Deep Furrows. Herbert Joseph Moorhouse

Deep Furrows - Herbert Joseph Moorhouse


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       Herbert Joseph Moorhouse

      Deep Furrows

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066147396

       FOREWORD

       DEEP FURROWS

       CHAPTER II

       CHAPTER III

       CHAPTER IV

       CHAPTER V

       CHAPTER VI

       CHAPTER VII

       CHAPTER VIII

       CHAPTER IX

       CHAPTER X

       CHAPTER XI

       CHAPTER XII

       CHAPTER XIII

       CHAPTER XIV

       CHAPTER XV

       CHAPTER XVI

       CHAPTER XVII

       CHAPTER XVIII

       CHAPTER XIX

       CHAPTER XX

       CHAPTER XXI

       CHAPTER XXII

       CHAPTER XXIII

       CHAPTER XXIV

       THE END.

      CHAPTER

      Foreword

       I The Man on the Qu'Appelle Trail

       II A Call to Arms

       III The First Shot is Fired

       IV "That Man Partridge!"

       V "The House With the Closed Shutters"

       VI On a Card in the Window of Wilson's Old Store

       VII A Fight for Life

       VIII A Knock on the Door

       IX The Grain Exchange Again

       X Printers' Ink

       XI From the Red River Valley to the Foothills

       XII The Showdown

       XIII The Mysterious "Mr. Observer"

       XIV The Internal Elevator Campaign

       XV Concerning the Terminals

       XVI The Grip of the Pit

       XVII New Furrows

       XVIII A Final Test

       XIX Meanwhile, in Saskatchewan

       XX What Happened in Alberta

       XXI In the Drag of the Harrows

       XXII The Width of the Field

       XXIII The Depth of the Furrows

       XXIV And the End is Not Yet

       Appendix

       Table of Contents

      Once in awhile, maybe, twenty-five or thirty years ago, they used to pack you off during the holidays for a visit on Somebody's Farm. Have you forgotten? You went with your little round head close clipped till all the scar places showed white and you came back with a mat of sunbleached hair, your face and hands and legs brown as a nut.

      Probably you treasure recollections of those boyhood days when a raw field turnip, peeled with a "toad-stabber," was mighty good eatin'. You remember the cows and chickens, the horses, pigs and sheep, the old corn-crib where generally you could scare up a chipmunk, the gnarled old orchard—the Eastern rail-fenced farm of a hundred-acres-or-so. You remember Wilson's Emporium at the Corners where you went for the mail—the place where the overalled legs of the whole community drummed idly against the cracker boxes and where dried prunes, acquired with due caution, furnished the juvenile substitute for a chew of tobacco!

      Or perhaps you did not know even this much about country life—you of the Big Cities. To you, it may be, the Farmer has been little more than the caricatures of the theatres. You have seen him wearing blue jeans or a long linen duster in "The Old Homestead," wiping his eyes with a big red bandana from his hip pocket. You have seen him dance eccentric steps in wrinkled cowhide boots, his hands beneath flapping coat-tails, his chewing jaws constantly moving "the little bunch of spinach on his chin!" You have heard him fiddle away like two-sixty at "Pop Goes the Weasel!" You have grinned while he sang through his nose about the great big hat with the great big brim, "All Ba-ound Ra-ound With a Woolen String!"

      Yes, and you used to read about the Farmer, too—Will Carleton's farm ballads and legends; Riley's fine verses about the frost on the pumpkin and "Little Orphant Annie" and "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse!" And when Cousin Letty took you to the Harvest Home Supper and Grand Entertainment in the Town Hall you may have heard the village choir wail: "Oh, Shall We Mortgage the Farm?"

      Perhaps even yet, now that you are man grown—business or professional man of the great cities—perhaps even yet, although you long have studied the market reports and faithfully have read the papers every day—perhaps that first impression of what a farmer was like still lingers in a more or less modified way. So that to you pretty much of an "Old Hayseed" he remains. Thus, while you have been busy with other things, the New Farmer has come striding along until he


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