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Show tub times dairy akd poultry. Ptri.isia Coinra. ' INTERESTING r.M.riN MA dtto Mi Bt Tbs Tibs the pastures axe . new, and they are AMPUTATED LEG IN COURT. si ways small. The system to as de(WimS ky l,(argm 'and scribed above, but they have a poor Ova.r.hip of the La It FOR keeping quality. r "Jew Cheese also called kosher" UTAH. are salted toss than the regular Gouda COALVILLE, and have a flat circle in the mould flew SeeccMfal Farmer Operate, Tfcto where the stencil of the rabbi declarBurTAts not tha need think (Jurat 1 part meet ot the Uemestead Htsts ing the cheese kosher" to carved. becau-- e Hawaii Is sometime called "Counselor's Cheese are made quite A te the Care- - ot Live Sleek and wtvh Islands, it is s Iron lunch. mail and have a different color. They . ' Fntltry. have a better keeping quality and are Wmt two cartloads of salted heads used for present. chiefly bun? st his pslscs gate, the Sultan - Heme Made Oeade Uwes those Cheese Milk are. "New Bay Abdul A a1 appears to be defyinjith We have received from time to time made in winter generally from the civil service commission. Inqhirie on home cheese making. M r. milk of fresh milking sow but are not J, II. 31 on rad say that for home considered as good aa those made while Caukokvu has given notice to the manufacture Goud ishjaU odd, the the earn are ou the pasture. CHAPTERS OUR RURAL READERS. -- i iT'tf? $a5s-- - -- bill snti-i'igseet- r tv W jV 3- liOMtejof.tit has paused loth ii!gi,jl,atiAre:,out tort!!.. .Aaiaa if; ' all after !jA, Amkkhax girla are sot titles There are 5f7,OOQ women in New York supporting husbands who have no embellishments of that sort. WO are now told, the wearing , -- paste diamonds." about as truthful a report upon Its face sa to say that their gowns are of a black-whit- are e. e Indiana Ir la just like a " man to bleak hi heart lifting an ke chest. It is probable that ho would - have tost his best girl without any inpro-al- convenience whatever. Tur. beit that can bv wished Mr, and Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt is that they may bo as happy over the termination of their long drawn out marital lnfethutle as the public Is. Max (YRstt greatly enjoys a cutting joke at the expense of the American people, but when It comes to a joke at the expense Of the trench people that is a different matter altogether. Tub late Jlr.lIaUnea scheduled himself to the tax assessor at $.1,000 That to a above his cash value. kind of of oneself n are ever guilty of. - Katb Field thinks that marriage ought to be made more difficult Hut Kate's preposition would undoubtedly be badly anowed under if submitted to a caucus of old- - maids or young maids either, or that matter. that few besides poets beat B. C. . frorahiboukA: We reprint in Cheese Making, the chapter en JLwAjidijveMmf out reader to utilize their surplus mlik. Cheddar cheese on a small farm is certainly too laborious but as before said every cheese maker ought to study its making carefully so as to lay a solid foundation on his or her knowledge of cheese .making-- , of all other cheese. t know of none more suitable for making on the farm than the Gouda. The city of Gouda in South Holland to the center for ths production of this popular cheese which la imitated in many places in France under ths name of From age de Bergues, la Denmark fa modified skim cheese) under the name of "Export Cheese." Gouda Is chiefly made from new milk, but, aa do most other cheese, its reputation suffers by ths making of half skims. The milk is brought into the make room as soon aa possible and strained into a cylindrical barrel on a stand. Color is added and the milk is set at 3 to m degrees Fahr. The curd should be ready to ent in fifteen minutes; and this should be done very carefully and gently, either with a wire cutter or with an American curd knife, and then left for a while, covering the tub with a cloth. - The whey separates and most of It is dipped out. The curd is then stirred up gently and further broken by hand until it is reduced to the size of beans. Ths temperature is then raised to da degrees Fahr. greet C.) either by pouring back some of the whey which has been heated, by adding hot water, or by any other contemvenient way. , The cooking perature depends on the destination of the cheese. The lower the temperature the larger the yield and the finer and softer body (more moisture) but leas keeping quality; tha nlgher the temperature the better the cheese will keep and stand transportation. The hot water or whey which is poured on the curd should not be too hot, not shore 130 degrees Fahr., and should he added gradually. Whenever the curd pieces "squeak" between the teeth, the cooking" is done and the pieces should the b the size of wheat kernels. The whey is dipped off, and the curd is Squeezed and wrorfced with SJu hands so ea t geS rid tUR FERMENTATION TEST. In making any kind of cheese, where, wTthe 'Gocda, the reuWito a'ddvd to the milk just aa it come from the barn, it to even more important than in making Cheddar cheese to have perfect milk, and it there to any trouble, it may be necessary to submit each cows milk to the fermentation test and thus find out If the trouble lies in the milk from an individual cow, The fermentation test is fully described in Dairy Messenger No. i and be it enough to mention that B simply of putting a sample of eseh cows milk in a tube one inch by five inches, keeping It at a temperature of about 105 degrees Farh. from nine to ten hours and then observe the action of the milk. Dr. Gerber places the shortest time for coagulation of good milk at twelve hours, but I hsve found it (as delivered at cheese factories) to coagulate as quickly aa nine hours Perfect milk should, when coagulated, show a solid columa of nurd which, if left undisturbed, should stand quite a time without any whey separating and without any gas hubbies which indicate fermentation. The Introduction thiatest in our cheese factories would save the country thousands of dollars now lost in poor cheese, And In this matter we must also hope the best from the experimental stations. Farmers Review. a on-sists - Imported Dslrjr ltra.ll. To a visitor to the patent office' in Washington, the fact to very evident, that the advancement ot invention for use In the dairy and creamery Is in keeping with any other line, says C. E. Hill There one will see models ot churns, butter workers, cream and milk testers, butter packers for creameries, and various other appliances in A Kektcck that dispatch reporta almost countless numbers. But there a leading citizen was shot through to s question In my mind whether the ths window and instantly killed. dairymen of this country are a railing Scientists will be on the qul vivo to themselves of the improvements in this Jearn definitely what portion oi a direction. colonel's anatomy is denominated the Go, if you please, In a neighborhood 'window.", ot farmers and dairymen where the ran. "jmwkn Th principal of the Middletown, creamery man has not been, and you will find the milk aet in the tie pans Conn,, high school who mently or earthen crocks, in the cellar Where dofflfod" fight members of a cla-tIt will take up the offensive odors ot by whipping tlioir mischievous hands, vegetables, smoked and pickled meats, irebabljr ohsstiwd totter ,, than lads of most of the knew, Foma of the makers or anything and everything else that whey. Many will thank him in after life for saving salt at this be there, or perhaps, in the winit stage by working it in a may them from the follies and crimes of box with s double ter time you will find it In the kitchen, bottom, the upper voile g hazing. one being perforated and covered with where it gets all. the delightful (?) More extensive is the odors of cooking, washing, etc. This a cheesecloth. Tub Frenchman who killed himself you will find Instead of cans and tanka in brine. - , because he got tired buttoning and salting for the submerged system or milk Is The salted to curd or unmlted houses and creameries. There is no unbuttoning bis clothe I matched by press as soon as possible. The put hoops reason the Chicago man who kiilod himself be. Insomuch are deep dishes .made of as the why thisto should flooded with circulars, leaving a statement for the coroner (moulds) country wood willow bottom. withe perforated that .he was tired." Perhaps the and the agricultural and dairy jourmost- - reasonable suicide waa the cigar The curd is filled In little at a time and nal are teeming with advertisements with and the closely store man who was worn out carrying pressed firmly of the latest and most improved dairy sometimes with a the wooden Indian out mornings and bends and sort of rammer (potato masher.) apparatus. In nights. There to no reason why the The hoop is filled to the edge dash churn should be used '"rounded and then a Ki smia will take a hand in heap piled when a barret or box churn can be obsupply leg England with wheat and Dour by on top, antFpuY to press. Sometimes tained at a alight advance to cost, ungtt ing state aid in the shape of trans- the cheese is taken from the pres after less It to that the dash churn" man a short tlms and broken up and then wants the old plunger for the reason portation. This will not only seriousour affect cereal trade put to press again. Tha pressure is that it makes the butter come quicker, ly declining about of the double the with Great Britain, but will also only weight benee less labor, earing harm India, hew Zealand, Australia cheese to begin with, but after a few nothing for results. evidently But the and Argentine interests. Russia will hours it is doubled and kept up tor mao who uses a modem chumdairy preship not onty from the Black Sea, but twelve bourn If u longer keeping enserves of his the thus butter, grain -Ueo from Siberian porta - quality is desired, the weight is hancing the value of the product. doubled e third time and kept up for Furthermore, If we are not near a Boston is ambitious to be something three hours more. The cheese is creamery and are obliged to make above a mere Hub. It proposes to turned every hour to begin with and butter at home, tot us use a lever or erect a steel observation tower 00 later every three or four hours while roller butter worker and turn the old fret high, containing a museum and la the press. The holes la tha mould wooden bowl over to the cook, for balconies above and at the base an must be cleaned out. If the salt has use io chopping mince meat and bash. amphitheater seating 13,000 people. not been added to the curd, the cheese Let us use a dairy thermometer inare The principal objection to the' scheme placed in the brine trough. This stead of the finger for regulating the is that people would then begin to look trough is filled with a strong brine snd of the cream and milk. down on Bunkre Hill monument, and the cheese float in it, n little salt being temperature surface. the very thought of such desecration sprinkled on the top They are A Tilntwl Fowl turned twice a day sad the sprinkling make a Bostonian shudder. Wbat la probably the most intelh of salt Is repeated. . It takes four to fowl to the country is owned by eight days according to the size gent Thr peculiar accident to the of a Staten Island boy, and no amount ot finish the to the cheese, salting, steamer Venetian, near Boston, by money would Indues the lad to part which the vessel was broken in two Borne makers take them out of the with his pet, aaya New York Recorder. r hours and dry in the middle, suggests again the brine after twenty-fouthe salt on, turn- Dew Drop la where this bright bird danger of great length in luetal ship. salt them by rubbing and her youthful owner live, and the There son tn to be a lark of w hat ing them twice a day on the salting tricks that th feathered creature which to provided with grooves might bo termed longitudinal strength table, knows would shame an acrobat and or five for four takes This s draining, in made of plate, of Iron or band man rolled in one. A start. Tha strain to which the craft days with a cheese weighing fourteen sleigbtofview wae private given one afternoon Is Subjected when raised upon a wave to aixteeu pounds. to a number of the boys recently I hardly loss than that to which the When salted they are washed with friends, and then, they call the bird Venetian succumbed.' warm water, wiped dry with a cloth, Fanny, was put through her paces, to and put in the curing room. Here the of the little audience gathonce a day, ereddelight Tug nloption of the bicycle by the they are turned at first to watch her. military authorities of Europe ha Ted later twice a week and after three ' First of all Fanny gracefully walked to a discussion In the war dejiartmeot months only once a week. The curing a tight rope stretched across the hack of lUjriin, Paris and Vicuna a to the room should be dry and well ventilated where the amateur circus was yard - way in which the bicycle soldiers are and there must be no draughts, as that The Second number on the ungiven. , to salute their officer. Several rid le- will cause the cheese to crack. If the ntous accidents have already occurred cheCse become greasy (by exudations) published program consisted of a serof summersaults performed with because tho military cyclists, when they must be washed in warm water ies wonderful speed by the accomplished , mounted, attempted to salute their and wiped dry again. The curing room The problem is a hard Is kept dark, and when the eheere are Fanny. Fanny wears long feathers superiors. on her little ankles, but that does not one. fotvthe military authorities are fourteen days old, the rind is colored her from being very agile and great sticklers for form, and cycling With a solution of saffron and beer or prevent and saluting at the same time seems a vinegar, or both. This gives a yellow very grace fuL After shooting off a toy cannon, flying through a paper physical impossibility. color and to said to protect against covered hoop and skipping a rope, flies When three or four months old out fronj a dozen letters picked Fanny I diattention of the Tug it top as a rule cured, but It Is often painted on blocks those country which spelled rected to the fact that the theater hat sold as esrly as five or six weeks old. her name. There and h dozen other problem has been solved by Kansas The cheese are pecked in rows in clever City. Manager Hud-o- n of the Coates boxes, with seals boards between each amusedtricks kept the select audience for over an hour, whan the opera house published a card request- cheese, and lately neatly painted, circus came to an end and everyone ing Indus te remove their hats in his pressed cardbod boxes of same shape theater, and the ladies, as a matter of as the cheese are being used for the ex- present voted the exhibition of Fannys courtesy, have re. m plied. - That's all pert trade. The weight of the UouJa skill a great success, , there is of it, Mr. IIudsonT we are varies from six to sixteen pound. A There are districts in the west informed, does not intend to patent cheese weighing ten pounds will be where peoplelarge with asthma, hajr fever, his method, although ho could maka ebout nine Inches in diameter and and consumption can find temporary a fortune by so doing. lie prefers to four and half inches thick. "May and often permanent relief from their be a public benefactor, and perchance j nTe'ere" are'mada in the spring w hen cemptatots. nave a monument erected to hi mem I , ,my by a stateful country -"- s ve-tel- 4 (38-1- t(bnd to the owner - Who is leg 0 ui. of an amputated it the mutilated Individual or the mutijating surgeon. This is the Is absolutely necessary In order to have embarrassing question before a court good health. The greatest affliction of at Brussels, Belgium. So long as the the human race is impure blood. limb to in pine A, says the New York World, it to scarcely necessary to say that th'-r- cannot arise a doubt of the ownership possession to. In this ease, even more than the traditional nine points of the law. But when the kftifeand saw have done their work when the surgeon has finished his task does the proprietor, the original e " I wish to sty that three years sgows kad a beautiful boy bora to aa Attkeagsefu. months be breathed bis last, a victim to imblood. On Aug. 4, 1891, another boy There are about 3400 disorders inci- pure was born, vbo at the age of two months bedent to the human frame, the large came afflicted with the same disease. We majority arising from the impure or believed the trouble wee constitutional, end Wusonous condition of the blood. not common tore month. I procured a bottle The best remedy for all blood dis-t- o of Uoode SanaperUlt end commenced to give found in Hood's Sarsaparilla. irregularly to both mother and baby. ImIts remarkable cures are its loudest provement began at once. W e have succeeded blood from the It is not what we say but in eradicating the ecrofuloui praise. w are blessed with Anlce "tiiat fat , baby boy.lS months eld the very tells the story. No remedy has ever had so marked 'Picture of Health. 17o6d ' sates,"" 'ail life'tad full of a,i.4iteP-tbattkt- e Scrofula In its severest forms yields Sarsapariito. 1 sto itituistef to the Mefthodiat to its potent towers, blood poisoning Protestant church, and it affords me muck add salt rheum and many other diseases to recommend Tloodi Sam peril 1 te are permanently cured by it. For a pleasure aa all a sale, aura remedy. Even ray wife, general Spring Medicine to remove after taking Hoods, became healthy and those impurities which have accumulated during the winter, or to overcome fieehj and has tbe bloom of girlhood again. Rev. J. M. Patz, Brookline Station, Missouri That Tired Feeling, nothing equals y their integrity? Or does the artist who has amputated the member and ipmc Mo : manufactured product acquire, , by th very fact of his labor, the right to dispose freely of tltfc detached piece? That is the problem. The case stands thus; In the month of December last a young woman of 25, newly married, injured herself by a fair so severely as to necessitate the amputation of her right leg. The operation succeeded marvelously, and the surgeon who performed it was so proud of his work that, without letting anyone know, he carried the amputated limb to his office and exhibited it as a trophy. In the most conspicuous corner of his waiting-roohe placed an enormous jar, in which the leg of his client was preserved in alcohol, and which was duly placarded in large letters with the name, address and age of the former owner, together with the circumstances undor which the amputation had been' performed. The surgeon evidently calculated, not without rea-ththis spectacle would be a son, fine thing for his reputation by edify ing the public in a , peculiarly suggestive manner regarding his wisdom, his ability and his steadiness of apart from the pleasure that it might give as a species of work of art. so to speak. The trouble to that the ingenious doctor had reckoned without his host that to to say. without the husband. The latter had no sooner learned ot the disrespectful use thst had been made of a part of the body whose lord and master he had the happiness of being than he took prompt legal action. The surgeon was notified in good and due form that he must not only put a stop at once to the unseemly publicity of the exhibition, but must restore the leg without delay to its rightful owner --The practitioner rejoined that the limb in disoute, having become, thanks to him, a simple Anatomical exhibit, and bearing the marks ot his handiwork, was in some sort a newly manufactured article, the fruit of his labor, of which he had the absolute right to dispose as he saw fit, -- and that the husband who had married a wife with two living legs, had no right to claim the ownership ot a dead one. Here the case rests, and all the Belgian legal luminaries are fighting "i over it. w. s . m at hand;-entirel- y 35: cent Patterns lor These pattern, retail fa faihlon bazaars and at ores for twenty five to forty cent each, hut in order to Increase the demand emeoir stranger wa offer them to the lady readare of ltd for tbe remarkably lew price ot only 10 gtper B&oh. Postage one oen t extra. The pattern are all ot the very latest New York stylos end ere tmeeualed for style eeou-ne- f ot fit, simplicity and economy. For twon rears these patterns have bees used the Country over. Full descriptions end directions aa the number of yards of material required, the cumber sod semes ot the different ptecea in the pattern, how te cut and fit and put the caramel loceUer-- at aoat with each pattern, Gents. 10 a picture of the ferment te to by. These particular, there patterns are complete in every Mint s separate pattern tor avert tins le piece ot tho dress Your order will be filled the same day It is received. Order patterns by number and five alts la inches. Avert patten guaranteed to be perfect TKXT ARU OLOYS FITTIXO. To get get BO feT and BRE AbT measure, put ths tape measure ALL of tbe way around the body, over the drees close under the arm. Pries of eaoh pattern, IO oemts, wbe ordered oa eoupoa printed below. Footage one cent extra ea KACB peUexn. with - J" la Millionaire Matas. Is the homely little crooked letter J" really a mascot, or is it only a coincidence that it is to be found in Dress Slesves, Pettern'No. KXS is the given or Christian name of so Ladim out in three sizes, vti.t 32, 86 and SO inches bust measure. many millionaires? The recent death No. I is the butterfly sleeve here shown la of J.1 G. Fair has suggested- - the mouseline do sole over bright colored satin. This style of sleeve is much in Vogue for swell following compilation of millionaires oooesions and can be made with or without the names which contain the lower portion as preferred. Stylish garletter: J. D. Rockefeller, J. J. niture fitting of passementerie. Insertion or ribbon in bows or rosettes are sometimes displayed over Astor, Jay Gould John M- - Scars, J. ke Shirring thst marks thecenter ot puff with S. Morgan, J. P. Morgan, J. B. Hag-giadded attractiveness. The design is suitable for all to match or corrematerials, J, W Garrett, J. G, Fair, John spond with tbe dresseither fabric No. t is ths Bog lan sleeve snd is very becomWanamaker, J. W. Mackay, J. G. to slender women. It is eiso arranged over Flood, J. M. Constable, John T. Mar- ing a fitted lining end esn be plaited or gathered at tin and John Arbuckle. None of the the upper edge as preferred. Extra fullness is Inside seam, which throws dainty above are rated at less than $10,000,-00- 0, added at tbecurves across the arm. adding to the and and several at from six to ten ripples artistic effect. As s novelty this style is much in favor the with women, and will times that sum. make in luck-bestowi- n, - - lad mill. W Practical Irrigation by the use of windmills has been demonstrated in several states, and the subject to being discussed by scientists and boards of agriculture. The s to reage of water when it is plentiful, to be used when it to scarce, will solve the problem of droughts, andT permit the farmer to control the moisture supply of bis plants. When the danger of drought ceases to exist there will be more fertilizers - used and larger crops grown. silk, velvet or woolen up attractively fabrics to correspond or contrast with the waist. No. is a very full gtgot sleeve, the popular Style that la becoming to all and can be Binds from any material. The retail price of pattern is 30 cents , Misses Correa a Pattern No. 301 la eat la four sixes, vis. t d, fi, 10 and 1 'years. Cherry colored cashmere anti oresmy lace, combined to make this charming dress, designed for party, dancing school r best wear. The fancy arrangement of the pretty waist is made over e fitted body lining that simulates a ke at the tipper portion, and is covered with point-de-renl- Handsome laoe bretelles cross the shouldors end fall on each side of front In Jabot style. Th dosing is invisible In oenter hack. Full Empire puffs are stylishly arranged over fitted sleeve linings, e trill of lace finishing them at the elbow. Tbe full round skirt is trimmed with a eibgle band of insertion (to match lace) sewed oa above tbe deep hem. The upper edge is gathered end sewed to lower edgy of waist. Tbs addition of a guimpe will make this pretty costume suitable for general wear. Velvet, satin or silk can be used in place of the lace with stylish effect, sod the sleeve frill can be emitted altogether if so preferred. Crepoa, camels' heir, taffeta, Henrietta, or soy soft woolen or mixed fabrics will make up stylishly by the mode. The retail price of pattern is 23 cents iiiHifivtTmTiHMnimifminiwffmfffffRnfn.MfmmnmnTTHmmmTmmmffmmTTfi COUPON ORDER BLANK. : Per ledtss, j rttsss. beys, flrts BlT SKIRT patter; saiun chlktrsa, give SRR.tST bmuots Vui only. eeai , Earn,, Mteewmttwt l Orest Falls aee4ee44eeee tee asjeeseea The biggest thing in fairs" may t km now be seen in the great Russian :t itotl.tgrssjirtos, fair of Nijnt Novgorod.' Soma idea pf Btirw Brill ok safely by miL the business transacted at it may be vrmpp! tap per tod dmcJoced formed when it to stated that the total AddiwCO IFOK rATTKRX CO Uek Box 74t Bew York, II. T. value of goods brought for sale last bLuiuummimuuuauuwiMuuuuwLmuwmuuiiitiiiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuz year amounted 10 about twenty-fou- r millions slMInirrnearly the whole of THE which changed hands. The fair lasts uuiitb AHrfkXnruiwSe for six woeks.ani has been held regut Cough fefTupw U prer tc AH about Gtu4 Use making mmwr in Gotta larly for the last two centuries. hj ueipinf tb market' oa margin of c a as ; e a - Ht -- v te N 1,004 money, Liverpool has been thoroughly aroused by the effort of Manchester to capture its tralo by means of tha ship canal, The former city - will build a great landings stage to dabark pass ngers without ths Use of teniers, and expects to thus accommodate steamers of the future 1,000 feet long, making the voyage from America in three and a half days. Beat metUPd yet, AU oalpers ma& A tXto, lit Rainey fit, ditaagm -- n'm la AastralU. Jap At Japanese laborers are beginning to emigrate to Queensland in Northern Australia, where they are proving to bo good workers. The Australian prejudice against the- - Chine o does not seem to apply to them, as they and the torean laborers are held to be exempted from the poll tax levied upon Chinamen. ii. A New . n ' , ., an was formerly pronounced incurable. of tie early stages of tbe disease it is not In all Scotts Emulsion dE&S&SSSZSEEsSESSSSMSSP &2S$SS33S3EBBBSrS2&SS$5S2!2ut3E5Br will effect a cure quieter than any other known specific. Scotts Emulsion promotes the making" Of healthy lung-tissurelieves inflammation, overcomes the excessive waste of the disease and gives vital e, , strength. Pot Coughs, , Golds, Weak Lungs, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Consumption, Scrofula,' Anaemia, Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Children. f &nowfH, One, of the heaviest snowfalls In the history of this country was February to 24, 1717, when the snow remained five to seven feet deep all over New England. Now 19 Scott Buy only the genuine with our trade mark on talmouolerti wrapper, SmJ for pamfkltt n Sietft Emuhivn, FREE, Bowne, M. Y. Ail Drusglete. BO cent and SI. ; |