D. LAXDiIETIi SOXS, Harden Seal*, Philadelphia. The Attention of Market Gardeners iud olhtri dnlrlnic to Pirrhuc Nm LAN OKKTII A "ON" to llioir ciiatomrra | \ YY| 1 E \ "TV T r grown awl "'"I i>M*lrily lp ttirmarlroa, upon tlirlr H'.'rDri nu.OrTrvVyi— L own farina. lb" rnlt of manp raara ontul awl V,\ At\| y r nTi lr. r|j V* Htll | Intel a'rlrrtloii.awl ara not tlm rrault of rlianro • v V T* nnil,!wo', front paitiaa who know nothing . of th Inialnaoa of nllng Hard lataiiig rtN|Uir LANDHKTII A SONS (now romprlaliix Vol a, rra). Aral folindad P in IT*:, ami pa.ain K to three H eneraliotia. hat hern . ondm 1.-.l lth the vi.w „l pr.-lnrliii .natla of lit. im Ul purMt tiiwlltv. Me are, Iherelore, iu>lißrf, in ManriiiK ,,,r cuetomurn Miut Tllh Hr.KH.s OrrKKhu ItV KHs II AVK Ml M I'RKIOH IN Tills OK ANY OTIIKK CiH'NTK Y The puldh generally are lnrlla.l to ®all ani examine our hk of SKKHS. IMPLEMENTS AND TOOIJI, all ot the llr.t i|iiallty. No aavond p .t|Uuliiv #•*!•• f° r Cntwlogue free. Prke* low. D. LANDRETH f T P. BLAIR. 7 . JEWELER, wATcnM, clock a, jgwtLir, Ac. All work neatly eteruted. On Allegheny atreat, ■for Hrockerhoff' llonaa. * " iF.ALEKS IN PURE DRUGS ONLY. [II ZELLEII k SON, * el . DRROOI.HTR. No fi. BrorkerholT Row. J f All the Rtandar*! Patent Medlrlnea Pre-' nterlptlona nd Pamlly Recipe" accurately e 11 iireieml, Truaeea, Shoulder lirarea, Ac.. Ac. j I 4-lf g " GUIS DOLL, PA.SIIIILNABI.K BOOT A RIIOKMAKER, Brorkeihoff Row. Allegheny atreat, Rellefonte. Pa. 8. e. HVHKa, Pree't. 1- T. BAkkta. ("aali'r. FIRST NATIONAL HANK OF P BKLLKFONTE. Allegheny 9treat. Meilefonte. Pa. foil CENTRE COUNTY RANKING IJ 00MPANT. leeivp t*e(>owiU And Allow Internet, Dterouof Not**; Buy tnd Bell Gov. Bernrltle*, Gold and Conpon*. |*u A BKAVBR, President, 9. D iBHWi OmM*T. CONSUMPTION R I'ONITI VKL.V CURED. A LL sufferers from this (lineae pL that ara antlooa to be cured ahonld try Dk nfXKRM CELEBRATED OONhI'MPTIVB WIW- But. Tlieae Powder" are tha only preparation known u will cure Couavurno* and all dlaeaaaa of tha Kkott AID LCl'ia—lndeed, ao atrong la our fallh In ■ha. anil alao to roarlnr* yon that thay ara no hum- B we will forward to atery ealfarer by mall, pat H, a rati Taut RAx. We don't want yoar money until yon are parfartly Bbfted of their rnratlte powera. If your Ufa la worth Mag, don't delay In firing thaaa Powataa a trial, aa Mr will aurely cura yon. Pill .- for large hot, J3 (, rent to any part of lha fated "lute* or Canada, by mail, on receipt of price. I ASH & ROBBINS, LJy 380 Fnlton Btraat, Brooklyn, N. T. SPITS, EPILEPSY, OR FALLIMii SICKNESS PERMANENTLY CURED—No \ llainlmg- by an# month'a utaga of Dr. Qaa jrd'a Calabratad Infollibla Fit Powdara. To eon face .offerer" that theae powdara will do all wa claim lr lham W. will aend tliem by mail, roar rin, a ntkk Rial MI. Aa Dr. (ioulard la Ilia only phyalelan that pa eter made thla dlaeaee a apedal .tody, and aa to ■r knowledge thouaanda lurehe-*n raintiirrtr cr- I by the nee of thaaa Powain*. wi wnx atUHITII A Rlttltf care In eaary caaa, or iirtm rotr ill. four lirvMii. All anfferera ahonld glra thaaa mwdera an aarl]|frlal, and be conrlnced of thalr com- EprPe, for larga b0x,53.00, or 4 boxea for 11400. aant b mall In any part of tha Hatted Ptatee or Canada 00 iclept of price, or by axpraaa, C. 0. D. Addreaa [ AHH & ROBBINS, L|y, 380 Fnlton Street. Brooklyn N. T.^ DROC K EIIII OF F HOUHK, I > RBLLBFOKTI, PA. W. R. TELLER, Proprietor. I Good Sample Room on Second Floor. MV-Fraa Buae to and from all Train*. Special rataa ■ wltneaeea and Jnruri. 1-1/ BKLLKFONTE A SNOW SIIOK K R.—Tiiu*-Tl>l lii on *nl flr May 1,1 MO: Mnov Bho* 7.20 A. M.,arrive* in BrlUfont* 9.10 A. M UIVM 1W.7 A W. I."ave Buw gboe 2JO r. H.,arrive* In B+lUfoat# 3 4* p. m. I.INITN H*llefont* ">.16 r w . arrive* at Snow Bho* 8.67 P. M. DAMKI. VtIIOAM, general Snperinten'lent. BALD KAOLEVALLKY KAIL III >AP.—Time-Table, April 29, I**": Kip Mall. Mtwaat>. Kip. Mail a. m. y ■ r. in • I" 832 Arrire at Tyrone Leate 7 I I Jl) * .'I 8 23 Leate K*"t Tyrone Leate... T IS a 27 739 6VI ...... " Vail " ... 7 l *3l 735 817 " Mai,l Eagle • ... 7*l A .17 74* t, <) •• Fowler " ... 753 a4B 742 8 3 " Hannah " ... 738 9 J 73S S3 " P-Tl Matilda " ... 741 918 727 347 " Martha " ... 7Si 92* 71" S3* " Julian " ... 1 to 7 * 537 " ('mantilla *' ... *II 9 4.1 7 tai Sl* " Hnnw "hoe In " ... *SI 9SI 658 iIS " Mlleebarg " ... 24 858 848 S S " Itellefonte M ... 832 SI 838 4AS " Mlleaburg " ... *45 In 3 823 443 44 Cortln " ... 85Slo 14 41* " Mount Eagle •' ... BOnlo 18 8 9 431 " Howard •• ... 9 10 29 683 42U ..„ " Kaglerllle " ... 9lalo 42 SSO 4IS •• Beech Creek " ... 922 111 47 534 4 3 44 Mill Hall 44 ... 93411 00 529 400 Flemlngtoa 44 ... 937 11 4 425 333 •• Lock llaten 44 ... 942 II * | JEN NSYLV AN IA K AILROA D. I —(Philadelphia and Erie Dttlalon.)—o and aftar December 12. 1877 : WHAT WARD. ERIK MAIL leatra Phlladalphla 11 S3 p m " " Harriabnrg 4 2ft a m 44 44 Wtlltamaport...... 9 33am " 44 Lock llatan.... 9 40am 44 44 Ranoto. 10 3S a m 44 art! tea at Kria 7 33 p m NIAOARA KXPRRBO laataa Phlladalphla- 7 21. a m 4 4 44 Harrtahnrc.... 10 SO am 44 44 Wllllamaport. 2Jn p m 44 arritat at Renoro. 4 40 p m Paaaangera by thla train artita In Belle* fonte at..... 4 33 p m PAST MM K learea Philadelphia II 43 a m 44 44 Harrteborg 333 p m 44 44 W1111aiinixirt............... 730 p m 44 arritea at lark llatan 8 40 p m EASTWARD. PACIFIC KXPREBB leatea Lock II at en.™ 840 a m 44 44 Wllllamaport... 753 a m 44 arritea at llarrtehnrg 11 33 a m 44 44 Phlladalphla..,. 84S p m DAT EXPRESS laataa Renoto 10 10 a m 44 11 Lork llatan II 20 a m 44 Wllllamaport.... 12 40 am 44 arritea al Harriabnrg 4 10pm 44 44 Phlladalphla. 720 p m ERIK MAIL laataa Ranoto 9 33 p m 44 44 lawk llatan 943 p m 44 44 Wllllamaport 11 03 p m 44 arritea al llarriahurg 2 4S a m 44 44 Philadelphia 700 a m PAST 1.1 RE laataa Wllllamaport .... 12 34 a m 44 arrltaa at Harriet mrg.. 3 Ham H ■< phlladalphla. 7Mm Kria Mall Waal, Rlagmra Ktpreaa Weat, Lork llatan Ariomm.elation Waat. and Day Ripraaa Kaat. maka e|oae ronaecttnne at Northumberland with L. 1 I, R. R. traina for Wllkaalatrra and Scranton. Kria Mail Weat. Niagara P.ipreaa Waat, aad Rrla Ktpreaa Waat. and Lock llatan Arcomawdatlan Waat maka cloaa ronaertlon al Wllllamaport with N.C. R W. traina north. Kria Mall Weat, Niagara Ktpreaa Waat, and Day Ktpreaa Kaat, maka cloaa eoaaartlon at Lock llatan With H. R V. R. R. traina. Rrla Mall Raat and Waat conaact at Rrla with train# on I. 8. 4 M. R. R R.. at Corry with O. C. A A. V. R. R , at Emporium with I. K. 1. A P. R. R., an J at Driftwood with A. V R. R. •Parlor rara will rnn batwaaa Phlladalphla aad Wllllamaport on Niagara Eapreaa Waat, Kria Ripraaa Waat, Phlladalphla Ripraaa Raat and Day Ktpraaa Raat, and ttanday Ripraaa Raat. Sleeping rara on all aight traina. Wn. A. Ratmin, (Inn'l Suparlnlandanl. GIRAHD HOUSE, CORKER CHKPTNI'T AND NINTH 9TEKETS, ratvAmrnti. Thla hauaa. prontlnanl In a city famed for lla com fortabla hotala, la kept In atery reaper! e<|iial In any Srat rlaaa botali In tha country. Owing to tba atrtn gency of tha tlmaa, tba prlca of board haa been reduced to ntu MU4M par day. J. M'KIBBIN, 1-8-tf Manager. New Advertisement 9, IF-AIR/MIEIR.S WHO WANT GROCERIES AND OTHER SUPPLIES FOR HAR V EST I'N O SHOULD CAM. ON SECHJLER&Co. FOR ANVTIIINO IN TIIK LINK OK SUGARS, COFFEES, TEAS, SPICES, NEW CHEESE, s. C. HAMS, s. C. DPI EI) REEF, IJHEAK FAST HACON, DRIED PEACHES, NEW PRUNES, HOMINY and RICE, SYRUPS and N. O. MOLASSES, NEW MACKEREL, •ST< )N EWA RE, QIJ EE NSW A ItE, Ac., Ac., Ac. ALBO ANYTIIIMJ IN TIIK LINK OK FRESH MEATS. We are killing "tall-fed Atoerx of from 120(11<> ltikilb"., and have positively the BKST MKAMS that are ortVretl for "ale in Centre county. SEC! I LEE & CO. an o a r: n s, llukh House llluck, Reliefonte, Pa. NEW ENTERPRISE. 1 LEXANDER A CO., AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENT —AND— SEED STORE, BELLEFONTE, PA. They mean by thin all the name import", that i, to deal in nd to fnrnJali t*i farmn at Mm luweat |MBibl price everything in the ah*|a f at. gri< ultund implement that farmers use, inr Imlit.k- HKKLm <>r ll kit,.l.. At profit # bavonn h*ul n I'l.oMT, iBtt*r |*lrwe than tlicw ran I— had fr the *nm* amount of ftt'>T \|m thoOwtrw llall t'ornjibntn VI #> need *r noth itig al-'tit th- lie-rite ••( the planter, ae th In ua*" In t Vntr* county them t I*. tie l^et. HAKRoHH and CU.TIVAToKS „f tha lat.-et inn prr.trd pattarne MuWER> RKAPKIIS and GRAIN 111NDF.RS.—f)f lher waaall the Dalairn* atthar aa j*rat Vfoware. t'omhired i;-|H-re aii-l Mnwara, aitigla Ilartaatara, or we Cotnhitiad and Itindar*. TIIK WIIKKI.Lh, No •, ae a ...tnhlnaft marhitia.ie tha nu< hitia of tie kind in tha markat TIIKGBKATBM IMPROV K.V|K.\T >K TIIK AK ie tha Vorrtetoan Glaanar ami Bltidar, I'wll and it. It ie wondarfullj |.arfv t Atty l>V taalaa vaare old. with one h'.ra*. will fob |..w and Idnd all tha grain that any K**pr with elda dahvar.v will rut It not only bind* hut gtaana, and will aata tha of tha invhina in on<> y**r, by taking up from thaefuldda that wlilrh ie now |..t. TIIK M "ItKRH Y OH AI ,N HK11.1.. alt bar with or without browdraet hoae, with without fartllirar and wrd ef.wing atta hnerite It j tie haat grain drill br all puri-*e-e in ti.* markat. TIIKoKIM.It Til It Mil KR AM J*KPARATR Tie rap,,fat..n of thie machtna ie -o Wall aetaldleliad that we ran aay tufthing aU.ut It that tha pa. p|e da not koow Any parm.n wanting ona, or m nard of ratwire f<>r thae# nw in tha ry.untv, plewaa rail. IIKKItNKVt ft PATKNT KKVKL TRRAD HMK POW KR, for ona and two h -reaa, with I'atant Sjea,l Ragulatnr. I.itth- Jiat,r Thrahar and Oa-maf V ICTtiR III'LI.I It S.|# agenta for Tan tr* rountv. VV AMINS.C aRKI A'.M IH OOICB and Pll fTONJi m are agente f,,r tha rain of Mt t -l-hratad OiNK LIN H'AllON.tha reputation of which iee, Wall aeute llehad alaoof that oKTLAND PLATXrItVf HI KING WAOONM. ('arriagaa, and |ttiggia Ail ara warmnt-at Nota Sr,dia, at tha low prlca of |T ■> |ar ton. Pamttan Munno wM 'n nrd-ra only. Ph.wphalaw alwaya on hand. mannrwa for different crops auld u|N>n nrd-ra at rnanu farturara* prtcaa. piiWDKR—Via ar- Ihiimtit'a agante. Riaetjng. Nporting and Rifle |e,wdar on hand and aold at w|ola aela prtf-i ; fwaa tilt Alß—Aftar tha growing cmp | harraatad we Will lw prepared to pay tha hlg!et markat prira for all kinde of grum CMAL—-Onr yard ie alwaya efnrkad with the lewt Anthra. ita Coal which we a-ll at lowaef prlra 1.1 M K —We make the h-et white It rue in the Plate. Ite propertiew for mwrhunirul td aghrultural pur |oaaa eiral all ntlera, FAIRBANKS' J*CAI.EH —We ore their agent* In Centre roofty and will aupply all pwrtiea wielung goo,| and trge eralae at their lowaat price*. We extend an invitation to everybody In want of anything In bir line to mil at r.nr ntora riH.me, op tewlte the Kueh llouea. and a*a what wa ha*a. and learn from thoaetn attandanre mora partknlarly tha •co|>e of our hueineee AI.KXANDF.R k CO Hellefufita. Pa , May fl, |w*. p.Mf FOR THE OAMPAieiT. TIIK " PATRIOT " DURIXO TIIK PRKAIUKK. TI AL CANVAMt. TN order that everyliody, no matter How poor In par"., map rl Iha nawa .Influx lh* Xf"at pnlltlral atrnxx'" of 1"*0, Iba OtltT P.Taio, (Mnn.lar "dltlofi will lw a.nl hp mall to aap addraaa, pmtaga fra. from th* preatnt llm. nnlll th" ARaanth of Noraml.r nax>, for $-1.(10; lorlnlw of Ara or mora, (an.l ona ropp fraa lo Iha aaodarof Iharlah.) U.MI par mpp. W i 11,.,1,1 "on.la) arilllon, Iha I)*flT Patxiot will ba aant lip mail In anp addran, poatax* fraa, for aama parlod for I?..'"); lo clolwof Ara or mora (with ona ropp ffar lo aandar of rlah) t3.no par ropp. TUB WKKKI.T PATRIOT from Iha preaenl lima nnlll the waak attar the Prail d-ntlnl election will lie arm to any add rem, Itw, lot Ponyr Clara; •• elnlia of Ate or upwanla for TnmfT-Ptfl Catrra per ropy, with on# copy free to •cndcr of rltth. In evert CM* the inonet muat accom pany Ike order. Now lo Iho lime to et np rlaha. Pernor ratlr local oraantraticrt* cannot circulate rlieap or and more aflrctlte r*ni|ttn lltorotnra than new*. papera fttmlonod at throe eitraordlnartly low ratra Pond In your ordort addroaord to ParatOT Prauamna Co , Ifiiamat an. Pi jn. • • HUH II HOUSE, RRLI.RFONTK, PA.. IS O JEJST. !-dm D, P. PKTKRA, Proprietor . '4 PENSIONS. ALL dinabletl Soldiers and lieiro of Irruad Soldlara who died from mnorqnracea of •artier in lha Army, ara entitled to PKNRIONA. NO ARRCARA allowed after JOLT I. lAM. Rend •tampa for full InitntcUona In all klnda of Soldlara' rlalma. J. H. BYPHKRD A CO., Mm AHy't tint f street. WARIIINOTON. I> r CENTRAL HOTEL, (Oppoalta tha Railroad Station,) MII.WtBI'Rn, ORNTRR COUNTY, PA. A. A. KOHLBKCKKR, Proprietor. THROUGH TRA VRI.RRR on the railroad will Rad thla Hotel an rtrellent ptare to laaeh, or prtxorr a meal, a* ALL TRAINS atop about 2i mlnataa. IT ike (Crnftr HKLLEPONTB, l'A. NKWH, KACTFL AND HUOOKSTIONB. tUK TUT (IF TILL I ATIOMAL VIUKI la THI IKTEU.I (HICK am moariHiTT or TIII raiMii. Every farmer in hit annual experience U nearer* eomethiny of value. Write it ami eemt it 1,, the "Ayrinilturat Editor of the DKMOCKAT, lle.Ue'fonte, I'enn'u," that other farmern may hare the benefit of it. Let communication* be timely, anil be sure that (hey are brief and melt painted. KKPAIR fences and gates, put away the tools in good shape, and do the many odd johs that will help so much when the busy days of spring come. Til KMC is no better time than the present in the entire year to trans plant grape vines. As we have often done before, we urge it upon those of our readers who have not all they need to furnish grapes for the family, to purchase one or more vines. Those who cannot afford to do so, may obtain cuttings from friends. Let them be about eight inches long, in eluding two joints—one near either I end. Plant these in mellow Boil so j that the upper joint shall be at the surface of the ground. Cover with litter of some kind when sharp frosts may be expected and so leave them until spring. How to do It. 1' IHST, thoromjh prrpurittion of the ! hmd by plowing, harrowing and roll- ! ing. Second, drilling in the end from j one to two feet apart, according to the size of the stalks of the variety planted and its suckering habit. Third, KI.AT cultivation. Fourth, mijficient cultivation to keep the sur face mellow and free of weeds. The above we l>elieve to be the treatment to which we owe our immense yields of Indian corn. So says Mr. E. S. Cannan, the very practical editor and manager of the Rural New Yorker, and the Kural Experimental Farm. Compare this with your own experience of the past season, and see how they agree. Exhaustion of the Soil- It is certainly monotonous to grow the same crop on the same field for twenty or thirty years, but it is only in such monotony that satisfactory answers can be obtained Ur some of the most important questions in agricultural practice. It is in the fact that Dr. Lawcs has conducted ex|>eriments with several different cro|m upon the same plots for such a long series of years, and with great care, that the deductions coming from his work are of such value. The recent statement in regard to his turnip cx|>eriments are in |oint, and we quote them Wlow, not because they relate to turnips—which are with us a very unimportant crop as compared with their relation to Eng lish farming—but as an illustration of the disastrous effects upon Amer ican agriculture which must, sooner or later, follow the great wheat farm ing enterprises of the West, as con ducted by speculating capitalists ol the large cities. He says : In 1845 the land taken into turnip experiments nt Kolhamsled, and manured with superphosphate of lime, gave 14 tons per acre of bulbs and 4 tons of leaves. It has been under cx|>crimcntA ever since, but no succeeding crop has been so large, and at the present time a full supply of |K>tash, superphosphate, and other mineral manures, will not produce more than 4 or 5 tons of roots to the acre. It is therefore evident that at Hothamsted the stores of fertility accumulated in the land before the experiments were commenced have been exhausted. Advice to College Boys. Under this title the Practical Farm er of recent dale reads the farmer boys a short lesson on the utter non sense of wasting time and labor in the study of the classics, while at school, which we take great pleasure in transferring to our own columns, and giving our most hearty endorse ment. These are "good words," and very "fitly spoken Hundreds of farmer boys have gone from home this fall, for the first time, to attend college. We want to say a few words to them byway of advice, and it will do, also, for those who have not yet gone, but intend to go to college at some future time. The advice is this—if you intend to be farmers or business men, don't let the owl-eyed professors persuade you to fool away time on Greek and Latin. They will talk to you about the discipline it will afford, and how necessary a knowledge of these l#n- gunges is to a proper understanding of his own tongue, but don't you pay any attention to it. You can get ail the mental discipline you need in pursuing other studies that will be of some practical use to you on the farm or in the office or workshop. Of course, if you have plenty of money and time at your disposal, and you are not preparing yourself for an early struggle in life on your own "hook," you can study these languges and anything else you please, and if you intend to be a doctor, lawyer, teacher or minister, they will be use ful to you. Otherwise, let them alone and occupy your time with science, mathematics, history, economy, etc. Take book-keeping instead of Latin, and English grammar instead of Greek. Lay a good foundation and le thorough as far as you go, and then apply yourself to the study of your life work, if you intend to be a farmer, take an agricultural course of study. It is a liberal one, as pur sued in our best industrial institu tions, and will, in our opinion, devel op the mind quite as rapidly and to better purpose than the old c lassical course that has been so rigidly ad hered to for centuries. We know that fossil professors of Greek and Latin will pronounce this advice dan gerous, ami the man who makes it a 1001, but we reiterate it, nevertheless —don't study Greek and Latin unless you intend to tnake some use of them in after life. Bwarmiug Extraordinary. There are doubtless many bee fan ciers among our readers, w ho w ill be interested in the experience of Mr. I). A. Kern, with a hive of Italian bees, as related in the Ohio Farmer: The first swarm came out May 5, and was put in a hive filled with comb. On the 19th of May the sec ond swarm came out, and was hived with a weak swarm, tin the 20th the third swarm came out, and was hived with the second and the weak swarm. On the 21st the fourth swarm came out. Mr. Kern caught the queen and killed it, nnd put the swarm back to the old colony. On the 2.'5 d the fifth swarm came out. He caught two queens and killed them, and put the swarm back again. On the 25th, at nine o'clock A. V., the sixth swarm came out. He caught two queens again and killed them, and put the swarm back again, The same day, at three o'clock i. M., the seventh swarm came out again. This time lie hi veil them in an old straw hive, nnd set them on top of the old hive. In the evening of the 25th he shook them down in front of the old hive again, and that settled for the time the swarming fever of the old hive. Hut on the 86th of Jane, the first young swarm throw out a very large swarm, and on July 3d threw out a second swarm, and alout five minutes later a swarm came out of the old hive again. He hived both swarms together and sold them for S2OO cash. All these swarms made 235 pounds of comb honey. Manure Making. Cor f Oh Hide I fill* R~rard To make manure of any and every thing on the farm for which there is no better use, should lie the aim of every true farmer. It is, in fact, as the slip-shod, shiftless farmer is un worthy the name of a "true" farmer. The first and chief source of manure on the farm is the excrementitious matter coming from live stock. Chemistry shows that the liquid por tions are worth even more than the solid ; hence it should lie the farm er's study to save both. How can he do it* Easily,enough, if so deter mined. First, let him put the cost of his absurd fences into barns (with basements under,) nnd all planned with a view to housing both the stock nnd their excrements, the lat ter at least until it can lie safely ap plied to the land. Everything that can lie used as an alisorbent—straw, chall, cornstalks, potato tops, leaves, dry muck, road dust or even sand, salt hay, sea weed, etc., etc., should lie plnced "where it will do the most good"—under the animal, behind him, or under the floor in the basement if dry drippings go in that direction. The straw, stalks, weeds, bog hay or muck ol the ordinary farm furnishes the material for vast quantities of manure—vast, at least, as compared with present results. The hen house, the privy, the wash tub, the kitchen sink, can all be drawn upon (or large supplies, though ordinarily most of it goes to waste. Receptacles for dry muck or dry sawdust, into which slops could be conducted, could be easily made and with leas ex|>ensc than fences—fences, the most silly investment ever thought of for tilla ble land and money needing men. The cost of fences put into barns, and stables and drainage and manure cisterns—in a word, into improved farming—would add hundreds of millions to the wealth of the agricul tural classes. If adopted at once and universally it would create a greater revolution In the country than did the discovery of gold in California. Btahle manure excels all other fer tilisers in this—that it is more nearly a complete manure, furnishing for all crops what they roost commonly need. The farmer, then, who skilfully supervises this branch of his work is on the road to success. Ho will see a hundred chances for adding to his manure pile where his slovenly neigh bor only sees one. Even if his ab sorbent inalerialH possess little or no value in themselves tliat does not discourage him —it is a convenience for conveying what is useful to the land. His manure cart is in the same category ; so is his shovel and bis fork. Borne farmers find, or tirink they find, that swamp muck has not muck fertilizing value; but when well dried and made friable by a winter's frosts it will certainly absorb great quantities of urinal matters or household slops, and by that means they can la: inoffensively conveyed where wanted. It is safe also to believe that, generally, swamp muck has virtues of its own. It lightens a stiff'soil; it holds the moisture that comes to a dry soil; it makes a sandy, porous soil heavier and darker; it warms a cold, backward soil by let ting the sun's rays through it as black clotli does on snow or ice. It needs intelligent treatment—as horses, lioys and women do—that is all. Even sand lias merits, also, though gener ally there is no desperate need of it within a rod or two of the sea shore. Weeds manipulated so that their seeds will not germinate are just as good as straw for the compost heap. Fermentation gives the quietus to seeds. Slops are exactly what is needed in a compost heap which has too much fermentation in it, because they check the heat and possess some fertilizing ingredients. Muck in a pile of animal manure and strawy matter is also useful, because it checks and tempers lire-fanging, and its own possible sourness or extra moisture is driven out by the heat. When the farmer devotes his atten tion as thoroughly to making man ure as the average farmer does now to fences and pasturage financial in dependence is close at hand. Think on these Things. A man can not be a successful farmer and something else at the same time. The loss of barnyard manure may l>e prevented by the use of eave trougbs. 1 don't approve of cows licking themselves clean. I do that with the I card and brush. Heavy fowls sometimes receive severe injuries in trying to fly dowu from high perches. If hens have a warm house and enough to eat, and of the right kind, they will lay in winter as well as summer. Niggardliness in the treatment of the soil is the worst economy; while liberality is returned many fold. This is especially true with regard to grass I lands. As food if to animal life, so is manure to vegetable life. Therefore he that would succeed as a tiller of the soil must use every available means to save and apply the same to | his crops. Young stock at pasture should be taken to the barn before the nights Iwcome very cold or the feed very scant. There is no profit whatever in keeping any animals that are not constantly gaining, and it is not un usual to find cattle at pasture growing poor in October. Ciilcr made very late in the season and stored in a cold place will keep sweet, lecause active fermentation is prevented. If it is rich and sweet when it comes from the press, and care is exercised in making it from good, sound apples, it will not be come sour if kept in a moderately cool cellar in a tight cask or in bot tles. Ahoy* th# rot of corn Th* autumn com**, In of fold aod hr*u. The shtlarh jrrwtt her in ihr **rly morn. And nods from for al*or# his mellow IroMt hb# hang* hrr banner* out A lon* thr wood* in t rimaon garnishment. And thivsra the frrel |ea*ae in gti*t about. With thr brown stubble and Ihv 4rj rr blent. A Principle in Feeding. From thr American AfrtmlUrirt, All food beyond such amount that is properly digested and assimilated by the animal is a source of loss to the owner, and that in two ways: First, the food is lost; and second, the animal is not kept in the best condition for getting the most out of its feed—its stomach is overloaded and its digestive apparatus more or leas disarranged. Just inside the limits of assimilation is the poitit to have in view in feeding ; in this way the animal will have a good appetite, and other things being equal, is sure to give the best returns for food consumed. There is a golden mean in feeding farm stock, which the farmer should find. Vinegar. The essentials for good vinegar are: good cider; a temperature of at least 70', and as ooraplete exposure to the atmosphere as possible. The process may be hastened by adding yeast to the cider, or "mother" from old vinegar barrels, which amounts to the same thing. Vinegar making is, therefore, a sort of fermentation, facilitated by a low microscopio plant of the fungus groap.