not only live, but thrive on grass or clover pasture. on such pasture without other until spring grain is ripe. Peas are the | best feed for hogs, and these will be ready in about 24 months afler sowing, Barley is next best of the spring grains, and will mature sooner than the peas, Early sweet corn can be utilized to good | advantage, to be followed by later varie- ties, and fed stalks and all, and the | hogs will eat it with great relish, There | are more fattening properties in sweet corn-stalks than most people suppose. With the above auxiliaries hogs may be | kept growing through the Summer,and | be fattened without any corn. Young | pigs, howsver, will require something | more than pasture, Wheat middlings, or ground oats with the hulls sifted out, and slightly fermented, will make the best kind of food for pigs. The hulls of the nals are excellent for the calves or cows, If sows are suckling pigs, they will require additional food until the peas or barley them, The hogs may be the je a ing will be unnecessary, be scarcely anythi take the place entire in small cel The waste will Wheat rl might of corn, and if ground qual i ve nt Swine, lent food for der e country of all and and Keep 'JIEN we nees in th Con & y Lime to make uest ones th eh made at We wish KDOW to ba can be notirg, to deseribe one / thing,” tho ugh 1 3 may claim to have be be set at t! usual rails and re: ay. Two perso: : ntages than on fe dri at ¢ the ty Yorn t Jus here : good some Way Ye ia nd Of wire in the and 3 YE- MAY ny are put 1 of the wire the post or into which the w The advantages , that It it » rails ca ove anol staple driven ire 1m 3 be made fast. tvle of LY fence are i8 DOL y be carried. i wded too hard the iated, more watery attering gi frequent occurrence in milk, and the larger numerous they are onally, at the blood will flow this extren is cro nes vil ner, ~~ i ies Ids of more Uccas: | a milking, early pure. Wi me been reached t is may Le remedied by leav- part of the milk at each the flow dries down to an food and vigor of the cow last th ie nn he secretion too », and it back a " 11 milking Lill amount the can sustain, Tie oat crop 18 too generally treated as of little consequence aud often sown iate on thing else, prevails the average yield and profit 1s likely to be very small. stock leads to his neglect, not the crops on which the relies to ralse money to pay hired help or to clear off mortgag:s who give oats They culture and manure as any other, One farmer who used large quantities of phosphates on all his crops says that they pay as well or better on oats as on any other. better is clear. We underfeed when we grow our young stock, doubtless, in through aad the exceptional which occur have often the wrong kind of food given them-—an undue propor- corn is made the principal feed, of which it is capable, A MosT desirable little pig is the genuine ‘Small Yorkshire.” It would seem 1mpossible to breed any animal having more economical proportions for meat-making. Jigs of this breed are not so small as their name would imply, sometimes weighing from 160 to 170 pounds at six months old, They are broad on the back, which is very straight; deep in the body; with a very short snout, and fine legs, and altogether they are a superlative breed, AN Ontario, N. Y., farmer had twelve acres of land which was so wet that except upon knpolls it would not produce wheat, He laid drains two and a half teet deep and thirty-six feet i at a cost of $30 per acre, and ploughed deep. He could then raise forty bushels of wheat per acre, HU MOROUS, “How DID you } lose your arm, Mr, | “It was shot away at Cold Harbor.’ “Lose your leg at the same time?” | “About two hours late r, while they | were carrying me back.’ “And you are totally blind, too? “Yes: shell came into the hospital 1" 9 “You must draw a large pension? “Well, no; 1 don’t get any pension at | all, Papers are all right, so far as they go, but I haven't been able to hadn’t gone into the army | of the cholera, | winch was mighty bad in our town in 1863." nc —————— Youxa WiIre.—'' What you doing at that FIRST on earth are Second young wife—*‘1"m practicing making wrinkles; 1've almost forgotten | how.” “Wrinkles! Of all things! to have his wife Don’t you look young?” *‘Indeed I do, John is going with me to select a new bonnet this afternoon, and if he sets his mind on a cheap bon et he will discover that it makes me look as old as his grandmother,” A NEW GAs. —*The car is ful alumni,” whispered Miss Deckon ier friend from the west, j Cambridgew Of street #8 thes rd 11 al the \ you were on ‘3 wr y .}? “Won HN 3 No. ' § wan » neighbors, because of our they stuck uj 1 a few days K-up as they Strong lye iz sure death to apple bor- ers, Apply with a , Spong ge to the trunk and large branches, Frazer Axie Grease. un that it is the the Frazer Every One trial will cons best. Ask your dealers for Axle Grease, and takes no ot box has our trade mark on. Ss——_— WW ———— ince yo her, It should be boarded toward the north-east, ——— > — Consumption Surely Cared, To the Editor :—Please inform your readers I have a positive remedy for the above By Ita timely use thousands of hope! jess cases have been permanently cured. | shall be giad to send two bott PREE tO any of your readers who have consump tion If they will mend me their Express and PF. O. address. Respectlolly, I. A. SLOCUM, M.C,, SL —— so A writer in the ’raicie Farmer, after extended experiments, that wheat is gener rally sown too deep. - vt © ure Fits. ” This heading 1s a familiar sight 10 most news. paper readers, as it has appeared regularly in the best puniications for many years past { br. H. G. Root, of 1538 Pearl St., New York, has | a world wide reputation as a hy cessful specials ist In this distressing disense, and has, no dogs, cured more cases than all other doctors cotn- As an evelence of good falth the doctor sends a free sample bottle of his remedy to all sufferers who write for it if they give thelr Ex. press and PostoMoe address, L— Many farmers feed roots without first freeing them from dirt, This is an injurious practice, and harmful to cattle, 181 Pearl St, N. Y. ~~ I, In hundreds of cases, Hood's Sarsaparilia, by purifying and enriching the blood, has proven a poient remedy for rheamatism, Hence, If you suffer the pains and sohes of this disease, It is fair to assume that Hood's Sarsapariila will cure you, Givelt a trial, Horses will not suffer from galled shoulders if their collars are kept clean, Nothinglike Cannes Alaney ou Gravel, Engnt's, Heart, Urinary or Diseases Nervousuess &¢. Cure - Oflos, $81 an St, Phila aa a hottie, 6 for $5.00, Druggista ———— Benevolence begins with trifles and ends with God. for Dropsy, A headaches, blurred eyesight, 0 the eyes, nervous pros 1 frritability of temper, hot ¢ with chilly sensations, 1 pains here and ti sincss after meals, waket and unrefreshin y feeling of dread, « ha ustid POT uiness, - any considers 1 Are Amer , or Torpid Liv , or ladigesti your di number di atter what stag fe and al N tern s Golde no ri upon Pierce? oa Pr. Dis. | OVOry a r, and | Medical iw 4 Dr. Plerce's Golden Yiedic al Diss covery CURES ALL HUMORS, { “FOR THE BLOOD is THE LIFE.” r Dr. Plerce *u Golden Medical Discovery, 'CONSU MP r ION, 3 Se rofuls 1 of the i ungs, : 1 f ( « hroniec Discases of Liver, Blood, and Lungs. all { £1.00, ee ari woh! ation, World's Dispensary Medical As 14) ® 4 ® 3 I = 310010 $300 7:77" FRAZER AXLE GREASE. - Fraser suis, Sold rer Beat in the W or Co as Chioaaos, K. Y.a sel 43 WORK: 1,000,000 # Head °F Bar Me- Her Crips Loic, —Miss Birdie Ginnis complains of headache. little sister Molly has toothache, Birdie says: “Molly, you must have that pulled if it aches, It is hollow inside.” “Sister Birdie, don’t your ‘‘Yes," “Then you must have It’s holler inside,’ A larTLE your HAMLET — “0,” was the reply, **I don’t know What is the play?. “Hamlet,” “Then of course I'll go. I'm inter- ested in everything pertaining to hams, even to little ones,” pp ———— WHAT A Piry.—~Miss Chillingly— Mr. Featherstone Robinson—Y a-as, And it’s weally quite interesting to 1 was then, Miss Chillingly-—It’s a pity you gave it up. Only think! In ten years you might read it over and see what a fool you are now! > AX EARLY EviCcTiON.—A little Austin boy, whose impecunious parents are always moving from one house to another, wasasked by the Sunday school teacher: “Why did the Israelites move out of Egypt?” “Because they ecouldn’t pay their rent, 1 reckon.” om AI Sa. A RESEMBLANCE “Colonel Wilson 18 a fine looking man, isn’t he?" sald a friend of ours the other day. “Yes,” replied another, **I was taken ot Am 1 wh . ‘re 1 Hipye ‘Youl why, you're as ugly as m “I don’t eave for that; 1 waa for him, I Sug HAp THE MONEY.—Young Man-—I love your daughter, sir, and would lke to make Lier my wife, Father--What are your prospects? Young Man—1I think they'll be pretty good if you'll say yes, OBLIGING APPLICANT. — House » new domestic)—There is on The last girl hi vd a habit of coming into the par- whenever play the AN like it. You piano, do you? **No, mum. But Ol! earn wid a hittle showin’ ——— never think OO! eud from you,’ Enjoying HimserLy,~Traveler (to leman watching them throw trunks Grand Central station)—*You evidently don’t own any of those trunks or you wouldn't look so happy and contented.” Gentleman—*'No, sir, I'm manufacturer,” ONLY he Tie THING TO DO.—*My whispered, softly, as they sealed themselves on the toboggan, way down, what would you say?’? 18 one of the most distressing affi ple who are lis victims deserve the great success Hoo uring sick #h to allow tnd Invigorating God's the 441 Barsapar eadache ari gle conditie tem, Hoo i d fron raking Ho Hood's for ! 2., Ap iecaries | 100 Posen One A Great Medical Work for Y and Middle-Aged Men. fuse? she whispered, *1 should have to to let imply said, you A Bo DCO Lod fruit produ yzd certain will KNOW THYSELF. > BLISHED b PEABODY i INSTI Neo wM the TE, iH. Host 0) ba hd : 173 onEd oung MEDI. Beh St. M.D. 1. G. ROOT. M. # GRAND OFFEH! Solid Rolled Gold Rings almos VION ATTA Fagng 4 Bend with or CHP, sciting ate of Tinud spt with twe svely Blue Ture 1 wu Brilliant, Finte senial snd Diamond opuinr Flat Hand, Hine Sis iend setting, Rie, when dln OR. HAIR'S Tuma G » Asthe STOW page J JONES p= PAYS the FREICHT Ton Wagon Seales, fre Erers ¢ Fes xs Brass Tare Beam ass Beam ¥ Janes 8r 8 ROHAN T TER BINGHAMTON. N, Me Rhine Hashit Cored in 10 20 days No pay till cured. Dr. Jd. bicphens, Lebanen. Ohler Bs ot Best Waternroo! Glbl i vil and Coal: Ris werreritnd wet FAFA ENINER a = —- ler RH sy de RAND ¥ = EAA wo Gen. George Archdeacon Lr WILL BR GIVEN —— i A FREE TO JAN 1, 1888. Eo So de® - FOR Finely llustrated. Crook Farrar, o 1 EE de & A 5a A ® * " n U 00 Subscribers. a OH & he oF i RE EEE Wk ne, INCLU Th AXD OTHERS. ALS, of Natural History; jon price. bo FOR $1.75. AERA RABE RRE SEW A —
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers