FARM AND GARDEN NOTES ITEMS OF TIMELY INTEREST TO THE FARMERS. room of the amateur's garden it Is de sirable to keep the fruiting branches as low to the ground as possible, and effort should be to make strong. In the summer pruning, rather, “pinching out,” of every made them thes Bees and Horticulture-Thinning Fruit. Crapes in Summer-~Eradicating Moles from Gardens. shoots are the strongest and the lower the If it to the low the is desirable town rd weaker, branches ones have TO GROW CELERY, Cole requires very rich and yet moist It should be made rich by previous manuring, as a large amount of manure put on the year the crop is to be grown makes the soll too dry. and though the celery will grow rank for a time, it will become dry and If the soll in which celery is to not rich enough, ry soil fresh pithy. be gome quick acting nitrogenous commer. cial fertilizer will be found more profit able as well as cheaper than the quan grown is found tity of stable manure needed to secure an equal amount of growth. The com eercinl fertilizer land as stable manure will, will not dry out the ES AND HORTICULTURE. i fruit fits in more hap ith the production of honey than ition. When bees chard growing of pliy Ww i 1 . 1 . Ty loes any other occu Head He Host 1ttentic weds least, The Wf any benetit next Dire | They es TIA HZB LION, i srtainly are and he blossom an opportunity * sejection of varieties, ti in gather the * beekeeper « until honey BUTTERMILK FOR POUL a little careful 1 hinning out the fruit excess. By this rop of the best quality ANnge when mesgns ao of be secured yearly and or doubly remunerative 4 the let-alone anagement in fruiting fri made wl w system great trees 1 he on had the inves im to thinning ose who have this a profitable O but ti extra labor meet Iw itlay. It is SCOTo ¢ labor, but that an that it is wisdom to withhold labor when it ean be employ- ed profitably, and those who have had in when the trees were overloaded main. wl 1101 Te experience thinning out peaches tain that it is an outlay which pays bet ter than any other expenditure on the farm. RAPES IN SUMMER. cal cultivation of grapes are intended for large vineyards, where the grape is cultivated for market purposes alone, The amateur gardener who has but a ay that the best time for pruning his grapes will be the spring and summer months. He should have a clear idea as to the number fruiting the following season, and, soon after growth has commenced, the weaker shoots that he does not need for fruiting the following season should be taken out. All the vital power of the plants will then go into the branches that are left. They will be strong aad healthy and bear fine grapes the following season. Another point to be attended to is that in the Hmited throw the strength of the plant into the weaker branches and make them as strong as if they pushed out from the upper portions of the plant, It is impossible to teach this in the few words of a paragraph. Much can be learned from actual trials, and If the amateur grower with little experience in grape-growing, and with this para- graph before him, will experiment with a single vioe for one year, he will learn book on whole week, studying a for a bry grape culture could MOLES GARDENS FROM nole, thu reountry That small, a pest to all sections of tl 1 rodent, sly ¥ to hbw gardeners shall be entirely r of them, is as yet an unsolved quest The fon most effectis all sections of has 1 8 were being laid in tation red spid ry fastor y have ove i 14 also ab I believe it 1% hw! Hy Pos FH sented itself, therefore de castor beans as all the animal world seems to do.” tests the Bicycles as Calamities. will presently Wl Business men be look. ing for a new tseorge to demolish the latter das cycle enemy of trade, the bi ery gide, “The bicyele has ruined our business.” While this state of the case is doubt ons exaggerated there iz still a mond cum of truth in this oft-repeated wail The bicyele fever seems to have spared po one, and ax a natural conse. quence money that was once spent in and the concomitants thereof, It i= well known that no branch of trade has been more visibly as well ns radically affected by the bieytle craze than the manufacture of watches, A large number of well known firms which once found it profitable to make watches have abandoned their manu facture for that of bicycles, This is said to be the case with, well known firms in Boston, Canton, O., and Rockford, 11. These concerns are still turning out wheels, but the wheels are no longer put in gold cases, The falling off in the demand for watches is justly attributed to the in- creasing number of twenty-first birth days which are now glorified with bi. eyeles, In the good old days his proud father always presented his hopeful son with a gold watch when the latter celebrated his accession $0 manhaod's estate, Now the boy must have a bicyele, In the brave days of old, when a girl was pretty enough to every thing she wanted she asked for jewelry or clothes or diamonds, Now she insists on a bleyele All of which is refreshing and amus ing when considered from the point of view of poesy or athleties, but to the Inst degree traglionl looked at through the spectacles of the honest tradesman For the retail jeweler no longer sells papa or the dry goods dealer no longer measures out silks and laces, the cigar man fails to sell Mary Jane's young man, and is forced to lay in slabs of chewing instead, Even the tall ors feel Men roll about much in bi suits nowadays never ur out their Theatrical # complain terly that the hurting sod * when they desery “© or a poodle dog. when watches dinmonds, perfectos to gum the strain, ®O yele ne to Wi other clothes hit thelr manager bicvele business thenrts u to go 10 the th felt the need of ip in Now fuent 1 the ardent of spooning together i i4eyY BO Hinnger that the loss nires on account + declares that pe ’ “w po, H . i were Known 1o s they went to the Qur Court Costume. in Minister Brook stein den obzrens.” worn bs never at time authorized bs the Journal, of New The only could wear under the was that Congress, asserts York, with em uniform a Minister Nel Me worn by Admiral or by General Anson G the coronation of the that of an officer in the American Navy Army. fridge, Cook, at Oo! inridge Is peither, are authorized by Congress to wear at Court receptions the uniform of their mnk, But any omer uniform or costume js explicitly forbidden by law, except the ordinary evening dress of an American citizen, This dress has been good enough for all our Ministers since the law was passed in 1807. The fact that an American diplo- matic representative is prohibited by law from wearing Court costumes has since become notorious throughout the Thus the assembled diplomats the with a broad grin, asx he strutted up and down the Court in his borrowed plumes, No other American Minister of Am- bassador has during recent years worn knee breeches at a Court reception. There are on record ‘in the State De- partisnt many protests by our diplo- mats against donning such a dress, It is reported that the Hessian fly has appeared in large numbers in Michi gan. —-— a The longest Egyptian railroad now extends wo Girgeh, 326 miles from Cal- re. CARSON CITY MINT THEFTS jones Pocketed Bars of Bullion and Sub- | stituted Others That Contained Less Cold and More Silver, One morning, about a year and a half ago, J. W. Adams Superintendent of the Mint of Carson Clty, received na wommunieation from Hirseh Harris, the melter and refiner of the Mint, con taining the startling statement that a clean-up of the refinery had re apparent shortage in gold bullion of, approximately, 3000 stand urd Superintendent Adams apprised BR. E Director of the Mint at Washington, requesting that BOC competent be tn Cnr y to Preston selected rather vealed an OUNCES Preston, person went son City Investigate, Mi Mason Andrew 'pited Mr Superintendent iy Office Mason reached Cars 15. IN 1nd robbed Mr. Mason « hear was as dumb as an Suppe “Mr tendent of the “Yes, «ft “Would it have Jones | #¥ie refining d a wuint partment be possible for this melt to been assayed and stamped, and vault Mr. about itv unto the wt hout Jones for a slowly thong ht moment, No, sir. in The amd then replied very {i don't think ‘act I'm sure it could not.” “All right. my friend” Mason, “vou will say nothing about and we shall see what Then a number of other melts were reassayedd, and the loss of Aska Yer it could be possible, replied Mr. this discovery we shall see” 75.000 in gold was accounted for, Oth. Tedd the belief that gomeone had stolen from the Mint, be tween June 1, 184, and June 15, 1865, nearly $100,000 in gold. After Mr. Ma- gon had the results of the reaseays offi- cially submitted to him, he walked into the office of the assistant superintend- ent of the refining department, and asked for his book of records of the as. says and refinings “Certainly, sir, I'll got it from the safe and send it to you,” said Jones. “I'll not trouble you to do that, If you'll get it now, please, I'll take it with me.” Mr. Mason responded, Jones turned white, then his face flushed, and then turned pale again, Hie seemed to have difficulty In moving in his clair. Finally he pulled himself or discoveries to book. to be a curious circumstance, The door of the vault containing all the “melts” in the Mint was just at the right of Jones's desk and not a foot away from book Hi, found the it Ww Jones nud time wnnted, for some that Mason, When Mr. Mason was able to make a careful examination of the book the first thing that attracted attention wis that nearly a dozen pages had been Next he discovered in Jones's Wis gave his torn out the was discoy- “melt” in which, by reassaying first evidence of the thefts ersd, It ns having received into the vault and charged off, Then, to cover the shortage in gold and the was entered been nme melt was to the re. the surplus in silver having again, and again entered as hav. ing been received at the In other Jones had made two entites up» of did not entered been sent HE fluery vault words, 1 1 » on his book something he LV been rumored Arson there were 801 Aint the and ons reason : 5 cateh these w That th line tribe, enough and = a wands proper territory f plain When tien operation they cau h a were first few ats. but a great many hore pork hen it dawned upon the owners would Ix iw rii their better to pen up their than to existence, roam at will over and =o they no longer the Vanderbilt demense” Paste That Will Keep a Year, I¥ssolve a teaspoonful of alum In a quart of warm water. When cold, stir in flour enough to give the consistence of thick cream, being careful to beat up all the lumps. Throw in half a dozen cloves and stir in a= much powdered resin as will stand on a penny. Pour the flour mixture into a teacupful of boiling water, stirring well all the time, Let it remain on the stove a few min- utes, and it will be of the consistency of mush. Pour it inte an earthen or china vessel: Jot it cool, cover it, and put in a cool place. When needed for fixe, soften a portion with warm water. It will last a year, and is better than gum, as it does not gloss the paper and can be written upon. Siberia’s Creat Railway, There are to be about 200 railway siations distributed over the new Bi berian railway. The rolling stock will comprise 2,000 locomotives, 3,000 pas. senger cars and 36.000 goods wagons, The passenger traffic will be almost ex. clusively confined to third and fourth cinsses, and the tariff will be very low. The works in connection with this | great undertaking are being pushed on | with much energy, and the work is ex. | pected to be completed in about six | years, The opening of this line will | shorten the journey around the world | by about twenty days.—Raillway Age. RICHEST HEIRESS ON EARTH, She Is Only Fourteen Years Old and Lives Nery Humbly. HT and ti nition dol- bundred the colossal fortune Hirsch Baron Premed of the late Maurice Gereuth, will eventu: her the do will make a tent be world The ross ctive gre nos ou that the loubtful, The AR I ROYEeriies v, nnd he ’ 4 gagogue {i of his end O11 ques he the it was To fief and training came 1 but naturml that up. fore, he should read iy acewde to the request of her mother, an ardent Cath daughter to continue in that fai deed, matter of fact, 1 child could have entered the Church, she must necessarily have abe jured all other relig And so it that in to her late brother inlaw’s wishes, Mme. Levy, though a upholder of Judaism, allows her ward to become a follower of an- other faith According to the provisions of Baron de Hirselh's will $200,000 has been set apart for the maintenance of Lucienne until she reaches her majority. Half of the income of this will go to her guardian or “gounvernante.” who will aot be called upon to render any ac count of the same, and allow ¥ inn #1 1.43 In- wri Ory the HEB] Jewish ols in deference stanch Curious Example of Thrift. Judge Fair, of Atlanta, Ga., who died recently, was a curious example of thrift carried to the verge of mono mania. In his desk after his death were found all the ink bottles he had ever used hundreds of them-—amd sev. eral thousand worn-out pens, and large bundles of envelopes which had been sent through the mails and were wholly useless, The average man consumes 20 pounds of sugar every year. The pearl fishery discovered off the south coast of India is very rich.