NOTES AND COMMENTS. ee —— The latest report of the chamber of of Middle Franconia, the most important hop district Ger many, that American gradually driving the German product from the British market, commerce Of shows hops are the In mitigating the Indian famine British Government has expended on its own account charitable and than $10,000,000 or as a disburser ot contributions What a of misery |i loans vast n more diffe in India this sum must have made! rence the amount The London Clobe says that a clever doctored” al and a snap- 1p photographer ha shot of an informal roy family gro Darmstadt sil taken produced a new ese t 1 ly official picture and i nting {aiser and the Czai their affectionately entwined buy it by the Peters la fought offi COMmMmes annually Italy cipants French army next to ce, with some . duels the past d 2,708 ten duels . Bpain and Great Drital in the code has become almost as obsolete gs in the United States Moat duels fought on the European ent are fought with the pistols knives in the order named hi the contin- gword, though ¢ O13 and are used occasion- ally Some young men of Irving, a suburb of Chicago, have formed an anti-mar- riage association. The marries must pay $20 and give a ban. aquet to the members. To visit a girl home by the shortest route. The mem- joy many banquets in the near future The Stone Family Association has grown so rapidly in the last three years, according to the New York Trib- in numbers than any similar organiza- tion in the country. At ae recent meeting in n, ‘ately discovered information as to the English birth- [ place and ancestry of Simon and Greg- lory Stone was presented, and William IB of Cambridge, Mass.,, was authorized to have it published for the benefit of the descendants, It seems that Simon ‘Stone spilled from London for New England In the ship Increase, April 15, 1635, and that reached Cambridge soon Stone, on Gregory alter. Stone ward, inspector leves Breckinridge there gre; eed in the rewards for be- army conduct propose to present good-con Re- ecommendations, which reed by General Miles Alger, Gen Breckin some adopted a 1d badges there ion into adges to deserving soldiers ferring to the r indo ral armies pay d marked benefit conduct our beneficial the ——_ ———————— The French Peasant social econ unity Every inhabi ¢ ommune is a proprietor of and all are bent on savin all thei: vidualiam, for common and mutual This illustrated by ganization of the syndicate for In at wholesale prices, They unite for the cultivation of the lending each other horses and making tp teams Every commune has a field, which is common property, and where, on pay- yet, ind combine is the terest or gail, After thes harvest all the fields become and the gros betall other betail are allowed to and the Lueck in Venice, There is a curious superstitition in Venice that if a stranger dies in a hotel the number of his room will be lucky at the next lottery. THE FARM AND GARDEN. INTEREST ON ACRICUL. TURAL TOPICS, ITEMS OF Salt for Apple Orchards - Exper ence with Turkeys--Large Trees Near Buildings--- Whitewashing Apple Trees-.-Etc,, Etc. SALT FOR APPLE ORCHARDS While it is well understood that 80 good a solvent where they may always be We often to apply both potash and apple But if every hese conditic et full alt is not a manure, it is that of other minerals ex ist in the soil it used with advantage vised farmers phosphate to this is that insoluble have ad orchards done vear .t is probabls f t some oO { revert minerals Wheneve beat an in apple trees { while givin he usual ind pho GUGAR BEET jugtion recently the residue « contains than While it itriment ha nas nai standard bean extrad 1 jerably less the CORT doers, it serves very useful pt se as a food, says the Burlington pounds of beets conta something je-ma One hundred over a pound of digestible mus K ing food, rod about six and timothy hay nearly three pounds value of heels howeve largely lies in cotitains and The while clover one-half pounds as a food, their influence on the digestive organs at a time of year w hen stock is usually fed on dry food. They are diaretic in their action and the al- most universal from practical feeders and experimenters is that roots are valuable as winter food for stock, and that sugar beets lead in this respect The Purdue agricultural station has demonstrated that sugar beets contain more nutriment than do mangels, car rots. rutabagas and common turnips Their sugary nature makes them es pecially palatable. For sheep or milk cows no better roots can be fed. keep the bowels open and tend to pre- vent impaction with cattle and sheep and give a gloss to the coat and con- dition to the skin not secured by dry teed. report ] At the Grand Island (Neb) sugur | factory a flock of HOON0 sheop and a of cattle are now being fed exclusively upon the sliced the juices asd sugar are City delivery wagons owners of Cows «of the city the feed consumed number | almost beets, after extracted dao other live of thi liver to stock in all kind nominal first tho At that can be for A Week Of WREON price 25 cents only one supplied the I three eng the exact DUt now Loers To Inland food mand, ari encourage factory Stock i} quant ervice the Grand the try fecders “ Hberty Auli in unlimited yards Ringed by a Bicycle Nut Bunk. of Bro atid Edward old the the and of rings 8X Ang in he tener are olin on giihioct proper to his age and probably held anil day or two ago That is because hi Edward is a was polishing a aighly tempered worn by and of maci trade oe big bicycle nut steel when suddenly flew ft itz moorings, slipped over and, still revolving cutting a thread as stopped by the ji his index finger rolled up the finger it went until it was knuckle The finger bogan to swell it impossible to screw off the nul except process similar to the one by it was put on The surgeons finger with antiseptic vaseline and unscrewed the nut, follow was which of three grains. This is about fifty per cent, stronger than a steal thread of the sswe ‘hickness, NEW YORK'S STEADY CROWTH. The City Has Never Halted Since it Was First Fairly Started. Krnest Ingersoll writes a paper on the Greater New York, entitied soning Out a Metropolis,” for Bt Olas Mr. Ingersoll say The people of New Btaten | northern (OWHE resolved Island and ther nto “nd ing AH degides lon dwell the Huds widely separated quarters of New York Independent A Rat Catcher's Story. trades, and of the any all that as in in fessional rat-catcher According has made a barrel of business. but who has into other pursuits, it easier to make There aroha hilly prooaaiy are #8 many 0. i other line the story who that ed of a man money in gince drift Was a living e¢atching rats than by running a shell game at country fair. "1 used to use ferrets for the extermination of the rodents’ he sald, “and when 1 received an order to clear a warehouse of the pests 1 al- ways insisted that the pay should be ance a at so much per head. 1 carried the fer rets in a big wooden box, with a false bottom. In a secret drawer, under peath. 1 would place four or five dozen jive rats before starting out, let them run loose upon reaching the place to be rid of rodents, and then free the fer- rots. Of course, with fifty or sixty rats running around loose, there was al. | ways 2 wveat slaughter, and sometimes the would kill nearly all the rate | free in way | was of receiving handsome re- un evening's work, up feryety turned sure i Lis lalwave muneration for 0 ‘ entiation od rd 1c who employs Record invited Crant to Co to Her Cellar if He Cot Fr ahtanod Storage miiiions ter eX~ with boxes, the y make artificial through the rooms by means of pipes, which keep the tem- perature severa! degrees below zero. The fish, meat or game {0 be presarved is packed in the ice boxes, which have double wails and the ice is packed around them With the atmosphere around them below zero, the articles 10 be preserved are Kept at a tempera- {ture that would make an Arctic explor- er shiver, until they are wanted, when | they are taken out and sold, some- times in a few days, and as often in a {few months. The refrigerator cars have helped to develop the cold-stor- | age business, traordinary hickness, sheathed “8 $f and filied huge ff i of the modern warehouses, wood with ice In some same chemicals used t circulated ice are