an beautiful and interesting Lulie Eustis, ie pretty girl, detect them without cutting them. never been any effort to make it attractive Many attacks of fever, and girl, in whom he was quite and one of the most graceful horsewomen Paper-pulp glue, linseed oil, and carbonate for the children. The parents' diphtheria, or other diseases,result from bound up. His wife was then dead. How Poor Pass Was Rescued^ i Washington. of lime or whiting are mixed aim has been to work and save, with damp, unventilated, unclean cellars. Louise. Corcoran was regaided as legitimate together and heated into a thick cream, Some years ago Mr. Corcoran remarked One beautiful summer evening, the scarcely a thought that their children Keeping the cellars clean and ventilated, prey by all the designing which, on being allowed to cool, is run to a fnen* "People tell me I am had any other need than food and avenues of a large city were thronged is the best way to keep it drv it members of the diplomatic corps in into moulds and hardened. generous. I have tried to be, yet I clothing. They are active, brightmmded may be necessai\ to use other means. with people on their way to the different Washington. Mr. Coicoran bitterly never wake up in the night that some Drawing-rooms can be set off by bo\ and girls. It is no wonder that Lime placed in the cellar will absorb churches. At a certain comer, however, opposed her marriage to a foreigner, ease which I might have relieved does handsome pianos manufactured from the dullness and monotony becomes unendurable. moisture and noxious gases, and thus although professing perfect willingness several persons were standings not come to me. After all, the part of papera French invention. A beautiful help to keep the air pure. Charcoal is for her to marry any deserving my fortune which I have most enjoyed gazing apparently into the air. Others, musical instrumant of this kind also a great absorber of gases. The young man she fancied, no matter how is the part I have given away." has lately been an object of great curiosity soon joined them, until so large temperature of the cellar may be lowered This farmer does not hesitate to small his fortune, only he must be an to the connoisseurs and musical crowd was gathered that the way was bv putting a tub of broken ice spend money in farm improvements, in American. But the young lady was INFORMATION ABOUT AKKANSAW. savants of "Paris. The entire case is completely blocked. 4$ and salt in. The rapid melting of the full of life and liked admuation, as fine stock, or in anything that will advance made of .compressed paper to which is ice cools the air. This will be convenient \oung things of her sex do. One day, his financial interest but any Soon the windows along the stree** A Fine Collection of Native Grasses given a hard surface and a cream-white when a considerable quantity of when she -was entertaining a forbidden outlay for the children's pleasure is were thronged with people, and a num.* A Curious Library. brilliant polish. The legs and sides %l admirer, who was a member of the fresh meat or fiuit is to be preserved. regarded as unnecessary and extravagant. are ornamented with arabesques and of persons were seen on the tops of. tLt When a stranger with credentials Spanish legation, she heard her fathers It is impossible to keep the cellar in floral designs. The exterior and as houses in the neighborhood. J% drops into Little Rock and expresses a step an the hall. The young good condition unless the drainage is Children cannot feel that sense of much of the interior as can be seen desire to obtain some information about And what do yon think they saw?* grandee turned pale, as did the heed~ efficient, and there is a proper arrangement proprietorship in the farm and its profits wben the instrument is open are covered Arkansaw he is at once presented to less girl, iThe step approached nearer Clinging fo dear life to a.jutting ornament, of doors and windows. Double that is a stimulant to heads of the with wreaths and medallions Professor Thomas, and the latter says a hand was on the knob of the door ones are needed to keep the temperature near the top of a tall chprcnsteeple painted in miniature by some of household, and something is needed to "come with me," and introduces him when Mr. Grandee, forgetting all, at the right point in summer as the leading artists of Paris. The tone take its place. Some personal property, that pointed straight up into to his museum. This museum gives about his dignity, scampered under well as in winter. of this instrument is said to be of excellent even if a chicken or a pig, is a strong the soft evening air, was a black caL the stranger a very fair idea of what the giand piano in the corner. Mr. quality, though not loud. The incentive. Children are sportive bv Arkansaw. can do in the line of production 'How did it get there?" was the firs* Corcoran's eyes were too quick though. broken, alternating character of piano natureall young animals are and without trying very hard. It contains, "Peg-Away Jobs" on the Farm. Going back into the hall he reappeared question every one asked, and "Horn,, music is replaced by a rich, full, continuous some diversion is essential for leisure for .one thing, a collection of 155 with a buggy whip, which he used vigorously With all due allowance for recreation, will it get down?" was the next roll of sound, resembling somewhat hours otherwise their minds will wander different kinds of grasses. "Not bad on the shins of the grandee, that of the organ. Only two of* The poor creature was looking down^ reading, etc., there come intervals in off and dwell on the attractions rfor grass," Professor Thomas will say who got out of the house as fast as his these instruments have been made and at frequent intervals it uttered ordinary work on the farm, half days supposed to pertain to village and citv in an unconcerned manner, but watching .legs could -carry him. That cutset! One is still on exhibition the other a pitiful cry, as if calling to the crowd life. or more, when farmer and men are .Miss Louise of [foreigners, and shortly the\ visitor closely to see that the has been sdld to the duke* of Devonshire.Chambers' below for help. Once, it slipped and A few dollars each year invested in South1 idle or unprofitably using their time. after she married Mr.Eutis, of Size and character of the collection has Journal. fell a short distance down the sloping reading matter will not only supply Carolina, then a young member of the had its i proper effect. Against the They might just as well be at work, side of the steeple, and an exclamation pleasant employment for leisure hours, house. Her married life was very hap-J walls, hang stalks of cotton, corn and but do not know just what to go at, of pity come from the crowd, now Couldn't Seasonably Expect I but the means of mental improvement ipy, but she did not live many year*.| other. cereals. In shining glass jars intensely interested in its fate. Luckily and the time slips away with telling as well. There are so many excellent, In 1870 she died.,of consumption, leaving are preserved, in alcohol, specimens of He popped his head cautiously inside the cat's paws caught on another pro- stories and ineffectual "putterino-" two sons and a daughter behind, entertaining publications for the young, \fmit suoh as a northern market seldom of our saootum door, just as we were jection, and for the moment it wassafe. about the place. There is plenty of !her. Her husfeand did not Ions: survive and at such low prices, that no family *sees in.a-state of nature plums as big starting oat an important leading her. The loss c& this beiored child, was #n which there are children should be work needing attention if they would as peaches, and peaches twice as big as Some looker-on suggested that it be article, and mentally cursing the innate an, overwhelming! hjow to ^Mr. Corcoran. without one ore more. But parents they .ought to be in northern eyes, only go at it The careful farmer will shot in order to save it from the more, peversity of a stubborn steel pen and a Years after-he could ot speak of should discriminate carefully between "Strawberries five inches in circumference, look out for this and always have a dreadful death that seemed to await it? bottle of limpid, mucilagenous, mudcolored iher^ithout teai-e. Only,a little while a good and a bad class of reading matter, .oranges as fine as Florida ever but no one was willing to fire the shot. "peg-away" job in m'nd for the occasion. BgO, in speakiog.of .Gen. Lee, with ink. grew, ,and apples of a size and qualitv for there is a large amount of a distanceyb Ere long a little window somT It may be cutting wood, or whoa he was on fternis of .great intirtnacy, Aiioh as New York farmers never "Don't want no lead pencils to-day, flashy, sensational character, wholly :the above the place whereen cat was .P he said: 'gdiave thejast letter forking over manure, or whitewashW P^c wner the cat was to do you?" he equivocally sang ou^/ dareamed of .producing. "We grow unfit for the young to read. en the ever wrote. It wa upon the occatfion.of se hen-hous or cow .taSaa ^Si?i5 S?5?*!^J hen-house or cow stables. Frequently "Come in, any man," was our encouraging everything that sa be produced in four There is no reason why a country death.1* stopped had determined to save it they had mj child's there are permanent improvements and response "Je^s look At em degrees,of latitude," savs the professor, home should not be a place of pleasure mounted the stairs to where the bell Therecontentment to everyfreedom member. andvsaid no more, aTOS*C0ffenrit emotion. needed, which the farmer is slow to begin what do they eost?" "fcurithere is just that difference in the is a freshness and in hung, and then by a ladder had reached but which once started, under the "Ten cents a,dozen," was the answer farm life that cannot be enjoyed when 24 .miles of territory between the the window. They had taken a. "peg-away" plan, would be accomplished in seductive, persuasive tone of voice. a person is surrounded by brick walls. He hafi already designed great charities, noifehern and -southern boundaries of board up with them, and they uow before he was aware of it. The After paying for our purchase, we With pleasant mental recreation for but rafter that he seemed ,to pre*eawe the state." pushed one end of it out of the window ground may need grading so as to give cautiously inquired: leisure hours there need be no unhappy them with greater order. He and lowered it till it was within reach Bat -what a ^curious library! The a better slope to the lawn, or to drain "Do you think they'll write?" memories of the farm to carry through established the Louise 'Jfoma far Impoverished of the cat. Then, encouraging words covers .of the books are of wood, .each a the surface water from the cellar oroatbuildnigs. The vender of confined plumbago Gentlewomen, and .upon a and signs they tried to persuade the different -specimen. The .visitor picks Hedgerows may need clearing shrugged his shoulders and made truthful plan that shows how perfectly he understood creature to step on the plank. Pass up a book. He finds that it is A solid How to Have Broilers. Zifr out. Good solid stone walls wl response: ithe art of giving. No restriction seemed to understand, and pat out one bit of wood in the shap f a hacdy a rise in this way, foot by and rod by rod Broilers have sold as high as eighty .exw-ts for these .uafortURate "The pencils look good enough but paw, but drew it back immediately and volume. .jT&y&ould, while on a .visit at a time. Roadways, bridges and ladies. They may go and come at you certainly couldn't expect them to cents per pound, wholesale, in the New at that instant one of the boys accidently not long ago, spent more time examining paths can be put in order, draining attended will, spending months or years with write at that price."National Weekly. York markets this season. But it must let go his hold, the board turnedJ the library han ho gave to the ,rast to, fences and gates repaired, .^1- their i*uuilie$, .have their luieuds with oer and the cat would certainly havebeen bo kept in view that only the best of the museum. The library WAS worfo and a great deal of permanent work them illnessthe home ig truly a A Bright St Paul Youth. dashed to the ground had it. the time, tee. for imagine one consisting ydung chicks bring the high figures* done which will add convenience, profit home, which alwa3 ready i wel-j known St Paul artist has a trusted to that means escape. of tomes made, from whit* oak r, rted*a Aw Those who make a specialty of broilers ui and increased value to the farm, come them. Nofc only every .comfort, boyEnlightening givene th tWorlde cut, ert h% if^in^ll^S^ear-e lLd who is The boys withdrew the* board, and are careful to breed, them to a certain should it at any time be soldAmerican but every luxury is provided o*r them H. beech, b.reh, red eedag, yellow pine, soon re-appearmg at the window, were sayings. Yesterday, viewing a piefcbois Agriculurtst for July. standard, so as to combine quality as iu the handsome building wittb. the pitch pine, willow, poplar, .cypres*, Itt'e seen to be lowering a basket down the old field" or long leaved pine large grounds en Massachusetts well as weight, which is done by mating side of the steeple. Pussy having now Avenue, in the meut desirable quarter *he asked who it Wasthe big lady, Plymouth Rock cocks with Asiatic He Wanted his Name Changed. d'erc, black walnut, hickory (several ceased to cry, watched it intentlv as it at the town. Mr. ^Corcoran knew that 'liberty," was the reply, 'Oh, yes, varieties), white and red maple, box hens (Brahmas or Cochins). The chicks slowly came nearer and nearer. "When- *i "Well John," said the judge to a pigtailed tie deprivation of accustomed refinenvents hs responded "iknowLiberty, Americans elder, black locust, black sumac, water it was in reach, the cat carefully pot I must be dry picked, and the skin nottorn, Celestial, "what can I do for laie in life would be hard upon wife.'* Not bad, that. The other locusg, coffee bean, wild plum, hollv. out one paw and took hold of the side while the crops should be empty. you?" wooien g6ntly nurtured therefore ctajr he was teiling a rather tall yarn basswxod papaw, bay. umbrella, wild of the basket, then as carefully repeat* The plumper the breast the better. everything, linen, chiua, glass, and to a gentleman, who interrupted him "Want to gefee name changed.** cherry, sweet gum, elm (several varieties), ed the action with the other paw, thei furniture was dainty a.nd elegant The main object at first in raising "What's your name now?" with: "Do you know George Washington sycamore, witehazeU butterunt, drew itself up, and with a violent eft They *rere to be at' no expanse of any the best broilers is to secure growth. "Sing Sing. No goodee. To much pecan, hjgkory, and twentv or more "No," said the yoongeter^* fort flung itself over the side and inti s^ kind except for ihefr clothes, and Mr. The chicks are therefore fed on food aldelman. Getee changed to Walbeo other woods, A majority of the woods ".Well, he was a wrj 'good man, whe the bottom of the basket The nex& "What was the Corcoran made It hie busms to find containing a plentiful supply of nitrogen Twice." lie.*r are handsome enough to be used for could not Mil a moment it was safely drawn np to thev out those who were ibiolutely penniJess, and phosphates. No food is given "To Warble Twice?" decorative purposes, and all window, amid loud cheers from thfr" matter?" wa* the quiek ttlort couldn't the newly hatched chicks before they and wyr *at tkw ve* 'suitably havi"ttfir piiKei^iK' "&* rSfe? same Yep. Allee same Sing Smg."~| spectatoVs"beiow.Z!Ftore"iK^Smiihl are thirty-six hoars old. The'castom of