— FARM NOTES. UNSALTED BUTTER —HOow many persons are there who would turn up their noses at mention of unsalted butter? Isu’t fit to eat! exclaims the opinionated person who does not Know what lie 1s talking about. Well, it Is a | matter of taste. Bat travelers from | Europe have the greatest dificulty in becoming accustomed to our strong, old, briny butter. They cannot eat it at first, any more than the American an endure the pretty, tiny pellets of fresh butter that meet him at every hotel in Europe. Bul again, so accom- modatipg is human nature, that, once forced to accustom bimself to the unsalted article in Europe, he, too, finds American butter briny and flavorless, The truth is that the most delicious butter is that which is left unsalted. For market, of course, it will not keep many days in the fresh state, but even then twice as much salt as is necessary 18.often put intoit. The salt makes it acrid, and destroys wholly the exquisite cream and grass flavor. For use in m3thetic homes, sets of tiny separate moulds, in the shape of a | strawberry or something else pretty, should be had. Take the butter unsal- ted, work the milk out, monld it in rich- | colored little gems in these, and put it upon the table in that shape. It is as attractive to the eye as flower or fruit, and the tasta of it upon warm biscuit or snowflake light bread—well, try it, that is all, wit CLOVER.-—AS ping up the fertility of the iL manures are (00 expensive, wrdly possible to make a suf- home-made manures; we! resort to sowing clover, rotating crops, and resting part of the | farm. Sowing clover is our cheapest and surest way of fertilizing, for whe growing on the land, we can graze il or mow it for forage and its effect as a fertilizer t for several years, Waldo t', Brown, of Ohio, one of the most intelligent and successful farmers of he West, says this of clover: *'With | thirty-five years of careful observation of the effects of clover, I have each | year valued it higher than I previous vear;a crop of clover cannot be grown on my soil without benefiting it: no matter what use itis put to— whether pasture, to mature a crop of seed; plowed under, or burned off, and each farmer who grow clover can determine for himself what is the best use he can put itt the roots of clover are the tant factor in the fertilizing val he soil, because their Irie i considerably exceeds that of the weight of the top; and also because they are richer in food elements than the tops.” FERTILIZING regards ke farm bou and 1b is hi ficiency of then must L } i } did the | i ue WinoLe GRAIN FOR FOWLS try do not need to have th masticated, If they did nature woul have provided them with teeth, and, as everybody knows, *'as scarce as hen’s teeth” bb become a proverb. The work of mastication is done in their gizzards by the aid of stones and shells. it is better for the fowls’ healtn to keep this mill suitably provided with hard food that needs grindh up. Your ¢ are often injure have ing too # proportion water It does not g gizzard ent exercise, Try ing whole a little while, ‘hicks w sme hard, lively. elr A 1 f Of ig y yy ME food the feel. The and ive ¥ $ $ WHeaL bec pian raft ti walter and f Of only The slowly salts th bumen fungu sdevelopment, , We are told, has that, whereas fresh { rots away in a few sawdust wood which has aked sowe time in water, and has thereby Leen deprived of soluble mat. ters, will remain 1n the ground under similar circumstances wholly unchanged and only shitly tinged en the exterior with ear watters dissolved from the SOE, @ experimen when bus years, He is a wise farmer who proviles plenty of pasture for his hogs in iummer, T i» hog is as much entitled to grass in summer as is the cow, and will profit by it equally as well. Many farmers | very little attention to what food ing time, thinking that uutil ther all that is necessary 1s to give them barely enough to keep them alive, and then they are imuatient to stuff them with all the corn they can eat, wondering why the hogs don’t do better grow fa make sweeld wiiy the ower is so unlucky as 1s hogs i cholera. AY to have Mr. WiLcok, says: the habit of 1eeding stock with wheat for some years past. I consider it to be more nutritious than any other food I have ever used, My plans are as follows: chaff —the greater straw thrown ever a given quantity (tour or five pounds) of meal, with as much pulp root as you feel disposed to put in, mixing it together. Give 1t twice a day. To sheep I always give it crushed or bLiuised--say a pint or a pint and a half each per day; it is the finest food for sheep I have ever used,” Pigs that are to be marketed this year should be pushed hard from the beginning, If allowed tostand still for a day there willbea loss. Ground oats and corn mixed, or ground eorn and wheat middlings, wil make a good slop for the pigs; soaked corn will also be highly relished, and will be found well adapted to keeping the pigs in high flesh, but as soon as the new corn shall be fairly in milk that will be found the best of all fattening foods, On the other hand, if pigs are to be kept over the winter there should be no stimulating or forelng. Give them the run of a clover field the first suw- mer, with a small allowance of grain. SCIE NTIF 1C. A joint for diving bands in which grea tL strength is combined with an even surface has lately been offered to the public, although it has been used pri- vately for upwards of five years, Messis, Bailey Brothers, of Chancery- lane, were apphed to by a large firm of m—————— go modified from that which they have long made for mending china and glass that it might be used for joining ma- chine belts. The ends of the belt to however so long as the width belt. The cement is applied hot, the two parts are put carefully togelher and the joint is subjected to pressure from a vice, use the belt before twenty-four hours have elapsed, when, will be the last place at which the belt will break. the belt with a heavy weight on the joint, the joint and of stretching the belt, It is stated that the joint will stand both heat and damp, and that one has never cm ————— (Ersted, very early in the present century, discovered by accident the power exercised by acurrent on a mag- He was hold- approached it to a wire ich a current was jassing. he at gion that the magnet was deflected y the overcoming of ASUe for the moment the earth’s magnet- ism, and it {1 across his mind that the reason why the magnet itself points to the north was owing te the directing force of currents passing ¢ and west round the earth, The idea, thus developed into el gnet- d lirecting force 1 east § lectro-mi 181, 1as been inventad in Ger- erns and machinery. It as th surface almost is applied, Thirty pounds of shell 1s of Manila copal, a nd ten poun are placed ir in a vessel, externally by steam, from four to six 150 parts of the } 1, and the 7 s+ Al tou de A varnish | many for patt dries, leaving INO0L ten is ac, nn Lia of Zanzi bai Ci which eated and stir red daring hours, which pal 3 after i i i i le heated for four hi - This liquid is dyed by Orange “a whit ATES grees, Hr JULES Wie ' ’ VON Ol applied as a ive poun nds of Manila 13 of spirit her fore: imports +4 amount ly 8106,0 Bth last om ¢ adr Pi £3, s from Japan for 8 Year. wi to $2.5 G O00 last JU OUR) ast gri Britl yny will t problem, which wiii Li ies, Lhe SCOR (. E. Dessey, calls attention in American Naturalist to an puff bail This particular found by Professor R. E. Herkimer County, N. Y., belon the species known as Lycoperdon gngan teum. Photographs of il were Laken, It was irregularly oval in outline, much flattened, Its largest was 5 feet 4 inches, 6 inches, the enormous fun gus, 4] and diameter its smallest 4 while its height was but I'uis specimen, the wri ter the largest of any of whic feet “i is i VAarison. i Setls Green states that the cause of number of ale wives, the bodies of which are found floating on Lake Ontario, is starvation, at all, yet they will follow the school day after day until they starvation. > troleum is sufliciently volatile to be daugerous : Herr Montag points out a very simple and conclusive method. tills a glass three parts full with the pe- troleum to be tested, and fills vp the glass with boiling water, at the same time holding a flame over it, If the vapor disengaged becomes ignited the petroleum should not be cousidered a safe liquid to leave exposed to the at. mosphere, a———— - > n—— A writer says: “I discovered, many years ago, that wood could be made to last longer than iron in the ground, but thought the process so simple that It was not well to make a stir about it. Posts of any wood can be prepared for less than two cents apiece, Tuls is the recipe: [ake bolled linseed oil and stir In pul verized coal to the consistency of paint, Put a coat of this over tae timber, and there is not a man that will hive to see iv rot,” SALMON SALAD.—Toa can of sal- mon take eight or ten stocks of celery; cut the celery into small pleces and mix with the salmon, which also be picked into small bits; sprinkle over a little salt and a very pepper, and pour on some good vinegar, A small onion mi ay be added if at APrLE JeLLy.--Use fair, sour apples, Shee them, skins, seed and all, and simmer with one-half cap of water |t Then strain | 7 pound of boll a few clear; then cover when |° through a cloth, add a sugar to a pint of juice, moments, skimming till into glasses, and cold. GREEN PEA Sour ~Boll three pints shelled peas in three quarts of when soft rub through the and add a little water, re- of colander Boil | hour, thicken with a table- flour mixed in two table- | Season to taste, SLICE PINEAPPLES, — Few | that pineapples in their are never sliced, but | are carefully broken | gpoons of cream. Dox'r country al silver fork, If this way 18 once tried They | for cutting across the grain. both or ining. — - yisil SEED.—A paragraph going rounds saying that the orseradish plant never produces seed; | hat its only mode of spreading is from | he root. It not really need any | method propagatio but we | seen a horseradish seed on 1e soil was thin and poor. usual ly ed ont warden or al soll dl plant has no ir need of producing Place it it 1s pinc hed a to die, and it will propagate same us all other plants do. HORSERA 18 Lie 1 ah ) h { t doe . £1 few +) ich g AS istinet seed. Where L111 WEEDS IN POTATOES. —The labor of keeping potatoes free from woeds late int season needs to be done careful- a8 to disturb the pay, | by pre “ 80 not setiin not only Iz uced, bu harvesting it. Few nes will do ro } t work where ly. The But it ¢ better Croj the case o© potatoe diggliog work, and non the ground is careful hand will still y 1 + iv ) Bre { r machi peried Very wee most a leave s The trustee Franc Feil of Par Pal i $1 a gians Mt hha wr * 8Co nD A + for $ Hamiltor Wad some rs nt at a few Hght could i Olt yd ik OK DY bthouss deparime Th o “The Nliood is the Life.” The ing real price ti e of acquinis of every gr it Ig il. Farmers complain that sparrow destroys the buds o and bushes the English f fruit trees c—— us headache, and om ach and bowels, ierce’s "Pelle wf anti No ¢ By drugg and billo iH de cured ~bilious | McK by Pr. P fins, WwW Waste oO gra heap buxes to al ri mta, Boil blackberries aix minutes, wilh six ounces of sugar to the quart, e "9 either sex in stanps Dispemsary i Delicate diseases or ly cured. Bend 10 cents for book. Address, World's Medical Association, Buffalo, —-—-— Wy clean knives: —Cut a small pols , dip it in brickdust and rub them, — - Fraser Axis Greases, Teo the Fraser Axle Grease, N ‘tis the best ~will wear twice as long as | other, Aak your dealer for it, and take no other. —-——-—— Boil peaches, whole, fifteen minutes, a ——— Rood's Sarsapariia is made only by C1. Head & Co, Apotaecaries, Lowell, Mass, [i is prepared with the greatest skill and care, under he direc tion of the men who origio ded 1. Meade Hood's Bareapariis may be depended upon as Mrcuy pure, honest, and reliable. ————————— If afflicted with sore eyes mse De, [sano Thompe son's Eye-water, Druggists sell at Zo, per bottle Boil plums ten minutes; eight ounces of sugar to the quart is needed, Nothipg like CRONE nianey Cure for Dropay, Gravel, Enghts, Lieart, Urinary or Liver Diseases, Nervousiess, Ke. Care goaraatesd, OMoe, $31 Art Bb, Pda. $8 bottle, 6 100 800, DIuggisia Ty i. The greatest wealth is eontentm: nt with a litte, OASIS 50065 Tovar GLoe' mends anything! Nroken Chie na, Glass, Wood, Froe Vies at Drugs & Gro. a The friendship of the artist 1s mere self-interest. The best cough melioins is Piso's Cure for Consumption. Bold every wire. 20a, home,” won by Hood's In Lowell, Mass, where 1t Is pre- | of Hood's Barsspariila xold | medicines, neighbor | at the time, and it has | given the best of satisfaction, or nis could not be | if the medicine did not possess merit, If you suf | {ny | i there is more han of all other Whol same debility, try Hood's Sar- “1 had salt rheum on my left arm three ing terribly, 1 took Hood's Sarsapariila, snd { he salt rheum has disappeared,” MH. M. Mions 1 French 8Bt, Lowell, Muss, HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA il dra $1: six for §9. Prepared | Mass, Years, ' at ggista, i 3 100 Doses One Dollar, COCKLE’S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS | THEGREAT ENGLISHREMED Yor Liver, Ble, ¥ree from Mer. iry: outains or Vegetable Ingre Senta Bs nt RICH PTENTON, New York. | | | { | | | | | | i i Bd 2 | { { i i { | = Indigestion, ele, | 643 AR ASTHMA, 38 KIDDERS ASTILLES fad Jvement HERBRAND CO, Fremont t O HOT Fruit CAKE, — SEIOLD., One pound of butter, one pound of flour, large nutmeygs ful of mace, namon, one teaspoon half spoonful yw rind and juice small UAT, twelve e two Froun ground, EES, b one teaspoon one teaspoonful of cls 1 tea ated yell and four pounds 1 4 y 1 our pounds of raisius, pounds ron, half pound each BWeet and almonds blanched and beater almonds bianched and beater rose water. To be n one large loaf. It tikes eight hours Oovell. ginger, g ne} one lemon rosewater, 1 i Y or) giass currants, orange, of t itter 5 " i in a moderate PEACH SHORT( The cake one pint of flour, one leaspoon- 2 powder, two tables AK}: of bakin one saltspoonful poonfuls of sugar 1 then mixed of butler. moisten with Bake in two QVen. Have slices, four tablespoont When thoroug bly mixed, teacupful of milk, His one eac Ol deep pie-plates In a quick in As soon as the cake halves, but ’ in ter tl ge Hece Warn em and arra: tween th I've slices of peaches 5 ink! with = @ 8. 1 x gar. Se ing creatn, Ris VLES, ne cold chicken, seas pepper roll out’ a cut into veal and salt t. as for tarts, oblongs, as for a tablespoonful of the in the centre of each, egg, and i Saveiopng the of the paste quick oven. over with beaten oven a m These LIVET. KOH BQUAIeS Or turpovers, put seasoned weal © inke me at. into rol edg bake a Pinch firmly together; When brown wash egg, leave the glaze and t he at ¢ nA in inute serve Lol, f cold ealfl’ of cod ar » (vs are Lice & RUSK,- SUZAT, yeas! Une q of half a lissolved in warm one Leas poonful { , TWO & lour and salt togelber, pour yeast. and let rise four or fi beaten e these cake, | Wal KE or evs be if salt ve yore addi gx HERE Sugar, mm AD, 8, | FRANSES, itier eat, four and teaspoonful O twice the flour, of ginger, one teaspool Nace Al cinnaino thirea eges : beat together wm hy BUgar, butter and spices ati! they are very light ; put in th e milk, beaten eggs and finally flour, Stir Len for minutes and bake ina “cand.” Break i ad of cutting it and eat with ced K as an accompaniment, ips ot fou ia, sifted Wr ful teaspoonful of mixed alt ave i Te Ter. fouxp Tmmper.-—It said the soundness of a log of timber may be ascertained by placing the ear close to one end of it, while another person delivers a succession of smart blews with a hammer mallet upon the opposite end, when the continuance of the vibrations will indicate to an ex- perienced ear even the degree of seund- If only a dull thud meets the the listener may be certain that or eur, - CrunLers, —Butter sige of an egg, half cups sour milk, all well aod enough flour to make a soft dough. STEAMED IXDIAX cups of Indian meal, two caps of flour, two cups of sour milk, one teaspoo: of soda, one egg, a one cup of hours, pinch of salt and molasses, Bleam three a one cup brown sugar, two cups flour, one cup milk, one cup chopped raisins, one egg, one teaspoonful soda, one tea- spooniul cinnamon, one of cloves and half a nutmeg. of an our, Rice Gems —Use one pound wheat flour, one pound of rice; mix | thoroughly; add one pound sugar, one | 199 NVA RELIEF quicke r than any known and hie only Cures anc Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, 8tiff Neck, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Headache, Toothache, Rheumatism Neuralgia, Asthma, Frostbites, Chilblains, § 1s first remedy. al iT 8% { Prevents | waa Lhe natant flops the tion, hel ings, 88 allays Infla her of junds Kom the HK Nervous 1f¥¢ Finan R afford instant ease Thirty to sixty drops ¥ Miter how vio natie, Bedn s Ne ura gie, or w Yom 1864, Dysentery, Colls, Al "aus, I# pol a reme Cure Fever an 0x, a There thst wi Arious HE 1 per bottle DE. Great § AND IRON wl excruciating Cured ougesty Bowes, or other Mh. ating iofirm, paing, ns, m and OTA, applieati the pain Crippled, roc den, FADY RELIEF bier of waler Sour in haifa tun re Cramps, Spasm=, iting, Pal pitation Sick Headache, Wind in the Bowes af 1 of Dis and in the oLner dial agent Ma as HADWAY'S Drugglsia N. X., apariiiian Re- ay's Flies, ny's Say Ladw tarching NG POWDER. » perf o sbarcl {ness and § « £4 roiling Baves } dx 1 A TeV 1 scl wi thal r rabbing ut STARCHING. ; vir rt, do as nice wa Tn in any laundr 10 & @¢. pips. at al Grocers. wast x In ts slareh nm slip easy, rths the starch ¥ A boon 10 we is the wor Olesns 1 as the t washer Ppoeh, ti eX Perien Fe with ng and fron oR 8 TAD be Boi ng Dot DECESRArY il Oret-class, well sis ogked NJ.CEA Makes ir abide v ough or A SIRE INDIGES TION for. in: Di VKH rsrew ast } ¥ was taken the wl § > tthe { he and we wu Do nent hemitate reliable. ¥ ’ Ww M. ¥. H Manufacturing Che sr dr ard . i Pia Best, Ensiest to En J ws BW, TEL LAGE [urpov ia Hoare MM. 8S ha #07 P i nha ¥ lo P: bit ie woud at Alms Business ho aus § faraished, it Be charge unlems paten ‘SOLDIERS bi CURE POR and DY SP EPSIA. approval reparatt ’ ruin Where TOD it & t 0. mists, 53 John Btu N.Y Y Use, and Chong sent by mes Warren, Pa. wlane, hicago. PMENT ASsOCIaTIONS, H MTHROP, Clhiaton, ( pregasraniend by a. B Mayer, Ease at ohoe; Do or delay d 5 of cares, (fos SAM 4PM TN AM Advicalrss Pettit's Eye Saive 2 cents a box by dealers Hitun Write. £ Phila, Ia rehip. $40. Write. $40. ollegr, Li werd Sand fod ed; Beers’ Lravel pay, AW Laws went free, FREE © Blair’s Hox, 3 OPIUM i% "PENSIONS dissolve one teaspoonful of soda in Fail Deseription Rheumatic 4) round, 14 Pills. dave. No pay til An Increase may be ave, AQ dress Mino DL Steves & Oo, Metropol a Dik, Cldoago, 1H, HAT “AILS "YOU? ? languid, low-spirited V INisers i CXPOrIeno after eating, Hg 3 IROrh- ira Pe os en ng gpocks Pid CX iii cane Of maout regular appetite, Gi irred eyesight, OR, nervous ire rt 4 y of temper, hot ushen, chilly senss (tions, "sb sry, pains here and there, cold 8 after meals, wakefulness, or unrefreshing sleep, constant, ling of dread, or of in he alterpating transient drows disturbed inde 8 ribmbie ana Tox Apes erable number 1 sve all, COTRE ¥ Hs pla ‘oon or any ne, you mre imon of American Torpid 14 Indigesti your disease has swome, the number and diven of »y toms, No matter what stage it has reached Dr. Plerce’s Golden Medical Disc overy will subdue it, if taken according to direc- tions for a reasonable length of ne nok CLIT fications multiply Jp tion o aungs, Skin Dise anes, Heart Discuss, Rheum atiem . Kidney Disease, or other grave malndics are iite Liable to set in and, soc new or ater, | 100 a fatal termin Dr. Plere e's Golden Me dic al Dis covery acts powerfully nu vel through that great ! Cle 8 the system of all blood faints an atever © in Be ory sufferi stench nore the upo WM Liooag HIS ng ing Dr. Pierce e's Golden Me dical Dis covery ‘CURES ALL HUMORS, in red ink D BOTROR moro] 15 Affe “FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE. ”» Dr. Plerce™ Discove ry, and good it ry Me aie al a gos i CONSUMPTION, s Scrofula of the Lungs, 3 ¥ i retreat § ff ts or 85.00. go Brrr ter book on Ck World's Dispensary Medical As Association, 663 Main St... BUFFALO. N. X. ee set a THEATED FREE. rn gh pat enfl oe Lem WANTED: OR THISCOL NT, 4 For § NER i REing h | LIFE- -SIZE CRAYON PICTURES. ¥ gel raers Tess, i can eas poe ake a jarge nmiReinn Ad international Publishing & Printing Ce. 528 MAKRKRT LPHTA Dr %, | M & PHRILAD? N. & J. B. HOBE NSAC K. J. fe 11 Offices. fic d Surgics 40 Y EA HETABLIEHED, | 206 North Second St. Philadelplia, Pa Bry a 1180 Rom, MI SA. ML. 10%] t.. a0d rom 6 i a Si Be Hegn og ar + of Ber in i i pervous debility ar gpecia « jre Ir Al ot | yEIcians er oO (ff . {ep om « w trict tall pdt. GER Werks, Fittabarg i seh deading double Shotirans at 8% 1 barr eo breechdonders a! 84 to $12. Bree hi { Riffen from #8 50 t " 15 le burrel M Ehotenine sigh he ting | (Bom | Bib Sa Rocher ir a di i 10 #30. Bona Tastrst od Catalogo, Add } GREAT WESTERN uUN N WOR Ks | AFFLICTED >< UNFORTUNATE After all othere fail consult Dr. I.OBE 829 K. 15th 8t., below Callowhill, Phila, Pu. 20 years experience in JISPECTAL diseases Pen tanently restores those weakened by early indincew tions, Bec Callorwrite. Advice free and sivicty com | fidential, Hours: stam tile snd 7 10 10 evenings. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Postin nth Shey ond. Worl, ra only by the Praser iat Lakin a "J Sul. Sold S100: AS ga ens Debill a eal Weakneas that notanks a Aras Th TUR Bie Philsieissia Ta Bald bg sil Dragglens Hinge nL sol edomdinng 16a oot, stamp for ttebury, Ma fail be cure. BO Com, Mark Meodisos be rolled ana cut the same as cookles CucvMneEn SALAD, —Peel and slice the cucumbers aud jeave in 100 Wali r or un hour, drain, slice an onlon and lay 'n a cold dish alternately with the cucumbers, and season with vinegar, pepper and salt,
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