Supplement to The Messenger, Marion, N. C, Pages o and 6. LIFE. Life Is th5 o?ean, Eroa l and deei; Billows of emotion f O'er it pweep; VTe must battlo boldly With the tide. Lest it waft us eoldly Tar and -wide. L;fo is bright or dreary Where we dwell; Though our Xeet are weary. Ail is well; Ever bravely pressing v On our way, Fairer is the blessing Day by day. Life is like a jewel In th rough; Cut it, be. not omH, Just enough; I'oli.sb, till its glory, Full, divine. Tells a iioble story, Kven thine. fora C. Uass, in Loston Transcript. oooooooooooooooooooooooog 8 Octavia's Housekeeping. o o g I;T IIKI.EN WltlTNKV I.AI1K. g OOGGGOCGOOGCOOOGOOOOOOCCO ;HEY are coniiucr. Viney!" Miss Nancy Crowfoot tucked her ball of blue yarn into her apron pocket, and shad ing her eyes with one hand, looked down the lane, where tall mulberry-trees threw their long shadows on the velvety grass. "Coming, JIiss Nancy!" echoed a wc-t voire. And pretty Viney Mavis hastily fhoved a gooseberry pie into the oven, nnd came out on the back porch, with its drapery of pink and violet-cupped morning-glory vines. She, too, gazed eagerly down the long land, and soon the sapphire-blue eyes sparkled and the pink-tinted chcoks broke into dimpling smiles. "It's them!" she cried. "I could tell old 1 Apple's jog-trot a mile away." Viney hud been up since peep of day, when the first touch of pink blushed in the eastern sky, and when the thrush and the cat-bird were thrilling their earliest morning peans. She had milked the sleepy-looking cows, their dew-hps still wet from contact with dripping grass, and had breakfast ready just as the crimson pun was peeping over the cloud-capped bluffs, lining the shores of the great Father of Waters. It was an extraordinary occasion, as Farmer Mavis was going to the rail road station, twelve miles distant, to bring home his only daughter, Oe tavia, from boarding school. "Don't you bother yourself about breakfast, Viney," said tho farmer, good-naturedly, as he lighted his cob pipe at the kitchen lire. "I kin eat a Biiack, and hev breakfast when we git home. " Put Viney would not hear to it, and with her own hands she fried her uncle's favorite punc-ukes, yellow with 'gs. poured his coffee, and set a glass of fresh, sweet milk at his plate. "Dinner will be all ready when you get back, uncle, so bring a good appe tite," :;he said, kissing him good-by. It wns a happy family that dwelt at the old brown farm-house. Farmer Mavis was good nature per Bonitied, and Miss Nancy, tho house keeper, was a sweet-tempered old maid; not so very old, either, for youthful crinkles still lurked in her Boft brown hair, and her cheeks were as rosy us a winter pear-main just touched by the frost. She was a dis tant connection of Farmer Mavis, and ba l kept house for him ever since the t'oath of his wife, six years ago. Viney was his neice, and was as dear to him us an own daughter. Crcat were the preparations which were made fjr Octavia's home-coming. Miss Nancy had secured tho w indows nnd make up tho plump bed, with fresh., lavender-scented sheets and pillow-slips, and the best homespun coverlet. And Viney had cooked a substantial dinner roast chicken and cream bis cuit, new potatoes and green peas and cauliflower, with custard and goose berry pie for dessert. In the meantime. Octavia was on the cars, speeding along ut the rate of a mile a minute. She was a sharp featured, thin-lipped girl, with light hair, and face as freckled as a turkey's "I am going home to keep house for my pa," she had said, affectionately, to her girl cronies. "To-be-sure, he lias a sort of relative keeping house now---and old maid --but I shall poon ret her adrift. I detest old-maids!" In due time Octavia reached home. She bestowed a cool nod on Miss Nancv and touched Viuev's finger-tips frigidly. "Mercy on this!" she cried, in a thin high voice, a she entered the house. "Dinner at this hour? How horrid! What 'does make pa keep such old fashioned hours'?" Mis Nancy and Viney stood aghast at this unlooked-for reception. "We had it earlier than usnal on your account, Octavia," ventured her cousin. "We thought you might need Something." "Need something, indeed!" sniffed Octavia. with a sneer on her thin lips. "Do you s'pose I've been starved where I came from? resides, I had a !u:vn n tne cars. 1 m coins: un to my room to take a nap now," she added. "It will be soon enough for dinner after that." and she swung out of the room without waiting for a re ply. "Wal, ef that don't beat all!" grnm Med Farmer Mavis, his honest blue ey.'s et ending with surprise. "Ff Octa'.y thinks we are goin' to wait for her to nap afore we tat dinner, she r- Fetch along "I shall take the head of the table myself now, Miss Nancy," declared Octavia, as she came down to break fast, in a pink morning-dress, net at all suitable to her light complexion and red hair. "Pa can't afford to keep a hired housekeeper, now I'm at home, so you had best look out for another situation. Of course we could give you references for honesty, ami so forth," and Octavia, jingled the tea spoons in the cups, and took her place at the head of the table with a flourish of trumpets, as it w ere. Great was the surprise of Farmer Mavis when Octavia informed hiu? that Miss Nancy was going away. "Going away!" he repeated, staring half stupidly at his daughter. "That's what I said, ain't it?" snapped Octavia, tartly. "Going away. She knows you don't need two housekeepers; and now I'm here, of course it's my place." So there was no help for it, and Farmer Mavis harnessed up the horse, and helped Miss Nancy into the spring wacon. "That's the last of her. thank good ness!" mutttred Octavia to herself when old Dapple had trotted out of sight; "and I'd give Viney her walk ing papers, too, if it wasn't that I really need somebody to do the help of the kitchen work. IJut I'll teach her to know her place. She's no bet ter than a servant-girl, if she is pa's niece. And when Archie Grey comes to pay the visit he promised I shall keep her out of his sight, or of course she'd be a-setting her cap for him when she knows how rich he is." The sun had slipped quite out of sight in the crimson west, and night hawks and bats were lettering about in search of their prey, when the sound of wheels was heard in the lane, and old Dapple came trotting into sight as briskly as if he had been in the pas ture all day, instead of traveling twenty-four miles to and from the railroad station. "Fa's come!" announced Octavia, sailing out to the back porch, where Viney sat, with drooping head and aching heart, sighing over tho happy lays that were gone forever. "And good gracious! he's brought Miss Nancy back ugain!" she cried, snap pishly, as two ligures came up tho walk in the purple gloaming. "Oh, no, Octavy, I hain't brought Miss Nancy back!" returned her father, good naturedly. "This here's my wife, Mrs. Jeremiah Mavis. I hadn't no use fur two housekeepers, you know," he added with a sly twinkle in his eye, "so I concluded to keep Nancy. Octavia tossed her head, and flounced off to her own room. "I won't stand it!" she declared to herself. "I'll marry Archie Grey, and snap my fingers at pa and all the rest of them." She went sulkily down to breakfast the next morning, without deigning a glance at her stepmother, who sat at the head of the table, pouring out coffee. Her father seemed in high pirits. "Wal, Oetavv, if you can't be the housekeeper, you kin soon hev Viney's place, I reckon," he remarked, with twinkling eyes. "Oneweddin makes many, they say; an' she's a-goin' to be married afore long. "Married!" Octavia was thunderstruck. "Yes," said Farmer Mavis, while Viney blushed like a brier-rose. "Archie Grey has been a-comin' to see her, off an' on fur a good spell now; an' yesterday wo met him nigh the parsonage, uu'he asked me plump out for Viney. So I said I reckon I could spare her, seein' you was home now, to take her place." Viney made a pretty, dimpled, blushing little bride, but Octavia is an old maid still. Saturday Night. A Color-IIrarer's 3Iedal. During the war tho color-bearer of tho Ninety-ninth Illinois Regiment was Thomas I. Higginson, now of Hannibal, Mo. In tho assault on Vicksburg, May 22, 1SC3, the Ninety ninth Regiment was ordered to charge without looking back. It was con fronted by the Second Texas Regi ment, and sent back in confusion. Rut Higginson literally obeyed orders. He did not look back, but bounded forward, his colors held high and bravely flying. When he was within forty yards of the enemy, so great was their admiration for his bravery that word was passed along the line that he was not to be shot, and all firing ceased. When at length Higginson realized his predicament, he turned to retreat, but wa3 ordered inside tho Confederate breastworks. Ho was held by tho enemy for several days, and treated more like a guest than a prisoner. A short time ago the Sec retary of War granted him a medal on the affidavit of several of tho soldiers of tho Texan regiment. Success. To Build a Thousand Ilrklce. The United States capitalists who have taken from the Ecuador Govern ment the contract for building a rail road from Guayaquil to Quito will re ceive, according to the New York Com mercial Advertiser, for the work $17, 532,000. At the starting point Quito, the workmen will be 9350 feet above the sea level; at Santa Rosa. 9386 feet; at Tambillo, 8250 feet; San Miguel. 8304 feet; Ambato, 8100 feet. "The height of Chimborazo will be crossed at an altitude of 12,300 feet, and there are other points where 10,400. 11,800 feet are reached. The grades be tween these points are very steep and abrupt, and 830 bridges, varving from j those of 500 feet span downward, will have to be constructed. The road will be about 404 miles in length at an average cost per mile of Si3,39t) in gold. No other railroad in the world J so often approaches such great heights, i over ground so difficult or crosses so many streams and rivers. kin think so, that's all! the coffee, Viney." OUR BUDGET OF HUMOR. LAUCHTER-PROVOK1NC STORIES FOR LOVERS OF FUN. Typographical Penetration Had C'asp Amounted For Cool I'.qually Damp Kaith Cure Arctic Accuracy l'rojjress in Domesticity Too Much Snake, Etc. The removal of the powd-T from .r.v, His mustache he effects That is to say, he prints the kiss, And then the proof corrects. Li.'e. Penetration. "Bindley is a great hustler." "Yes, but he never has time to get started right." Chicago Journal. Had Caw. "What are you treating me for, doc tor?" "Loss of memory. Y'ou have owed me a bill of $S0 for two years." De troit Free Press. Accounted For. Algernon "I've such a deuced cold in me head, you know." "William "You must still have that Boston girl on youah mind, old chax." Pittsburg Press. , Equally Damp. "You throw cold water on every thing I undertake." "Well you wouldn't like it any bet ter if I threw hot water, would you?" Detroit Free Press. Cool. He (theatrically) "You have re fused me! To-morrow I go to seek my fortune ir frfee Klondike." She "May I have tho refusal of you when you return?" Puck. Faitli Cnre. "You took the doctor's advice?" "Yes." "And yon are " "Much better. I took it instead of the medicine.'' Cincinnati Times Star. A Settler. "Darling, please answer me," he fairly moaned as he stood in the centre of the parlor. "I am on the rack." "So is your hat," shouted the old gentleman, who had a gallery seat on tho stairway. Detroit Free Press. Not to ha Evailcd. "Foiled!" hissed tho burglar, and turned and fled away into the night. For he had evaded the improved burglar alarm only to discover that there was an old-fashioned rocking chair in the front parlor. Puck. Arctic Accuracy. "Spitzbevgen is just about skeen teen miles from Washington as the crow flies," said 'Morgan. "Excuse me," remarked the arctic explorer, "you mean as the carrier pigeon flies." Philadelphia North American. !rade the Alloirancc. "Oratory is a gift, not an acquire ment," said the proud politician as ho sat down after an hour's harangue. "I understand," said the matter-of-fact chairman. "We're not blamiu' you. Y'ou done the best you could." Detroit Free Press. I'nsciciitific. First Arctic Explorer "T have al ways considered Columbus a some what over-estimated man." Second Arctic Explorer "Why?" First Arctic Explorer "He dis covered America tho first time he went to look for it." Puck. Too Much Snake. Kisdig "Form three snakes in a circle, and let each begin swallowing the other, and what will the result be?" Slinibig "The result ! My dear boy, simply this. That if you don't stop drinking you'll land in a lunatic asylum. " Philadelphia Call. 1 ncoiisiotcnt. "I'm afraid of you," said Miss Kit tish to Mr. Callow, saucily. "That's strange," replied Mr. Cal low. "A few minutes ago you aw said that you were afwaid of nothing, doncher know. "Well, what of that?" Detroit Free Tress. An Awful Ordeal. "Now just as soon as you are mar ried," said the experienced husband, "the life insurance solicitors will be after you in droves." is mammon v so dangerous as that?" asked the candidate for nuptial honors, with apprehension in hia voice. Detroit Free Press. AYhy He Is a Uachelor. "No," said the rich old bachelor, never could rind time to marry." "Well," replied the young woman with the sharp tongue, "I am not sur prised to hear you say so. It certainly would have taken a good while to per suade any girl to have you." New Orleans Times-Democrat. Modern Improvements. Perry Patettie "What is these hore bath-robes they advertise in the papers?" Wayworn Watson "I give it up, unless it's some sort of rubber coat to keep wotter from gittiu' on a guy when he takes a bath because it is the style." Cincinnati En juirer. In the Illictoric Cla. "Miss Kerbkr'. in the sentence. 'Daniel Webster stood there lil;-.. a great oak tree,' point out the idea the author was trying t; convey. In what respect could Daniel Web?ter be said to resemble a 'great oak tree?' " "Well, he might have been rooted to the spot." Chicago Tribune. The Hoy the Father of the Man. Binson "How do you like married life?" Hoblow "Oh, it makes me feel like a boy again." Binson "How so?" Hoblow "Because I have to sav wood, lug up coal, run errands, and listen to a course of daily lectures on my shortcomings. " Roxbury Gazette. Progress In Domesticity. "Did you ever," asked the Young husband, "have vonr wife look you in j the eye when you came home and ask you if you had not forgotten some thing?" "Many a time, me boy," answered the old married man. "She does yet. In the early days it used to mean a kiss; now it is usuallv a reference to wiping my shoes." Cincinnati En-j quirer. Taulty Judsiuent. 1 "Here's an account of a man who has been arrested for stealing plays," said the man with the paper. "For stealing plays!" exclaimed tho man who was smoking, in astonish ment. ; j- "That's what the paper says." "Oh, well, the trouble with hira must have been that he didn't use any judgment. If he had stolen some of the plays I've seen they wouldn't ar rest him; they'd give him a vote of thanks." Chicago Times. WORDS OF WISDOM. Any one may do a casual act of good nature, but a continuation of them shows it is a part of the temperament. The man who is ever lamenting, never rejoicing, is playing a part, for life if? neither constantly painful nor constantly gay. True nobility is shown by gentle consideration and courtesy to all, and brings its own reward in the extra fineness of perception its practice bestows. Good resolutions are like vines, a mass of beauty when supported on a frame, of good deeds, but very poor things when allowed to lie unheeded and untrained on the ground. My experience leads me to believe that the supply of poetry, or verse as sumed to be poetry, in more egregi ously in excess of the demand than any other description of literature. To-morrow you have no business with. Y'ou steal if you touch to-morrow. It is God's. Every day ha3 enough to keep every man occupied, without concerning himself with the things that lie beyond. It may be truly said that no man does any work perfectly, who does not enjoy his work. Jov in one's work is the consummate tool without whicn the work may be done indeed but without its finest perfection. Man is Condensed Air. Liebig, the greatest chemist of tho century, writes: "Science has de monstrated the fact that man, the be ing which performs the great wonders, is formed of condensed air and solidi fied and liquid gases, that he live3 upon condensed as well as uncon densed air, and that by means of the same mysterious agent ho moves or causes to be moved, tho heaviest weights with the velocity of the wind. But the strangest part of the mutter is that thousands of millions of these tabernacles of condensed air are go ing on two legs, destroying other forms of condensed air which they may need to build up their owu wasted tissues or for shelter or cloth ing, or, on account of their egotism and fancied power, destroying each other in pitched battles, using imple ments which are but other forms of condensed air, the material of which they themselves are formed or com posed. Chemistry supjdies the clear est proof that, so far as concerns this, the ultimate and most minute compo sition and structure, some of which are so infinitesimal as to be beyond the comprehension of our senses, man is, to all appearances, at least, com posed of materials identical with those which compose the structural being of the ox or the dog, or even the lowest animal in the scale of creation." Solomon seems to have entertained the same idea. See Ecclesiastes iii., 10: "For that which befalleth tin sons of men befalleth the beasts; as the one dieth, so dieth the other; yea, they have all one breath; so that a man hath no pre-eminence above a beast." Pittsburg Dispatch. Urcedins Snakes For a Living. The bounty given by the Indian Government for snakes' heads in order to exterminate these reptiles, has led to a few of the dishonest natives breed ing them for a living. An Englishman recently traveling through Central India made a peculiar discovery. In the heart of a dense jungle he came across a rude hut, and close at hand was a large pit, covered over with a tight-fitting wooden cover, lie found the occupants of the hut, two disreputable looking natives, and asked them the meaning of the peculiar pit. They informed him that they were breeders of snakes. They caught all sorts of snakes and put them in the pit, the bottom of which was covered over with dried grass and leaves. They kept the snakes here some six months, feeding them on all kinds of small animals and birds. They then filled a largo earthern pot with poison ous herb.-, lighted it, lowered it into the pit, and secured the tight-fitting wooden cover, and thus smothered the reptiles. The cover was allowed to remain on for a few day-, it wa then removed, and the snakes taken out by means of a long pole with a spike a.Z the end of it. Their heals were then eut off and one of tl:3 rogues set out i"T the r.cur ..-! Gov?rnra-nt agency to obtain t'ue bounty, while the othisr one caught freh snakes for the pit. The snake very oftt-n devoured one another, but the mothers generally managed to bring up their young, though it was a marvel thc-y bred at all in su.i a pl:ve, being, one would think, contrary to their nature. Pear sun's Weekly. Meal on Cvt Corn Stalks. It is only possible to use meal on out corn stalks with advantage sfter they have been steamed enough It? soften them. It is best done when the feed is steamed after the meal has been applied. This partly cooks the meal and diffuses it through tho pttdks, so that the whole will be eaten. When dried stalks are cut and merely wet with cold water, the meal put on them will be licked off by cattle, and this will soon make the unused stalks very offensive. Cut hay and straw are much better to feed meal with than are cut s;alks. It is better to have the cut hay or ntraw steamed as the meal is applied to them Iluyins Feed For Feitllitv. The question how a farm shall be best manured is not one that can be solved in all cases off hand. There are farms where the best improvement possible was to run a few underdrains through a very rich part of the farm and use the crops grown on this to feed stock which fdiould manure the rest of the farm. Wherever this is possible it should be done in prefer ence to buying either feed or fertil izers. But with a farm that is nat urally underdrained the question how to increase it fertility must depend much on its location. If it is where milch cows may be kept and there is a good market for milk, it may pay bet ter to enrich the land by purchasing and feeding wheat bran, linseed meal or cotton seed meal, together with such coarse feed a3 can be grown on the place, than in any other way. The milk sold will more than pay for the feed, and the manure product will be therefore a free by-product in this method of manufacturing. It is often believed that milk takes so largely from the nitrogenous and mineral sub stances in food that little is left for the manure. But experiments with milch cows shows that when they are highly fed, fully eighty-live per cent, of the mineral substauees in their food and eighty per cent, of its nitro genous substances goes out in manure. American Cultivator. Ilcsj'.ilarity in Suiting the Dairy. If the cook should conclude that the trouble of salting our food is all un necessary, or that if we require it at all, once each week is sufficiently often, she would undoubtedly meet with a vigorous protest from all concerned. What reason is there, either in theory or practice, to lead us to suppose that our dumb animal friends are less sen sitive to such irregularities? The writer remembers well that with every Sunday morning in his boyhood days came the duty of giviug both cat tle and horses a handful of salt. As time went on a cheese factory was built, and as we became its patrons we had an excellent opportunity in weigh ing our milk 1'rom day to day to study the efi'ect of changing conditions. We soon learned that ".salt day" wai in variably followed by a shriukage in weights at the factory. AVe very nat urally concluded that such over doses of salt irritated the stomach of the cow, causing a teveriu coimuion ot tne en tire Fyste.-ii, nnd (viusemeut lessening of the ll 'v of milk. A'e at ouee adop ted the plan of sprinkling the man gers with .-;alt before the stabling the cows, b..h at night and in the morn ing, and the irregularities noted above were at an end. The cows seem to en joy the licking from end to end of r salted b;x much better than a large quantity of salt. They come into the stable as soon as the doors are thrown open instead of waiting to be driven in as formerly, and stay each in its ac customed stanchion much better than when there is nothing to take up their attention, and every dairyman knows that "in contentment there is a great gain." A D.iiryinau, in Farm, Field and Fireside. I!xt m:i porized (.rain iiin. It is no small job and requires not a little lumber to make a grain bin for the stables, haviugfour compartments. :i:at: T en; s r.u U'.'C'J eay way of s.ecnr- j imoatiotis. Four i it:-.r trie sam( em:.Y sugar Is are set in a row few narrow strips of is hinged either t i tnd secured by a board. A cover the wall or to this frame-work and the bin with f..ur compaf tments is complete. It may even be made by suiting the four barrels in a row and hinging a cover the wall behind them. A sugar t arred is very com l.iodious ::iil -a-y from which to dip meal. Ko'llKin; ll!;ii Faliel'S who d on the road are vrtttv heavy bills . Thi-, IS e -: e :ialiy lics-.Lith' riiii. much team work oblige i to make t the ld-ek:-mith.s. rue in the winter t-.e-us -u, wi:en o ii.ary ,-mooth shoes r.:e i.'ji e;i :i s..;eiv. io s.ttetv. To sharpen and reset a round of shoes tve-rv two or three weeks makers an expense that can only be afforded by farmers who have a great deal to market on poo 1 1 ri.-es. So ma:.y kinds of implement are now usf-1 on the farm that every farmer ought to have eome acquain tanee xrith some blacksmithing, so that he can mend what is broken with out being obliged to go off the farm to do it. A quantity pf bolts and nuts of different sizes, with fall set of tools to go with them, cannon bo purchased for less than twi or three visits at the blacksmith's would co?t. It will be a great convenience if thff' farmer learns enough about bis horse's feet so that at a pinch he can reset a shoe when one has been cast, and the blacksmith shop cannot be conveni ently reached. We have known farm ers who learned ta set a shoe as well as any blacksmith ceroid do it. As a good deal of this work vras done dur ing rainy days, it did not any more intefero with farm work than it would to driv? to tho nearest blacksmith's and wait irhile ho shod perhaps a dozen horses beforo your turn cuvis. At this season of the year, horses hav to be rcshod frequently, so as to keep the toe crdks sharpened. As the set ting of a shoe is a comparatively sim-' pie matter, it ought to be included in the practical education of every man who intends to make farming hi life business. And yet probably, should this be doue, some intermeddling law maker ould frame a law to require all who did any horseshoeing td pas? an examination and be registered, ami forbid a farmer even to shoe the horses on his own farm until he had been to this trouble and expense. C rate For moving Swine, Sheep or Calve It is often desirnblc to ntove a small animal from one building to another, or from one pasture enclosure to an other. Leading or driving' calf, sheep or pig is attended w it a' difli- FOR BRIN G I culties. They will go in company with others, but decidedly object to going alone. The cut shows a crate on wheels, with handles permitting it to be used as a wheelbarrow. Into this the small animal can be driven, the door closed and the crato wheeled away. It will also bo found a very useful contrivanco in bringing iu calves that have been dropped by their dams in the pasture. Do Your Own Kepairing. Too many farmers are given to hir ing repair work done which, with the aid of a few tools and a little ingen uity, they could do themselves at one teulh the cost, writes E. H. llichard son, in Orange Judd Farmer. An old iron and a boll box should be foune1j.ii every barn. Having these in p!ace, never pass n piece of old iron or a bolt, however useless it may look, but pick it up and put it into its box, and seven times out of ten you will find that apparently worthless piece will answer a useful purpose. Bolts of all sizes and description?, especially an I 'i and J inch ure always coming handy. Every farmer should have a bench GO inches wide by 10 to 15 feet long, with a good vise 18 inches frorc the end on the left-hand side as you stand facing the side of the bench. A left-handed man will have the vise o i the right end instead of the left. Hanging conveniently over thi t bench on the wall should be a goo ' rip and crosscut saw, 12 teeth to this inch, a 12-inch flat bastard file, t -inch three-cornered faw file, a 10 or 12-inch brace, 'with , , ':, ,' and 1-inch bits and a 1; and 2-inch auger. Bight here let me say, never file the bottom side of the cutting e Iges of a bit or auger, always the top side and file at quite a sharp angle. A good heavy hammer, a claw hammer and ax and light riveting hammer should also be found, a box of assorted I to J copper rivets, a cold chisel, punch, a square, a marking gauge, a screw driver, uunkey wrench, 12-inch stet son pipe wrench for twisting bolts-, plye-rs ?, ;, 1 and H-inch chisels, mallet, harness punch, ;-inch iron drill to use in brace, an assortment "f small wire nails, -inch to 1-inch, smoother and jack plane, a pair of compasses and a key-hole saw. . These tvd -i wiil, of course, cost con siderable, but if V'jii use them as much a ; you ought they will pay for them selves in six months, an you can h almost anything in the way of rer;i;-r work. Aa old anvil or block of iron sh mid be added and if yon get a cheap diill press and some rainy day buil i a forge, your blacksmith': bill woulh indeed, be light; with the above tool and a little ingenuity almor-t anything can be repaired. Any man who ba ! brain enough to successfully tn j ginter a farm should be able to u-o j tools and do any repair work. To il lustrate what I mean by using a little j ingenuity; Lat fall my wagon tire i get loose. I removed them one rainy day, railed some strips I had which i were 1 inch thick by ; inch wide ha.f way around the wheels, heeled tne j tires, put them on. The result was as goo'l a Y a the blaeksmith u" nave none. ibj cost was aooai cents. Saved $0.13. Time, two honr. Wood IJ'iti-Sert. It is not g-norally kno.vn that sixty tier cent, of wood may be nvertcJ - j into liquid. K(i IN CALVES.