/iunfiiitiHn'H Vomer. I'iltubur//. /•. j SUDDEN CHANGES! And cold woati •••i- toil we may nw look for li It nciv.-nrv lu [ ro| ro for it. To thoro who \ -ii 1 iwr *t>'i' laM Fall iho elegance Mid itingriuuile of our nlock I w a print -oil ito\ Our Stock thli full •* l*rgi r mid mort) complete tint it a. ever. Win', it include* nil tlio lower priced tillable trade*. we liuve alko tt v „ rv | H i-j{„ vnrietv of M-n' Overcoat* at S-4, $5, $45. SH, $lO, sl2 to sls |tiiini>** Suit* $5, $7, SlO, and Dr.'.* Suit* sl3, M 50, sls, ijj $••,! Hl ,,i <;o- l( ma ii life turnl in our own Cu*h>m Department dtir ■P *ing the iluil no nth* >f July and Align l. made hv our regular cut t"in tailor*, cut by our cutom cutters nnd rnude from good* o|. acted for custom work. The prices we have marked these suit* * and overcoat* will In no instance be mom than two-third* of what It would Co*t >ou to have the shIIIH good, make to order. Wo are showing the handsomest *in h of .Men'* Suit* nnd Overcoat* that low ever been displayed in this eity. A Department Which Merits Special Attention IS THAT or KAUFMANN'S i BOYS' AND CHILDREN'S CLOTHING. All Admit they never beheld mob a magnificent di-pluy of novelties . for the little ones, and willingly acknowledge our superior *tvio, lit and llnish j over nil competitors. All say our price* are remarkably low. We feel mated over j success and are now ready to serve the people from an a*sortinent better and cheaper than can la- found anywhere. Bov*' Cashmere and Cheviot Suits Children's lllotts Suit* fr. tn..sl ItCto 250 C r $2 to 6.25 Childrctu' Oxford Suit* from..sl 5t t to .'t 75 1 iloy*' Worsted and Diagonal Suit* Childrctu' Croquet Suits from..sl.lH) to fi 25 C riin , $3 to 7.50 Children*' Dengremunt Suits s■■'< to 775 1 BOYS Finest Dr.-.* Suite, satin lin- Children*' Cheviot OeercoaU..s 1.36 to 360 ed from S. () to lfi Children*' Finest Die** Overeat Boys' Chinchilla Overcoat* fl<s to 7 from $3.00 to 0.50 Boys' Beaver Overcoat* $•! 541 to 7.b. Bov. CassimereOvercoat* ?l 25 to !' When you call to see our immense stock of clothing we wllllhavo something Furnishing about Full styles of Men's and Boy's rHat, also Gents' Goods, and show you how wo can save you money to tell you If you buy from UP. Far Ahead of ALL Competition, liecause tit' carried away all the Honor's ;.inl"al! the I'rt iniums and all the Diplomas, and all the Silver Medals offered at the late State Fair and Kaposi the Host and Finest Clothing for Men. Hoys, Children. i KAUFMANN'S RELIABLE ORE PRICE CLOTHING HORSE, 1 83 TO 87 SMITHFIELD ST.. Cor. DIAMOND STREET. PITTSBURGH, JPJI. Samples of fabric:, blanks f r self-measurement, shew ing how to order, ami Fashion Books mailed iree J to any address, I WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. i j Vt-, t"- 1 • . ... oaaljr *•;•* Om? ftoltara "• rwr.aii *• * !#•• a *air : - . | rrrri uRVil*r. 'I t*- mi**4,br <iWI, <■*•'. Xftß ... 1 #u. ,4Ulv Dip eoumt) ever !#f BMP it ill- H M mmM w IhH • " w h* ti *f. • . ijft . !"i' "U tt.fr. ..i. tli- .lu-t !•■■ n ry >"•'' '"J a. m rue >.* - •. l'llE CI XT, INXAT I TIMES-STAR 1* lh* >■! t.'J . 'l*. I"' 1 *'""■ 1 4 ~ ' n ' r ?'! .J7i-7,7 X.7' ... i' '...u. * ..•* li. li.ny rII u ii. suy ■ *•■> !--• i*•-* min • 1 Ui. Ihet it It.is of cr it t ItMl i< iD|e4t .ii |m t f tjl I u U* I%f ♦*• r> I lllll# • n1 Jt*t 1 11 fl MmhUm ' '• * ,f 1 , . ~ v . . M , Hi, tl,* ti#wttnw tiv.iy o4 butt %n* pto- KXT.a'-- T*rricli*.l. oi .... n,r 4. l'b will fareivt your uim rtin.t/O tl Uier* i n -nt in-*** IVHmoh MeF<lrlanr ,f Co., Ihirdirnre Ihiiler*. HC K* ID'"W K- EI I McFARLAN K CO. *DRALKRfI IN STOVES, RANGES t HEATERS. A Lsu . Paints, Oils, Glass and Varnishes, r —AND BTJII-IDEIR/S' AtLgUUWT TKKKT, .... nm W BU KK, • . . . 81.Lr..!4TK, rx. THE PATKIuT. ▲ Pennsylvania Newspaper for the General Public. ft* DAILY PATftliyT U only morning u*toimtnn pabinii' i *1 ih btio r(>iiai. ' TV* DAILT MTHInt mak>*a -prrlally of pannryl' null* rmi Al DAILY PATRIOT pot.llal.. r lb* pr.m Run and anerlal* from *ll point* DAILY PATRIOT *!** *pra il nitration to grain ■ad plwdnr* nutrti. DAILY PATRIOT nfp monopoly, Lmlid, MnmliMti'Mi ol lineal powar. "rtm*: ♦Aim |r *nonm, fatrkAly In ndranr*.) or ■T.i*l pr xinnrn if nol p*M In adranca P..r any pari") Ira* ib*n on* year at proportional* .air* ftr* WKKRLY PATRItfT la a large, right pag* yr|r t ' drrotr.l to lllrratmr. agrl< allure • Ontr, maiiHtar tnrra, nan*. duiDi., rlc liurmg IMJ .wh nomiei will contain an tllnatralfoa of anrn* pronilnrnl Inylr of Itriil Thl< la an aitrarrlr* fmtnrr al,|. h rannol toll D> pi**** Trrm. II Imp., am.uni. InrariaLly It. adraorr. On- opr Of III* YYKKKI.Y PATHIOT ami •no copy of rh* Philadelphia W KRKLY TIMKS nlll b* ran I ona yr.r for fXUI caak In adranca, tlma airing Ilia two paper* tot tha Mtowrtptloa |.rlr olll.r Tatlrr. On* ( m* 4 th' WRPKLY PATRIOT and on* ropy of Ib*OOITAOS IIPARTII.an rg. client monthl) tiiag* asin*. pn Id label *1 Katon at l/g> par anoam, will b* pant on* yaar tor II fOcaahln andranr- Sand In yoor gnktrt,tio.j. al once Adrlrra* PATRIOT PUBLISH!SO 00 , . Ilarrlahnrg, Pa | B!V. v i MOX KV To Loan a< i'p ct. * ' ' H* Till, M ITU AI. I.l* K 1AIB. AM E Oil OP JtKW TuKK, un Ar.i uh im|',"V*l farm (.r.>(-er 1y la mm, lUM lew Hun, ! i.d mil *CMd|n .(B*Hunt ~f Ik* yriwnt , a | a * *, "• pruyarty Any yu*U.m at lh. |,rinrl|.l ran U laid i.-It al any llm*. and It h*a I ran lh* r u*i,.m of lb. m|..;ij l p*rmll ih* |.rl .fljal in rrmalr. a* Km* a* lh* ii.*h nidi**. If lb* lalerral I* |.rr,miill, t|d Apply fo Cll ARLEI* P. miKHM AN. 4ib.ri *(-)•. MYOnnt, •treat, Huudia#, fa., oftnHAVIH X. Kl.lbK, Co.l Appraiser, Nffllifnata. I*a. j PATENTS 1 TiLSriuellt C — tor ". f ' ll Carnal*. bar# had llilri)-iu<> pa*rl a* i muTOAwwurTil Dr * icprt ii**"net- S* i?n* r *" *"?' flvrnim llm*. •fmilaih M. Artifrvm a o> pitmt i ; I _ *";• \eie AilrrrHoeiueiitM. TliTT J S A NOTEn^IN?SAYs!" I>B. U'ctti—iMtir t*iri fur ton j. u. 1 hav* . |. on a tinrtjrr t.> ))y*|p*i i, < ou*i||w<i' u iiii-l | I'ilci. Tart fepringvourpill* war*recotnmndei) j to m*i lU**d them (I ut vvcliliitla tni'.h). Ism novr a will mini, Imro y.iul <li o-imn parfcol, rtfohur *tao), *ll*4 koih-. *m i imvo y, in" I t'oiiy pou-i■' soiiJ dali. Th y uru worth ; thvlr wulyht fn gnlil. I.Iv.SIMPSON, T."oi*vill,Ky. SYr/?PToiif:s of A TORPID LIVER. Losnjof AppcDte.Nauuon.lJow'- lßcoetiva, Vulu iu ua'Udid. with a <tilllnensatlon [ lutlioluichpnrt, fwlnujid rthn Should'-r [ blucl", l'ulln-'iai. 11ftnr eating, with u dlu. tnclinntion t > sxi'rUon of body orinind, Irrii ihui'y of tompor/Xow spiritn. Lob* of m morv, with 11 f. olinir of having n>'- Uctod somndutv, Woarlne*;,, Dizzinrnn, Flutt'-rlng of tlin heart, Dot* tH forn thn oyoii. Yellow Bkln, lloadacho, l(f*tl<-Kii n**ii ut night, highly colored tTrino. IF THESE WAHNINOSAKE UNHKEUKDI SERIOUB, DISEASES Will BE OEVEIOPID. TUfi S MI.LS arn rnrr tally mlaptrd 10 • tirli r*ri. nncilnir r rtrcl* turli it rlinuge orft-elliigaifa,toni*h (lie *iiftrrer. Tl y Hit* ifimily fairly . and you will gull, a liraltliy UUiilinn, Vigorou* ltfM,/, I'urr llloud, acronir Itervu. and n Sound l.lvrr. I'rli c, l*it Caul*. office. u.l Murray St.. If. V. TUTT'S HAIR DYE. 44r*y llnlr nnd tVhl.krri rhanged In a <.!•>.*> Itlnrk 11 y a alnglo applli all.hi of (hi* l>. It 1111 1 w*• t• a nil i*l rnlnr, art* liiiiincinrunil)'. Hold lit UriiK lllm.nr *rul hi *>|irc* on r*>rrf|it of til. oilier, 115 II nrrny HI., X , tail*. I lilt. TI'TT'H >1 ttl Al.of Vnl.,l.le\ , I n r„rtu*tin 11 nd I nful ll* < r I pi* „ |||l iM-mallcdl llKllou B|i|>llcatluu. / THIS PAPER IS ON TILE \ ilinirinife iJX iTMU-tnsi'. sirvnlw 1 Juw!vlU(/y flt and all oih.r a.**t*:a in I laiimoMUn I '*• "wtd can t* ma*la no lha \ADVtRTISINC/ ""** UvuraMa term, at (ha F out / It!ai:.-u'.Tm;i;i! I^:7, Xkeystone/ H - p ' P r o^fo r°' \c\ICCESC / \* -f ISIIUWr .1 It,. - im -. llul llwl.f| ,111, li^K l\ HAS BEEN PROVED L The SUREST CURE for DISEASES. * rofUißfl bck crdlß rtlrrud urln Indl r® Slvt# thM yoti art ayi Jtim • THEN IX) NOTjf CIUEHrTATE; u* Kitlary-Wert atone#. fdruc-IE ® r.-*'* rwnmoad)4nd It wlU*pr4U/ om r w l xnc tha (]>omi and rratora hAalLhjr artion.J % i\ LnHiAQ Forooßplalnta p^uliarj> -I kCJ V4lVrOa to yonr art, at.ch aa t-alnLi I nd Kidng^r-W -rt la unaurpaaawt. aa it will art pron-.pt!7 and aafrly. Either ®c*. I§eonttaißot l ftr.Uon oftuiaJ{ a*j bri *4 d iator anddu'l dn|paf C J patna, all ytald !• !•. cur' v powov |5 % \ SOLD PY ALL DaUQOiaTS. rrtoa 11, p i: ■*'. t -- . yw - • ,aa --a-Mwrrj| B5; 2Uh:i®S|!B j D CIOOO T "I: ■' " . ' w | J. li N ' it I. 1 Lg r ■ * r M r. Is, *. i>- la n. -'•' v . 1 1. *. L I h. 1. r i rn,tvu. * *. r j c 1 .ij W'Swil L - 1 Jjt * . * a .-m . v •* /y c 1 . \* 'Ox u, Jtycixz. } \ \ \* y/ /W^ \/ JOHN BARKIS, AOEST, RRI.LBVOBT*, PA, v PEOPLE. J B .rerun fUip. -M nn < *■•*. ..■..**. ,a iU, MM, *,,*. 4 Vn**a lata, laar.l. MI (.' o lu •im.MM p i Add raw J. H JOIIXBIOV. 169 Smithficld iiw(, Pittsburgh, Pa. For Hnle. 4 FARM conuioing Fifty-Acres RAMr"mVn'/un' W U"' '' • "VOdrtOST la.nflA* *" 4 Hi,i j in. Isalrof A. AT. t.iUUWT. . ; itf&MlitCdi*. * m Cnvtrr BKLLKKOSTE, I'A. iiuaBICXTLTTJBgiLL. M;WH, FACTS ani> BUUOKHTIOKB. "iikTEr<ir fhk national vrrmiii is thi mrctu- USNCK ami* enogrfciiitr at the iai mm. Every farmer in in/% annuaf expe.rxtnee tUteoecrti Hornet/iing af value Write it and if U the il Agricultural FA'xtar aj the. liellefante. /Vvifi'ci," that other farmer* may hare the benefit of it. Let eommun tea turn be timely, ami tenure that they are. brief and well pointed. New K.nui.ami> farms must Ik: looking up. According to the He port of the Hoard of Agriculture of Connecticut, that State boasts of one county .Middlesex—in which no furin yielded less than four percent., a number reached twenty, and one ran away up to twenty-eight |er cent. It won't do to cavil at the worn out laud of the Hastern States after that. A CORKEMHINDKNT of the Columbia Journal dries his seed corn thorough ly, and then smokes it as lie would hams, for three or four days, lie says it becomes so impregnated with the smoke that neither squirrels, gophers, nor anything else, w ill take it after leing planted. The one great | goes I that would surely lie gained | would be the certainty of its being effectually dry. IIITTKR milk is a matter of frr queul occurrence every fall and win ter, or soon after the cows are oIT from grazing. It is caused first by bitter erbs in the hat—as May weed, •lohnswort,etc.,and also by the use of too much over rijic food, such as straw, corn, clovrr, or late cut hay. It never occurs when cows are fed on good food, and are thriving, or even holding their own, and arc kept comfortably warm. Oi r excellent contemporary, the /Vest, does not hesitate to say that "every ntan maintaining a vault un. der a privy ought to le fined. These \auii* are among the most horrible nnisunrtH that barbarism has lie qucathed to modern time*." We hearlil\ ng're with our contemporary, but i* it not inconsistent when in another column of the same page it suggests the propriety of "a good cattle barn over a manure cellar J"' THE best piece of wheat we have seen this fall was -own upon a lot from which a large crop of early jk>- tatocs had been taken. The ground was not plowed, but thoroughly cul tivated, roller] and harrowed, after having lilwrally licen top-dressed with very fine stable manure, and forty bushels of lime per acre, the drill having been set to sow but one half bushel, and then drilled both ways. We do not remember to bave ever seen a finer looking piece of wheat. PERHAPS the longest step towards making the production of sorghum sugar a Buoceaa has been taken by a couple of professors in the Illinois State I'nivcraity, who have discover ed A new process by which the pro duct can In; rid of the peculiar sor ghum taste which has proven so ob jectionable. "A large factory adapt ed to the process has just been finish ed at Champaign, 111., ami the first two thousand pounds of sugar, C quality, was, found to he devoid of any fiavor that would suggest sor ghum cane." j Cot,. F. I). CURTIS, one of the ie*t ; farmers of the day, tell* in the Trib une, how ho economised in his stork j feeding last winter. Among other 'things he says: "Our young horse, not used, was fed nothing but oat I straw —all it would eat, nnd gained , all the time. This only proves that | bright oat straw is good feed ami | superior to coarse hay, or any hay, I unless of more than medium quality." We think it proves, in addition, eith er that the Colonel's oat straw is very much "superior" to any we have ever used, or that he has a mighty poor threshing machine. A VAST majority of farmers could make a wonderful improvement in their poultry stock, and thus make money, by killing ofT ail Ihu roosters of their old' lot, and introducing one or two pure bred ones of some ap proved breed. The present la the very best time to make Ui* change. The old stock can he more canity fa!- teiieil and disposed t ,f to letter nd vantage than alter a while, and the new birds can lie purchased much cheaper now than at any time later in the season, Breeder* and fanciers want now to reduce their stock for the winter, and are much more atnend ahle to icason in the matter of prices, than they will lie toward spring, when they will have comparatively few choice lards left, anil the demand for them will lie at its height. Dcoh It Puy to Grind tlio Corn With tho Cob. We are frequently naked this ques tion, and upon the strength of sev eral tears experience, we can only answer that under circumstances it docs, while under others, it might prove unprofitable. The Luc Stork Journal stales the case so fuirly and clearly, and so in accordance with our own views, that we make room for an extract upon the subject: "It depends upon the facilities for grind ing, and the kind of stock to lie fed. Sheep grind corn better than cattle, and therefore they utilize the nutri ment in whole coin latter. The cob contains more actual nutriment than is generally supposed. It shows on analysis 4±. r > per cent, of carbohy drates, ] 4 per cent, of albuminoids, and the same of fat. It is quite safe to say that cobs have one-half the value of hay, when fed with food rich iu nitrogen, winch it so greatly lacks; and when the cob is ground fine in burr mill stones, there is nothing in jurious to animals in it. There is much •*uil l about the danger of fco<l• 1 ing cob-meal, but there is no founda lion for this prejudice. When the cob in ground One with the corn it must certainly IK* 111 a much lietter condition for feeding than corn in the ear, when cattle swallow a large part of the cob without masticating it any more than is necessary for swallowing it. Yet the cob does not in anything like the proportion the grain does ; ami while millions of cattle are fattened every jear in the West on ear corn,aenaihle |ieople will not lie alarmed at the danger of feeding well-ground col's. Where nulls are prepared for grinding cob, it will pay to grind in the ear, as, in addition to the nutri ment in the cob, it saves shelling, and the cob mixed with the meal separates ! the particles of meal, so that it goes j into the stomach in a more porous j condition the gastic juice thus pene trates it more perfectly, and the meal ;is digested belter than when eaten j alone. The writer fed five work ( horses upon cob total, mixed with cut li:iy„ for several years, and their ' health remained excellent. We do not w;*h to convey the idea that corn cobs of themselves would lie worth grinding, but corn in the ear can be ground whole as cheaply as corn can In- shelled and ground, and, tf the fanner is short of fodder, there can Ire no doubt that it is wis dom to grind cob and oil. Protect tho Manuro. *'( AgrVnllntW. An Knglisn farmer on using, for the first time, manure that had been 1 made under cover, bad bis crops j ruined by luxuriant growth. He used 1 the same quantity as lie was aecus | tomed to of the open yard manure j ami the grain was lodged before it was ready to harvest. This is a strong argument in favor of a pro tection for manure. On most soils it is very important to have it well de composed, so that the plants may obtain an abundant supply of food from it at once; but during the fermentation process, to render its I insoluahlc compounds available, M. rious losses of fertilizing materials j arc very often sustained. If the 1 fermentation of ttic? heap is rapid, | there is danger of losing the very j valuable nitrogen as volatile ammo nia, which, passing into the air, is as likely to nid a ncighlmr's crop as our own. On lite other hand, deeom|>o sition may go <>n so slowly that the manure is unfit for immediate use when wanted. It is no easy matter to con duet the decomposition so that the I most good manure may Is* made with I the least loss. It is, however demon- I strafed that hot sun, winds, snd rains, are to be kepi from the heat, and that the Imit manure is made under cover. A method of box-feeding lias Ivrn adopt, d by many, which allows the manure to accumulate under the ani mnls for months. It is found that this system docs not imply offensive stalls, and that there is little loss of nitrogen—the element of greatest value, and most likely to escape, it is only necessary to use rnough litter to nhsorh all lire liquids. Covered yards would secure much the same conditions for the manure by pro tecting it from the drenching raina, and the exclusion of air hy compact treading, which prevents a too hasty fermentation. It is certainly worth while for every farmer who contem plates the use of commercial fertili zers, to see that he is making the most of the manure which his ani- i msls arc giving him dally, preserve and protect it diligently. TIIB buckwheat crop of the coun try amounts to near 18,000,000 of bushels, and Pennsylvania is to be credited with about half of It. I Not AH Clean AH HO Mitfht Be, ; But Cleaner Than Some Other*. Mr. V. J). Co burn, Kantian, a roost eminent authority on swine, in in. ehne'l to laugh at those who main tain that • the hog in the cleanest of all iloineHtic animals, if he only liaa a fair chance." lie think* that they might as well tell the farmer* that "he it a singing biril, or work* well in harness. ' Hi* own opinion of the hog— UIMJ no one irt better rjuali(Se<i to give an opinion—is about tbia : He cannot lie iniiurrfl to eat so much inuf.ii and sweet that lie will not be willing to travel some distance to interview the carcass of a mule or cow deceased a fortnight before. I suspect that he would abandon the laughing brooklet at any time for an hour's repose in a bath of mud, mor tar, manure and Hastiness of such consistency as he likes. Of course this is *ll very shocking us well at new to some folks, yet the hog can do all these tilings and still I*. rnore cleanly than most dogs, or a good many people. He has hi* little pc culiarities, and hack of all of tliern he is chuck full of merit and meat." Tho Texas Hoff | He is of .Swiss collage style of ar chitccturo. His physical outline is angular to a degree unknown outside of a text hook en the science of j Geometry. 'I he country razor-back prowls around in the woods ami lives lon acorns, |>ecari nuts and roots ; when he can spare time he climb* under hi* owner s fence and assists in harvesting the corn crop. In this re spcct he is neighborly to a fault, and, when his duty to his owner's crop will allow, he will readily turn in and assist the neighbors, even working at ( riight rather than see Ids crop spoil for want of attention. Crossing the razor-back with the blue-blooded slock makes but little improvement, j Ihe only effective way to improve him i* too cross him with a railway train. He then becomes an im|iort ed Berkshire, or Poland China hog, and if he does not knock the train oIT the track, the radroad company pays for him Ht the rate of $1 "a pound, for which they are allowed the mournful privilege of shoveling the remains off tiie track. The ham l 'if the country rrzor-back is more I juicy than the hind leg of an iron fir - log, but not so fat as a pine knot. I HE term "buckwheat" has often liecn spplled to the |*nple of West ern Pennsylvania in derision for some unknown cause. If pancakes arc good, however—and>boul every body si cms to think they are— the Pennsylvaoian has reason to be proud of the epithet rather than ashamed of it. Of the total l.uok wheat crop of the United States, which amounts to about 11,000.000 basin is annually, the Keystone Stale produces nearly one-half.* Thus does the thrifty Pennsy)vanian manage to scratch along in coni|M-tition with his neighbors. MUCH is written in the face of the decrease in yield of otr grain crops almut the way to re-establish former product*. Some will tell 11* that we do not plow deep enough Others Hint our lands are not drainer! ; a third that we do not pulverize at the right time ; a fourth that we do not plow at the right time, and a fifth that we miss it in the proper time lor planting and towing. All these things may have something to do with it, and in particular esses may lie the prime moving cause; hut, in my opinion, the deterioration of our crops can be tracer! to an absolute want of our best manures CV I* K. I'iotrilr. WHEN we remember that an acre or soil to the depth of one fool weighs not far Irom 4.00(1,000 jwunds. and that the addition of fifty pounds of a compound of phosphoric acid, or potash, or nitrogen will make a mark er! difference in the crop, while the chemist would not be aide to detect Hie addition by an analysis. It Ire comes clear that the true test of the fertility of the aoil ia in the crop that the soil will grow. "By their fruits ye shall know them" is as true nf soils as of human actions.— Car. /-htm nilil (itirnrn. , I AiiMF.Ht Mimelimrt Hirer at what ! lvle "hook farming,'' claiming j that they prefer ex|ieriettcc. Kxpe I rienca nnd study should jointly lie | acquired by all. Will, year* of ex | |>erienec there are hut few fannera 1,0 can visit llie agricultural shows. Judge ami select the prize stock. It is important, in order to be a first- I class farmer, to understand all that pel tains to it, and nothing is so much needed as knowing how to select tbc llCftt, THK man who wants to make MON ey from a fruit orchard might aw well atop feeding his cattle M to stop manuring and cultivating kit trees as they become old. TIIK liuml /W speaks of a corn Held near Naples, (N. V.) m al has produoetl 45 successive crops of con, witU but little manure, and that re ecntly applied. The crop is far altpve the average this year. KXPKRIKXCS abowa that the former who raises hia wheat, his corn, bit mulct and pork at home succeeds (tetter than the one who raises oniv
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