FARM AND GARDEN NOTES ITEMS OF TIMELY INTEREST TO THE FARMERS. Spreading Manure---Selecting Seed Grain. Description of a Good Dairy Cow---Small Crain Harvesting. ~ FEEDING FLESH TO HOG! It is a common practice to throw the offal left butchering of dogwst animal to the It will be greedily hog Is naturally car from hog ous: but where much such feed is given it makes iimal feverish, and flesh ix not so good for fod as pork made by feeding grains if ther any of the offal, the troduced into the are lesions disease disease hus be tne nay SW There is obiection to feeding such meat which have anima SOme and which will not } Wik of their eggs Cultivator, hy > I RE SPREADING MANI ’ shepherd & hou guard against, So that it is son questonable if the «ilo can ever on sheep farms tut ther usable possibl ly the sweet sugar beet or the sucenlent mangel question about roots, « special palatable and nutritions Rape cannot be sown with grass seed, as it will shade the ground so much a to wholly prevent the grass from to kill it short time, Rape spreading plant, that will fill the rows if they are three feet wido, being much like a cabbage, but with the leaves spreading, instead of making a head On any farm, and under good management, 8 flock of sheep will pay their winter feeding in the manure thoy fll make. Give them lots of straw, and they will convert it into the richest kind of food for crops. FOF grow. ing, of »0 simother it ax Com. pletely in a is a leafy completely gowwl While we are buying about all our woolen goods of England. to the ruin of our own mill men and impoverish. ment of our operatives, the great and | good statesmen of that country are | paying us for the practical freedom of the American market by devising legis. lative schemes for shutting out sheep and cattle, our | Thirty tons of roots may be grown | on any good acre of land by the right | cultivation. This will feed thirty sheep | for 200 days, or 200 for a month. This | will supply two-thirds of the feeding, i For the future ewes the twin lambs | ghould be reserved, It Is not at all | necessary that twin lambs should he discouraged on account of inability to] T is il trained fo toy then, Better ewes, all that { successfully wanted The rear i= is | rear | are training done by | feeding. : nals wirn Sheep are not robust thirty {drive of miles on n them and for them but much to {nltogethor too effect 5 Jop disease inlly ongestion of | the I'his trouble, Iw tire de Of the the skin wontld HIOST oR the lungs pre by ovevhenting prodine Injury t« off of |t a tempod and hy wool cause the dropping however, only in nry which the sheep will get over time, but it will not on the surely cause the loss of lan time. American na short Bve wool already sheep ihe at Sheep Bree ing SMALL GRAIN HARVESTING Improved harvesting machiners reduced the labor of caring for sma 80 considerably ain after it Is ripe, acreage is determined more bry prospective price than the « Hoetion, The pony binders hinders, the header, « confined to the great ure used « s. In NeCERsL Inily by ti certain loealit hods ly remain igh nnd does rot nproved rong i il to is limited ball They Ww 1 roller and ind 1 easily work in kind of band there pros fede nn very do good Hy grain, On the the iz a number of twelve ket These do well other foot binders on the n which can also be ved as headers in the heaviest grain, binding the great of grain with It i= pushed before the team, four horses be ing sufficient to propel it. With a little alteration the grain can be headed and run into a wagon instead of a binding apparatus. The three-horse mocnines, however, continue to be the favorites and cut the greater part of the grain, These have been greatly simplified une til the parts of the machine are few oven innss 0 Nar ago. The work is done perfectly. They will work on ground too soft for the ordinary reaper. The construction tiuat any one of average brightness can operate them, is Curious Egyptian Delicacy, “Rhabob” is one of the great delicacies the It i= a thin string of mutton, which is wound around a small ‘ron rod the customer waits, Lord Gower, an Englishman of noble birth, in a land where the tall silk hat is regarded as the fortieth article of faith, has started a crusade against the “dicer” as being unsightly, ungainly and altogether unnecessary appendix to wale attire, NOTES AND COMMENTS, (HX) Mada Ly fut Now to France lost 7 soldiers In ascar, rather a high price to Antananarivo be the taking of monument is to erected their memory The heen Intel ar, fol wlhale-boat Industry has nffected by the Cuban ow along the New of the insurgents the whale-boats in sight to New York The ws to use and agent buying all and shipping intention England coast an has been them bus sieved to honts filibu these landing men arms from shipments [he sone European Economist publishes facts with regard to the growth of the during population in countries of Arions Europe decennial period » OF . 1885-00 ge nerense was 29 FOO iH) Rome For 12.510 804) toy advanced added popu Austro- 1 iritain, 2.» have example, Russia het Laermany, SERS §,.0522.600 Ig lation Hungary, 3,502 200; i022 400 ’i,1 Wi fs ed urkey, 1.1640 0600) An article in ne point 3 opie; take testimony as to the pract cal re gults of leense and prohibitory legisla of of R108) ix he prevention niemper An to defray Loe appropriation made the expenses of the in- quiry The Australia They of the population, and spend their life in travelling from one little colony or “station.” as called, to another The name “sun owner” is applied to them for the rea. «on that the sun's setting is a signal for thelr coming. The “stations” far apart--twenty or thirty miles, or even more—the people have not the heart to send them adrift to the bush, A correspondent of Yoston IF'ranseript aays that is n paradise for tramps comprise about one-quarter it is recognized as a necessary evil The well-to-do farmers have usually an “travellers” hut,” and regular rations are served out to these wayfarers, a nikin or dipper of flour, the water-bag refilled and a “nk for the night. A dispateh from Duluth, Mian, an pounces the discovery of vast beds of part, of Minnesota. It is also thu: voese vast beds have become the property of James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern Railroad Company, a branch line of that raliway to the mines. Similar discoveries of very ex: have been Alberta hundreds of the Minnesota deposits Record that Hyered Of nan eventual transfer The place Ios has undeniable advantages the I against all competition, in Canada Wnt he Philandelphin it of says tuat n good conl ean the might of the ould turn ont he cheaply superion the neat t grea Prened iron ore, it 1! iron Dusiness where the ray material can most cheaply assem bled ih wien end w assert themselves The have Madagnas the pro + the latest num Oficielle Hova' customs prevalent in changed of tnne Cit not been wines establishment the French For in finzetie the final tectonnte, of thi contain under the bers heading of following “Fri little pil Review iY at Fi slave 1 little oman Fananarive hoy 100 frances 110 fran | r practiced by francs; slave, sluve grown w franes,’ ded HE the $ not exactly the same eruel 1 Lier i of Lies Hberal PAPER market should be French officials Af: ords 1s t uring fine weathe again on the riactures of } rit i it binving Ro it is that mans to lo Mummy of an Unknown Race, John McCarty 1 Ari a mamms 4 Hunter into Pros rong ht ott, zou that i= be a decidedly different He it while hunting a lion, which he had treed] and brought down, in the Verde canyon. In a cliff dwelling he had found a sealed chamber 7x9 feet. Tear ing it met a grisly sight. It was his mummy kneeling on a soap- weed mat, with the body upright and head erect, the Jong arms hanging straight down from the shoulder. in life he was about five feet seven inches high. In one hand was grasped a stone ax, in the other a bundle of barbed flint-headed arrows, As the air rushed type, open he arrowheads and the rawhide handle of the stone ax crumbled to ashes, as dia the mat and mantle which covered the mummy. The fine brown hair about two feet in longth, fell from the head. In the cave were found several earth. enware bowls, a tortoise shell and about £1.80 worth of besf-grade tur. rough, dust as It was The pleces rang- ino flint in this part of the country and ro known vein of turqnoise in the west. ern hemisphere of the width of these specimens, where the ancient got them is a mystery. The absence of high cheek bones and the fine hair Indicate that he was not related to the Indians of today. | THE YOUNC FOLKS, THE AIFELI Ten little children, standing Std y then there wep fearful of nine, Nine puzzled faces, Clkly, then there Eight pairs of heaven, BY, DURY seven grave heads, fix “lal lady,” d ¥ Carer strive, “Dut te, duty Five diearts so more Bix darlings, + were live un tiny more ann S00 the re As a peneral like ard ship are hut there them is United are some exceptions, and one of the “‘mascol” of the { cats I888, He Las traveled 150,000 miles in her. and something the Is feaman, sailors Martin Foley. Officers come and go, court martials ties are inflicted, but Charley remains the pet of the ship and the most exalted eat, marine or otherwise, on the globe. The bundreds of scattered people who have served on the Yorktown will be delighted to learn that Charley is still “on deck.” 80 to speak i tice. but be is still amiable and lovable They teil a funny story about this famous cat. When the Yorktown was on a dock on the opposite side of which sn English gunboat lay. As was his wont a view of things. Fome English sailors observing bis swagger, troduced. One of them went on board the English gunboat and brought vat Ginger, a lusty cat of Jofty British pretensions and aristo. eratic mien. The two cals met on the dock and touchsd noses in a disdaintul way. when, all of a sudden. Charley let fly his right paw. striking ‘he Iriton on the jaw and knocking him overboard. This act performed, he strutted back ts "im? His performance was cheered by the Yorkt i’ thint cal’s slo k pn I'he af ship. and {nies wn if 50 sletiire I i ime per, ent a! thie Prasig C3} 44 nears ry { Aa i ron tae SOOT ON i them hing i FHI [nite] 8 it the i \ { thor isar | know abou feline mance iz of [ese 3 Humble Ancestry of Proud Peers. n Nir John Houb Marquis of Salis. ‘homas « Goke, draper, A Matter of Nose. ite of the Important place given as an index of character, is but little to be learned from it the cause of an innate mind and the fea- Most of the correspondences which bave been remarked appear to be of a radical onder; but why a Roman first became associated with a warlike and domineering disposition or how a long and thin nose became n sp to the nose there in esthinating fiom If we omit the changes which take place in a nose during a life. ime of its possessor, there is scarcely i : No Tartar or Hottentot, Japan has shown that she possesses plenty of men with mili tary aptitude, but no Wellingtonian nose can be found within ber borders, Again, no Chinese nose is jong and thin, yet “John” is not without a certain apti- tude at driving bargains, The very correct maiden has colored stds and sleeve links to mateh each