ww | over a special apparatus with which - is conjoined cooling the in active, the of cooling to be is particularly advan. temperature of fresh which lactic acid and the milk will quickly turn sour, at have a greater acidity than allowable. By the milk ¢ power fine time, morning | oliced that unt one of one them RET IARD ~and*® =: (IARDEN FARM NOTES I'his tageous, milk Is bacilli thus least that for Does Capital Punishment Tend piminiss Capital Crime? 2 | wo waddle up get i one are more wiole fi i, cach Uswhally own body rushing Blew or By Thomas Speed Mosby. HE of the process of evolution which, judging from existing tendencies and death penalty, as a feature penal code, is undergoing a to- cooling ward me who had an agri what he A very practical en a four ural colege, asserts that ned about feeding ne worth the time upon his agricultural Power enough to work ing over Your between the river down fi head has ne farmer hold the Henry tation farmer, years course at stock and money education. do all the farm is blow banks, W sroken to aver om been once will have little reins. Wiscon of the Links flavor or food, not giver a iach in mation on hay uring ¢ hey shou There ave dre sever making con umid hays each is adapted tain ditions The regions is a knotty heen the cordingly and problem in the h one Al iia green in Te exas of it haa suffered put up {O00 on reputat COOL. Milk a: contains a stances { THE MILK PROMPTLY. it is drawn from the large number of of a volatile nature, depend largely upon the feed she has been eating: for ber of foods give = cnaracteristic, and in some cases disagreeable, and taste. In addition to these, is the characteristic animal self dependent upon the cow, cass very strong awd objectionable, variety there odor it. substances volatilize or pass off read- ily, and leave a pure tasting and smelling milk. This condition can be brought about by aerating the milk the devolpment of these bacilli is i checked, and if milk can be kept at a low temperature until delivery very little acidity and practically be deliver So far, at least, as children are concerned, this is most Important. — | American Cultivator the will be milk present, Sweet will ed CORN FODDER FEEDING tod des * is food. made to onsid equal to materially Although corn not « a complete noi the On stack over the FOR POULT materia not ing in it her is over body used not ary will be of little service to Ashes ar here is difference pr duced om wood They should be kind may Should those hens used, but between those and sifted fine, used in a wet spell come on, avold from wood, as the contact with water renders them in- Jurious to the skin ~The Epitomist those from and dry coal either weather be PRESERVING EGGS Silicate of | "water glass” i soda, commonly called weighs about ten galion, 1s a syrupy liquid and costs us, in gal seven cents per pound, at Nashville, although some correspond ents state that they buy it for fifty cents a gallon We use one part of the water, so that one gallon of wa | ter glass makes ten gallons of solu tion ready for use and this quantity is enough to preserve about fifty | dozen eggs. Clean stone jars are placed in a cool cellar, are partly fill led with the solution and strictly fresh eggs are put in from day to day as they are gathered, adding more of the solution from time to time until] the jar is full We put no doubtful eggs In; they must be ab. solutely fresh when packed —E, J, Atkinson, West Nashville, Tenn. : pounds to the looking lon lots, i i have char fifty forty those which the It now exists in In the addr as ing past invest] 1101 ( the whether { essed to to a be asking thelr opinion ital erime Eighte attorney-g selves capital penaty the deat} answers jurisprudence ext the world's clerized must result in {ts complete f the American Union f this subject, the writer caused attoruey-general 3 Of forty these punishment tended to diminisn Onis penalty opinion Ox By Tom Watson again modern Amer Missus.’ Englis} “Ask the honest roar there get tegmiya lant John, and the crowd applause No microbe of di focne for the and incompatibility missus” is a whole 11 brary of martial wisdom a man's wife knows where his goes, it is, In one thousand, case, spent for the best interests the household. The man that can ‘ook his srother squarely in the face and “Ask the missus,” is spendrift, mo bogus highsroller, gambler, no cheat. “Ask the missus” and her happy, hopeful, trustful, ae] fae ed for foot of distrust Ask the out its room the Yorce to hold: no it money minus Bay, of the faith she holds in the man | who trusts and loves her, “Ask the missus” would voree lawyers out of business the missus,” would wipe divorcegiv- ing South Dakota off the map. “Ask | the missus” would keep the worth | less foreign nobleman off the Ameri can grass, “Ask the missus” would build homes such only as the found. ers of the nation knew, put dk French Origin Of “Bi lackmai 1 mail rent, ¢ Known whit " meaning nes por neh Anglo Saxon Wrasibly ‘mae a from the old Fre halfpenny in the England and Scotland united the freebocters used to frequent raids on the farmers living along the border and the money paid Cure immunity from these raids came to be known as “blackmail.” Once established in that sense it is | easy to see how the world came to be | used to designate money pald to se cure lmmunity from a raid one's cputticn. --The Suburbanite No Need for Nerve Medicine. A country doctor, after writing a | presoription for a patient told him | the druggist would probably charge | him sixty “ents for fling it. The patient asked the physican to lend { him the money, The latter scratched {out part of the prascription and hand. led It back with ten cents, remarking: “You can have that filled for a dime. What | have scratched cut was for your nerve’ Washington + Bar * tion or “malille.” a days before were make ito 8 on CAl Il do ‘SE FOR COMPLAINT. I grandma at all a Fred, don’t he "] Andd grandma at his face ilke drew all,” The tears And he nd di Were i ready to fall; gave OVINE broken off Mam nother sald little he ina, when went tie gray Donk bowed walak, “a lit 0 me, and | bowed to bowed my cap off: bowed too po whenever hought of the little that, he felt that een too polite But the little and 1 ray but the off you?" his head think Was lite, d And, on '% gray Donkey er the Donkey Donkes on the shelf where away, after they had neat gilt hook, remembered that, when his last bows, a little boy vellow curls and pink bowed to him in return: once occurred to him gray was they put him hung he he made with it he and that ———— ——————— ——— And the Jackinthe-Box went {seling gay and springy iy-Jump-up.~<Mary folks. on like a John Mitchell, in Little I THE GREEDY CORMORANT. When | was a keeper in the Nation- tl Zoological Park in Washington, 1 ‘ant, Four little cormorants came to the too, and were placed in a cage in which dogs had once been kept. Outs de was a pebbly yard in which the fogs had exercised. The cormorants vaddled about this yard and seemed th al 14 and lifted amazement ing pies near something and clanking I seemed surprisingly d head him! Heavy Once calls Keeper who deci: gate by means a eration, two wa mior hind a fringe each other at legs is roaching y form a the bee's bas into it. =a » a successful will eram enough pollen him for two three The Epitomist As t sort of cave and Journey Ns : he io or last Gays One Way to Get a Dog, “There are ways and ways of get- sald the old secret ser man, “but | wouldn't recommend some of them to a Sunday school Now, | knew professionally a confidence man, 1 won't deep the reform went, but officially he was reformed and oe cupied a pretty respectable position in the community One day 1 met this chap on the street, and I had something to say to him. ‘See here’ demanded, ‘is this your advertise. mont in the paper offering a reward of $56 for the return of a lost dog? ‘Bure!’ sald he. ‘But you don’t mean 1 didn’t own a dog,’ he corrected. ‘But I do own one now--the handsomest English bulldog you ever laid yoar eyes on and the cost just $5.00" vice reformed say how
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers