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Show Dw(h , Cmm Nt B IltlllY Cin4 VI TRV . Jt 1 ' 1 Vl irr local application, a they can not raaek tbs (Uaaaaea portion of ;b ar. Thar to only on way to cur Deafness and that to CHAPTERS FOR by constitutional remedies. Desfnass to INTERESTING caused by an inflamed condition ot th OUR RURAL READERS. mucous lining of tb Eustachian Tub. -- W ben this tube gats inflamed you hot sound or imperfect bearing, and l!m Vdt i v fill I rumbling anur OiHTMtc Thu Then it I entirely closed Deafness is lk rexult, and unless tb inflammation ean b Departing: it of 111 lioim total Hint taken out and this tub restored to its nort v, t h t Cur e hum U aid of mal condition, bearing wifi b destroyed V u r . forever ; niu cases out of ten ars caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous tUTfaie W a will revs On Ktgp.nK p th Ihilrr. Hundred Dollars for iNcrj tuinicr needs to keep lib dairy auy case of Deafnesa (caused by catarrh) can not be cured bv Hall s Catarrh up to the required lutmiaU'. as It IS tl usually ueiesSdry eaifi jear to dispose Sw! ;&:' fre .iLri of a teitain number of cows according X , Toledo, O. Kola by Brujtztots. tSc" to the hiss of the herd, from those that Hall a Family 1 j n ar S v I Tb The pheasant loves Uia liberty and Is not yrt rnolgjj donlesticated to live In the ptftiltry yard among the other fowls. It is absolutely necessary, Therefore. to keep them In a small jard covered b nets or else in on aviary. They are very semdthe to wind, to the frost and to the cam. and on this aciquut the breeding places of these birds should be exposed to the eLd. but sbtileiej or the north and west sides The quack rc must be bpaiioua. eoieied with turt, dry and divided into as many coij.u Inn nts as there are varieties of pheasants, and provided with nests whh h should be partly by mailed straw , fur the pur-jet- a 0f juawairing t!i k..i w Trivtli Th 4 htnrli bis dtpanuiiWiL for 1893-9- le ed j t iie which UC to voTtfidp thbt task to quit themselves infinitely better of this ,a K, and which tame to a ceitaln extent the litt! iheasaLts, always somewhat wild The. female pheasant lays fiotn twenty to twenty-fiv- e eggs. The to time of ini libation Is twenty-thre- e n twenty-seveGeueially not days. more than seven pheasants will bo raised out of the eutne number of eggs laid at one clutch. It Is nceeir-ary- , at the time of the laving, to redouble the vigilante in regard to the pheasants, to attract them into places prepaied,4to receive their eggs, removing also the newly laid eggs for fear of their being broken by the female. The eggs are placed under small hens sluing in separate apart-ment- s furnibhed with hav fine and drv. The other cares concern the raising of the young birds, which Is about the same as that of chickens. The new ly hatched flock should be placed in a special box, where they may be left to the care of the brooding hen that lias hatched them. Having shut up the young ones with their adopted mother, they should be fed d With ant eggs, millet, eggs minced with pieces of bread and lettuce. Some phcnsantTatbers affirm that they obtain very good results with a paste made of cooked beef, pieces of d bread, eggs and chlckory, all minced very fine and carefully mixed. Other raibers employ boiled rice, chervil, chicory, pieces of bread, d eggs, crushed hemp seed and corn meal, and say that they find it very good. When the young ones have reached the age of fifteen days they can be allowed the run of th& poultry yard and be fed on hemp seed and wheat At two months and a half of age the tail develops, and they reach a 'critical point In their lives where those not carefully tended die. Those that pass that point safely become soon fully attack U kets abroad and re.ct nred Industry and normal consumption at home. One of our agricultural exchanges discusses the matter from a domestic standpoint as follows; What the jear way bring forth U contingent greatly upon the spring season, when the young tbingB appear on the farm. If it la a cold, damp and backward spring, it means a light pig crop. We have had hut one large crop of plga, and that followed by a season of great scarcity of foods. High priced foods and diseases have caused heavy marketing from.all sources, and unless we have an unprecedentedly large pig crop this spring, thej will be a marked shortage of the stock which Is to go into markeynext fall and winter. Should there be a big.com crop, and short pig crop; there is certain to be a great demand for stockers to move the corn. Hence, In any light hard-boile- in- ifs-whcfevef-cxhibited- , competition with others.' It, makes the finest, lightest, sweetest most wholesome bread, cakeand patfy. More economical than any other jeaven ing agent ROYAL . SAKINQ POWDER CO., tO WALL ST., A Word A boo I W bite Clover. Professor llenry of the 'Wisconsin station is credited with the following: It ia not advisable to sow white clover alone on land for hog pasture, but a mixture of several grasses, such as two bushels ot blue gra&aone bushel of orchard grass, one peck of timothy end four ponnde of whit clover seed. Sow this on three acres of ground, with a very light seeding of oats and barley, or, better still, without any grain at all. It la suggested that the land be not pastured until ther sod le well formed, and It the grass runs up tall that it may be eut for hay. No stock should be turned in on. the field until the second season, unless a few weeks in the fall while the ground is dry. Thick seeding is urged. , Make Tosr Owa Bitter I On receipt of 90 cents In (J. S. stamps, I will send to snv address on packsg Ht- - . ketees Dry Bitters, On packag make on gallon Wg tonio known. Lure stomand to a grant appeach, kidney tizer and blood purifler. Jut tb tnedtein needed for spring end summer. 25c. t your drug stor. Address Oso, 0. Btb flying I'odor Water. When tho penguin In theLondon zoological garden is fed, the fish are thrown Into the water, irid the bird, which cannot fly In air or swim on the surface of the water, at once plunges in. and Is transformed into a swift and beautiful creature, beaded with globules of qnicksclvcft. w here theair clings to the clue feathers, and- - flying through theclcar and vc aveless depth with arrovyy speed and powers of turning far greatertliHB inaoyhnown form of aerist flight The rapid and steady strokes of the wings are exactly simi-ltto those of thsair birds, while the feet float straight out, level with its 'body, unused for propulsion, or oven as rudders, and as little needed in its progress as those of the wild duck when on the wing. The twists snd turns necessary to follow tho active little fish ere made wholly by the etrokee of one wing and the cessation of movement In the other, and the fish are chased, caught and swallowed without the slightest relaxation of speed, in a submarine flight which is quite as rapid ss that ot most birds which take their prey in midair. . u- diet, ktTZS, Grand Katildk. Mich. Its woman has a nk looking pocket book to carry, she doesnt car whether eh has say rnouey or not. Noth-- . Dra. H. H. Oreen A Son 'of Atlanta, Ga., are the greatest dropsy specialists In the world. Care more patients then the entire army of physicians scattered over this beautiful land of ours, A valuable discovery outside any medical book or published opinion. A purely Removes all vegetable preparation. dropsical symptoms rapidly. Ten days treatment mailed to every sufferer. Be advertisement In other column. ICagt Sets HXaas Only a I rate man ta atfrswf ot a ghomt ot WsnwnMd M me or monoy roluwlod. Aok fetf a murdered opportunity, -- mov IniwMIwa rriwueosl. II tbe Baby Is Catting Teeth, It to well to have e nobis purpoes, but oh! weed remedy, Mss knit sad salbteMStbvTsodforwellciUlSrm perform tbs doing of it. SstucCi Soerans Toothing. a Long Road short Jesrseys Bright things sr not always good thing. Is th rbaraoterlktie title of a profusely illnstreted book containing over one hundred pages of charmingly written descripWhat an ordinary man eats tions of summer resort in tb country id the way be eats it would north end west of Chicago. Tb resiling t enough to give dyspepsia matter is nsw, tbs illustrations ars naw, en ostrich unless the os and tbs information therein will b new to dch were wise enough to asalmost everyone. sist his digestion A copy of fcihort Jonrneys on a Lon? Road" will be sent free to anyone who will from tune to time enclose ten cent (to pay postage) to Geo. with eu efficient H. Heafford, General Passenger Agent combination of Milwaukee & Bl Paul !. we can look at It, the indication is for high prices for hogs and products next fall. If tbe season Is favorable for the growing of corn, we predict a large acreage and there will be aa urgent demand for young stock during the early fall months. This will have tbe effect of clearing the early markets. Hence, we believe that It will be prudent to push the young things to a marketable condition as early In tbe fall months as possible. The outlook for swine developed, and i properly cared for, provided with 'fresh water and good grain, are no longer In danger. In their wild state pheasants,, eat grain of all kinds, Juniper berries, grains of broom corn. Insects, forms, snails, and ants. Tbelr nourishment in the parks consists of buckwheat, millet, barley, rye and other small grain.. Hemp seed warms up tbe female pheasants and predisposes them to laying, but It ia not necessary to abuse the use ot this grain, and It is advisable often to temper its effects by the feeding of green ial stnffi nntntii v so rhirnry raiser of If -ever a ebeai is placed wn?.chin.the market It will prove a boon to tbe dwellers in the suburbs of great cities. Of sll dwellers In this country the suburbanite has the hardest time to get milk and cream. He is beyond the limit of distribution in tho cltyLand he Is not near enough to the farm to get s supply thence. He muBt needs depend on some man that keeps one or two cows and can supply him with duly a limited amount of milk and no cream. When the drouth comes In the summer he Is forced to be satisfied with a very small smount. so that otffer customers may cot have to go without If of a sudden he wants a gallon or two it Is unobtainable, and If he wants to make be must import his material from the city. Some keep cows, when they have a man for general work, but this applies mostly to the rich. Many more would keep them If they had the time to milk them or had some one or some thing that could do It When this problem Is settled there will June the hemp seed should be entirely discontinued. iottto Trluti Voxt Words certainly bright The Suburban Cow, n forth. Toward tbe end Is pAlnr. In closing this paper I wish to say a word in favor of private dairying, said E. H. Vaughan before the Nebraska While J do Dairymen's association. not wish to say anything disparaging to tbe creameries, yet I do think that for the man who Is Imbued with the right spirit taste and love for the work, that the private dairy present the most Inviting field. It encourages and stimulates him to his best efforts. Alj of the various conditions are under m his management and Immediate control. Step by step through the entire process his perception - la quickened, his vigilance mado more watchful and zeal more earnest, for the reason that the whole responsibility rests upon ness is beyond the reach and influence cows In these places. of the one who performs, cares for and directs the work at tho creamery. Yet Value of Skim-MilIt Is a very all of the many and intricate steps and thing to take quite a young pig turns are performed by or under the easy feed It for a month. You will find Immediate direction of the private and if you weigh the pig at that time and dairyman, who all the whllq, is stimulated by the knowledge success charge the milk and other atfeed that one or failure depends on the quality of bis you have been giving it month, you have made the milk worth work. By the fine of the modern ma- 35 or 40 cents, but you cannot do It for chinery the old-tidrudgery Imposed or eight months. . It is Impossion the good housewife has been re- seven ble. I bad a talk with a man In New summer and be said sktra-mil- k Is worth 60 cents per hundred for the use of his herd. Often these can forms the work with lease and skill, be obtained quite as cheaply as young calling on the wife only to add those feeding calves. He would buy the calves, and can be safely shipped by artistic touches In which the ladies al- calves, keep them for a short time and excel. fatten them up. You will find no diffi- express to most any part of the coun- ways I draw this ...conclusion, that when try. In this way the cost need not be culty your mflk worth 15 W lhe characteristics m 20 cents per hundred. Do not feed very great and then the farmer caa Lift Tfu named engages In this It alone. You will never make the full grow up the animals aa be shall consider to be, best in his particular case. business, he will, in a reasonable time, --value unless you feed It with grain. find his prodnet taking front rank upon J. H. Monrad. s Ifs merits with other popular brands, PbesBts. and tbe together market leading (Translated for tbe Farmers' Review Feeding the Fowls. Before you confrom tbe French of Ad. Benloa.) Eggs to Beat Eggs to beat well demn the breed or flock for not giving - The .pheasant is a beautiful bird that should be ten or twelve hours old. Tbe yu Sgs the past months flee to it that has been greatly In repute for a num- whites will froth If a little salt I the food given has not been such as ber of centuries. The . plumage Is is added. In coldquicker before using ; would provoke fat at the expense of weather bright and the flesh extremely deli- eggs drop them In tepid water and let 88 making. Don't blame tbe hens cate. There are three principal varle them remain five in hot I following your lead to the com bln minutes; known: Tne common pheasant, j leather let them remain the mow f ud so awayfrom the nests. J One the silver pheasant and the gilded , length of time in cold or lie water, f puultryman who was complaining pheasant There are seven other va- j The white of eggs are of great value' about his Wyandotte not laying for rletiee less extensively known: The in me arts. They are extensively the winter admitted that he bad fed on pheasant, tbe variegated used In the preparation of albumen- - corn and wheat, giving all tho hens I wanted pheasant, the ringed pheasant, the lzed paper for photographers use. to eat, and kept them In n Mongolian pheasant, the rreerr pheassmall, warm pen. Now, these thlngg Lest year the sheep in this country never did and never will provoke egg ant, the copper-colore- d pheasant and tho sparkling pheasant ' j grew 07,100,000 pounds of wool building. Ex. f Chicago, Chicago, tht tr , vegetable par-titio- FOR ALL THE ILLS THAT ex- Such a tracts. 'preparation is Dr. Pierces Pleasant Pellets. They are the pills oar excellence for those who sometimes eat the wrong thing and too much. They stimulate action in all of the digestive organ.- They Slop sour stomach, windy belching, heartburn, flatulence and cure constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, indigestion, sick' headache ana kindred . derangements. used they are always la favdr. Once Elys Cream Bate WILL CCBS Catarrh Apply fUlm intOMen BOBtri) MW bw, ft . Y . Illi e Jtu FAIN um CRN BRING ST. JACOBS OIL fis CURE 13 KING! VHk vltfj ACHES to Everything. for-th- oraat ash-color- ed Railway, 111. Ideas At th Bear. London Daily News: From Lemberg our Vienna correspondent learns that a terrible battle baa been fought at the railway station at Eawaruska. A menagerie was being conveyed by rail and when the train stopped at the statififl a great noise was beard. Tbe guards went to the wagons containing tbe wild beasts and found the wooden which separated three lionesses from three beers and these again from three hyenas broken down and the animals engaged in battle- - One bear was missing, tbe lions bad eaten hiin, skin and all- - They bad bitten another bear's paw off and a hyena lay dead on tha floor. Twolions in a neighboringcom-partmen- t remained calm. No one dared to Interfere between the fighting beasts until the owner arrived in a sledge snd separated them not before he had been bitten by a bear, however. He claims damages from the railway administration because the partitions gave way. k. -- f . . e 1 Its Lorlilsrds. at all ; the Great International Expositions, and .kAJy Like a Hsckls) Which kept la order runs smoothly and regularly, so ins bowels fcoen up their action it measures ars when to keep them in good working order. This infers, of course, that they sr out of order, is surest recount tiien is to Hostetler's Stomach Bitters, Uxs-titremedy mild but effective, which is ieo tor dyspepsia, malaria, rheumatism, nervousness and kidney trouble. He always does his best who slw ays doe . all h can. Tbs loss blood there is tu a sermon the mors compliments tbe'presrher will get J made. Of- official investigation, and Worlds one-lwelf- tb hard-boile- ss Climax Plug is much the best chewing tobacco JOI humamtv as io a contagions diser.se a 3ort of inset t leprosv which all but exterminates him. The study of this contagious disease has been part of Prof. Foibes' work, and he. is now able to grow the fungus which will Inoculate the ug iiu the dlbease. The chimh bug first began business in North Carolina about the time of the revolutionary war. He moved north and reached southern Illinois In 182. He has been a periodically active resident ever since In size he Is of an inch long, and slim bodied In proportion to his length. Ho has six legs and two pairs of jrings. He Is armed very like a mosquito w ith a hard, jointed, combination drill and suction pump which he drives into a blade of wheat or a stalk of corn and pumps out the juice. hard-boile- al- Dsats all other kinds -- .- Ontluok for tlx Net Hog rnp. There are several contingencies Involved In the question of the next hog ctop. savs an exchange. Among them Is whether we are to have open mar- OYAL BAKING POWDER is the purest and strongest baking powderjmadet. It has received the award at the U. S. - - highest ' Govt of m truly-benefic- - r, of Derelict The New York Tribune; The dis- Stock Journal This must culler be tance wh.ch derelicts traverse is much done ou the faun or lieifers by raising is greater than general! supposed A by puri basing the cowb. careful record of observations has reIn a comparatively few instances sulted in the preparation of a chart which shows that the hulk of a schoon- pci haps the latter method might be provided the right kind of er, the Fannie E. Wolston, has drifted, preferable, could be obtained at reasonable during the last five years, more than ions 10,000 milea This calculation ia based pnees, but the majority of farmers on forty six reports of Its having been must or should depend on raising their own he done sighted. Another derelict, which be- more daily stoik. This should cows can be than the cheaply in its 1801, drifted wanderings gan about 3,500 miles up to the time it was purchased, especially at the present when had last teen, been afloat 615 time, and there are other advantages it that should he taken into consideradays. The W. L. 1 lute, another floattion are the raising of the ing terror of the sea, roamed over the heifers These in a proper manner and their North Atlantic for 310 davs, covering adaptation to tlio farm, whtih could in that time about 6,000 miles. not come from frequent changes of Kelt Tim Too Go West o nershtp Take the Burlington Route's Black Hills. The lirst step in this business ia to Montana aud Puget bound Express the kind of heifer talves needed get 1 .eaves Omaha at 4 35 p. in daily, for the dairy. They should be selected lasteet and best train to the Black Hills, as far as possible w ith particular refernorthern Wyoming, the Yellowstone National Dark, Helena, Butte, Bpolaue, beat-ti- e ence to the kind of work that is to be and '1 acorn a. requited of them, either as milk proFor rates, time table, etc., apply to the ducers or butter makors. If they canlocal ticket agent or write not be obtained from the herd then it J. Francis, v. ill pay to look around among those O. P. AT. A.. Burlington Route. having good dairies for such as are Umaba, Neb. Next provide comfortable wanted. The April Review of Reviews on the quarters for these little animals, where kept warm and dry. Parseverity of the winter just passed they can be in the southern latitude of our own ticularly Is this necessary In winter spring when the weather is shiftcountry and in the Unlish Isles The and and unfavorable, and a large proerection of a snow statue of Washing- ing ton in New Orleans late in February portion of the calves raised are started and the freezing over of the Thames at this time Qf year. "Now how shall they be fed? below London Bridge in the name It is now desirable to have heifers month are two events which fully jusgiving milk at two years of tify the Review in pronouncing the commence winter of 1895 a most unnsul one for age. To do this they jnust be well recent years, and a rebuff to the old- cared for from the first. They roust be est inhabitant with his tales of kept In vigorous health and steadily cold weather. growing. Their food should be such as will foster the growth of muscle and Pigs have been washed, but none have bone, rather than of fab Within the love for ever been cured of their mud. past quarter of a century, by a proper method of treatment, heifers are aB good at two years old as they used to be at three. Milk Is the natural food for the young calf and this should e supplied In sufficient quantities, neither too large nor too small. With the Jersey calf It Is particularfor the ly necessary not to over-fee- d first few weeks, otherwise bad results will follow. After a little, skim milk may be gradually substituted for that fresh from the cow. In cold weathei1 this can be had sweet, and If the Swedish or cold deep setting system of cream raising Is practiced, and can be had sweet during the warmest season of the year, especially if practiced in a " portable creamery. To make up for the fat of the milk removed In the cream It is well to make a little gruel of porridge from middlings of oil meal KNOWLEDGE and add to the milk a tablespoonful of the meal for each calf at a feed is suffiBrings comfort and improvement and cient at first. tends to personal enjoyment when A very important matter in the feedbetwho live used. The many, rightly of skim milk is tb have It sufficientter than others and enjoy life more, with ing warmed. Here Is an advantage less expenditure, by more promptly ly claimed for farm separators, in that to best worlds products adapting the the milk can be fed almost before the the need of physical being, will attest animal heat Is gone. But I can see no the value to health of the pure liquid difficulty where the cream is obtained laxative principles embraced in the by cold deep setting, as it can be easily remedy, Svrup of Figs. warmed to any desired temperature. It excellence is due to its presenting We are raising a December calf on and pleasin the form most acceptable milk from cold deep setting: with the and ant to the taste, the refreshing addition of middllbgs as described properties of a perfect laxabove, and It Is doing nicely, there beative ; effectually cleansing the system, ing no trouble from the scours. A young farmer In Windsor county, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing ponstipation. Vermont, is making a business ot raisand millions to It has given satisfaction ing veals on skim milk from cold deep met With the approval of atene.no graln feed being netting Kided. To most farmers this would seem because it acts on the weakimpossible, but there Is no doubt in the neys, Liver and Bowels without perfectly free from matter. ening them and it issubstance. He first heats the milk hot, then every objectionable feeds three times a day, giving four to Byrup of Figs is for sale by all dre five quarts at a time. The calves are $1 bottles, but it is man(kti in 60c andthe California Fig Byrup not allowed to drink the milkrhut take ufactured by Co. only, whose name is printed on every It from Smalls calf feeder or someIn this way the milk package, also the name, Byrup of Figs, thing similar. and being well informed, you will not has to be taken much more slowly than when drank, and he attributes some of accept any aubatitute if offered. his success to this method Of feed mg; as he has never had a case of scours. He feeds from four to five weeks old and then sells for four to five dollars a head, having a good market .. If the farmer has milk It is well to feed until the calves are several months old. Some do this, keeping them in the barn during this time, considering it is better than taming them out to grass. They will soon learn to eat hay and then should be supplied with that which la early cut and of best quality. After getting to be a few months old they will eat grain of some kinds dry, as middlings, bran, ground oats, etc. Thus having the farmers direct attention these young animals should be kept constantly growing and thrifty and vigorous In health, und this should be kept up right along summer and winter, with the object always in view cow from the of making a first-claheifer, a work of which the owner may well be proud. But in this work of Improving the dairy farmer should not neglect the This 1. advanceicotmn of the full report treats exclusiveiv of the chinch bug and how to kill him b dircit bodily attack and by the .j.ei method fgnliig him A fatal aud contagious disease and a lovv aud painful death. There h s been unother "wave" of jhinch hugs in Illinois the past season, and Jn the southern part of the state t1ieyi doi tro; od' mui h corn. Ev cry few the tranqtplity pf jeara there U an uprising of the chinch bug, iu numbers sufficient to destroy disappear ;aa-eesi- ito ' The chimffi Tmg Is the subject of an Interesting pamphlet about to be Issued by the state. The pamphlet is part of the report of ITof. S. A. Forbes, slate entonjj'ogtst, covering the work of -- A GREAT C00013 IMIDY. Perhaps you may think that Scotts Emulsion is only useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and make comely and attractive, lean andangular women, and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of the consumptive, and enrich and vitalize the blood of the scrofulous and anaemic persons. It will do all this but it will do more. It will cure a Stubborn Cough Hard, and specifics entirely when the cough ordinary syrups fail The cough that lingers after the Grip and Pneu- d monia will be softened and cured by the balsamic strengthening influences of this beneficent r namely, Scott's Emulsion of Oil and Hypophosphhes of Lime and Soda Refuse substitutes. They are never as good. Scott & Bowne New York. All Druszists. 50c. and 5t. food-medicin- e, Cod-live- heal-lngan- |