+ — BURCLARS RICH HAUL. Cracksmen Rob the Coldwater (Mich.) National Bank, ——, ——— Every Vault and Safe Blown Open and Demolished. Burglars entered the Coldwater (Mich) National Bank between 2 and 3 o'clock in the morning, blew open every vault and safe ani got away with &X 000 in cash and a Fy private deposit of $40,000 worth of Philadel phia and Reading railroad incoms bonds. Some people in the vicinity heard two explosions about tie time of the ocourrance, but attached no NMarming significance to them, and the robbery was not discovered until employes came to open the bank at the usual hour that morning I'he robbers drilled the outer door of the vault, and with a punch broke off tha lock The middie door was secured with a padlock, and this was probably broken with a sledge. Che inside vault contained one burglar-proof combination=lock safe and also a steel safe with a [hese were drilled and charged, it 1s thought, with dynamite. The doors of both safes were blown completely off. wrecking them and leaving nothing but a shell of each, The concussion shattered the wooden shelves inside the vault and soatterad the contents of the safes and the shelving about the floor About $200 in gold that was badly mati lated and bent out of shape and also a quan- tty « srware were left by the robbers A six-ouncs bottle was found In the bank with about an ounce of liquid remaining in it This is supposed to be nitro-glycerine time-loek, Ls v the cracksmen., Some tools, consist- ing of punches and chisels. with the sawed- off handle of a sledge, were loft in the bank e to the bauk was effected by pry- an ootnide window, Two suspicious men were near Fear en. { the bank evening, It was Chere seen the that ere the robbers, IT} ue bank officers offer £500 reward and the fers $300 additional for the appre n and conviction of the 1 wbhbers, wdeiphia and Reading bonds that taken were u gisterad hey are ered S75 to 88% ir to 1TH ve, and 1739 174 sive, and 1704 PROMINENT PEOPLE. 1% Hoon f Lord Teany- ew drama, Austria writes to the 4 Aan amateur » artist of the pres isa man of Dat mes his night i ddealy in un 1Y has the credit of bein ws and hardest w England has had for many rlein rein 4 = n has received John D. 1 » te of magnate, of yf Chicago mt gift from Standard Oil Kansas, has an ne the editor "HY a Tk * newspaper al years old, t Sewanee is noted throughout e State for ita hospitality Gexerat Hexny R. Jackson is liked by iy in the Mexican capital, and he is be the most popular Minister that has ever represented the United States thers I'uzgng are only four authors who earn $2000 year with their pens, and these lucky ones are William Dean Howells, Rob ert louis Stevenson, “Mark Twain" and Mrs. Burnett (GUSTAVE JOVAX in R Rtenpes Steppes, WITCH, the greatest cat. tie breeder iswia and called the “King of the ywaos 600,000 acres of land and possesses more thao 1,000,000 sheep and 34. 000 shepherd dogs Ix his recent wedding in London, Eagland, Lord Alington laid unnecessary stress upon the difference between his own and his bride's ages by having two of his grand- daughters serve as bridesmaids Tuey say that Thomas Nast, the great earwoonist, grows younger as the years pile up their burden on his shoulders. In his New Jersey home at Morristown he is some- times seen cantering about on horseback like a boy Mi. Wixaxs, the State Superintendent of Public Instruction in Kansas, was for. merly a bricklayer in Atchison, where he helped to build Corinthian Hall, State Senator Kimball, of Parsons, worked by his side in those days Fraxcis, of Missouri, is a stickler for “the swallow-tall” coat at his receptions. Colonel Richard Dalton, who wants to succeed Franeis, says that if he is elected Governor the people may eall on him in their shirt sleeves Tux choice of a wife for Prines George, of England, has gradually narrowed down to two women Bo Victoria, daughter of Prince Christian, and Princess Victoria of Hesee, the youngest daughter of Princess May loth are charming and popular Kiris Jonus Marcaaxt Muxoy, the blind sculp- tor of Tarrytown, N, Y., has completed the model for a statue of Washington Irving. He can scarcely distinguish light from dark- ness without the aid of an opera glass, but «work has been done almost entirely by the ase of touch * White James Whitcomb Riley was giv- g » reading at the Grand Opera House, Kansas City, the other night, Mrs. Amanda FE. MeChesney, of MoClure, clsimed him as her son, who ran away tweniy-seven years ago, wrote poetry and and traveled with a show, The poet insisted that he had a clear record of his parentage Hexator Prrmionew, of South Dakota, lived for many years in Sioux City, lows, iu a log cabin that was his own handiwork, This was not jong ago, for the Senator is even pow not much beyond forty, He wasa Vermont farmer's boy, and when attracted to the West he walked much of the distance, His first investment of money was a lucky one, for be ht some of the land on which Sioux City now stands, and in this his present fortune had its source SEALERS PERISH, Many Frozen 10 Death in Trinity Bay, New Foundland, (GOVERNOR A salilogram from St, John's, New Found. land, says: There was a terrible disaster in Trioity Bay a few days ago, Two hundred and twenty men went out in small boats seal hunting. A furious “northesster” suddenly arose and the temperature fell to sero, Most of the boats were driven into i hist ; ; 7 : FIFTY-SECOND CONGRESS, In the Senate, 420 DAY, Vice-President Mor. on, baving returned trom his visit to Philadelpaia, pro- sided over the Senate, and laid beforeit the credentials of Mr, Daniel, of Virginia, for his new term beginning March 4, 1803, and they were ordered to be placed on file Messrs, Claggott and DuBois spoke in sup port of their claims to the ldaho senator. ship=e= Among the bills reported ani re ferred were the following: To amend the Railroad Land Forfeiture act, by providing that persons occupying such lands and entitled to purchase them shall have one vear's additional time to do so. Mr, Stanford introducad a bill to determine the value of a legal-tender dollar. Mr. Vilas introduced a bill to amend the pension laws, Referred to the Committees on Pensions. 43D DAY. Discussion of the Dubois-Clag- gett contest was continued Among the bills referred were the following: To pun- ish the violation of the treaty rights of aliens, To purchase the historical part of (George Bancroft's library, To pro vide for the establishment of a gun factory for the finishing dnd assembling of heavy ordnance on the Pacific coast—-—An priation bill appropriating §20),00) for the amendment to the Postoflice Appro distribution of the mails in raral districts was referred to the Committes on Appro priations ri DAY. Consideration of the Dubols- Claggett contest was continued == Mr. Kyle reported a bill providing for an investiga- tion relative to the ‘‘siums of great cities’ Calendar~—Mr, Allison reported a bill ap- propriating $3000 for the expenses of the typous fever and immigration investigation Passed —— Mr. Dolph, in presenting petitions from his State favoring Government aid for the Nic aragua ( ‘anal, spoke in favor of such legislation iri DAY. Mr. Dubois was declarad en titled to sit for Idaho by a vote of fifty-five to five——The Pure-Food bill was taken up and several amendments, mostly of a verbal character, were agreed to-——The Benate ratified the protocols and treaty making the United States a party to the convention of Berne relating to the protection of patents in all of the signatory countries, tiret DAY I'he Viee President presented pmunication from the Secretary of the na to the Yosemite Park ’ ill was dis an res Mt sl ¢ estate of Alexande rgia, of the ex him in prosecy A for the payment H., Stephens, of Ge urred cial penses in tng his » District referred Messrs, Barbou tt, Butler, Dolph A, A Was In the House, e entire sons retary the nll, the ad jourfied rn Dax sented 8 resolu rder : 1] was passed setting apart a tra the use of the Lick w I unmitieo The C versity ¥ ution House and ? tion jointly to investi the immigration went Commis Bynum, of Indiana dian Appropriati . Pending a ymmittee rose, ani the Houw adjou 47m Day [be Indian Appropriation was passed «The District of Int propriation b wo Wool bill ani Cotton Bagging tton Tie bills w reported Sri Day. —Mr fix the compenmtion and craw of lifesaving stations—=The House then went into Committe of the Whole (Ms Richardson. of Tennessee in the chair the District of Columbia Appropriation bil Without disposing the bill the committs rose, and the House adjourned 401 Day. ~The District of Columbia Ap propriation bill was passed-——A bill was passed constituting Newark, N J. ay of immediate transportation—~Oae bil authorize reduced railroad fares to comn cial travelers was taken up and until adjournment, bore Day Mr. Sayers reported the Ur gent Deficiency bill. It aggregates $43, 413—-The Pension Appropriation bill was reported The House then wont into Committee of the Whole (Mr. Hatch, of Missouri, in the chair) on the private calendar. The after noon was consumed in the consideration of private bills——The second night session {or the consideration of private pension bills proved no more successful than the first On'y eighty-seven wembers responded to their names, and, after a roll call, the House adjourned into numa (Neill reported a bill ¢ koopers 0 RIOT IN DANTZIC. Systemat be histribution of Food by the Mob to Starving Workmen, A mass wo thousand or more a deputa visf Magistrate of Dantzic, to ask for neeting of § inet oy yorsmen ssni nan work and food for their starviog families I'he magistrate received them kindly and maintain the peace He had been made hundred men on relief near the city, This did not satisfy the delegation, and when the steam boat departed with the 200 who bad been promised work, the hungry mob left behind, encouraged by Socialist and Anarchist war. riors, began to sack the bread shops and other places where food of any kind was for sale or stored The police were overpowered hy the mob LArge phim of meat, bread and groceries were heaped in the streets and guarded by a detail of the rioters, while the hungry workiagmen, one by one, were dealt out provisions in ao- cordance with their needs or the size of their families. Skirmishing parties of the rioters meanwnile kept the polics at bay severely injuring several of them. in the day, when the ricters had ob tained all they wanted, they dispersed, sev- eral bodies being hastened homeward by the police, who had rallied in stronger force. About fifty arrests were made, DISTRESS IN VIENNA, Forty Thousand Workmen at Pres ent Ont of Kmpioyment, There is much suffering inVienna, Austria, among the poor, and the charitably inclined have incessant demands made upon them to assist families who are on the verge of star 7ation, It was anpounced that about 160% machanios ware out of yment, advise Toom Arrangements aban iwo said That to saploy WOUrKs procure the number of men out of 40,000. J. A, Tonia, once a wealthy nter of Horn Lake, Mim. wend to Ls Tash . to supplies for com year, fies hd br of cotton caused all merchants and bankers to refuse him eredit, and, smarting under the humiliation, he kille | THE LABOR WORLD, Wouex work on French railroads, Tarrk are said to be 10,000 Chinese shoe makers in Californias, Tue number of men out Vienna, Austria, is 40,000, Tre discontent and distress among Euro- pean workmen are growing greater, Tug Knights of Labor building construe- tors in New York City are about 4000 in number. COAL rates in England are advancing, and to all appearances the miners have the up- per hand, IN twenty-four hours a steel manufactory in Pennsylvania recently turned out 190 tons of rails, ’ THERE were nearly seven hundred lives sacrificed by mine explosions in Europe and Ameria last year AuTHORITIES in Austria bave frowned upon attempts to relieve the distress exist- ing among unemployed laborers. Tuer are 10,000 testotallers in way service of Great Britain, and among the sailors in the naval service, IN consequence of the printers’ strike in Germany about 35,000 union members bave been black-listed, among them over 0 women A strike of longshoremen is on at New " Orleans, La., and 2000 men are out of work, The demand is an hour's pay for fractional parts of an hour of work in the rail 12,000 By far the greater part of the accidents that occur in milis, ete. happen during the last two hours of work, when workpeople are tired and careiess, Tre Queensland (Australasia) Govern ment has decided, in consequence of the large number of unemployed workmen in the colony, to prohibit immigration for the present Tux United Brotherhood of Carpenters throughout the country will on May 1 de mand that eight hours constitute a day's work, They will strike where this conces sion is not made GoveERSOR Manxuam, of California, has informed a committes of the Sacramento Federation of Labor that he has decided to declares Labor Day, the first Monday in Sep tember, a legal holiday NraTistics from Australia show that there are farms where laborer: receive $16 per year, three cents for meat and seven cents for butter per week, and 100 pounds of flour every three months, Ine has sat for | spent i) Roval British Commission on Labor ss than a year, but has already / ission is admittedly sntertalo- whbody imagined the ment w ) EXPOnsIve President Less than thirty years Me Leod, Reading Railroad, rodman » Northern Paci He is now the bead of a XX mile trunk ne and the subordinate ago smployer and WaearTLey investigating wu account made nt ¥ coats at eight ents on tae « eight whose fo-Calals to bave pub. that the capital in opposing the strike of the showing mpanies was $50 while the actual value ¢ is $246,790. 1 NEWSY GLEANINGS, 10.0%) the ¢ 11.000 mite nin I TYANIA has brass bands, 4 religion winter whoa crop Prxx THERE are Mixxe faliure mw sects in Eogiand, OTA'S Tue Calif be small ris oF Maxy peopl starvation THe wor silk a year 1 is producing | ) poutsds of ITALY produced 3,500,000 boxes of oranges and lemons last year IT has not been a WR SON for the winter resorts Tug endowment of the Chicago uats to $4,000 000 last year took this country Vary prosperous ily now am ELRCTRICITY 5.851 horses it of street car servioe in Tene is said to be more poverty and n Italy now than for many years y has netted about $2X,000 from lots at Creede, the new mining suffering COLORAD the sale of town of Arva bark for ken inhabitants Tie famine stric compelled to eat Hungary, are food, shutting Ww price « 4 MONT ANA mining companies are down their milis, owing to the J sliver PORTUGAL'S finances are in A serious con dition, and rumors of impending disasters prevail Oven 300.000 Germans are preparing to leave the Volga provinces of Kussia for the United States Trarrens in the far report that the fur bearing soimals are very numerous this winter, particularly the beaver A WIGW AM to accommodate 18.000 people built at a cost of $4.00 for the National Convention, at Chi Northwest will be Democratic eago, 1, I¥ Somersetahire, England over 80,000 acres of moorland have recently been flooded, Jeaving a large number of farmers in utter destitution Anvices from Bhanghal state that 20.000 Chinese rebels are secure in the Northern Mountains, ready for a descent when the weather becomes milder Axx Frewon, of Belfast, Me, formerly of Bangor, a widow aged %, and worth $100 000, nas created a sensation by marrying Herbert C. Peavey, of Amherst, aged thirty- sux, an itinerant peddier A WELL-PRESERVED skeleton of a man, said to have been at least ten feet tall was exhumed at Trace Fork, Tenn. the other day. The skull and other bones are very large, It is supposed to be the skeleton of a prehistoric man A Paexcon officer has submitted to the | War Ministry a rifle that will Jrolecs a stream of vitriol for a distance of seventy meters used only against savages to prevent their making frenzied rushes, GREAT swarms of locusts continne to com- mit devastations in the Cape Colony, Free State and Transvaal, South Africa At Christiania, on the Colony and Transvaal, the mass was six miles in length, It is stated that tis eggs from which the present swarms have resulted have laid in the ground for no less than ten years, BURNED THE WIDOW, She Was Suspected of Having Mur dered Her Hushand, A frightful atrocity, perpetrated by several unknown men, is reported as haviog occurred at the town of Menin, Austria, A handsome young widow named Leppers was to have murdered her husband, | proof sufficient to ee ta number of " i nan diel ia frightral y. while the py waiting ty ars Jogked oa al sonnet ———a Fanuens are plow fn nearly ever n Kansas, ine some of Bo A planting oats mild weather | Calves, common to prime, He proposes that this weapon be | border of the Cape i DESTRUCTIVE FLAMES, Fire Causes a Loss of $1,000,000 in Brooklyn, N. Y, Just while the Brooklyn (N, Y) churches were emptying their teeming thousands af- ter the forenoon service a fire broke out in the heart of the business ssction of that city which proved one of the most disastrous in many years, The flames completely wrecked the mag- pificent sight story clothing establishment of Messrs, Bmith, Gray & Co, on Fulton street, and seriously 1ajured many adjoining busi ness bulldings. Fifteen persons wera fnjured during the fire, including two of the brave fire laddies, who were probably fataly hurt. Falling walls crashed down on the elevated road and for hours travel to and from the bridge was suspended, The fire paralyzed the surface and elevated railroad traffic of pearly the entire city and for about eight hours it was impossible for travelers to use the cars. The total loss is estimated at pearly a million, THE MARKETS, Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted in New York, 10 BEANE AND PEAN Beans— Marrow, 1801, choice, #2 10 Medium, 1591, choice,... 175 @ 180 Pea, 1891, cholee.... . - @ 150 White kidney, 15891, choles 2 5 “ Red kidney, 15891, choloe. 1 § Black turtle soup, 1801, 3 Yellow eve, 1801 choice Lima, Cal, per bush Foreign, medium Green peas, 180] ISU], bags ' 1801, Beotoh @ 15 pert Creamery Penn } extras . Other Went, extras State dairy —haif firkin rigin, tub, Lin. creamery Creamery State--1901 1. 1901 be | 18 Fow sJersey, Western Chickens, Local Roosters Turkeys Ducks Western, per pal Geoese, Western per Pigeons, per pair DRESSED POULTRY DRY Turkeys—Jersey and Md, Ib State and Fenn. per Ib Chickens—FPhila. , per Ib Jersey, por ib...... State and Pean., per Ib Fowls-—State and Penn, Ib Western, per Ib Ducks-Jersey, per Ib State and Paan., per Ib Geese, Jersey and Md. fan Squat White, par doz Dark, per doz ITATORES AND VEGETABLE Potatoss—Jersey, bulk, bb yd State Hose and Hebron, per 180 Id “ed State other kinds, 180 Ib L. 1. in bulk, per bbl Rwoeet Potatoes, Jarsey. bol Cabbage, L. L per 100 Onions Connecticut, red, bd Orange County, red, bbl Urange County, yellow Eastern, yellow, per bbl, 2 19 Eastern, white, per bhi, 50 Squash--L. [., marrow, hb (1: I. I, Hubbard, per bbi.. 1 Turnips, Canada, per bbl..., ® Celery Mich. per doz. roots - Long Island and Jersey, domen bunches Ro 300 : 0 17 | String beans, Fia., per crate. 200 p 400 T ¥) 500 100 Lettuce, Southern, per bbl Tomatoos, Fla. per bush crate, 1 (0 LIVE STOCK Beeven, ... . sesssee 300 Mileh Cows, com, to good. 2000 HN An AD (0 @ SN @ na a iH @ >" @ GRAIN, XTC Flour-City Mill Extra... PROBES: . cuss ssssssons Wheat-No, .t Hye—State TET Barley —Tworowed Miate... Corn~Ungraded Mixed. ..., Uata-=No, 1 White. ,........ Mixed Western... ....... Hay <llood to Choloe........ Btraw-long Rye.......u.. Lard-City Steam.......... FURS AND SKINS, Fastorn # Southern # Novrthwestorn Howihwertern, Black bear. ..... 585 0028 00 88 02815 00 Cubsand y'rlings 5 0015 00 4 00@ 10 00 TOa00 5008 TN 60g TH Sa a0 bY 1% 110 m 14 | dowgrward 18 Fem , Nd CARE OF THE COLT'S YEET. The feet of the colt need a great deal of attention during the winter, When he is running in the yard or standing in a loose box on a pile of manure there is nothing to wear down his hoofs as they grow out. It is necessary, therefore, to trim them down to the proper shape with a knife and rasp. Bome hoofs will be found to have grown out at the toe, and others at the heel. Both are bad and often result in spavins, windgalls, feet, curb or ring bones. Many young horses have unsound feet and limbs and the owners think the un. soundness is hereditary, while in reality Agri- contracted it came from neglect.—American WARMING In cold weather it is necessary to y cream before churning, unless og ryt in ke pe ain a temperature of sixty-five de TRE CREAM, varm tl the dairy room warm enough to ruaint There is no certainty in dairy without a thermometer as a guide nperature just right, which ny time than sixty | i DO harm spread. From a diagram of the pear orchard of the Missouri planted in 1881, { ghted rs that the ruer of station tam first tree © the we disease spread the direction of the prevaili during from the The west ected trees planted in 1891 only one ols or suckers grow= he prevailing winas July Southwest and West. June and were ye orchard was disease. Of nineteen south shows Lhe l Healthy sh the base of lead from blight, show from There has liflerence in the standard trees, night ing from trees practically that the blight above and works but little dwarf and attacks the tree been blighting of and ail varieties were affected in nearly the same degroc.—New York World. INJURY BY INSECTIDES. A series obstacle in the way of a more ee and successful use of the arsenites has been their liability to foliage, Exveriments for the past two seasons have been made upon this point by the Jowa agricultural experiment sta tion with the following results 1. The oldest leaves are ceptible to injury. 2. Dews, and probably direct light, increase the injuries 3. Leaves kept perfectly dry hardly be injured by the arsenites, 4. Applications made in the heat of the day and in the bright sunlight do not injure foliage more than when ap- plied in the cool of the day. 5. A dashing shower following an ap plication of one of the arsenites is apt to lessen the injury to foliage. 6. Leaves suffering from a fungus dis. ease are more susceptible to injury than are healthy leaves, | 7. When freshly mixed or applied, | London purple is most and white arsenic | least injurious to foliage. i 8. White arsenic in solution should | not be used upon foliage without first adding lime, Bordeaux mixture of some other substance to prevent its injurious ef »cts, 9. White arsenic, if allowed to stand many days in water before being ap- plied, will do far greater harm to foli- age than if applied as soon as mixed, 10. Lime added to London purple or injure tender most sus sun Can | { | 3 ] . coe injurious to foliage than as ordinarily ap plied in water, 15. The arsenites in strong, soapy mixtures do considerable more harm tor folinge than when applied in water only. 16. The arsenites mix readily in car- bonate of copper solution and do not seem to do more harm than when applied’ in water only. 17. London purple in sulphate of copper solution does vastly more harm when applied in water only.—New Eng- land Farmer, SALT AR A FERTILIZER. According to the modern notion of ‘a complete manure,” neither salt, plaster , writes Joseph nor Hime is a manure Harris. A ‘‘complete manure,” we are | told, is anything that contains nitrogen, benefit phosphoric acid and potash. But salt, plaster, and lime contain neither nitro- gen, phosphotic acid nor potash. And, therefore, they are not manures, either complete or incomplete. If we accept this notion there is nothing more to be said. But while nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash are unquestionably the three ingredients of plant most generally deficient in our soils, it is very certain that they are not the only sub- stances thot will increase the growth of our crops. Lime renders the nitrogen and potash of our soils me able; WwW W0Ore I have seen & decided { salt on appiiestion ol food plaster makes clover and corn g luxuriantly, and from an mangel-wurzel, John Johntor iraining.” and ners of hi iter wheat for many 1 the Frankly, I do hundred of in- decided ef- where its “Agri- war farmers P have tried for some reason or other its use ' Keo. ertainly r uses year Aare oes where sail has had a : there are more instances Oes, ra a bundred continue sfter year, super] h wphate. Hundreds of experiments might be cited where salt has eficial. it is sometimnes valuable and often. not know, We do not understand its action. We are pearly as ignorant in regard to the action of plas ter. For some years we have supposed that salt and plaster checked the evapo- ration of water through the leaves of the plants, and thus lessened the injurious effect of drought. Some recent experi- ments would indicate that pilaster was favorable to the growth of the bacillus or ““nitrate yeast” that converts organic nitrogen and ammonia into nitrates and thus rendered the nitrogen immediately available for the growth of our cultivated crops, Possibly salt acts in the same All that we know at present is proved ben times not, we do WAY. | that salt is frequently very beneficial on some soils and some crops. One of my | neighbors who grows cabbage, onions, carrots, cte., on low, mucky land de- pends almost entirely on salt as a fertil- izer. He frequently raises a fine crop of late cabbage with salt alone. On similar land of my own in the same swamp I find superphosphate and a little nitrate of soda highly beneficial. So that it would seem probable that salt develops plant food from the soil. And it isa question for consideration and experi= ment whether it is cheaper to furnish the phosphone acid and nitrates in the form of manures or fertilizers, or whether we should use salt, lime or plaster to develop them from the soil, Ifa given amount of money in superphosphate and nitrate of soda will produce as large crops as the same amount of money expended in salt, lime or plaster, then, of course, the fer- tilizers are to be preferred because they furnish the plant food rather than develop it from the store of organic mat. ter in the soil. American Agriculturist, FARM AXD GARDEN XOTES, A really progressive farmer is a centre of light, It will not do to close the poultry house tightly. Oats are now considered to be one of the necessaries on a poultryman’s bill of fare, There is no other business in the world in which it is so cusy to miss getting thes full profit as in farming. The one great misfortune which causes Paris green in water greatly lessens the more good work to go to waste in this injury that these poisons would other. wise do to foliage. 11. Lime added to a mixture of white | world than anything else is the want of a | definite plan. The best of the early chicks are the arsenic in water will greatly increase the | ooo 0 look after with a little extra ate injury that this poison would otherwise | oouion do to foliage. If the arsenic is all in solution the lime will then lessen the in. | jury, as in the case of London purple or | Patis green, 12, London purple (Paris green and white arsenic have not yet been tried) oan be used eight or ten times as strong without injury to foliage if applied in | common Bordeaux mixture instead of water, 13, The arsenites cannot by ord nary method be successfully mixed ja a kerosene emulsion, 14. The arsenites mix readily in rosin comuounds and do not seem to be more | and to fi They may become winners at | the fall agricultural shows, By planting corn and potatoos togethee in the same field, two rows of each alter. vately, a full erop of corn can be grown and half a crop of potatoes, In feeding poultry, if the object is to fatten for market corn is the best of foods; if the object is eggs and good health corn is one of the poorest, It was thought at ove time that oats were the food a hee could have, that a man was only feeding oats was that he was 20t only stiagy but his bens,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers