The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, December 08, 1885, Image 10

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THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY DECEMBER 8, 1,SKA-TWELVE PAGES. Bfgtrdlog CUlcr. When yon come to cider I would wiijh U VWi ani -i . Tor I ain’t a modest feller, and 1 (fever was called meek; It wa» Jnst two years ago cdtao fall, I MyatoBUL baj m I. ••Let um mako a little cider," and “kerrcet” waa Ma reply. And though Lizzie has her notions, and is net on temperance, (And in powerful down on fiddlin', and thinks it's aln to dance), I Bet down on her objections,and went off «nd bought a preiw, And we went to smashin' for a month or more or I would work and lng the apples all the livelong day, and then In my dreams at night I'd hear the cider drippin' out again I But I tell you I wan happy when the whole blamed thing was thspugh. And Bill and I went a visitin'with nothin'else to do. And tho way we uaed that cider was astonlshln* to Tor my Lizzie wouldn't touch It. leavin' all to Bill and mel But there was one baj’l that stood there that we never touched at all. And it got so strong that one day it strolled up to make a call. And one momln' In pertlckler that old cider got strong That it waltzed out of the cellar humioin’ of a little song. And It sauntered down the medder and hae never been back slnco. Do you think I was a dreamin' ? Well, it might FACTS FOR THE FARMERS, HANDY HINTS TO HAVE ABOUT THR HOUSE. A Handle of Flint, nml Siij-ijp.tlon. about field and Orchard. There iB no feed for sheep equal to clover hay, especially if a smaller proportion of oats be allowed daily. Feeding swill to swine docs not supply them with water. Give chem pure, clean •water, and they will keep in better condi tion than withont it. Keep the seed corn dry. It is not the cold so mnch as moisture that injures it. It should be thoroughly dried and hung up before the winter sets in. A horseshoe hns been invented that comes on and off like a man’s Bhoo. A rim at the bottom and a buckle at the back hold it in place. A pad protects the bottom of tho boot. Pimnips,oyster-plants (salsify) and horso- radish may remain in the ground all winter. A portion of such crops should be stored in the cellar, however, fornso when the ground is frozen. A farmer in Lancaster, Pa., has roofed a new bam with glass. He says the cost was not a great deal more, and that the glass weighs thirteen tons, while a slate roof would weigh twenty-six tons. The libtral use of kcroseno will gTcatly assist in preventing lice in the poultry- house. The quickest and safest remedy to . rid poultry of lice is the free use of Porsian insect powder dusted through the feathers. There is no necessity for digging arti chokes. The best way to treat them iB to allow them to remain in the ground, leaving the matter of harvesting to the hogs. Enough tubers will always remain for seed next season. J. F. Heath, of Brookfield, VL, has raised ciglity-two bushels of wheat from two screw, mid E. F. Mowe r, of Barre, VI, forty bushels of wheat from one acre, 250 bushels of oats from three acres, and 110 bushels of barley from two acres. The dairy cow require* very little exer cise. She needs plenty of pnre air and moderate movement in a small inclosnrc, but every good dairyman knows his cows will seriously shrink in milk when required to walk a mile to pasture and back. A potato grower atates that by experi ment be boa discovered that tho rottmgof potatoes it duo partially to moisture. Po tatoes grown on laud that had been thoroughly unJenlrsined were sound and good, wlma those grown on land uudrained Jotted badly. Mi.isea Emma and Anna Prcssey, of Hun*- monton, N. J., have fourteen brooder- houses and a faltcniug-honse, in which they expect to raise 6000 broilers for market the coming season. They hatch all their chicks in incubutors and were very success- iul hut year. The value of farm animals in the South ern Stales it estimated to have increase, from $320,000,1100 in 1880 to $562,000,000 in 1885, over 70 per cent. Daring the same period farm products are said to have in creased $500,000,000, and pig-iron from 210.000 to 610.000 tons. Do not confine tho turkeys over ten days when fattening them, or they will lose flesh, confinement rendering them discontented, which soon results in a refusal of food. Give them plenty of charcoal, gravel, and freah'meat, with all the com they can eat. Anoverfut animal, unless for the butcher, is not desirable in all cases. Fat animals are poor breeders, os a rule, though there are exceptions, but exercise and surround ing conditions affect the animal and render it suitable or unsuitable according to the objects desired to be obtained. One ounce of salicylic acid, which it often recommended, will effectually stop all ten dency to fermentation, but being injurious should never be used, while mustard seed is perfectly harmless. Trenching is done in Ireland in this manner: ltemove the top soil from a strip one yard wide and a foot deep, then spade the sqbsoil well and spread plenty of ma nure over it; throw the top aoil from the next row on the surface-soil of the first and to proceed until the whole plot haa been trenched. It will produce heavy crops for several yean. A barn or stable should be kept at be tween 50 and 00 degrees in order to de rive the best results. In some coses this cannot be conveniently done, hut os tho animal heat is about 68 the temperature of the stable will have more or leas indu- cnee on the quantity of food required, and hence the warmer it can be nude in the sta ble ip winter the better. At the recent fat stock show in Chicago it was discovered that the' managers had permitted oleomargarine to be exhibited with the dairy products, and upon pro emt* being made br the dairymen they were in form . <1 that the creameries used “neutral" fat in the butter made by them. The Dairymen’s Association appointed a com mit tie to investigate the matter. Borne heavy yields are reported by the Western Farmer, Madison, Vi is. It states that a farmer near Seymour, Outagamie county, Wis., averaged nearly 200 bushels of com per ucre; that an Adams county for mer averaged 103 bushels of elovemeed from fourteen acres; that a fanner near Baraboo raised 100 bushels of potatoes from a barrel of tubers, and that a tanner near Mount Hop- threshed an average crop of 35J bash- els of wheat per acre. A Beading, Pa., fancier recommends the following as the best food for mocking birds: Toko tho yolk of a hard boiled egg and about the same amount of a boiled po tato and mix. Then add as much prepar ed mocking-bird food as will equal the egg and potato. Mix the whale thoroughly and feed in a small dish. Give plenty of clean water and strew tho cage with grovel. Wash the cups daily. A meal worm or grasshopper once n nay, with a little fresh beef occasionally is good. He also states that if the bird becomes droopy feed it a spider. A writer in the American Cultivator says: "I know of n mowing lot that haa not been plowed for fifteen years, but large broods of fowls ranged over it niter the crops were harvested, and the grass was so heavy on it last season that much of it became lodged before being ready to cut, and on some parts of it there were harvested three tons of hay per acre. When the chickens were first allowed to run over tho land the owner had to take n rake to get enough grass to gether to wipe his scythe. It was a poor, wore- out, neglected piece of land.” 3. J. H. Gregory says the experiment sta tions have proved a great safeguard against frond on farmers. They have driven out imposters and sustained honest manufac turer:!. In the South Carolina station COO specimens of fertilizers were analyzed, and only one found which was a cheat. For a potash fertilizer bard-wood ashes are worth about thirty-five cents a bushel. But there is a great difference in them. If manures do not ferment ashes do not hurt them. Ashes should not be put with hen manure unless it is to bo used at once. Muriate of potash is tho cheapest form to buy it, the potash costing about four cents a pound, but in good ashes it costs about seven cents. REFORMED JUDAISM. rinin Words from Felix Adler—Changes that Should he Made, N. V. Tribune. An audience that packed Chickering Hall gnthereil yesterday morning to hear Prof. Felix Adler s lecture on “Reformed Juda ism." Some fifty or sixty persons secured scats on the platform nun between 300 and 400 stood throughout the lecture. Mr. Adler spoke for au hour and five minutes. He was ut times eloquent and impiassioned. Hu begun with a graphic picture of the fall of Jerusalem, and said that the sufferings undergone by the Jews then were but the beginning of a long series of trials that laslel for tho next 1,700 years. Their religion was the bond that held them together; nnd it must have been a great religion. Judaism did not emphoiiize doctrine or dogma. Its three principal ideas wero God, the priesthood und the return of the Jews to Palestine. Suddenly there came a change, and the Jews began to feel the influence of modem ideas. One layer after another of the law waa rejected, and finally the Reformed Jowg came to the spirit of the Bible, and that spirit resolved itself into monotheism. But in Insisting on doctrino they departed from the old basis o£ their religion; and herein is their weakness. They have token away the underpinning of their whole sys tem, and have only the apirit—only tbo ghost—of their old religion, which they can't clothe with desh and blood. The Re formed Jews make a bravo show in exter nal things, but life 1ms departed from them. Their religious instruction creates neither n deep nor a lasting impression. A few hours a week—o few hours a year—are all that most Reformed Jews cun dovoto to their religion. Prof. Adler proceeded to point out the changes which, in hi* opinion, should be mode in Reformed Judaism. In the first place, their mistake should he recognized. They should cease to dwell on doctrine. The emphasis of their religion should no longer be laid on the law-giver, bat on the law. Granted that a ballet in God is neces sary for them, is it necessary to hurpj con stantly on that? They admit that they don't know what the will of God U. They must have recourse to reason to find out the laws that should govern life. In their con vention at Pittsburg last week thia mistake was made. They insisted on having the right prayer and the right ritaab “Con gratulate yourselves, Reformed Jews,” ex claimed Mr. Adler; “they have given you a new prayer-book! I think the Lord doesn't care for their prayers; I am sure he could get along very well withont them. What they should do is to cease to do evil and learn to do well. Go, mend your ways, your evil doings, and execute righteous judgment between turn and man. Au earn est attempt to show that the moral law is divine—that is the great need of tho present religious situation. Tho one divine element is left to man and cannot be token away; it did not orig'nato in experience, but is founded on uwtul sud transcendent sanc tion. Then the Reformed Jews should elab orate this law into practical, concrete |iro- poifitions, so as to right wrongs nnd esitnb- lish justice now and here. Let them bend to the ta<k of lifting up the moral condition of mankind. In the second place, there should be a change In the character of tho Jewish min isters. Heretofore they have been philo logists, to interpret books. Philosophy must take the place of philology, and they must study politics and ecouomiea. Third ly, there should be n wiping out of the lines of separation between reformed Jews and those who hold the sumo ideas. They are no longer a nee, bnt a religions communi ty. Lastly, the third ana foolish notion that the Jews are an elect people must go. Some claim that (hey possess a higher morality than other people, but morality does not run in the blood. The Jews have their virtues, anil they have their vices, too. Race pride ia the bioet odious of all these vices. Let it be the task of those who work in the old hne—as I cannot—to castigate the old vices, to coll them by their right names and extir- E atc them. Lot them keep their unsullied ome altar, their warm sympathies, their reverence for old age, their humanity; but these do not exhaust the scale of human virtues. The Jews should learn from Chris tians that the idea of a monopoly of religion is repugnant to every rigbt-tbiulring mind; and how much more repugnant the idea of a monopoly of morality!" Substitute for Leather. Shoe ml Leather Reporter. Substitutes for leather have liecn widely introduced in the construction of boots and shoes, and many of these are admirably adapted for the purpose. But a compara tively abort time ago only real leather was used. Leather-board, pancakes, artificial leather and atrawboard were unknown. The use of inferior materials originated in New England. It was at first an attempt at deception, and resulted in the discom fiture of the manufacturer who dertook it There waa a certain make of cheap pump-sole bro- gons offered In small lots weekly at auc tion, which had become standard, both in feature and in price. The shoe waa quite familiar to certain jobbers. On one occa sion a buyer noted for his keenness detect ed a singularity that led him to an invest!- K Uon. Using bit penknife he discovered >t the manufacturer bad substituted com mon pasteboard, with a veneer of colored paper of the same hne as lestber, for the leather sole. These shoes fell to prices that comported in some degree with their worthlessness. It is quite poesihla that this trenwetion conveyed the germ of the idea which afterward bore fruit in utraw. bowl and kindred materials. THE BEST PERIODIC AES for FAMILY READING 2^0 W I© TI-I3E HARPER’S MAGAZINE. DEPARTMENTS BY G. W. CURTIS, W. D. IIOWELLS. C. D. WARNER. Subscription per Year, 84.00, The Sevcnty-necoml Volume commenced with tho Nnmber for December, 1885. It is the purpose of the publishers to make Harp er's Magazine for the near year of unprecedented interest On the conclualon of Mins Woolson's novel, "East Angels," and Mr. Howella’a "Indian Summer,” there will be commenced seriala from R. D. BUckmore and Mrs. D. M. Craik. A new edito rial department, discussing topics suggested by cur rent literature, will bo contributed by W. D. Howells, beginning with the January number. With threo departments, under the charge respec tively of George William Curtis, W. D. Howells and Cbarlea Dudley Warner, tho editorial portion of Harper's Magazino will claim the attention of every intelligent reader. Among other attractions for the year may be mentioned a series of papers In the form of a story—depicting characteristic features of American society—written by Charles Dudley Warner, and illustrated by C. 8. 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Its pithy editorials are marked by good sense, and its snort stories, poems, essays, and other matter are the bosk of the kind. Not a line is ever printed in its columns that could offend the most fastidious taste. Tho fine art illustrations of Harper's Bazar, from the best native and foreign artists, form a marked feature of the Journal, aa do the blight, humorous cuts which have won it the name of the American Punch. No pains or cost will be spared to main tain the high standard of the paper. HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE A SIXTEEN PAGE ILLUSTR AT E1 > \Y l.i .K - LY FOR BOYS AND GIRI.s. Subscription For Year, >$.\oo. The Seventh Volume commenn <1 vv Number Issued November 3, IS The position of Harper's Young People as the host juvenile weekly is firmly established. It is a miscellany of the choicest reading for boys and girls, and it contains tho best literury and ar tistic work anywhere to be purchased. Every line is subjected to rigid editorial scrutiny* in order that the papershall contain nothing harm ful, and that it shall bo an effective agency for the mental, moral and physical education of it* read ers. Its stories have all tho dramatic Jniemd that juvenile fiction cau possess, without anythiug per nicious. Its articles on scientific subjtcts, travel, and the fact* of life, aro by writers whose names inhuro accuracy aud valuo. It* hlstoriml stories, biographical tales, etc., promt attractively tuo motA inspiring incidents in hit-tor j, and iu the early lives of notable men aud women; in every number appear stirring p< «ms, amusing rhymes aud ingenious puzzles, and ocoaGunally articles ou embroidery aud other fonus of needle work. Papers on athletic sport-. games and pa- times have their place, while fluo pictures by tho foremost artists and engravers lavi.-hly illu-tnite its pages. There is noth in g cheap about it but its price. 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The last threo annual volumes of Hater’s Bazar, in cloth binding, sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight docs not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 per volume. Great Britain, ai i emphatic (estlm the ap, .-oval ofp lation in this country and in this circulation is a scarcely leu nial to the fact that it has won rents also. Pastors, teachers united on this point with parents and children. f Press NoUt vs. It deserves a placo in every homo M. **.(] with children, whose lives it will make bettor and brighter with its weekly vb it.-).—Z4< u’s Herald. Boeton. This bold venture in the field of juvenile litera ture has proved a victory. It deserves a welcome at every fireside.—Bov. J. H. Vincent, D. D., in the Sunday School Journal, N. Y. A model juvenile. A boy or girl can Lave no purer and brighter magazine as a weekly guest— Independent, N. Y. 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Published by HARPER & BROTHERS, Franklin Square, New York. In dry geode circle*, Tho greatest of the past eventful week. The astonishingly low figures at which we hove been selling dry goods during the week past burst upon tho im mense crowds who thronged our stores like ^ REVELATION. Our reductions have been appreciated and taken advantage of by tbo people. Wo are not crying “wolf,” but mean business. Our plan of action for the remainder of tho season will bo strictly adhered to, and all winter goods will bo sacrificed. No exceptions. We have to offer for the coining week an elegant line of two-ioned Velvets, French Suitings, black and Colored Ithadames with mutched trimmings Theso goods make up with handsome effects and aro decidedly the most fashionable goods of the season. We invite special attention to tbe finest line cf Black- and Mourning' Goods in the city. These goods ore all selected by buyers of taste and long experience. We carry the lorgeat and beat assorted stock of any hoase in Middle Georgia, notwithstand ing the assertion of competition to the contrary. Holiday Naval Tien. A beautiful lino of these goods will he displayed daring the coming week. As we wish to make room for moro, they will be sold close. No old stock. All fresh, desirable goods, embracing the very latest conceits. Handkerchiefs ,Gloves, Hosiery and'Notions A tremendous stock of these goods on hand and en rente, jnst for the holiday trade. NEW TRIMMINGS in Fur, Feathers, Beaver and Aatrachan. A duplicate lot of thou matchless 51-inch Tricots at $1. Full standard Colooes iu Solids. Mourning and Figured at 6c., very best goods mode. A PARTING SHOT. So much has t~en said about our Carpet stock, that little remains to be said. We are selling them foster than two men can put them down. New lot of thou large (Smyrna Hugs just in, tbe handsomest of tho season. An inspection pf our entire stock is cordially solioted. J. W. RICE & CO., Triangular Block. X.- L. I XALL RXS, Has now n stock tho most complete lino of CABBIAGES, BUG GIES & WA GONS ever brought to Georgia. I am tho newest house in the city and will sell only new goods and now stylos at now prices, never before touched by old concerns. Como and see mo at 98 and 100 Cherry Street, Ma con, Go. •«p25 ItawAwlm A. B. FABQUHAB, York, Fu. KOBT. H. aillTH, 11,n,\,r A. B. FAEQUHAE & CO., klANUTAOTUinM or AND dxalim in NOW IS THE TIME S Don’t Waste Your Money on Third-Class Machinery. Thousands wasted every year by not coming to Head quarters to buy Machinery. OVER FIFTY ENGINES SOLD Come and read what tho planters say about them. We can show tho strongest certificates of the best plantore in i Georgia. The repairs on fifty Engines aro nominally noth-, DOMESTIC AND IE PORT UR IIA1H > W YUF ing. The simplest, strongest and most durable Engines in ‘ '* the United States. Order, solicited and good, atulprh. j way. gwreniewsst STEAM ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS, GRIST MILLS, BELTINO, STEAM FITTINGS, HANCOCK INSPIRATORS, and£a full line of BUFFALO SCALES, NAILS' AXES. PLOWS, SHOT, CUTLERY,1 W0(>1> WAB8. M. J. HATCXIER & CO. General Agents. A. B.EARQTJ I IAR&0 octld&mJtwtf .'/A COX. QEOBOU.