Full Moon, 6th day, 4h. 25m., evening, E. Last Quarter,.13th day, 10h. 57m., morning, W. > First Quarter, 29th day, 10h. 12m., morning, W. 244| 1|M. 15 25|6 34 13 Full Sea, 92 7010 6 63|thi. |11 45| 420 2} 523 D Souths. h. m 7 26 rises 0 22 7 37 1 15 8 226 6 2 10 111 7 74 kn. morn. 8 27. 32 13 112 8 81 kn. 0 51 9 29 2 6 10 29 216112 317 01 Oh'd 8 30 257 3 nk 9 23 49 arm 9 39 4 42 arm 10 24 5 37 245 2 Tu. 5 26 6 32 13 02 rei. SEPTEMBER hath 30 days. 1873. D. M. D.W. Lord, t'is Thy plenty-dropping hand And gives me for my bushel sowne Aspects, Holidays, Events, 1 Mo. Length of night 10h. 51m. 2 Tu. runs low. 3 W. 6 h C. 4 Th. 60. in 5 Fr. Dog Days end. 6 Sa. in Perigee. R. HERRICK, 1661. Farmer's Calendar. WINTER rye and wheat may be sown now, and grass seed sown last month, or the first of Bright this, will do better, in nine cases Perihelion. out of ten, than that sown in the and spring. There is less risk from agreeable winter killing than from drought. 7 E 13th Sunday after Trinity. seed in the spring along with any It is a poor plan to sow grass 8 Mo. Nativ. of Virgin Mary. 9 Tu. 6. Very high tides. 10 W. State Election H. weather. 11 Th. Battle of Lake Champlain, 1814. 14th. $15,500,000 damages ag'st England awarded U. S. by Geneva tribunal, 72. 14th. gr. hel. lat. N. 14th Su. af. Trín. o̟ in 8. runs high. ♂ ☀ 2. 12 Fr. 13 Sa. 14 E 15 Mo. 16 Tu. in Maine. grain. It does better alone. The grain shades it, and robs it of food; and when it is cut the grass is too tender to live under the hot and dry sun of July. If the ground is moist, it may be got ready and the seed sown in August. Then it gets a strong and healthy start before the ground freezes. Harvest begins in earnest now, and the work presses. Cut green fodder corn while the sun is still hot, and you can cure it easier than later in the season. in Apogee. 626. The swedes sown in June ought to be weeded and kept quite 21 E 15th Sun. af. Tr. St. Matthew. clean. They make the bulk of 22 Mo. Oent.. AUTUMN BEGINS. their growth in the first part of 23 Tu. Great gale in N. E., 1815. frost. the fall, and they ought to have 24 W. 6 sup. convention, 1787. Const. of U. S. adopted in 1758. 25 Th. High tides. {Days and nights a fair start now. Keep the soil loose, and thin them out if they need it. Get out all the muck you can while the low lands are dry. It is the mother of the meal chest, they say good on almost all soils if rightly put on. Swine and other creatures fatten faster now than after it gets to be cold. ◇ Full Moon, 6th day, 0h. 47m., morning, W. 294 21 Tu. 6 20 5 10 10 51 4 25 15 29 11 11 rei. 5 20 11 15 11 2 0 sec. 0 sec. sets 11 56 5 43 0 40 4 lạ 2 thi. 7 31 3 11 8 26 4 9 3 kn. 9 31 5 7 295 22 W. 6 21 5 7 10 46 4 30 16 1 0 41 legs 10 45 6 5 5 legs morn. 7 1 61 legs 0 1 7 55 |