Be is A A on FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. |! better buy one of standard manufac | ture and pay a few dollars more, rath INTEREST ON ACRICUL. ITEMS OF - TURAL TOPICS. Cleaning the Milk Vessels— The Cabbage Worm—English Wheat Deteriorating Permanent Farm Improvements Spray. ing Fruit Trees—Eté. Eto, Cleaning the Milk Vessels, milk buckets, cream vats, butter workers, not only be All vessels, cans, churns, washed clean but wuld be to steam or boiling water at least a By ing in a large full of boiling and keeping there for ten hey can the cleaned. ete, should every treated day, % hi once Week, submerg wash boi ler them be nicely water minutes, © The no Cabbage Worm. 1 5 Of us to ki There | ess § poisonous snpounds bage Rift fine 4 heads or them with and they hour or there § the m and to feed is Ost on loose thought course an the head plenty it wore th Er gz lish Wheat Deteriorating, that 3 from one gome ef ment Ke and and 4 Lae Dus i Iwo, and to hes even waen he b new bul he paint for unatt 3 or t are tinable, Spraying Fruit Trees. A corre spondent er trees wi SAYS eleven years, but only Fe satisfa the Then for apg I to a gall and two ple, and spras bloom « Mrs tory. ordinary » adds sid of this two gallons of water pu the thie and which Foy 1 ofi ces before olnes nd again after third necessary, one, Gives a if 5 = artiliont a} pli ak bloom fourth is not while the as poisons or kills the pollen. Uses same Bo currants and gooseberries be fore they bloom and after the fruit has started. For peaches and pears he weakens It, using Hwme water and one Loudon purple in two Uses lime water wi lon the Novwer it often bloom is on, the of tepspoontul gallons of water, thout London pur size, to prevent fruit rotting on the trees, and has succeeded In saving it by shaking slaked Lime from a can at tached to a pole, right on the ripening fruit, Some Incubator Problems. To buy or not to buy an incubator, Is a question often considered at about this time of the year, I will try and usaaily occur in this connection, dogbt there are many worthless and inferior incubators on the market, but I have carefully Inspected the merits of alout all the good machines and not wasted any time on those that were visibly inferior. Speaking from ex- perience I have yet to find any of those that I have tried that would not come up to the ordinary standard. However, there are beyond question many Incubators made and advertised that are, from a practical standpoint, not worth the price of the lumber put into them, and pelwons contemplating buying an incubator and pot being femiliar with the different makes 4 fairs. They the oud, Inquiries are sometimes heard small incubators for re garding chicks As 1 have no fig it each season. which to base an estimate, would be impossible to say how could hatched in an in however, I would nat recommend the use of an incubator capacity than but would ommend the 200-cgg size, but principally for ches be of less oh, in general red far various reasons, economy in fuel, us experience tea that it takes very little fuel to run out a hateh of 200 than 100. It requires mount of and t hatch Hie more, if any, also fuel {0 it it does a haich of only about the same and same amount of care me run out a 100 or 2M-egg us does a 50. and things being equal, you can plainly see whe the econo COCs my al and natural med cial and car h all truthfulness § 1 te % i eandor, Pros Vely no Qilie excetds The # a is chiefly hard seeds animal tion consists mostiy iat ! i nil its age Boe al hivyr apparentiy arisen amber irom 1d thers Valley t is no doubt that ho farther west, uch rests of the in the Missiasi rod- wings and Eoin » TOW vivid pi and rd, the inte yellow head blackbi Are er's 1h nt oral bundant for grain srower, Provide for the Escape of Surplus Water. porta of Is land earliest pretty nee aving the moment In spring acknowledged by Tt iy i He Pi ready for cultivation at possibile is generally farmers in all climates where the winter consists of wet or freezing weather, The Guelph Experimental Farm in a six years’ test learned that barley sown on April 21 produced an average of four bushels per acre more than that sown May 9th and 10th; spring wheat Epey ke more, and oats about three and a half bushels In favor of the earlier sowing. These are telling differences, which are not the only advantages of getting surplus water off the land as early as possible in spring. draining will do much In this respect after the frost Is out, but there are very few fields that are not the better of a system of surface water-furrow soll, especially, if of a heavy nature, the more inclined is it to become sad, soggy and difficalt to work down to a friable condition. In our judgment, a field should not be considered plowed at this season before the furrows be tween the lands have been given an outlet and all low-lying portions crossed by water furrows, and then, at least, the junctions of the crossing whole cross furrow is not shovelled, which will generally be found to pay. This greatly facilitates the escape of not only the melted snow, but it car ries away the beavy showers that would otherwise deter work on the land for. bours, and perhaps days, It will pay to give attention to this matter, as it will help the returns of the 1901 crop either of which is an The general outlet witercourse must be attended to, that the water from one field may not collect and give trouble on another field on our own or our neighbor's farm, Probably Importance is or of greater or more the matter of having all and mouths of under- before open ditches obstructions We have underdrains by drains cleared of ng-up occurs, yates of mterfered freezl whole lect years, gilt, and seriously the tile with neg il outlet for a few arry ing All especially in loamy this Rend drains « considerable Or mucky soils, ut the out wien cannot general Local Transportation is Perio Rice. dan the and But His Oae Brave Deed. HETO WH Id read history, jus Nhe was a wrahiper, Often she wou to find some new hero to worship Otherwise she wonld read sach nov “Reautiful Betsy, the the cls as elle of the B Bride.” Of course this made her feel that she had married beneath her, for her hus- band had not grown round-shouldered from wearing heavy medals, Occasionally she would tell him that she wished he was a hero. Onee the foolish man told her that Bie would be a hero if he had a chance, “You would?’ she sald, in tones of incredulity. “Did you ever do any thing In your life that looked like or that seemed valorous in after years?” He thought of the day when they rags Works, or taronet's and he gave the minister £10 and she became his wife. But he didn't say anything about it. For a true hero never talks about his daredevil deeds, Ho she never knew that her hushand was a hero, Isn't It Baltimore a sad story. Sharks Work the Fishermen. On this side of Pearl barbor the sharks are said to abound in large numbers. The natives have the great- est difficulty in eatehing thelr fish, for the sharks follow the boats and snap the fish off the hooks while the fish. ermen are deawing them toward the t~Hawallan Star. IO SAA The man who boasts that he has no nomics ib usually a nonenti ty. NOTES AND COMMENTS. A faster boat than the Columbia, 80 it is sald, Is needed to beat Shamrock 11. Well, it will be built, the successful lady bonds of Why Is it that novelists when they enter the matrimony have way of selecting husbands much younger than them gelves? i Poa dk The recent feat of a Tong Tsland d on hel as compared changing the view commonly the subject of masculine with feminine endurance, A hunter paid one Providence 3205.45 pot t for Kil penalty | which birds round the nj as robin, HOW are pro the year by Switzerland, writ » dopo in a bax upon it. the « has a to gigantic ted sign posted De the payh win whi Hug the vari npon inonnt up to £1,000 annum; oent $1.00 to 83 per i per cent ficcount LL EE in # # ii ha 03 3.000 hie red One an cives only 3 1 Calife swhia contributes from State Treasury for the partial support of half-orphans and complaint is be ing made of the amount of money thus demanded, For the six months end ing June 30 last, $81.707 was thus paid, and there are previous claims of $175,000, which the board refuses to pay, declaring that they were con- tracted before the present administra- tion took office and their correctness cannot be established. Some counties will sue. G-y 255 The Philadelphia Press, commenting on the remarkable bank defaleation in New York city, says: “One might expect that shrewd New’ York bank officials might be interested In know ing how their note teller could keep seven thoroughbreds, and half a dozen stylish traps, and let his wife attend a neighborhood ball of wheelmen in an imported lace gown, worth half his yearly salary and ‘covered with dia- monde! But so far as the directors went, Mount Vernon and its social life might as well have been in Indiana.” There Is a theme for a novel In the case of the man out West who had his nose made over hy a surgeon so that the wife of his bosom should not recognize him when he returned to her, after a separation, and stole thelr child. If one may cast aside his fea emption allowed to persons by law. Miss Loffin’s counsel took the ground that the services rendered by his client were in the nature of manual labor, not be legally cinimed. The court held that the point was well taken, and the exemption was not allowed, on the ground tuar school teaching is manual labor, It 18 quite common for prisoners fo the jail at Theoretically the gov loaf of bread but the supply be starved In Cpnstantl nople, Turkey. allows small ernment fn a day to each prisoner, is never always had to re; or buy it sufficient and prisoners have their friends to from a sort All au terestod in this institu 11 bring them food, in the Lhe teen thorities and tHe prison, are in tion the thelr utmost purchase ther there, gold story SIR fis nugg litions ox nds, indy enterprise, * than he fon could in oith as tl ho at its in tri es, as it Innds J 0 Hberal tow ard colon- The Can inte, 8 disposal are to settlers on extremely but quantity quite limited; farmer should Argentina a capital of less than £2,000 tive is not astounded at a little money and it takes just much capital to go into business Argentina as elsewhere, iavor » of bes and no with able the i terms, is now go to " he 3 the sight of as in Latest reports from the Far East state that Russia is bending fort to the completion of her Trans- play a large part in the politics of the northern power, but in the develop- ment of its resources and of the com merce of the world, For while it will bring the west into direct and speedy overland communication with the Far East, and so be of first Importance from a political, military and com- mercial point of view, it will open to Russian colonisation and development a region one and a ball times as large as Europe, This region, known as 8i- of territory reaching from the Polar Sea to the borders of China, and from the Urals to the Pacific, a total area of over twelve million square versts, or about forty Umer the size of the British isles. Divided for administra tive purposes into four great govern ments, Eastern and Western Siberia, the Governor-Generatlships of the Steppes and of the. Amoor, it has a population of something more than 8,000,000, but 8 per cont. of which is in the towns, though several of the THE JOKERS’ BUDGET. To Kiss a Miss, It is no bliss To miss a kiss, But, oh, "tis bliss To kiss a miss, But sometimes, After you You have kissed [ y thunder You had missed her. Detroit Free Press. wish 1« ot Defeated. 0 hear your engagement » Roel off. n away and enlisted sward!-lica- ® is The Resemblance. Took Her at Her i when I told rt cane rush, ran od not to mix Chronicle Guick Collection, ot a splendid library yout Mrs. Flashington. It him years and years tog her.” into house had book shelves and he done Chicago WOKS # aved a ' POON Toon, weeks,” Before and After. — “Do you think ¢ as often as you did before we married?’ asked Mr. Meekton's wife. § | “Much oftener,” he answered, cheer+ ‘fly, but absent-mindediy. “You see, Henrletta, weren't in a position to then remind me of yourself as much as you at present.”-—Washington Star, The Proofs Were Paipable. pre, “That man,” remarked the great de ; fective, “is undoubtedly a vegetarian of the most pronounced type.” “How do you make that outl® gueried his friend. “Oh, that's dead easy,” replied the g. 4d. "He has carroty hair, reddish cheeks, a turn-up nose and a sage look.” ~Chicago Dally News. a— Literary Fame, He saw that the mood of the hone ralled for Concord philosophy. . Happily, this was not difficult, : “It matters little,” he wrote, “which shoulder you see the new moon over, provided you put the shoulder to the wheel!” An intuition told him at once that his literary fame was Dow secure. —~De« troit Journal. of m were RB you Can a SE His Pointed Remark. nr” “I frequently hear you say that money talks,” she remarked, “Yes, it is an old saying, and a true me,” he replied, “but unfortunately While saucy talie ull taut taliads nub “Why do you say “untortunately' 7 |g a -