“Beware ald Bellefonte, Pa., June 18, 1909. A —————————————————————— THE BOY WITH THE HOE. Say, how do you hoe your row, young chap ? Bay, how do you hoe your row? Do you hoe it fair, Do you hoe it square, Do you hoe it the best you know? Do you cut the weeds, as you ought to do, And leave what's worth while there ? The harvest you'll garner depends on you ; Are you working it on the square ? Are you killing the noxious weeds, young chap ? Are you making it straight and clean ? Are you going straight, At a hustling gait ? Are you scattering all that's mean ? Do you laugh and sing and whistle shrill, And dance a step or two, As the row you hoe leads up the hill ? The harvest is up to you. ~New York Sun. A HOUSE THAT WAS SAVED BY THE FLAG. At 1655 Taylor Street, in the city of San there stands to-day a house, which, in the greatess fire of > times, was saved from the flames by the 2a ‘When over four hundred blocks of build. ings lay in smoking rains, this house was the only one left etanding unconsumed along the east side of the full length of Taylor Street—a distance of twenty-eight blocks, nearly two ful! miles. The house is one of the prominent resi- dences on one of the great hills of she city, known as Russian Hill ; and was the first large dwelling-house erected in thas sec- tion of San Francisco, away back in the early days. It is not built of Inmber that grew upon the Pacific Coast. Like many of the houses of pioneer times, it came in the hold of a vessel around the Horn. In the far-off state of Georgia the pine-trees grew ; and there the house was framed and fashioned before it started on its long sea journey of thirteen thousand miles. Some additions have been made, and its exterior has been covered with California shingles 3 but for the most part it stands to-day as is was first framed in Georgia. It bas Jong been the home of patriots. Its owner, Eli T. Sheppard, served as a mem- ber of the Eighty filth Ohio Volunteers in the Civil War ; rendered valuable service to his country as United States Consul at Tientsin, China, from 1869 to 1875 ; and in 1876, was appointed by President Grant intervational law adviser for the imperial Japanese cabinet. Another portion of the residence is occupied by Mr. E. A, Dakin, a veteran of she Civil War. Mr. Sheppard bad gathered within ite walls a large and valuable collection of oriental treasuree. Among them were costly vases given by the Emperor of Japan ; a sword presented by Li Huog Chang ; a superb lacquer cabi- net, the gilt of the Chinese Empress to Mrs, Sheppard. On the other band, flags had long heen Mr. Dakin’s hobby. He had one room entirely covered with American flags. Some of them had played a pars in history. There wae the jack of the Oregon ; the rear-admiral flag of she ; she jack of the Marblehead while as Cuba ; the laanoh flag of Dewey's Olympia ; and on the walls of this room buug the great banner of the Stars and Stripes that was to save the house and all its treasures from de- struction. At the time of the earthquake and fire, April 18, 1906, Mrs. Brindley, a daoghter of Mr. Sheppard, was there awaiting she arrival of her husband to take steamer for Japan. She bad long resided in thas coun- zy, aod had bad *‘eartbquake experience,” 80 to speak. Accordingly, as soon as the earth bad ceased trembling, she proceedsd to fill the bash tubs and all other recepta- oles in the bouse with water. She feared that the disturbance of the earth had brok- en the supply maine ; and hardly had she filled the last pitcher when her fear was proved well-grounded. The water ceased so flow. Bat ihe first step that made is Jonible for the flag to save the house had taken. Mr. Sheppard and Mr. Dakin took the second step. In order shat the household might bave a supply of drinking water, they brooght home from a neighbor- ing grocery a dozen or so bottles of water obarged with carbolic acid gas, —she kind of bottles where you pressa lever as the top, and the water fizzes out in a stream under pressure. They are commonly called “‘siphons. At this time no coe ¢ the house in danger. Is bad sturdily withstood the earthquake ; and the fire was many blocks away. Bat all Wednesday and Wednesday night and all of Thursday the fire raged in fary ; and at Inst is came creeping up the slope of the Russian Hill. The flames reached the block in which the house was situated. The heat grew intense. The sides of she house sent forth smoke. The veranda on the east broke into flames, and she un- der side of the eaves oa the north and east kindled to a blaze. Mr. Steppasd and his family bad taken one last look at their home with its treas- ures, and had sought refoge with friends across the bay. Mr. Dakin had ed to the last, hoping against hope. ih all The house was purajog, i fr 5s bs : g 2 | fries figd] Hh gs gs Boys," shouted 3he Joung lieutenant, ike “a house that flies a flag that is worth saving !”” His men 1 with a cheer; and as Mr. Dakin was sadly wending his way down the northern slope Hill, soldiers of the 20th United Infantry were dashing up the eastern slope at a donbie-quick. No time was tore away tne burning woodwork veranda ; open the door ; covered the bathtubs filled with water. Some of them oarried earth from the gar- was carried to them, they bombarded every spot that had kindled into flame, stood alone. Every blaze that had started upon its eaves sides had been extin- guished aave vie, There was one spot un- er the eaves at the northeast corner that could not be bombarded successfully. less the fire at that point was put oat, all that had been done were done in vain. The soldiers were equal to the emergen- oy. A squad mounted so the rool. One of the men lay flat upon the edge, and while four of his comrades held him fast by the legs, he Jeaned afar out over the wide old-fashioned eaves. Others passed to him bottles of water charged with carbonic acid gas. And there, banging far over the edge of the roof so that he might be able to di. reo the stream of water on the fire burning fiercely beneath the eaves, he squirted the fizzing contents of bottle after bottle, until the last flame and the last ember were ex- tinguiehed —and the house was saved. —By F. H. Wheelan. Potato Bugs and Blights. Information has heen received by the Division of Zoology of the Penasylvania Department of Itare from some of the principal potato districts of she State to the effects that the potato bug, or Colorado beetle, is already actively at work on the young potato plants and threatens to do considerable damage. Blight may also cause much loss to potato growers. Io answer to some of the queries as to how to destroy the bugs, as well as prevent blight, State Zoologiss Sarface replies as follows : “The Colorado potato beetle or potato bug will be very destructive in many parts of this State this year. Spray with the Bordeaux mixture to which is add- ed. Make the Bordeaux mixture by using tour pounds of blnestone and five of lime in filty gallons of water and to this add either one-baif pound of Paris Green or two pounds of arsenate of lead. Spray thoroughly and youn will prevent blight and aleo kill the bugs. Repeat this once every two weeks for blighs, bus if there are no bugs present, yon need not add the poison. Whenever the bugs are present add the poison and spray for them. There is no rule concerning the frequency of repe- tition for potato bugs, as we simply spray when they come and kill them ae soon as possible. If yom do not wish to go to the trouble of making the Bordeaux mixture for the blighs; or are willing to run she risk of the blight not coming, yon can kill the potato beetles by spraying with either of the two poisons mentioned, in fifty gallons of water alone. But the best thing to do is to make the regular Bordeaux mixture with lime and bluestone and then add the poison to this. The Bordeaux is for plant diseases only, and will not kill insects. It is thus a fungicide. To make it an in- suiide we add the poison, as described above. BLACK ANTS ON PLANTS AND TREES. A request for information as to how to rid plaots and trees of black ants, which was received at the Pennsylvania Depart. ment of Agriculture’s Division of ogy, elicited she following from Prof. H. A. Sar- face, State Zool : *‘You can do this by finding the nesting places of these pests and holes into the inserior of them with a sharpened stick like a broom bandle, and pouring into each hole one-half tea cup of carbon bisulphide. Fill the hole with earth and cover is with a wet cloth or blanket to keep down the fumes, and the ants will be ed at once. This is the best possible method for destroying ants of any kind. After the vest is found, and the queen destroyed in the manner stated, the colony is Bh He ed y r to where they live and pouring in the carbon bi. sulphide. If it he at the side of a wall, or elsewhere where they can nos surely be lo- cated, one can destroy them by pouring a considerable quantity of gasoline, or ben- soe, into the hole made by the side of the ‘‘Ants, as seen going up and down trees, are not themselves the cause of inj 0 the tress or plants, bus are visiting Plant Lice, or Scale Insects, or sometimes plant glands, for the purpose of obtaining the sweet liquid, called honey dew, wh is Senrated be them. Thus the ant is general- ly an indication of serious pests on the trees, although itself doing no injury. It is, therefore, not n to treat the trees for ants, but to treat them for the pests which the ante visit. This means spraying with a contact insecticide, of the SR “Blood Tells.” That old eayi bave many applioca- tions, "Then tue hoe 1a blotohed with pim- ples, the body vexed with eruptions eaten by sores, the blood is telling of its gg § 2 FY 60 cents per gallon, Sechler & Co. Forty Years in lows. [Written especially for the Waremmax. | In emigrating from one country to anoth- orth | er, and especially when some considerable dietance intervenes, one of the principal requisites inquired into is, are climatic conditions conducive to good health, There have been many instances where simply a change of locality ; the getting away from conditions or environments resulted in transforming a person of a delicate consti. tution into ome of rogged health which would naturally be followed with the prospeot of prolonged life. The death rate in the valleys of Centre county may be no greater than that of the Iowa prairies. There are no classes of peo- ple bealthier than the mountaineer, yet bow few of the Bald Eagle valley homes are builded very far above highwater mark or at least above the elevation known as the “foot of the mountain.”’ No criticism can attach for this, for where the cultiva- tion bas to be done there the home must he, and where railroads can be constructed there will the towns be and neither of these two industries as a rule are operated oo the mountain side, and were it not for the splendid, natural sewerage system leading out from every nook, corner, ‘‘hol- low’ and valley carrying away unhealthy and refuse matter, Pennsylvania might be called unbealtby; but this never was or never will be. Mountain springs are al- ways pure and give out nothing but health. Good authority says that Iowa is one of the most healthful States. Ite altitude is nearly regular being 1513 feet above sea level at its greatest surveyed elevation, dif. fering from Pennsylvania in from 1000 feet at the lowest and 2684 at its greatest, so that the average places us abont 300 feet lower, However we even up by having a con- stant flow of pure air with no mountains to interfere, with an equitable distribution, some say the winters are severe on account of the northwest winds, but they come laden with purity, as does the mountain spring. The summers are delightful and the falls are clear, warm and dry. It is a fact that we are free from epidemic and epidemio disease,and the dryness and purity of the atmosphere cause many to regard Towa as a desirable place for those predis- posed to lung trouble. The only scrap to be had with the writer as to the relative healthful conditions of the two States in which he claime a lively interest, is to attempt to place either one below what they really are, namely : good places in which to live and end ones days. My fathers family in 1869 was intacs ; that is, death bad never visited us, there being eight brothers and three sisters, We were not all in good health and as a conse- quence, Dr. Dorworth was an almost week- ly caller at our home. Father was always in poor health, while our mother seemed to be the only robust member of the family. So it was largely to tess, and perhaps for better health conditions thas caused a re- moval of the family here. That Iowa far- nishes a more healthy climate, we are not ready to assert, but certain it bas been that the entire family were greatly benefitted and the eleven brothers and sisters alive today are all robust men and women. The youngest brother, of twelve children, was born soon after coming here. The youngest sister the most delicate of the family, died Feb. 2ad, 1807, at the age of 47 years. The providential privileges meted out to us bas been the subject of some comment, and at the times of our reunions went the rounds of the press of the country. We note one or two : On Sunday, Oct. Sth, 1889, the unbroken family coosisting of father, mother and twelve children gathered at the parental home and sas down together at one table to a dinner prepared by she moth- er and three sisters. There were present, and served at another table twenty-three grandchildren, a total of thirty-seven—— another, and our last, occurred in August, 1900. Father was taken with a severe at. tack of a nervous affection, of several years standing and is soon beoaiie apparent that he would not survive. The family were all summoned and were present at our first sorrowful gathering. Watching and wait- ing for seven days the end came on August 23cd, while mother and we $welve stood around his bed and saw our father breash his last; the firet break in the family by death. His funeral was from Wesley M. E. church, the sermon preached by Rev. C. C. Mabee, who began his career as a minister at a campmeeting held in the early fifties, a mile above Howard in Pletohers woods. We six brothers carried him from the old home to the church and lowered him to hia last resting place in beautiful Woodland cemetery in this city. Over six years later, our mother was stricken with pneumonia acd passed away December 12th, 1906, belore the arrival of all the family, but all twelve were present as the funeral and again we six brothers completed the task of placing our parents gide by side where they now silently rest. Less than two months later the youngess sister, Annie, born in Howard, was taken suddenly from us with that almost always fatal disease puenmonis, and another time | 80d security we gix, laid a sister away, the first break in the family of children. We eleven sur. vive, all in good bealth and wondering who will be the nexs. Our parents were upright, conscientions | health riches christians, living and putting into practice their profession. Ie a communication to the WATCEMAN recently, Caps. Austin Curtin referred to father’s habit of chewing tobacco and his desire and efforts to rid himself of i$ which he finally succeeded in doing. The captains statement is correot, for on Monday, March 9th, 1885, he wrote a pledge in bis diary, and from that date on he never used it again, Oar family connection about all living in Iowa, were joined on February 18th, 1881, by grandlather, Jacob Baker, of Howard, who finally concluded to retire and spend bis remaining days among his kindred. The revering of old bome ties wae bard for the old gentleman to get over, but be lived a quiet and fairly well contented season with his son Mitchell, passing away on Friday, November 4tb, 1887, and lies buried ina country cemetery, sen miles south of this city. He was followed to the grave by Misobell, who died in she hospital in this city, following an operation for appendicitis on the 23rd of July, 1898, and was buried beside bis father. It can bardly be realized, yet the writer is now the senior male survivor of his fam- ily name, while but one of Jacob Baker's family lives : Mrs. Mary Moffly, widow of the late Capt. Joe. W., and who is now visiting in the old home State. We encroach on space in the foregoing allusions of a personal nature for the bene- fis of many old time personal friende and acquaintances who may not bave known of the changes that time forces upon ue, hav- ing been led to think thus from letters at band, expressing surprise that the writer still survives, With this we close a series of what was intended to be of four or five articles that have been swelled to about an even dozen. Claiming no pretention as a writer for publication, baving never attempted such previous to this, we apologize for poor con- struction, but emphasize the accuracy of the foundation and in conclusion assert what has permeated the entire series thas Pennsylvania and Iowa are both good enough to live in and enjoy life, good enough to die in, and not fis subjects for adverse criticism, and in support we ap- pend the following composed by a member of our Keystone club, sung to the tune of My Old Kentucky Home, and always put to use in our annual meetings : My Pennsylvania Home. BY W. W. FINK, Turn back, O Time, to the days of long ago, In fancy we fondly return To the dear old State where the Schuylkill's waters flow And the mem’ried lamps of childhood burn. Through the eyes of youth we can see the dis. tant hills In purple and shimmering grees, Her mountain chains and a thousand rippling rills, And her mellow, golden fields between, Cuorvs Pennsyl—ensyl—vania But vain my pencil—8o We will sing one song for our Pennsylvania home For our childhood's cherished home of long 8gO. On battle-fields where our fathers fought to break The shackles of the tyrant old King George, Their graves lie low by the river and the lake’ And at thrice heroic Valley Forge Der Dutch, der Dutch mit ihr karshe pol und such, Und ihr schwetza halver English yust so gahr, But der karsha pof und brodt warscht of der Pennsylvania Dutch Nourished heroes for the migh ty civil war, -Cno. The quince bush grows by the little cottage door As ever in days that are gone, The schoolboys play on the Susquehanna's shore In the glory of their life's bright dawn, A golden haze from the happy olden days Falls round us, and so, once again In loving tones we will soft our voices raise For the dear old land ef William Penn, Cha, Und noon mine lieben froinda, missen wir obschide namen. Wir baben angen- amp teite mit inander verlebt. Ich werda alla ein leaboolles ondenken in minem hertzen bewaren. lob schleetza mit den schaven, trastrichen worten Schiller’s : “Fer dies kurtza meochen laben awich- kiten mustz es gaben wo eich froinda wedersaben.”’ Good-bye, 8. W. Baker. Des Moines, Iowa, June 1st, 1909, Odd ltems from Everywhere, Union lodge, A. F. and A. M., of Nao- tuckes has received from Thomas H. Ran- dall, of New York,a Masonic emblem found while excavating ancient Roman ruins. It is shooght that the emblem was worn by a master Mason in Rome more than 2000 years ago. While the seeds of the dorows, an East African leguminous tree, are extensively used for food, the pods and leaves form an egeellent cement when mixed with orush- stone. Joseph N. Hope, of Dover, N. H., has a bread-toaster that was made in Lebanon, Me., nearly 250 years ago. It is made wholly of iron. Marine lamp-posts are still in nse at Ply- mouth. They serve to mark the way at night for tugs with scows engaged in the work of making a deep barbor channel on a tidal sohedule. In Australia, where women vote, the child of a poor widowed mother, instead of being taken from her and placed in an in. stitution, is boarded with its mother as the expense of the State. nerves and pervoueness, i Satie os val so? makes the mind cheerful. Is ly does away with the pain associated with the baby’s advent. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. i FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. So Life's year begins and closes, Day's through short’ ning, still can shine; What though youth gave love and roses Age still leaves us friends and wine, ~Moore, “Sprig and Autumn,” Sativ is perennially the leading material for the wedding gown, bot it is more shan ever the fabric of to-day. when gloss ie de- sired of all materiale. Of the satine there issuch an all but endless line thas is is difficult so discriminate. One thing is troe of all of shem. They are glossy to the last degree and supple as she silk will allow. As tbe season grows uncomfortably warm for satin thinver materials will take iw place. Acrepe de chine of satin finish, tulle, net lace and chiffon of various textures. The weddiog gown of to-day is as pistar- esque a robe as ever a girl plighted her troth in. In the robes seen this spring the waist line bas dropped more or less, as is basin all other toilets, and she lines of the figure bave been brought out at the waiss and bust more than is possible when the girdle is lifted. As yet, all the gowns are of priocess style, although some very hand- some ones have been seen that bad a two- piece effect. This is usvally done, how- ever, to suit the figure. Certain figures carry off better a gown that bas a break somewhere between the hem of the skirt and she buss. Oae of the loveliest spring weddings which took place on the other side of the water was ail in white—the bride, her two attendants, the four little flower girls and two young boy pages, who wore white sailor suite. The bridesmaids wore lace and the flower girls chiffon. The bride’s gown was satin. The old-fashioned blue and white check- ed gingbam is developed into a smars little gown that is equally suited to some of the soft wool materiale or to flannel, of which at least one gown in the summer wardrobe should he made. There is a four-gored skirt, with a double box plait down the front, which gives the effecs of a panel by being piped with plain blae, like the blue in the check. The jumper suit, on acconut of its con- venience, will figure conspicuously this season, bus the gunimpe and sleeves are generally securely attached. Sometimes, too the skirs is made separate, but provid- ed with hooks, and the waistbands with eyes, especially where there 18 any degree of fulness in either or both. It is still somewhat of a puzzle whether trailing skirts shall be given preference through the summer. The odds are with the nays. There are, and probably always will be, certain occasions upon which only a long skirt is appropriate, and there are a great many materials suitable only to be fashioned into long gowns; bat for all but ceremonious occasions there is no doubt that the instep-length skirt will be the more generally worn, although the design- ers still advocate the others, There are many pretty designe among the inexpensive linens, the cheviots, and ocotten orepes, shat have small figures print- ed on them in delicate colors. They are as cool and smart-looking for morning wear as white, and somehow seem to keep their immaculate appearance for a greater length . of time than all white. White is used a great deal for trimming purposes in the way of bias, straight, and shaped bands, in stripings and pipinge, and in jackets and barness effects. hite braiding or cording on colored materials is one of the fads of the moments, and for this there are many varieties of braids—plain, lace, applique braids, round, flat, tubular, and io all widths. The cherry season is at band. Native fruit is already fairly cheap in the markets aud before long will be here in quantities for preserving. No cherry is better for canning than the bright red Royal Ann. The Morello is aleo fine. Neither are sweet SuoUR AG ekt, bug are ideal for cooking aod preserving. Harper's Bazar suggests an original method of stoning cherries. Take ordinary long wire bairpins—new ones, of counrse—and sterilize by dropping for a moments into boiling water. Pas the loop end of she bairpin into a cherry ull ont the stone. The [ruit will be very ittle injured. In preserving cherries aliow three quar- ters of a pound of sugar to each pound of a b ono ¥s Shigsine ide Rleiths thr a n vessel. Cover the leave overnight. Drain off the syrup and boil until the scum rises. Skim carefully, put in the cherries and cook for about twenty minutes. If cooked too long 8! rit lone ite Beautiful nei 0 e a very preserve as above. After the fruit has boiled twenty minutes take it out of the syrup witha skimmer and place on a platter in the hot sunshine. The dish should be covered with a wire screen if the busy bee and the industrious fly are not to benefit. Boil the syrup until it is thick and like molasses. tn the cherries to the syrup, bat only to heat through. Seal in tumblers. The best oherrries for the table are black hearts. Served on lettuce hearts with a delicate onnaise these cherries make a delicicus . Many people stir into the mayonnaise a ocupful of whipped cream, bat this is not necessary. Natural finished willow furniture may be cleaned with soap suds in which borax has been dissolved. It should be applied with a scrubbing The pieces should be dried very speedily in the sun. oom The old-fashioned remedy of ying a one of the best apelying + roat. bandage, such as a folded in cold water and begins | evenly diffused in the finest kind that, as FARM NOTES. ~—Asbes of savy kind mixed with dry soil will make a good duss bash for poul- try. —When genuine roup breaks oul among the fowls it is very difficult to get rid of. By keeping the hen houses dry and bav- iog perfect ventilation she disease may be avoided. —Two crops of lambs casnot be expeot- ed in a year with any sheep but the Dor- sets and Tnois, and with these it is not considered desirable to breed twice a year. Ae a rule, single lambs once a year will be found wore profitable than twins or two lamblings, even with the Dorsets. —Out of 2,500 hoys recently examined in the schools of Kaneas, only six cigarette smokers were found to be what would gen- erally be called ‘‘brighs.”” Ten of the re- mainder were average students, while all the rest of the 2,500 were found to be poor at their stadies, or worthless. —Cultivation of the soil is not merely done to kill weeds, but it is a moisture con- servator; it makes the soil more porous, so that the the plant roots more easily penetrate in search of plant food. In time of protracted drought the cultivator should be kept going whether there are weeds or not. —The asparagus beetle is now doing damage. The best remedy is to cus the shoots as soon as they appear above ground, ae tae beetle attacks the tips. Many per- sone prefer the green tops of asparagus, bus the best stalks are those cut when the tips Sew, as they are then tender from sip to butt. —Oope of the handiest things about a farm is a canvas large enough to cover a load or stack of bay. Those who still stack all bay outside need one most. Bus there are many other uses for one, such as cover- ing loads of grain that can not be unloaded before a shower, a protection for the binder on dewy nights, ete. —S8prinkle lime in the watering trough and not a particle of soum will form on the surface. hen the lime loses its strength, scum will begin to form, which may be twice during a season. Wash ont the trough aod repeat the dose. It is cheap, harmless, wholesome; keeps the water sweet and saves the live stock. —Some Philadelphia gardeners use lime and tobacco water for destroying many in- sects which prey on plants. A half bushel of lime is emptied into a barrel of water, together with a backetful of tobacco stems. Thie is well stirred up, and after is bas set- sled for a day or two the clear water is syringed over bushes, killing all insects that come within ite reach. —Melon vines sometimes die from no ap- perent cause. Decay begins at the base of the vines, the branches not falling until later. This freqnently bappens when no indications of insect damage appears. The cause of the dying of the plants may be from the ground being low, or from the use of fresh mavure in the hills, which oreates too much warmth during dry periods. ~The bumble bee is a friend of the farm- er. In sections where cloverseed crops are depended opon, the value of the bumble bee as an agent in fertilizing the olover blooms is fully appreciated. A knowledge should be bad of the useful as well as the destructive insects, which would prove that the farmer bas quite as many good insect friends as he bas destructive ones. —Good hay can only be made by cutting the grass as soon as it heads out, and clover a8 soon as the heads are in full bloom. It is a mistake to wait until the heads turn brown. There is nothiog in the theory that sunebive alone makes bay. Air is as much a factor as sunshine. Curing mainly in the winrows and bay cocks is now ticed by many of our best hay specialists. ~—A stockman claime that when calves three or four days old become sick and die with scours it is due to indigestion, ap- parently, and yields to treatment with pep- sin if taken in time. A teaspoonful twice a day given in a little warm milk after feediog will cure it, and if given when the call is born, and continued for a few daye, will prevent it. The pepein is the common kind sold in drug stores, and can be pur- chased by the pound. —Shallow cultivation conserves the moisture and prevents it from ing from the surface. Every time a rain falls the loose ground absorbs more than does the beard soil, as the latter permits the and | water to flow off. When the rain goes down into the soil, avd the soil then loosened, the capillary tubes are sealed and the flow of water upward ie arrested. A loose top soil, therefore, not only permite of securing a large share of water from each rain, bus also retains it. —1It is claimed that by pouring butter- milk freely along the backs of sheep it will ve a remedy for sicks. It a gill of erosene is added to a gallon of buttermilk the remedy will be improved, as the kero- sene forms an emulsion with buttermilk and does no barm to the animal. The rem- edy will cost bus listle and should be given a trial by way of experimens. It is also claimed thas if buttermilk is given a horse it will serve better than soy other asa remedy for bots, These remedies were Suggested by parties who bave tested t en, ws S000 Sovusty ol Jandy is jpuiid, a law exists com a to duced for each pig of whi” Sig om sheep on the farm is ly ander- stood and appreciated by ish oe 3 he ae $0 ¢ of the Fue salt is so of batter, is showm icroscope, a film of clear is surround —Do you know where you can get a fine fat mess mackerel, bone ous, Sechler & Co. Doge in Hamburg are taxed according to size. The bigger the dog the higher the tax.