ABOUT FRUITS, FLOWERS AND FARMING. 27 



FARMERS LIBRARY. 



IT is of the highest importance that farmers should pos 

 sess reading habits; and that they should bring up their 

 children to a love of books. Every fanner should have a 

 library ; it may, at first, be small ; but it should be select. 

 As soon as a farmer is beforehand enough to own an acre, 

 he is prosperous enough to begin a library. It is said by 

 many, books won t make money. Yes they will. To-be- 

 sure, their best effect is the production of intelligence in the 

 reader ; but a man well informed in his own business is just 

 the man to make money. Who ever thought of making 

 money by buying grindstones and whetstones ? But they 

 sharpen the scythe, and sickle, and the axe, and they pro 

 duce money. Books are grindstones and whetstones for a 

 man s mind. 



Many are unwilling to buy a treatise upon the disease of 

 the horse, although there are several which will prevent most 

 of the evils which affect this noble animal. In the West, the 

 horse is used, in town and country, by almost every man. 

 But very few profess to know how he should be treated ! 

 And, of those who think they arc wise, how many have any 

 knowledge except of a few nostrums for sickness? The 

 horse, in man s service, is living in an entirely artificial 

 state. He takes care of himself if left wild. But living in 

 stables, laboring every month of the year in harness, and 

 under the saddle, not selecting his OAvn food, but fed at the 

 will of his master, his own instincts become of little use, 

 and he is dependent entirely on the mercy and knowledge 

 of those whose slave he is. It ought not to be thought 

 unreasonable to say that every man who is willing to own a 

 horse, ought to be willing to know how to manage him, in 

 the stable and out of it. There is no work in the English 

 language containing more, or better instructions than* Stew- 



* A Treatise on the management of horses in relation to stabling, groom 

 ing, feeding, watering, and working : published by A.O.Moore & Co., N Y 



