FARM AN) GARDEN NOTES F TIMELY INTERE FARMERS. ITENS ST TO THE About Subsoiling.-Picking Ducks A Tonic for Hogs---Late Peas for Home Use--To Wean Foals. LATE Dk. There is market for first new tites of AS VOR HOME generally a USE, very after fot ! late peas FLO eas, because the have satisfied the appe lovers of this vegetable the amd it market it price rapidly deel pay to fresh very power of ¢ ON jut a fall is and grow succession of until and it is farmer to I'he far eshier vegeta peas desirable, casily in the very secure it by later plantings ways to have [1 ner ougn longdr sen age City res of ti adv he should not the most of three paki mer for instead of stopping imes wish they had, they go on to tell us that the water, soll and in fact everything, healthy animal non-tuberculous Hiv, except perhaps and milk from before drawn with bacterial life. No wondes of us get aged and fight, lea field germs, good, bad ferent, jet them fight it out ameng then selves, the bad abead. But ja it eal to go to the ilize finsite COWS feems many up the diseonur give 3 5 ing the fo and md ana usually com ot F practi and ster reasonable or other extrenn all milk or eream and then ferth ize with the particular flavor-producing germ we desire? Certainly not aml I doubt very much If that ti will come, though such flavors or “cui: tures,” are now on the market. ver thie TO WEAN FOALS When plenty of cow's milk can by had it is just as well for the foal, and better for the dam, to wean them whe: four months old. The writer haw weaned them when three months ola, and kept them growing right slong, a well as when running with the dam, by teaching them to drink cows’ milk and feeding them LBound onts mized with wheat bran, fefore beginning to w voung thing should be sen, and the after the foal is The colt or tilly esti ean a foal the thoroughly ha! ter hrol this is dong better sr become ae hoth and dry. This can be aed by feeding graln gularly ght and set upon th it that sooner drop ol the shoud ned to eating Onis whole ground, wet Horn ground floor, oi colt ean reach the After secing youngst ing aste, will not he will take his 8 fed cows' milk him, if be on hand ration whenever It Is well to teach him before heel convenient, t if he aning wet ground horts relish that part POsipo LEM fam ard foot over i 3 1 ia rani] ead 1s lowers wolng KOT) %ay he fall, tha CRougn fis will enable t N I TODS heds ns fure to early over dry seasons and make a fair y Moat that our land we turn over the top soil and hard clay or grave} crops to bride ield farmers Know on much of along on the which bax season It is _OTAH Dottorn, Games more haml to plows down into this hard layer, COmpacs the and ir we eottld, it Is not desirable or profita ble to tarn the Thus we see at ¢ the importance of the stiboil Another great advaniage ix that such soile will hold each get Tn iA Hp on top. Git plow in sabsoiling manre fore, There is no chance for the ma nure to wash out. twice ax long nz they i= held until con. This let: i loose bed, where it | sumed by the growing crops. (amd alr, is the process which grade. ally chatigen the whole character of thy land, and with proper rotation of crops Land a few goad crops of green manure {turned under, we would Reon have a | deep rich soil, Instead of only a few { Inches of top or surface soil has shown its value perhaps ely on root crops than on oth This work on the wgolls ! have swerihed increased the yield of one-third, The pri ix wo plain thas CIN, lias lenst ot crops at MO] hy of readily n practice stthsolling ci wie Hs nm hiecoms advantage, that will noi—Atnerican Ag soon riculturist, FARM AND GARDEN NOTES rood cow Is food | not always fat; she ris hier nto milk rather thao into th Dalry cows are their sald by some to have y Worn ou that teeth at ten years of they are unprofitable, See that the cows have sort of chance to these hot some shade in the pasture, or a shied, come to the barn or days, Provide plenty of where tlhe for thelr r Of your pocket vater COWS can get at at, ge not pmnfort only but for the sak * heling Wi to Crean Inte were om wi marble over the grave, simply and date of Nothing strange was poted about the stone at the time, nor, for some months afterward. It looked like the rest of the sombre death's ravages, Mr William Ea. with his name birth and death gighs of On Memorial Day ton, a resident of Seabrooke, was look- ing at the Waters headstone, when sud- denly she discovered the picture of a Sho ox amazenent and called corroborated her story. Those who had known the first Mrs Walters deviated it was a good pics ture of her. Those who elaim to have seen the face describe it as perfect in the eyes, nose, mouth and ears, amd even the brows appearing plainly. The hair is also said to be very dis tinet, falling loosely on the woman's shoulders. The man who carved the amined it in others, who and the sarface of the image can be seen. More davs —PLiladeiplila Prees, ADVERTISES HIS LIIJURY, Cack With the Railroad i Stoddard of believes In telling the Far County “ Tut ‘ ner Jake Doniphan Is ans world of his gi has be ped and in [i+] of that Who whirl by Wane Ie We nll on the Burling Virol 1s hotse ad shall know all Jake's 11 on ro bout it, Uncle told or fi hig house by tracks ibles are ienbon re ide PHASCTIeT if he In nn lover of which stands near } Eases of the raliroad The on turlington the romantic in nort thu scenery whivn abounds HWERLETD IWAURAS, ly oDAtrye form the car window ns the Atchils approaches | a large sign feet, train from on anning station covering a board one by five patled to a feet high, which This Man pole twelve reads Has Been The Railroad Wrong «1 the This Rat Cat hes Birds umber Used in Box Making ! Bi R15 (NH) + ty 0 Bite 1 1H u Orth 0 white j§ 3 boxes in Chirago and $80,000 wort! wttonwoosd boxes at St. Louis total number of onipany year ot Chicago concern every year, The hrm operates its own box factory at Rhinelander, Wis, There are fifty othet soap manu facturers in this country, and Barrel and Box estimates that altogether 150, 00.000 used In packing waps alone the larger mannfactarers expend each year 8400 ¥¥) for boxes, If 300800) boxes cost MOON, 150000000 boxes would in- volve the expenditure of £203,000,000 for packages alone. Continuing the alenlation through the vast range of packing-box demand, which involves almost every used va 1.0058 uses 1.05 hoaxes iy this last was 1.0 An ¥ lier saxon boxes are mn Tyo of SOag ORp industry Known to man, we can imagine how enormous is the expenditure In its grand total. and what an amount of lumber is con. sumed in its manufacture. It is evi dent that the making of boxes fur nishes the largest percentage of the demand for the coarser and common grades of lumber, and that, years pass, there will be a sure outlet for low grade white pine. cottonwood, yellow pine, and all other lumber that ean be worked into boxes. — Northwest. | ern Lumberman, Met an Army of Rattlers, Mra, D. (Dell liad an exciting expe- rience with a mass meeting of rattle sunkes on the Eagle she aliry rond whiie wag on |} to Hixh N. XY. But for the timely Carpenter, the Wr Wis nnd Falls, help of Wh. BOT 8 wold ! doubtedly have enloved a menl on he coutent wagon Mrs nyold of plump chickens gered by familie footed and doll wis the pony and her tre $361 ANN rds and screamed thie dens gh which i p ] heeded when em j 1 the tiirou pouy them fot ivy the Wilgon Mrs. O'Dell 1} - Cricket Saved the filer Aft 11 finally etd Ww nent they were horses no bounds, No would induce were the first on to approach the and their wonder Knew amount of persuasion ount These them to horses they had ever seen, The movement of the cotton mi its to the cotton fields is increased oconomies that been enforced on and this is a movement that 3 the jogical result of the have business of every de- seription must continne fo increase Increasing the Issue of Eooks, The cheapening of devices for print. ing has had the effect of increasing the issue of books to a figure never before attained or probaly pever dreamed of by our ancestors. in 180M, Tor instance, there were issued in the United States 1.4% new works, while In Great Brit. ain during ihe same period the new books mumbered 5H,300, while there were 1.185 pew editions of books pre- viously printed, a fotal of 6.4805, and for the two countries of 10060, It is quite probable that not less than 1.000 | copies were printed of each work, and it is more probable that of the whole number not ten will be remembered, Good + Od In what gives stereos i blood and i blood and g ¢ vigor, vital Mod Dain cote by aking Hood's Sarsaparilla ¢ only HOODS Ly. Choon He sur floed’s Pills 20 the fay iy esthariic rite fan TRUMAPET CALLS. Note Unredeemed, id of God as his 8 throne, Bap- the safe John the a Bible is ajalinst a 0 Use an angel fter 1 looks neaven Ide to phy- gician what they ought pes} SOMEONES, Mrs Pinkham has re- {| ceived y the con. | fidence of thou Gancs. Women open their hearts to She understands their suffering, r {0 relieve and cure. In nearly all cases the source of women's suffe sving is in the womb. In many cases the .-ale physician does pot understand the case and treats the patient for consumption- indigestion ~anvthing but the right thing. It is nnder such cirenmstances thal thousands of women have turned to Mrs Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass, and opened their heart and lives woman to woman-—-and received her help. You ask how she can tell if the doctor cannot ? Because no man living ever treated so many cases and possesses such vast expe: ience. Displacement. inflammation, torpid action, stagnation, sends to all parts of the body the pains that crush you. Lydia E. Pinkham's “ Vegetable Compound * is"the sure cure for this trouble. For twenty years it has done its grand work end cured t thousands. to say her. and has the power