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Show '?t ARBITRATION Iiir rr19I uJi-- OOMINO. t t hut it will JXIDiI'111 r Mi June .t-ll- M nei ome I li h 1 v I'tjirisMn a! mu t u gittU 111 II u at ! '.i n4-- i fia t 'ii 1,11 I .i liet ,s i .1 In i n initi i so tliii m a it lilsl i lot bt uitiit '.y for lie ,nii a"l lioine lino, as i s, ( tn, to li ,e nn l u i a lilt! mp, men t of the fi ih mam tiile.inal n fm liiltain and Amema must 'result n t Mekuiley and the come most Ameneaua fatoi rent ,oughtfal fit. are ia li.it e RESOLUTION. I nlon Pacific Mortgage. WLshington, June 27. The Senate ommittee on Paeifie Railroails have jreed to report favorably the resolu on introd ueed by Senator Harris of iMisas, expressing the sense of th that the United States should rnate t 111 j 1$$ Kt 1 in nff Ms the Union Pae'iflc railway from rior liens and take steps to foreclose he Government mortgage. The reso jtion was amended by the addition ol fa provision, at tlie instance of Sena Morgan, requesting the president anspeud proceedings to carry intc 'ect the agreemen t alleged to have n made to sell the interests of the aited States in the Union Pacific ilroad and in the sinking fund action of Congress is had in edeern ferenee thereto. In presenting the Mil ll I . i well-mounte- resolution to the Harris will introduce a re irt, which, while it is not authorised aeoramittee report, gives the Kan ussenator's views and indicates thi nate, Mr. asons of fTtex'oininittee for the kea. This report stales that action it was intention ofcongress ttiat the Ia fic railroads sltould eoustitete a con naoua National highway. WhaHnIlnl New Bedford. In Danger. Mass., June 29. Let ters received in this city from Her schel island bring the intelligence thal ICANLON MURDER MYSTERY. three of the staunchest steamers of th San Francisco whaling fleet wer Idaho Murder Cane Promise! to b caught in the ice off the mouth of th t li'aroil Up at Last. Mackenzie liver last September and Pocatello, Idaho, June 27. The could not make a harbor. These ves anion murder mystery promises to sela, the Mary D. Hume, Captain Wilunraveled at last. Officer Jackson liam Haggerty; the Jesse H. Freeman, now in Iloise armed with a warrant W. S. P. Porter, and the Fear rthe arrest of George Musser, charg Captain less, Captain James McKenna, were g him with harboring the murderer frozen in the ice while trying to make r several days after the crime was a harbor. omitted. M usser w as at the time of They were in no danger during the e murder a resident of Pocatello, and winter, but the letters state that dur is here. He went very ing June, when the icepack breaksup Boise about a and is now ago year the vessels will have a hard time of it pposeil to he mining in the Willow and the chances are that all three wil! eek district. be crushed in the ice. If so, the livei James Scanlon was stabbed to death of from 120 to 150 men will be in dan 3e'eloek in the morning of April 4, ger. The whalers were short of pro, The by an unknown tramp. and the crews had to hau visions, urder was witnessed by several peo supplies from Herschel island over thf '.but an instant afterward the mur ice on dog sledges to the vessels. rer well-know- n ll-1- had disappeared. He was traced barn where he evidently stayed Burglars Existed la Imagination. til morning. Since then no traoe ol 0., June 29. For some Cleveland, bas been found. Officer Jackson Mrs. time Mary Obermiller hai s been working on a clew for sever been past with troubled burglars. Ilei months. He now thinks that hs neighbors, Edward Ratcliffe and Will A positive the e. that Musser lam Reneke, suggested to her that sht es evidence murderer and helped him to Ieteetlve, Bombay, been .1 Toah Lock. June 27. A detective whs detailed to investigate the shooting of Eicut. Ayerst, a and the wounding of Com isioner Hand, ho were fired upon native while they were leaving Governor's reception at Ganesh-4- , Tuesday evening last, has been id insensible at the bottom of a fry hole near the scene of the out Hu was suffering fronr several finds in the head and is in a critical com-'sria- ditton. CritlrUwL Kair Clowes, Tlie Brooklyn ondon, June J?7. nd e.nert minings ,thv an .article ie, thU tfc!ljr laijicmi1 he SpiUieid higlj(y praises' the American u electricity- for. various pnrpONCf In and declare tr, K ngl a n d is bh i n TTh e Tnotec B OS. He prod lets, however, thatth dt Mof tli Brooklyn. ivlU netstaifc 1 - of-w- tssiorf, fif hedause tlie process ol soil. mad the ... ood - Fifing has a; pongy.j Mormon ' lianr fich, L lerj. t Of title, m1 grower y tl ttal.-- t I Uld ill's Ct'r 1 UlU''t site m-- U Ut ' li.lits be that tlu n turn 'KuUljl vuni'd bl.et.lt tor ti.uii ill a u t s a s'e.1, wriiir m tinf rn an o i (oil di i. in,; ln i 171? VUl) la iy s.a, "ts, tobut UttaH Qiriies eperiem.e amt e- - GUid this in t lei y mai kt table voltes ixiierib' time, labor ami Yenrs ago, before the adtent of the self-lia. lung sorts, I will admit that this vt ts in a measuie tine, but tinee the introduction of the Golden Self- ijian( ),mg wh.te Plume, and Giant Pascal (and right here I would say, there are no better sorts). It requires but little more experience to grow a good crop of celery than It does lo produce one of cabbage or beet. First begin properly by buying seed of some reliable seedman. Now select a plot of fine loamy soil; If black, all the better. Spade this to a depth of at least one foot, as early in the spring as the ground can be worked, then with d rake level off smoothly, i and lay out beda two feet wide, but do not raise them more than can be helped. If the ground Is not very rich, now is the time to make it so, by applying some good brand of superphosphate, aay a peck to each rod of bed. This must be raked In to a depth of five or six inches, then again carefully rake the beds lengthwise. This done, draw marks crosswise. These must be very shallow, and eight inches apart; seed may now be sown quite thickly and covered by Bifttng fine earth over It so as just to hide the eeds. Firm down, either with light roller or otherwise. As celery seed requires a long time to germinate, the beds must be sprinkled- - once a day It the weather be dry. If this preliminary work has been well done. In about three weeks you will have a fine bed of plants, which may be thinned to about one inch apart in the row. All the attention now required will be to keep the beds free from weeds, imd give water when dry until about the first of July, when the plants should be removed to the field. A reclaimed swamp muck Is undoubtedly the best and most natural ground on ahich to grow celery. It should be well drained and made vvy rich, and be well fitted. The rows should be made four feet apart, and it Is well to sink the rows an inch or two. Holes for receiving the plants should be set firmly and the soil, if dry, pressed with the feet; the plants must be watered until established. Nothing more need be done for six weeks except to keep all well cultivated and free from weeds; by that time the plants will have attained about one foot cf growth, and banking must begin. This branch of celery culture has until recently been a slow and tedious operation. The push scraper la now used by all progressive growers; this Is a simple tool and easily made by any one in a few minutes. Take a board alx inches wide, fifteen inches of an Inch thick, long, three-fourtbore a hole In the center and Insert a handle (a rake handle Is Just the thing) eloping back at a convenient angle;. now brace it and you have a push scraper. It now requires two one each men with push scrapers side of row; the earth should be pushed gently against the plants, this makes a banking of about six inches, and gets no more dirt In the hearts than the old-tihandling, and Is much more expeditious; besides, the plants are in better shape for banking properly, which can be done with hoe or spade, aa the operator may see fit. The earth should be drawn nearly to the top of sorts plants, and If the have been used, this will be all the banking required, and In about three weeks there will be a fine . crop, of celery. steel-toothe- hs Rat-eliff- td ee te hipntkd Mts,7June SS.Eldets ' 4- 1J 4 8 e Pomeroy, Parish .and Jon ei ,ebeen rua out of , Meridian.,, r had begun kkqese-to-ho-u cs : Ai for the purpose of securing 80 roused the peoplv ! th el4er fJAefapted X ejvic- - key M) netified tY f Cl qTfitiiink that tlie pebpll s not allow the privacy .of theli He i Itirt- - v tl c bout Irld iuruliur u4 A blow a tin horn when the burglar came again. She blew the horn as requested. Ratcliffe and Beneke jumped out of bed and started for the house. Mrs. Obermiller was very much ex cited and shot off a revolver. Ratcliffe and Beneke also shot off theirs, which made such a racket that they'awok the town marshal of Lakewood, who came running to the scene and emptied the contents of a shotgun into Giant Fir of Washington. The burglars existed only in A tree that rivals In height and age the imagination of Mrs. Obermiller. the monarchs of the redwood foreste Thirteen buckshot Were extracted In' California has just been cut Into from Ratcliffe s thighs, lie will live. sections out In the state of Washington, says a writer in St. Paul's Pioneer Press. All tbe terms which have a at rienie, Deadly Shooting Affray been invented to describe big trees Lo29. Tom June Vanceburg, Ky., Wild be applied to this mammoth gan end Wyatt Cooper brought about a Without flattery or exaggeration. An a picnic on idea of its size may be gained from deadfy hooting afffiji !ui' ; wtrc the fact that tf sawed Into Inch strips lijchFork,. straight tfce lumber made from the-trwould killed iUstfutly kuJ waoy wero eL Logan and Cooper were deadly fill ten of tbe largest sized freight wh ,hey Bet Bt tbe p5c. cars, and the stripe at wood. If placed end to eoJv would, reach fraip the Cooper njc 10gran opened Xfire, 1 killing now- - Is New "the .. fifei 6ihefJ two whereWash. tree f h U. Jrpt tyliatcom. across; the waters of the Pacific Oeeanto the land of Ll frietiAs took npHhff fight' abd the1 HSiig Chanff.. The Total hefgUt-o- f the shooting Tiecame general. An unknown tree, as IF stood before .being Jelled, were was 4G5 frpOJr ahouUqne-elevemt-h pt pan was killed and about twenty a mile. Jo-thpoint wher' th first believed. is some 'wounded, fatally.it '220 vras limb branched, out feet t At circumference was found tbs base lUaktU Ie He Mu bee. 33 feet 11 tsekesr fTber a Denver. Colo..June 29 The identity to be th the ot irew throughout Slightest dead between Ptnwr' of a man found . indication oLunsoundnass... In all-th- s and Golden may thrqufh. l ttot, a gU o Mblngt(m an Inquiry from Mrs.""N. "iTilmer of .tree, young or eld, which would make Boise, Ida. Sbe asks for a description finer lumber tbhd tHa. 'There Ira way of the body and the mane clothing. tot tell th age wtr svery treef-Jusnabody-ma- x. that of her there Is to baru- ,hew many years a Hike lea hors has lived.-- With 4 tbe .tjT the I I buiiaL Zj problem iadlved Jjytudyihg41i Kin Children Killed. that sre ckhrl nuipber ehildrSi Madrid, . June i wheh the saw has severed the have been killed and many others Jl& great toss of wood Into sections. This JtnwJ ,bj! tho--; oafabse bj a church wall test, when applied to tbsWaihlngton at least 484 ai'Solino, in the province of Cnido tree, showed that Real. , - t I L Deadwood, S 0 , dune 20 Four masked men made a desperate attempt to rob the Butte County hank at Belle Fourche. Entering the hank with re volvers draw n. they ordered the customers present and the bank official A little hesto throw up their hands itancy on the part of Cashier Marble drew forth a shot from one of the robbers which clipped off a large portion of the cashier s right ear and enforced eompliance,wlth the command. The afe and eouuter were relieved of much they contained, nd the robbera mounting their horses, which had been stationed near, rode conveniently waa alarm An immediately away. given and In a lew minutes a and armed posse was in pur suit of the bandit. AA ithin a few mile from town the posse came upon the fu gitivea and a running fight ensued whieh resulted in one of the robber's throwing up his hands and surrendering. 1 he others, being better mount ed, continued their flight, but are being closely pursued and have very little chance of escaping. Governnental Fornrlosure of the j o, 'tK Manked Wen Itob a Bank. THE HARRIS Hint ud (rw kite 1. i idea ! f M til Invaded end that the et hist leave town. They left or iKt!1GV.,0iiU0'l' ' s J ' ,gr hirt nu.untalna. There are th of Cascad torm In Mf win.er. The lnd ue sunw Utle biotta titmenaeualy a good ileal after uie s.au.e it.' M mutains. that it Juu in the iiut the big tree has gm.e all tUrough this weather for alinos--t lnc t, aiuiiea, and it man bad ouly .it u a.jue it for would hate been uoue ttie tu wear. The men who own tlt nee In ns pnvent form have mhniii'td to bMigiaibia the fluestiou rigtitlmg the il.angts liub uudoubltil) to .a place weouiiJ - Jl . l utu;itd that I,, gujw. hate :m n tied s.tnee it lu I xaiume ' 'Vimpoabline eats tu Hit ( aseade MurLTaihO far a invest inalion e lit tnulustruled the bib'nte tt as the oldest iu tue state of t!e : Itene CuatatJf-- DAIRY AND' F(ULTRY; 14 bees el late yearsat erously represented . J CHAPTERS intereRTINQ POR j i s dls-pe$i- lbl lt"u 1 lie Cow auil Her Drink. i F a dairyman want? to Heat Uim-at-a genuine will p, Ur, let him keep his bird of milk giving cows in the stable, and water give them in Mi Ii a way that tlie weight Uriyik b each cow can be aaot i taiued, and if uui'-UO- i T' ! hold that tin l.u ytulcd iuove ih..t tnere has imn i j material liiaiire in the earth's siri.it e in the .t.Ue of ushlngiou an ; rotiubly in lie entne territory ot the I nlled 1. tuts fur at least &t0 Vets t" eu held by some that the euiface ot the earth in the far ue-.uNinons ot our lo.iuuy differed lu.mm v from v. hat It is men with so ie.ttu a period ft cm the scientific point ui view, lhnie the big as live centuries ast tree completely disproves Ibi cherished llieoiy. It id quite finely the wooded giant was a tiny sapling in the days when Columbus first discovered the West Indies. K has groan steadily and without opposition bime that date. 1 he tree was as straight as an arrow from Its base to the first limb, 220 feet, and curiously enough, the trunk maintained an equally stern position to the topmost point. d, blue-blac- u ) Th Old asd Hew I.llsrs. A few yers ago the writer agreed with the popular opInToB That the good old Lilac purple and white of the old homestead would be spoiled by any attempts to enlarge or double Its flowers or modify in any way lu peculiar fragrance. But tbe lover ot the good k, ej hand so that cai h cow desire, have all she will an I when she wants it. writes John ''"lid in Couiitrs i tenth man. We have been through a little evpeuenee of this K. nil, nnd the quantity drunk by earh cow was found out It Is an experiment one will not care to follow up inure than a week, before the faucet at the big tank will be turned, and the row g drink out of the basins again. The trial was made with six cows, and It was found that the average quantity consumed daily varted with Individual cows from 70 to 140 pounds. On cow drank this last quantity dally right along, and some tbe smaller quantity, with an 'average of 90 pounds each. Another thing we found w& that tome of the cows would drink very often, I. e., their buckets would be frequently found empty, and others drank At longer Intervals; and one eow wanted About All her Twenty-fou- r hours supply At one time. And would only drink A little As these cows wer towards night. being fed 50 pounds each of ensilage day. It la seen at one that aucculent food did not play any Important part In tbe economy of drinking water. It be plumage at ititf if li.sxjjaqlq) throughout; the Mottled (fig, 8) are' of broken blsck and white tn wings, tall and sickles, and the'' balance of the ' plumage is evenly mixed with white and black; the Whit Java U, aa the name Implies, pure whit throughout. They have a small single comb, standing upright on tha head in both male and female. Their shanks and toes' are free from feathers, yellow in color, with the bottom of teet yellow. The standard weight of cocks Is 9 -' pounds; hens. "Vi pounds; cockerels, S T6Vi and pounds, pullets, pounds; ' Dominiques. Similarity in plumage of the American Dominique and Barred Plymouth Rock has been the price of the former's popularity. Their -- t color is grayish-whlteach feather A regularly crossed with parallel bar of - J producing the effect or a bluibh-tlngplumage, the color being the same throughouL The illustration of Barred Plymouth Rock feathers will do equally well for the mark2 ings of the feathers ot the Dominique. They have rose combs, in both male and female, and bright yellow legs. Those who are partial to their color of plumage will find the Dominique a good bird to keep. They are good layers, hardy, mature early, and dress welt for the table. The standard weight of cocks is 8 Vi pounds; hens, 6 Vi pounds; cockerels, 7H pounds; and pullets, 5 Vi pounds. -- OUR RURAL READERS. j bean xarymnjfc fha' shOWSTTh -- u-.- tli.it in to ii on l,o if i ils tt ith don hie hairtnd shotruns pattol the tups of oai s t lo ep them of oiao of thi m da. m to he go.ng lot., oradoand I'tah ius.iai.li of tt i i n (.them are malt lay ti at s to jo. n l'tls promised I to pia in Washington but the great bodv n liatnisco, and there are going to they will anght f, ; U TO INTEREST j II M A lion of lhA Klort kraltai .v ii r i Kim. tilled it Us taerii-i- rpto-li- t ' i bilttf r . pn t'i i ih,,i!i lii.t.si HOI.U t naor OF t if"M mini fi u Ay of vrni lu i a tl A ih t vnt m0 a e foKm u ' s; ak eat it if Ju fuci id i ye ra o i W tims op- -i ,i' in , Knvas nmlj fhi lititi di,tn on th sit' e'1 "t oiuitr h at ..f 1. rtvM.i. ,,v iMMthnig tluj t i.n gt.4 of tlii -l n lu n tl aiu 4nk, I - GAIiDK.N. i 11 AuRiCULTUKISTo, f i I ioi N, tns an l t the 1 oil i riit re tntrdila Di it isH Trti- ( eiumis is ntt ,1 , 1 I In 1 , AN MATTERS the pah of the t hrst tu T h. Uur.sW staMiaiit Muni' was in ie h ,Itnts a pigyji j v tl It th. pres ml ul at mu i flu' t' K. i ( f h tu ' .it t oio full u t( iunfw. 1m U i li tin I ;jla l'f fort the gul( Ullllll 1st w ii , Irm ei ho In i FAKM ; t hiUttae at i he lu till I'at , uilniuir louruu fr ii-' ajkil lt ttf.1 WorUliig km!i iuterwevv bu diU-he- ,! JjUlH'l'V ROUTE. Ia on Homi Pwrmln. The large majority ot farmers who own horses seem to be quite anxkma to get rid ot them, even at low prices. Where the farm is mortgaged, and th horses can be spared better than anything else on the farm, this Is ail right.' as It ie better to lose the hors than th home; but where it is not. w regard U as very unwise and foolish, sa?s the Kentucky Stock Farm. In a country like ours, where one extreme follow another, it Is not wise to float with tha current or follow the herd. From 1880 to 1890 w bred entirely too many hones of all ctaases, and aa a natural tl '.It t 1 , r . .i old variotles must decide In favor ot the best new eorta after careful examination. The toilage Is better, they blossom profusely when much younger, the trusses ot bloom are larger, the M petals are larger and thicker, the fragrance Is more delicate, and the doubling of the fiowere of aome of them give the rich expression and even the colors of the best Hyacinth. Ot the single flowering sorts, well tested in Iowa, one of the best Is Charles X. It Is a strong grower, has good foliage, and IU very large reddish purple ' trusses are delicately fragrant. Of the J varieties white single UariaXegrayne is one ot the best. It flowers when ; very young and Its pure white trusses are large, well formed, and very fraUvA'tt A 7 ' grant. Of the double varieties we highly prlzethe following; President Carnot, trusses very large, flowers perfectly double with a peculiar mixed ex53$"Cycv pression of light blue, pink and white. Pyramldalls has very large compound clusters that divide into amall trusses 2."- PAIR OF BLACK JAVAS. ( resembling the light blue hyacinth la spike. r IU fragrance peculiarly fine. Madame Jules Finger, blooms very was also found that the desire ot a cow consequence we are now suffering w young, trusses very large, quite comfor water was about an hour after eat- period of low prices. Oof, next predicapact, flowers large, perfectly double. thirst was never so ment, If all Signs 4o not fall, will be but the Leon Simon only differs from the above ing, as in evening the morning. With some great scarcity of horses W bass this great In the color of iu flowers being darker of the cows there was some variation opinion jjpon the fact, thaf everybody In Its purple and blue shades. Mon in the quantity of water consumed is selling and that very f ew tre.hreed' Maxima Cornu is mentioned last but dally, but with others It was as steady tng. We do not believe there fcra more in bush, leaves, great trusses of double In quantity as standard measure. In thaa 14 perTtentwf thr horses being flowers, and rich fragrance it Is one of this there might be some variation In bred in the1 United States to-dthat the best The only purpose of these results from some other herd not so there weje.slx year ago, This can notes Is to draw attention to the re- cared for; these cows being continuoussot possibly but produce a great markable advances made In improving ly subled at the time of the experi- shortage, and help this shortage' in supply this good old shrub. Prof. J. I ment, while a herd that ran rs can have but one effect namely, to in- - ; Budd. crease the price. As tt take fire yearn -more or less might show different In another thing I was con- to produce n colt, and aa How riant! Obtain Feed. vinced, that a cow did better that the time can not be nbrldged by nny Bulletin 48, Utah experiment station drank several times a day, and so con- possible menus, nnd as the breeding be-- v It may be interesting before ws oass vinced was I of this, that a watering fan to fall off quite materially In 1898, ,t on the experiment proper to explain In system for the cow sUble was put in four yearn ngo, the shortage Is bound a very general way how a plant obtains several years ago: and my upinion of to begin to manifest Itself inside of the its food. The substances which make their value has never changed, more next two years. The produce of mares, In fneir bred this season will not be four up the ash ot the plant, the water than a more thorough belief yearn which it contains, and most ot the ni promoting the milk flow; and if our old, or ready for market, before 1902, out nnd be turned between this nnd that time every day trogen of the combustible portion are cows were to taken from tbe soil and the air through for exercise, I should itht connect out- we predict that there will be n much the roots; while all tbe carbon and door drinking with it, but hold to the greater shortage of horses of nil kinds some of tbe nitrogen are taken from manger water basin. In this connec- than has been seen In this country fop : the air by means of the leaves. When tion there is another point I think of many yearn. Breeder nnd Sportsman. a plant burns, tbe carbon or charcoal importance, and that is tn stable waterit contains unites with the oxygen ot ing there Is uniformity of the temperaSitting Hen. Sitting hens neven the air to form an invisible gas, usual- ture ot the water, ap4 the cow, being get fat In fact, with some of the perwater at to say sistent sitters of the drinking ly known as carbonic acid gas. Since habituated Asiatlq breeds, the burning of charcoal in one form or C2 degrees day after day ae the water the to which they exIs cot Indicates tank stable in my big another is always going on at the pose themselves is, perhaps, better for to the extreme temperature earths surface, it follows that the air subjected out-dotheir future as egg thg drinking water, and high feeding would be.producers we breathe, tbe atmosphere about us ranges of . Still tt ia not must contain considerable quantities of air included, and sbe must do the bet- beet to let this starvation go too far. with the shoes The hen will not eat carbonic acid gas. The green coloring ter for this uniformity, nor drink much, eliminated. to cow's the system matter of leaves, known to scientists but if feed and drink are offered early as chlorophyll or lefifgreon, hasfbe reia the morning, some of both will be - gtsndsri! Varlrtlm of Fhlrken. markable property, when under proper taken. We never feed n sitting hen is oldest of the This javas. variety conditions of temperature and moist hut wheat,. and do not give anything one at and time the American class, ure, and In the presence of light, of was considered ttye most profitable of very much of that It is more importaking the carbonic acid gas from 'the all breeds. At present they are not tant that the hen drink freely than that she eat much. She will sometimes j. ! air, and of breaking it up in the cells of the leaf into charcoal and oxygen. drink if milk is offered to her at night, v With wheat In the morning and milk The greater part of tbe oxygen thug at night, the hen will lose fat, hut will set free Is thrown back into the atmos be healthier and ready to go to lay- - ' phtre, while the charcoal la caused to water ether and with Ing again by the time her clutch of . unite substances chickens is grown large enough found In the cells to form the various foe them selves. Kx. classes of bodies that make up the combustible portion of plants. Skunk Flavored Butter.-Yb- ee hut- -, Fighting Flies. A good plan for ter experts know some things or think cow off files the the at keeping milking they do. One of Bremer county's time has been suggested. It u creameries had part of a shipment of to work to a charm, and certainly butter sold at two or three cents below costa little to try it. The method is " the top. And Just because the eowa over cloth of a throw to the cow's piece Mottled Java hen. had eaten wild onions. .There are no back at milking time.' The cloth can ' t be made out Of old cotton sacks, and raised extensively; the more modem wild onions here, and if the expert who should be large enough to cover the or newer breed have seemingly sup- sent back that word had been in tb body very thoroughly, falling down be- planted their favoritism. There ie no creamery when the skunk was killed . hind over tbe tail, so tbaLthe, mejn reason why this should he so, as they he would understand where tbe joke comes in. Waverly Republican. . general-purpos- e , her can not be switched into the tace of are practical i : the milker. Ex. . fowls. In size they are about like the Every neighborhood has n farmer Plymouth Rocks, but differ in general 1 . A Kansas Apple,Orchrd. The Kan-- , symmetry and appearance. They are little more progressive than The zver- -' eae apple king. Judge VYellhouse, who good layer and do well (n winter,, and age, one who always baa th best of , has the largest apple orchard la the for table purposes they make nice everything. These nr the persons to 1 ' I to clover as eating. They mature early, are good whom to go' for Improved stock, to,- worfil, seed his orchard ; soon as they begin bearing, and twice sitters and mothers, and are easily advice ns to breeds, for lessons in th , , 4 a. , n year roll the clover down with a kept in confinement There are three ear of Aock.: T Black, Mottled and j I beavy; roller provided with knives sim- varieties of Java u ilar to those of a sulk cutter. The clo-T- White. The Black is nor generally . ,The.)est preaching is 7 not:l Always reseeds Itaelt. Ex. iiy-seeh then the others, though th Mot- - done, In the puiplL - - t -- W if ay out-doo- ts. four-year-o- ld semi-starvati- or to-car- and-goo- d .lu -- ,i er 1 - |