Archive for July 12th, 2011

12
Jul

Day is Too Short For The Farmer

   Posted by: admin    in Farm life

The Fort Dodge Messenger: July 12, 1904

Day is Too Short For The Farmer

He is Working From Dawn Until Dark and Still Has Plenty to Do.

Prospects Are All Smiling

Haying Season is Now At Its Height – Cutting of Small Grain to Follow and Then Comes the General Harvest – Corn Doing Well.

The haying season is now at its height and some of the early pieces of oats are most ready to cut. With the past few pleasant days the farmer has raised his hopes several notches and is buckling into the work with renewed zest. From now until after the shock threshing season is over he will be as full of business as an electric belt fakir on a street corner.

Now he is riding the mower and rake from morning until night. Enormous stacks of hay are rising as if by magic in the meadows, and the great barn lofts are being crammed until they groan with their burden of sweet smelling new-mown hay. Following close upon the heels of the haying season will come the cutting of the small grain. Some of the early “Fourth of July” oats will be due to cut the first of the week and about seven days later the real general harvest will commence and from that time on until the last of August every farmer in the country will be on the jump from “sun up” till dark and still be wishing he might have the service of Joshua in order that he command the sun to stand still until he could get “that last load in.”

The cold wet weather of a few days ago was not just the kind required to ripen the grain rapidly, and there was a little tendency toward rust, but generally the grain was little damaged, and with the present warm dry weather it is coming on very rapidly, and there is no fault to be found with the progress it is making.

Corn, too, the past few days is fairly jumping out of the ground. When the nights are warm and the air feels stuffy, then is when the corn crop gets up and humps itself. Nearly all of the corn in the county is now pretty large to plow and most of the fields are ready to lay by.

(Editor’s note: An electric belt fakir seems to be someone selling electric belts – or a substitute – for some medical purpose. But the connotation is that the people selling are charlatans or scammers.)

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12
Jul

Several Are Hurt in Lively Runaways

   Posted by: admin    in Accident, Animals

The Fort Dodge Messenger: July 12, 1904

Several Are Hurt in Lively Runaways

Two Runaways of a Serious Nature Take Place Monday Afternoon.

Mrs. Isaac Garmoe a Victim

With Mr. and Mrs. J.M. Fibbs She is Thrown Out of Carriage – Mrs. R.M. Wright Hurt in Runaway of Team.

An accident which came nearly terminating seriously occurred Monday afternoon on tenth street and Fifth avenue north. Mr. and Mrs. J.M. Fibbs and Mrs. Isaac Garmoe were riding in the Fibbs’ carriage on Fifth avenue north and they noticed an automobile standing near the curbing. Mr. Fibbs realized that the horse would become frightened if the automobile was started and asked the person in charge not to start it until the horse had passed them. Misunderstanding the request, the operator started it forward. This frightened the horse so that he turned around and overturned the carriage, throwing the occupants onto the paving. The noise of the machine frightened the horse still more and it started off dragging the occupants of the carriage several feet before breaking loose, leaving the buggy upset with the occupants pinned beneath it.

Mrs. Garmoe Painfully Hurt.

People in the vicinity were attracted by the accident and assisted the injured people from beneath the buggy. For some time it was thought that Mrs. Garmoe was badly injured and a report was circulated that she could not live, but this is false. Although she was very painfully hurt she is in no danger. Mr. Fibbs also suffered a very severe cut over his eye and a doctor had to be called for him. One eye and the fact of Mrs. Garmoe was badly scraped, and her right arm cut. The back of her neck was bruised and her right leg was also bruised and the knee of the left leg was quite badly lacerated. Mr. Fibb’s (sic) greatest injury was to his eye. Mrs. Fibbs escaped with several minor bruises.

Accident Made More Serious.

The accident is all the more to be deplored, because of the condition of Mr. Garmoe, who underwent an operation last week. He has not yet been informed as to the seriousness of the accident. Mrs. Garmoe is at present confined to her bed, but it is thought that she will be able to be up in a few days.

Mrs. R.M. Wright injured.

Mrs. R.M. Wright was thrown from her buggy while driving in the sough part of the city Monday afternoon and suffered a severely wrenched hip and badly bruised shoulder.

The horses driven by Mrs. Wright are a lively pair and have run away twice before. This time while coming east on Thirs avenue south, one of the animals kicked over the pole, when the team became unmanageable. Mrs. Wright was thrown from the buggy almost immediately and the team ran only a block before being stopped. The carriage was badly smashed.

Mrs. Wright, although badly bruised, was able to pick herself up and was taken immediately to her home, where she received medical attendance. She will be able to get about in a few days.

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