an ITEMS OF TIMELY INTEREST TO TH FARMERS. crets of Success with Co-Operatiy Creameries. SELLING YOUNG PIGS. in no quie to get mone ker way fow hrs «iin Keep a sir ples when ready t is always , and wean or soon after. There good demand at sideral It young s kopown hy make same fod t rick of it pig gets bed STACKING STRAW BY LOSI Hea taken the kernel inating POWErs doors as soon and healthy, str that mve failed Mile If vou find more t! ins a hundred that fa ter seed corn "Tost, take one itll you have a If you have already shelled the corn, see that it is r mixed, and select a handful froin the sack, The germinating power of corn is destroved when subjected to a hard freezing before is thoroughly dry. This may happen also if well dried, Is placed in a damp place, and. where the germ is by ie sod] corn, softened The defective stand in most fields, wherever is found, is on account of pour seed. H. H. Fiteh, in Sac Suan. it ADMINISTERING MEDICINE CATTLE. TO os hole, mean somnething particularly easy, and pearly resembles. Elevate the cow's head slightly, thrust the neck of the hottie into the mouth, and let ts con. tents run down, and most cows will take it as fast as it will rn. Where trouble comes in i8 where the bovines are refractory. where there Is a cough or other laryngeal irritation, or where the animal is partially or wholly un- Is relaxed with a quiet . well to d sin E «sible Assuming i mild tne CoN handed, he f i it front her 1 i . [HIRS over Ce, ihsert the point where ul elevate the angle P'ass the bottle {1 t well and mouth over the thick part of tongue, let ts contents How can swallow It a an and grasping both horns, wh imal may require assistant on loft side help elevate 1d Dy er may grasp the nasal fingers in r mouth require r elevated high and COLSSAry, ment number of rods be a hee ( what may may to Just hold you head down A bee will seldom fol the door of any building If a bee gots into a dweiling, the com in terror for fear it will sting some one, It has no noiion of the kind. You could not get it in other way than to catch it and pinch it. In that case it would sting its life. a bee to sting you if you find one out in the fields at work on the flowers, may strike it or do what you please un- lesa you eateh it and squeeze it ‘hand so as threaten its life, | may cateh it in your hand and bold it there loosely for an hoor, and if may try to bite a little but it will never think of stinging. But when you come to actually work. ames toward r you do, don’t strike it. That La ot, it st when other w fi ing, ve no other thoughts than just soodd a Hite, and walk away. low [naide mou thing is to be fo sting in de No more can you get fence of ito i you to be protected in such a way that i you need not fear their stings, especial: lly about the face. At first you may i want to wear gloves, but will probably | give that up after a time, preferring a i few stings on the bind to the discom- {fort and inconvenience of wearing | gloves. be time when a bag, open dd cord each ru linet ne on the or or holds WI about Kor chies! may be some comfort to know that y Lite hh as they do at first, 1 Hs cease after a to trouble to become habituated Massachusetts Ploughn (LM AND GARDEN NOTES should LW IVs sie Charity Whereby Are Aided Ber ir TNT of TYLER TY performance gion of a i% repeated on every occa » character, and it has | deter of Berd in oun made to any one living in mine NO exception is Be wiy Poor, the member ever rich nillionaire or | the coin and | rule ever RO whether a a rag-picker, the um wi the key amd allowed to remain there for a cer tain length of time, when they are again called for in the manner as they were brought, the president tak- ing charge of the key and the sexton same Poor people take out of the urn as much or as little of the money as they family event requires, while the wealthy and those in comfortable ele cumstances add to it whatever their generosity prompts, No one except the president knows whether a respectable poor man has helped mself to any much or little for the benefit of others, In this yay a poor man who strives to himself to as aid or even for a loan. The confidence thus reposed in each individual has nev er been betrayed or abused, and if it has no one is aware of it. The fund in the urn has never become depleted within the recollecton of any member, nor has the congregation ever found it necessary to add one farthing to the contents of the silver urn from any of ver source, NOTES AND COMMENTS, Creling Is i ation { fic nll, England by On comparing nite In produced only thirty Werk months with nnd nnd Wales, wo | number of acectdents it the total S11 through will Ir them er cent. of were caused eyveling It | population of our ¢ and New quarters are {lew York distin Francisco w hiere Chinese is gradually growh sinnlier Franc 8 nbout 15.000 of the had nw is five years The ex ngo lusion weeding ont the presen population ¢ almost prohlb nrigration Washington Star, murderers When Indian Territory Nation, that a certain Indisu was an excellent haod on the ranch, 1 hunted him up and asked bin work for we ‘1 will work until the 20th of next month,” he said. ‘Why not longer? | inquired. ‘I am to be hanged the 21st’ was his repiy, in an unconcerned way. 1 hired him, and upon inquiry learned that what be said was true. But one nmin has ever failed to return for hang- ing after hie has been sentenced, and my Indian did not prove an exception to the rule. On the day before the exe. cution was to take place he left as calmly as though going on a visit, and the hanging took place at the time ap- pointed. Notwithatanding his ape proacking doom the Indian made one of the best ranchers 1 ever saw, and | regretted to lose him.” Some of our famous athletes think republics ungrateful compare their treatment to that of the Greek who won the recent footrace from Marathon to the Stadion. “Noth ing.” says the correspondent of the London Chronicle, “illustrates the char acter of the modern Greek co much as the extraordinary attention shown to the winner of this race, He has been treated as a sort of demi-god. All his sayings are duly reported, he has been escorted In a carriage by a detachment of troops; when he walks the streets erowds of respectable men and women follow, and the King of Grebee has not only shaken hands with him, but both he and his father have been invited to the palace; private individoals have given bw large sums of money; wine: convicts went to the in the Choctaw and if he would may Louisi in 1821, ti 1840, 1850, and added Alaska, has SUN NN) square sinn: I Be pue i Mex I=. ni have been cluding Bsa nee, upon the ohserver then looks box. whose fungstatec is placed directly above startling distinctness, irk shiadows, whil is sees, with bones and joi showing as d del graduated faint] reason the bones appear is because they intercept the X-rays, and thus prefen the tungstate fluorescent where their shadows fall cately the flesh is only visible surface from becoming Human Heart Beats. A remarkable calculation has made by Dr. Richardson for the Med! cal Record, It gives the work of the heart in mileage, the amount of blood thrown through the veins, and winds up with giving the exact pumber of | times the human heart will beat in a lifetime of 84 years been ¥ | ont of the heart at each pulsation in the | proportion of GB strokes per minute, and at the assumeq force of nine feet, then we must come to the following startling | conclusion: That the mileage of the {| Blood through the body must be taken : at 207 yards per minute, seven miles pet ; hour, 168 miles per day, or 61.320 miles | per year. At the above rate in a life time of 84 years the blood mileage of | the body is not less than 5,150,880, and | in the same long life the grand total of | heart beats will approximate 2,860,776, Loo." The charities of Paris received $3000 as thelr share of the recent cycle meet ing. FIDDLING v OF Hunting Device for Those Who Have Hot 2 ained, a Wild Turkey 7 ——————— Whales Had Legs. iad ORE Femiis THORNS ROE 1 jes Wome descendants took These remarks the fore legs of their Mp all marine meam- ™ oy sn] qlee are represented by " ra ¥ rs, The ancesiors ol 11s were land animals. he Interne. 1 ig seals, which live on land to some ex- The porpoise is legless, but has Tee anoesiors constrictor possesses rodimen- The boa tary hind legs. A Few Equestrians Left Yet. ding Club, organized by some of the most prominent Germars on the north side, occaxionally goes out in a handy make a public protest against the wheel craze. Last Sunday the club, went two abreast out along the Sheridan road, braving i= way through droves of scurrying bicycles. Most of the men were lange and broad. shonltersd. They sat upright with military ®tiffness, and as most of them wore peaked caps and high boots the club had more of the appeamnce of a swell cavalry company. All the horses were handsome animals, high stepping and foll of spirit, It vas just as if they meant to say: “We want to show you wheelmen that there are still a few nf us left.” —<Chirago Recond. as if to oe Leafless Trees of Australia There are forests of leafless trees in some parts of Australia. They re spire, so to say, through a little stom, apparently answering the purpose of a leaf. The tree i known as “the leaf loss acacia”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers