.MTMwOQ.MTA2MjIy: Difference between revisions
imported>Ramirez.crystal14 No edit summary |
imported>Ramirez.crystal14 No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
130 | 130 | ||
-ment. should any new ones be wanted, winter is the best time for purchasing them, for being out of season the shopmen will sell them cheaper. Feed your cattle regularly, and be careful not to give them too much food, for it is more impirious than not quite enough, give your laborly animals time to digest their food before employing them again. They will work the better" | -ment. should any new ones be wanted, winter is the best time for purchasing them, for being out of season the shopmen will sell them cheaper. Feed your cattle regularly, and be careful not to give them too much food, for it is more impirious than not quite enough, give your laborly animals time to digest their food before employing them again. They will work the better" | ||
By following these and other similar [ | By following these and other similar magines[magazines], Jake could always manage to have every thing in the neatest order, at much less cost and trouble than his neighbors, produce larger crops, do more work, and save more money for his employer. I often thought while looking at his handy work or degtenty[dexterity] with the plough. "You want but one thing, jake, to make you a man, and that is temperance. Would that you could add to your magines, 'taste not, touch not, handle not the intugicatuy buvl,' and follw it as strictly." | ||
he was an honest man, however, med was quite enough in detecting |
Revision as of 22:38, 31 October 2020
130 -ment. should any new ones be wanted, winter is the best time for purchasing them, for being out of season the shopmen will sell them cheaper. Feed your cattle regularly, and be careful not to give them too much food, for it is more impirious than not quite enough, give your laborly animals time to digest their food before employing them again. They will work the better" By following these and other similar magines[magazines], Jake could always manage to have every thing in the neatest order, at much less cost and trouble than his neighbors, produce larger crops, do more work, and save more money for his employer. I often thought while looking at his handy work or degtenty[dexterity] with the plough. "You want but one thing, jake, to make you a man, and that is temperance. Would that you could add to your magines, 'taste not, touch not, handle not the intugicatuy buvl,' and follw it as strictly." he was an honest man, however, med was quite enough in detecting