FARN AND GARDEN ‘NOTES. TIMELY .INTEREST TO THE FARMERS. TEMS OF To Detect Hog Cholera---Beekeeping for Farmers--How, When and What to Feed Fowts—-Horse Talk. SIGNS IN BUTTER MARKING. long time belies who We ago aginst the foolishness img In signs. And belleved In them aml perverse generation tro then now. and we Iu great deal knowledge pow than people had then Soa ing the eallvd thi the moan, ence on the butter, or the cheese, that ons chrn aml pre were all imaginary anal Hi whole of th pothine else, are the wen warned a very of people were called a foolish What i those was is sO ive a abroad I'he 1 ge tl tyr elder, the Sigh IO blos I~ “a condition of influ ol the any HK, Lie are all without COWS, or the In or witches and were supposed | infect ths vent the guch =K bad good ol if (1th €AR chee 2; nlt making of There which are ver the skin, wh thas destroying The black what is b flavor it reanained pear, Knowl ioned n to thi for this some Joealit fungus, iat mixture bas it should I seaeanlly | sven Are be cansed the soil, fre to for its Xz fruit Ma probably du ral bedfer | supply of fumes rreed by th peash ! Boston Tvs TO 1») Symp BV dizmn fen | fore it bs fw Foxiwa elaroni or Chiro PEeS giv the min doped, wed leer in sarily ra ant fia they cm petite is oped. in may the ihe be alwn over. Ih attended freguent or ap roan In Dreat quiet, and Mank al ead one Or 1 thickening and grabs on flu } belly or pal sfrendant A mer is swine plague toms am earl eharacteristic tha Post mortem, ti are found to be OTN that HORSE TALK The farmer w eolts is wise, I the bors WEY INN Ber absar i Being ithe ining of the hors age, when we real i feervest the Bors. Ma fi im all % SMoath, last fmve Lg oaly the rig rt ar peng to supply wand? Every farmer who has an apprecia tion of the horse should have at least «aw first class horse to sell every year ow hal eral himdred dollars ket. If you raise a quality you will pot Bayer. Rejorts declare that there fy woenrlings in ae suckling colts fing cant net thie demand fa come Ina fey years Pout Jet the we weak. Increase they nre not wheal Thee increasing in of in the classes flesh shows North, before it y IS olntry, Never prices Whi horses such Foor ¢ offered is den is good enough to bring sev. mar- the proper long for a in the city colt of wait fare tiie country almost Horses Wear in the ¢ Rome one that very ire rapidis tios Big is sure i the n and iF i ngs get thi grain ration doing ns well as they i= i feet It no economy ging a colt or young horse get thin. pass to ‘Toss with them Pont growl and scold at your horses, in fil temipered. 1 know a team that ave Badd toally yanked, scolded and Kicked, are thin, and the expression in their eyes is enough to break jour heart, “Fm” in Farm Jourmal BEEKEEPING FOR FARMERS. sto h them alone to me tomlin pnd How 1 hie worn who dislike il better let 1 pay r who though hu every spn 'y Iie ox fertii few stands of 1 oven new stock buy a bene ing fhe ln include politicians who raged hotly as to the claims of fruit blossoms ould for trouble hox hives wi foresee Ww jHLy In this case boos he HE in them, honey is a secoudary consideration In any event get a good stock o It ix becoming that is in dustrious bees, pit generally accepted beekee will not do to rely on Honey ing occupation unless practised in « The bees will which, {if who likes to handle have an excellent carefully managed, on as well as a profit nw] 8 from side INSU, will be a satisfa To such a of It breeder, two colonies reliable fen smoker, say get SOE them in an eight frame hive or } bee vell gel n respect, experienced HOW, WHEN at matures on, hits wa a profit on and pays a m feed and breeding and feeding price for the Colonel] Woods savs, it is te and the * the American farmers pull depreasions must trust rimarily to them through any and all It does not pay to sell grain or hay off the farm when it requires almost the in commercial fertilizers to replace the fertility of the soil. Better feed the crops to stock aud enrich the soil of the farin A return to the good old-fashioned way of raising a lot of good calves on the farm upon which they are to be fed is well worth considering at this time But the to be produc ed must be strictly high « Ines, ff. riee price i calves Kicking a calif on the jaw to make it let go of a teat is not conducive to the happiness of the calf or the prosperity of the owner. Abscesses on the jaw are often started this way, and then the wonders what could have occasioned them. Gwner bere is no use in keeping wethers when they always bring more as lambs, Kentucky and Tennessee have learned this lesson weil, The climate of these states is milder, and they can grow lambs out of doors much earlier than in the East, the teeth. The teeth undergo A heifer that Is called Lire hey fn free marten, minke infmals, he to a free marten id both twin Vari 1ls onl wWoevel Hors i with broken in nner bioameq {odd they edd In aid moisten } com tion at night k At condition, and 1 than on whole grain noon are inn tired is often food tna to pt again nll peculin in prox riy the intg it, and they put to work before their ra- digested at that rlectly sweet food fit are they Any literally fits the shepherd So that it Is t he have pn sori! gives them kinds guard variou: which aginst should somewhat questionable Hf xilo ean ever become heep farms there | } (18 le question about roots vied succnle sweet, pal beet, or the FIRES IN CREAT FORESTS. Preventive Work Accomplished by the Fire Warden of Minnesota. recently to wl supply citizens of And re with sink the water ias in They pipes making exirable for the front of the old Church Lane. As wan secured through etx, connection company to pass in constable’s tae, on Whiteman had all ted, he wi company’s foreman any attempt at trespass ging on his property would meet with resistance. The back sword that the constable conld do as he liked, but the pipes would be laid the next day. Then Constable Whiteman got mad. He gathered a lot of baady weapons together, including. an old musket which his father carried in the war stacked Ix hi the water he sont rd to the that foreman «ent of 1512, he alongside the fence, where he took up a commanding with a big horse-pistol in either hand and awalted the coming of the When the workmen came the old constable roared out that he would shoot the man who attempted to strike a pick. Seeing that the old man meant busi ness, the foreman called off his men and left the scene, These position, enemy. A counterfeliter in Wichita, Kas., was on trial about a year ago, and some of his implements were exhibited in | conrt. One of the jurors examined {them quite attentively, and later made | some for himself and began counter | foiting. He is now in prison. WORK FOR EXPLORERS. AN AREA GLCDB EQUAL TO ONE.FIFTH THE Z'S LAND STILL UNKNOWN €ven in the Americas There are 2,000, 000 Square Miles Not Mapped Out«-Vast Unexplored Tracts in tralia. Africa and Aus. ‘ith an equal i Of can scarcely be clal fs area ywh land on med, says (er in York work of the explorer to unexplored all the ki loin © H. Journal, i% Anish Even LL fhe re Are I'he New \Ameriea North and South milli l Iwo ns of square nies af which w absolutely nothing In Australia is an equal tract Africa square mil urex plored In GY " unkn jroiuy Lilie and ths immeding of the rounding the North magnetic vey ately Pole This pole ® sitnated 5 i of Cape Felix King William's near seventieth parallel or north latitude In 1831 {t was approximately located on the of Boothia Felix by. Captain James Clarke Ross Rince then it have been traveling in a direction, rather, such s theory of some drawn the fact that is at present a constant westerly nity thern end of and West cna st Kir appears fo westerly the Or. magnetists from there variation of the magnetic needle, Other magnetisis say that, as noth fixed magnet, the earth being magnetic poles Those who agree 1ipon a move ment of the poles are not all agreed upon the direction and rate of motion, These are important facts that await investigation On the 4th of July, ISTR, the writer, with Lieutenant Rchwatka, stood at Cape Felix and saw eighteen miles away the snow clad hills of Cape Vie toria, where nearly half a century be fore Kir James Ross had established that pole. Unfortunately, their object not contemplating a visit to this point, $ ing is more than the a magnet, move, iis cannot there being which fo make the observations that are so important, But some duy that work will have te work should be done by Americans, & 4 sUrin r of tin resistaice in will ” fluid in the be boiling and the potatoes cooked Iw ved removyeq boll ied in the same man few minutes the water prot “he and washed ner the top of an ordinary wood table dur ing the Process of cook ng The sight of a while resting on a table and with only a small flexible extending into the same is indeed unusnal and wonid no excite many modern house kecpers greatly upon seeing The pots and kettles all rest upon pot boiling wire A very one, don the sae, Boston's Public Library. Boston's new public Hbrary, includ ing farniture and fittings, has £2 410.000. It cost lo maintain ing 1805, says City Government, tle than present year $225,000 Cos dur a lit- and for the Lave been ape Of this £210,000, about $103.000 went for nore L210 0060 for bookbinding, £5300 for period over $6,000 for coal and for transportstion between the contral library and apxiharics dent that the expenditure for books between 20.000 and 40,000 in 1865, 1.438 persons gave 15,000 volo umes, besides 12.968 numbers of mag. eines and parts of larger works Cs pa SICK A00M, suppestions Concernirn of Patents be eXor and the Thereupon and in a short leave o die off mained in that section The Position of the Bed Ditton, writ to the Landon the fact that A. C. Globe, draws attention to ing persons can only sleep well when porth and south, amd others and west. Mr. Ditton dis that could he lay cast hiz head « eh many ying ving cast coverad some years ago he much better when and west, especially A well-known tonarian. on the other hand, ascribed his longevity to sleeping in north | and south direction. Recent experi ments by Mr. Kenpelley and others in fidison’s laboratory and elsewhere would seem to discredit the hypothesis thas the earth's magoetism has to d¢ i with the unquestionable influence of | position in sleep. Nor is il easy 10 see | how the earth's rotation can affect a rlosper. 1t may be that Mr. Ditton i right in regarding it as a resalt of tem: | perament, and, perhaps, also of habit | In any case, persons who are troubled with insomnia or who cannot sleep ir | vwtrange beds” would do well to in with the west. French the | vestigate the matter, and see whethe the direction in which they lie Is not te blame, Mr. Ditton carries a pocket compass, which enables him In hotels | to choose a bed which lies in the righ | direction, or else to get one shifted
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