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Beautiful Joe [56]

By Root 1878 0
gun "Is the dog dead?" asked Miss Laura.

"Yes," he said.

She sighed and said: "Poor creature, I am sorry he had to be killed. Uncle, what
is the most merciful way to kill a dog? Sometimes, when they get old, they
should be put out of the way."

"You can shoot them," he said, "or you can poison them. I shot Bruno through his
head into his neck. There's a right place to aim at. It's a little one side of
the top of the skull. If you'll remind me I'll show you a circular I have in the
house. It tells the proper way to kill animals. The American Humane Education
Society in Boston puts it out, and it's a merciful thing.

"You don't know anything about the slaughtering of animals, Laura, and it's well
you don't. There's an awful amount of cruelty practiced, and practiced by some
people that think themselves pretty good. I wouldn't have my lambs killed the
way my father had his for a kingdom. I'll never forget the first one I saw
butchered. I wouldn't feel worse at a hanging now. And that white ox, Hattie you
remember my telling you about him. He had to be killed, and father sent for the
butcher. I was only a lad, and I was all of a shudder to have the life of the
creature I had known taken from him. The butcher, stupid clown, gave him eight
blows before he struck the right place. The ox bellowed, and turned his great
black eyes on my father, and I fell in a faint."

Miss Laura turned away, and Mrs. Wood followed her, saying: "If ever you want to
kill a cat, Laura, give it cyanide of potassium. I killed a poor old sick cat
for Mrs. Windham the other day. We put half a teaspoonful of pure cyanide of
potassium in a long-handled wooden spoon, and dropped it on the cat's tongue, as
near the throat as we could. Poor pussy she died in a few seconds. Do you know,
I was reading such a funny thing the other day about giving cats medicine. They
hate it, and one can scarcely force it into their mouths on account of their
sharp teeth. The way is, to smear it on their sides, and they lick it off. A
good idea, isn't it? Here we are at the hen douse, or rather one of the hen
houses."

"Don't you keep your hens all together?" asked Miss Laura.

"Only in the winter time," said Mrs. Wood, "I divide my flock in the spring.
Part of them stay here and part go to the orchard to live in little movable
houses that we put about in different places. I feed each flock morning and
evening at their own little house. They know they'll get no food even if they
come to my house, so they stay at home. And they know they'll get no food
between times, so all day long they pick and scratch in the orchard, and destroy
so many bugs and insects that it more than pays for the trouble of keeping them
there."

"Doesn't this flock want to mix up with the other?" asked Miss Laura, as she
stepped into the little wooden house.

"No; they seem to understand. I keep my eye on them for a while at first, and
they soon find out that they're not to fly either over the garden fence or the
orchard fence. They roam over the farm and pick up what they can get. There's a
good deal of sense in hens, if one manages them properly. I love them because
they are such good mothers."

We were in the little wooden house by this time, and I looked around it with
surprise. It was better than some of the poor people's houses in Fairport. The
walls were white and clean, so were the little ladders that led up to different
kinds of roosts, where the fowls sat at night. Some roosts were thin and round,
and some were broad and flat. Mrs. Wood said that the broad ones were for a
heavy fowl called the Brahma. Every part of the little house was almost as light
as it was outdoors, on account of the large windows.

Miss Laura spoke of it. "Why, auntie, I never saw such a light hen house."

Mrs. Wood was diving into a partly shut-in place, where it was not so light, and
where the nests were. She straightened herself up, her face redder than ever,
and looked at the windows with a pleased smile.
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