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Show MKY and Cut of aa Aero of WSm (AND GARDEN. James Glurer of Harper county, Kan deas, sends the state agricultural partment an estimate, which he says MATTERS OF INTEREST Q many good farmers approve or havt AGRICULTURISTS. verified, shewing the cost at which wheat can be and la raised tor In that Hints About Cut(l-tlo- n county on lands that can be bought of (ho Soil nod Virl.l, Tlirroof e yleld, acre nd , anywhPere from n l0 40 bush- Vtllcullur ilorl- tU cnlturo. FARR employed, a lengthy atretch of permanent grass and about thirty acre of arable land, tying between a wild moor ,and a large river, was 'Infested" with moles, and many a hard day's work I have had In leveling the hillocks and scattering the soil over the surface of the land. The farmer who employed me was greatly In advance of his times, end his theories as to the practical usefulness of moles, weasels, and almost every kind of wild bird, were the subject of much bucolic ridicule. That Is nearly forty years ago, and that farmer Is dead, but not his theories. These were founded on long and cose personal observations, and their absolute accuracy has long since been ts recognized by all intelligent field and agrii uliumlisu. As far aa moles were conterned, thd land where they most did congregate waa naturally poor, but in course of time the moles improved It, and out of curiosity I visited the old steading and land last summer and found it rich,. infinitely superior In heart to that of many other holding where the demon mole catchers were atill employed in the expensive and destructive work. PnBlabU Ass Is Bsll VtMHb X W. Robe. There are evidently tww ar three ways of raising stesrs, which, materially affects their growth; and upon,' this much depends when they should go to market in order to bring the highest price, hence quantity nnd1 quality of food eaten must enter largely into n correct answer. There are, two or three kinds of steers to raise which have their inQuence upon jowg. the most profitable age to selL The on land ($15 per acre) at hflh'a most profitable age, in my opinion, to kT1' Taint of Boroyard a Brotlug O Good Cow. ...$1.2ti cen, ell n scrub or n Jersey steer, is either medl- BLLETIN 174. I off Chi advise all to chemist, .1$ keep Oil.NSON and Ross t bout six weeks or six months' old. and clnes Expei in.Hinal Sta.8 as can, as long they entirely were two general pRjWng After this he is altars kept at n loss. -20 tion In a newspafarmers that lived employ simple remedies uuiy, for with Harrow mg twice .25 Hence, the manner of keeping and kind per bulletin of the side by side. Each chickens you only do more harm than Drilling 1 0 of ateers both must enter into n full Ohio Agricultuial VtlrviTlV of them kept a cow, good. Avoid leaving milk in the sun Heading answer, as all have their Influence upExperiment Station and each endeav- by all means, and you boil your wheat, Seed, average on the profits when sold. But what 1721 gi mg the and (No feed off in clean vessels, grass, ored, beside supply$1.18 Total kind of steers to raise for profit if not results of expel no occasion feed two or three upon with the family ing so much disputed as ths moat profitable On the foregoing basis he places the w nliferuhz-e- r off it same the quickly days boiling; some milk, to make cost per bushel on different yields per on tile clay soil nay of keeping steer and when to sell. for sale. turns sour, but this can be avoided by butter First of all, a steer may bs raised by will acre. Including 6 cents per bushel In of one of its subIt water. cold it into of plunging one was Johnson never each instance for thrashing, thus: stuffing him winter and summer with stations, a table as the farmers that thus keep sweet much longer. I all he can eat and of whatever kind Of given which Indicated that barnyud lb neighbors declared had been spoiled feed upon dusty ground, whether sweet 15 bu. per acre cost 34 cents per bu. food he likes best, from calfhood up. the IS bu. per acre cost 29 cents per bu. nanuie had produced im.rease of crop Pi reading books on agriculture and or tainted. The former will scour, bu to the value of $2.50 per ton of man-us- e 20 27 cents bu. he might be kept on roughacre in per her Secondly, disease courts per c8t latter simply agricultural papers. He had got, as p 25 bu. par acre cost 224 cents per ba in the three grain crop of a ness, mainly, through the winter, and numerous forms. Russ sluggish expressed it, high It is on record that in 1889 E. F. plenty of grass during summer. Thirdldsss" on rotation, leaving the residual effanning in general and the ly, lit might be kept on short rations, Burchfield of Harper county raised an fect on the two grass crops yet to be ascot in panic ular One proof of this In Cly. E(t Presented The mole, like otirselvea, la not perof 42 3 bushels on A an unfortunate lapse of stinted, winter end summer. This is certained. average was in the action of Johnson when he By LI Hung Changs commissariat car- - flel(1. p Markef cf Eiigworth ccun-rie- d memory, however, the mistake was fect It has more than one "redeeming never done by good -- cattle raisers soil oil all the cows he had and took j v with It around the world a supply Tty the ganje year ralsed bu8hels per made of computing only half the quanice; but, taken as a whole, It is s (though I have seen It done on small the price and put it into a single cow of Chinese preserved eggs for the Am- on 1J0 MrM; lsraei McComau of tity of manure actually used, as it Lad friend of the farmer It destroys s vast lots), and as It is always at a loss, we of great milk and bassador's special use, writes A. V. Jackson county had 51 bushels aveiags been used on two crops in the thiee quantity of injurious grubs, and In Its will not discuss this method of raiscapacity. Rohg said that this was a in Earm Poultry. "Those won Mersch on a 19acre fieldi and warren Fulton years, namely, corn and wheat, at the searchings for these Insects, It cering steers further than to just state 1L piece of foolishness that could have By ths first method of keeping steers Pottawatomie county harvested 54 rate of 6 tons on one plot and 4 tons on tainly does Injury to the roots of cercome only from Johnson's continual derful eggs, said my friend, Mr. Doyle, the steward of the Waldorf, at which Li bushels per acre from 18 acres. another on each crop, making a total eals and other plants, more particular- they will mature about twelve months reading of agricultural papers. Any-during ils sojourn in New Coburn has no doubt luter application to the two crops of sixteen ly when the soil is light and in very dry earlier than by the mod of keeping of every farmer knew that a cow The destructive "leather the second. Does this pay! la ths point was a cow and that was all there was York, are not so bad after all. Here thrashing will show that these figures ions and eight tons respectively, and seasons. - have in Involved in this question. Let us look to it, and the man that would go Into Is one of them, he sajd to me, knowmany instances been surpassed reducing the value of the increase due Jacket is s great goureh of its subsisti I would be Interested In It, this year In Sumner, Cowley and other to the manure to about $1,25 per ton. ence; It destroys nice, and it eVen does M it a little from calfhood up. fancy stock of that kind was simply ing that me what looked like a piece of counties, but suggests it would be a The manure used in this test had been good ss s kind of subsoil drainer of First, then, suppose you give the calf wasting his money. Why, if he had showing all of the milk of its dam, and at about pummice stone, but was an egg en- - mistake for everybody to Tush into accumulated from horses and tows in the land. I may conclude with an exonly put his money Into a high-bre- d hunting dog, there might have been cased In elay, which was given me by 4 wheat expeetlng te acqulre fortune an open barnyard during the winter tract from s letter' addressed toms two months old begin feeding him one of the cooks, and may be a century j through often realising the phenome- - and summer previous to Its applica- years ago by s Yorkshire farmer to s shelled cornrshorts, oil cake, ete' some reason to it. Is a preual yields mentioned. naturalist, s portion of changing feed often, and buying whattion, and was under, rather than above well-knoHowever, Johnson continued to milk oid for aught I know. This of which some years ago in s ever suits his fancy heat, with plenty The the keepserved manure in hens egg. appeared qualprocess average open yard his cow andRoss did the same. Both The Farmers Review would like the ity. A similar comparison of manure work dealing with ornithology, entoof grass, thus keeping hlm-t- n high consent their butter to the same market ing them Is very primitive and simple, and got about the same price per pound, yet very effective. This Is the way It opinion of its readers on the above es- and fertilizers has been made at the mology and mammology In relation to dition till he is about two and a halt central station, beginning Immediately agriculture. To kill moles Is to leave years old end weighs About 1,509 as the butter Johnson made was from is done: First the eggs are boiled hard; timates. after the relocation of the station In the corn and turnip crops (upon light pounds. only one cow and therefore- could not then while they are hot they are wrapHonec Bon Month. . Second. Ordinarily ths calf is al- - , Wayne county, on the same crops, eorn, lands, such as sand and deeply-soile- d well be sent to a distant- market or to ped in soft clay and packed away. They lowed wold half thi the to of of lit dam's milk. If you Many horses, ths were land) ravages especially during oats, .wheat, clover and timothy, grown brought wlr; fancy customers. Johnson's wife kept will keep forever. They rotation. Four wheat worm, the grub (cockchafer) and other do not wish to take half the milk, a here In bags packed In rice husk, some first year of their working period, ar In a five-yeAccount of the receipts And expenditures in a systematic manner, and Mrs. of which you see still clings to the constantly in possession of a sore crops have now been taken in this ro- insects. I farm, and havs farmed, from second calf may be mated, andiet ths and this not only causes ths tation, three crops each of corn and a thousand to fifteen hundred acre ii two take ths on cow's milk, giving Ross, wishing to show that a common clay. These eggs are almost black, and mouth, different parishes, and have noticed them "plenty of grass. When winter the yolks are green. They chop them animal great suffering and usually lose oats and five crops of hay, the meadcow would do as much as a high-bre- d of flesh, but Is also a matter of great ows thus far being mown but once a that when you try to exterminate seta In, or If grass is short sooner, turn one, also kept account on her side, very fine and decorate most of their Inconvenience to the driver, says an year. Five tract of land are included moles, rooks, sparrows, etc., you havs to hay stacks, and teed some shelled though Mr. Ross said that that, too, viands with them, and they enter largein the teat, each tract containing thirty tar more destruction of crops. An old corn till plenty ot grass comes again. was a piece of foolishness. At the end ly Into all their sauces. The duck eggs exchange. This, If continued for sevcame to me and asked me I wintered thirty-fiv- e ths past winter acre each and so of three months Mrs. Ross confided to are from the Pekin and Muscovy eral months, Is also liable to ltave ths plots of without eorn, on animal with a chronic habit, such aa managed that each crop will be repre- whether I would have the moles killed In her husband that the cost of keeping breeds. They are first boiled, then preNo; if grass and bpy; but it will pay well their cow had Just equalled the" served In a paste of charcoal which throwing the head while hitching or sented each season after the first rota- on my land. 1 said, moles I should . havs no usually to teed some corn tbs first while the Johnson cow had $17 hardens about them. These duck eggs unhitching. We have in view ene very tion Is completed. At this stage of the I had no He said, "You are tbs first winter. Then grass him well through or thereabouts standing to her crediL are opened, split In halves and served valuable young horse, owned by a work only partial results can be given, crops. worthwhich became almost whom man five I hare beard say that, but tbs summer, because this takes no laneighbor, include would Ross went out into the country and In the shell, and as old as the eggs as a full rotation on less bor to furnish; then, the next winter, account throwof of habit the paid $15 for another cow, and Mrs. are, 1 assure you that they are decrops each of the cereal and ten crops you ars right He then proceeded to ofl fodder and Its same and at the time was not head, a ing lungto "I b useful employed by say: Ross hopes were accordingly raised. licious. It understand of hsy; but gentleman, rough him through I dont perfectly may and all the winstock fields, into hay the The ditches. straw, ar to most a kill ing had which who sideways off large, sandy field, But the two cows cost about double the the difference In preserving hens eggs the results already obtained, can be had. Tbs next that ter used grass to It moles. Increase nice the ths of value grow crops, the cost of one, and in two months more and ducks eggs; but I mfean to try an effective plan which we have ever tried follows, well, and winter aa behi found from his wifes accounts that experiment on them this season, and consists of winding any ordinary bit tJ being computed on the bases of 331-- 3 though it was so full of moles. I killed summer grass havs plenty of corn," If and on or down corners tbs 25 you the for cents tame fof cents per bushel for corn, fore; them all, and the field never grew Anythe two cows had made a profit of only will report my experience. about an inch, with tanned aheepskin oats, 68 3 cents for wheat. $3 per thing to speak of afterwards. The some might be fed very profitably dur$1.S5, while the credit to the Johnson com(which can be procured at any harness ton for straw and atover and $8 oaw was $29. Ross this time bought a grub, wire worm, etc., used to eat the ing the latter part of the winter, Hardiness end C 11 mate. store), being sure that it la not too hay: of everything that waa sown, and ing three years old, always keeping roots but at the end of another In the northern section of the United thick and heavy. With thla well wound him In good condition. Then bs very TaJuffToTTaoia I the young plants died off." month the profit for the three was but States careful attention should be given on, now have a cup of aulphur, and sure to give him abundance of the best $2.55, while the Johnson cow had "raised the selection of breeds, says Poultry each time aa the bit is placed in ths of grass the coming summer, and about the limit to $33. Ross determined to should not matter to the horses mouth moisten ths leather anJ It Keeper. -r Fralts, ltbs closing of ths grazing season, after ., CrrtIUclag Tetel beat that cow if he had to buy a whole atm farmer whether some particular breed rub on a little of the pulverl ted artiFew confections are more delicious he la three yeare old (or at the age ot herd, so about once a month be would may lay a few more eggs during the cle. It is well also to lengthen the bri than candled fruit, and few sweetmeats three and a half years), I would send bring home a new cow, generally, than another, aa his object should die as much as possible during thU year are more expensive, 60 cents a pound him to market- - He has been with you bought cheap at some auction. It tn la and may he to keep only those that are hardy time and not drive with a tight checkMil IM Tj UN being the regulation price, and a pound a little longer than ths first, oo9 la t apirtkrtoa. At the end of eighteen months Roes and able to stand the cold winters. In ing rein, After having adopted this a very small amount They weigh a little mors If well kept, but represents had a herd of ten cows, all working as making a selection, the proper course we aucceeded in curing a young It Will be observed that in thla test can be prepared at about half the coat, has cost you much less and will bring faithfully as they could to beat ths to pursue is to visit the yards of those plan smaller application of manure has however, at home, If care is taken. the sore mouth was which a horse of very you mors clear money. All that is Johnson cow. Ths product was greatwho have fowls that havs given good contracted during the working period been relatively ths more profitable, but currants, put on after 1,500 or 1,600 pounds Is apripineapples, Cherries, ly Increased In volume, even though not be borne out by subse- cots, in his section, and in purchasresults thla may season. the slow grdwth, and will hardly pay you are best and past expepeaches pears one or two of the animals had run dry. there rimented' stock aim to select the most vigorquent results. At ths The two former can for ths food consumed.' upon. But ths expense of keeping them waa ing Cover the Bulb Bed. Be sure to give has been hut little difference thus teT be used in bunches; the pineapple is ous. Breeds that have small combs considerable, and It seemed to Roes are heavily feathered should the spring blooming bulbs a nice warm in ths apparent effectiveness per ton, sliced across the fruit, each piece bewhich and that all the money he took from the or at the Catarrh In Shaap. thrive better in winter than will oth- winter blanket of leaves, litter from whether used at the a good quarter-inc- h thick; apricots j. grocer he paid out again to the feed-ma- n sera The results show ing should have also the stable, or brush, or a combination breeds rats such per but stone and the one slue on ers, diseases of the breathing cut are slipThe chief was not quits for feed, bat this bred for vigor. It is of no ad- of all, and do not be in a hurry in an Immediate recovery of about a dowhile pears and peaches ars organs ar catarrh, or cold; and pneuout, ped so. Moreover it had become a great been spring to get them out of their winter llar and a quarter on ths average In halved, and, of course, peeled. to buy special monia, or Inflammation of th lungs. burden with the Rosa family to milk vantage been for special clothes. Dont rush out the first warm Increase of crop, at recent price, for have awards when the' Maks a very thick syrup, pound to, Catarrh is known by profuse running ten cows twice a day and otherwise and all clear show-roothe brush and every ton of manure used. But the away but the birds day adding for each pound a small at ths ness, often accompanied by a Mrs. Roe suggested points in the car for them. litter just because it is unsightly look- long continued experiments by Lawes pound, Boil ths sugar first, then cough. It is a disease of the winter however, bred, be having should water. pure of hire cup a had better to than that they The crocus and snowdrop will and Gilbert at Rothamsted, a descripin- - ing. and breasts eyes and when they bnve end spring months, and ia generally th atout deep in limbs, ths fruit, at winced the proposlhelp, but Ross not need so warm a covering as the tion of which Is given in bulletin 71 of drop Uke out and drain from result of too close and warm stabling. boiled clear tlon'and said that the profit would not I dlcatlng health. It is ths hen that lays can be uncovered the Ohio station, show that not more when other bulbs and the syrup. It ths cherries are stoned Sheep need dry bedding and protection warrant iL At the end of the time every week in ths year, except earlier in the spring. But from ths than one-ha- lt to the possible the or make the finest, bechicks undergoing red health demands A an took Rosses account of hatching specified the etc., gradually remove increase from barnyard manure is re- (the not too sweet as the white and from rain, but their hyacinths, tulip, that the of pays air. Catarrh moulting, to the tree ing open exposure stock, and found that the laBt two cows process can only bs had ths covering, leaving the finest uf ths covered in the first crops grown from without phe rank tartness of ths sour la a troublesome, hut not a dangerous hens such but most, Investment and a losing stable litter on tbs beds permanently bd proved it. We may therefore safely offset the red ones). It is nice to string them on disease, unless the inflammation exdue considerathat now the balance waa Just a trifle by careful selection and Ylcka Magazine for September. residual effect of the manure against n broom splint, aa they can be (nor tend to the lungs, when It become conditions climatic and oa the wrong side of the hooka It had tion given the cost of application and consider the handled. cowa ten to more the cost management proper keep A Birds. Protected the pneumonia, which is generally fatal, actually pretty anec- immediate increase as clear profiL In easily after Sprinkle liberally with powdered su- Thla transition is marked by a quick had figurbrought in, dote is related of a child who was than they at the central sta- gar, lay on a sieve and set the fruit in Milk, Pure or Otherwise It is a diff- greatly perturbed by the discovery that another experiment breathing, a frequent backing ths money value of the feed that wheat and clover are a warm oven, I used n wire dish, such and laboredand a grinding of the teeth bad been raised on the farm. They icult thing to determine by the appear- her brothers had set traa to mttcb tion, potatoes, ing cough rotation, and in ns our grandmothers kept triilt in, set together. ance of milk whether it is pure or not birds Questioned as to what she had grown in a three-cro- p The discharge from the noslearned that the Johnson cow had inthis test the increase from manure ap- within another dish to catch tbs syrup. tril becomes yellow; a high fever, loss creased her net balance to $79.37 during It has a slightly yellowish whits color, dona in the matter, she, replied: 1 to potatoes has reached $2.50 per In two hours turn the fruit, sprinkle of appetite and thirst ar presenL if ahould and a was any, This odor, the months. very slight the that ths eighteen traps might not nttob plied prayed being - valued at 38 3 ton, sweet potatoes and tast a with sugar again. Keep this up untU Bleeding and purging with epsom salts t have of Roes. sent pure nlns He distinctly the birds, last straw with "Anything else?" Tea,' cents busheL sevBarnyard manure is the sugar has all dripped ouL On no Is th treatment recommended, hut to for per stand allowed quietly she said. bis cows to the butcher and gave up when "I then' prayed that God deficient in phosphoric acid, account havs ths oven hot, ns it will natur- would death terminates the css in a dairying except for home use. He says eral hours. Cream should rise prevent the birds getting Into relatively with ammonia and potash, dry the fruit sod leave it like so much usually aa cream should form compared the In ha and Is no profit or two, under any treatment' Thla ally; dairying, there the traps, and, as if to illustrate tne day of the total volume, or bulk. doctrine of faith and works, she added and the experiments of the Ohio sta- leather. And, of course, tbs fruit must disease is often ths result of exposure knows it by actual experience. Being to one-fift-h rows when drying. milk - Is poured from When good mad was Johnson how that to cold rains after shearing. J. R. it Then I went and kicked ths traps aB tion indicats that phosphoric acid is be laid in single has tsked most on maneeded fh constituent evaporated and Tomlinson. to the When a should tho juice the It tumbler cling glass cow he replied: Oh, so much from one to pieces. jority of Ohio soils, but that it only the sugar ha formed na glazed surface, luck. little, and not run off clew like water. tbAt was A country produces its full effect in the presence Straw Stacks. put away In boxes is dry place. WaxBurning ( Sail Bd Hod tor Bloat. and potash. The price of ed paper should b laid between each ' New York Milk Trust It is reported correspondent of ammonia that farmers are reports Plerrhoee and II. Cmm. As stock are turned on fresh grass, that a plan is on foot to form a milk burning the straw stacks in his neigh- acid phosphate has fallen .fluring re- layer. A bureau drawer is as good a of first or second growth, there whether Having seen, under the abqve headthem. to sale of control the the as to keep any supply borhood to get rid of them, says Ne- cent years until It can now be bought place trust, is danger of some eating so rapidly that ing, a letter, signed J. A. U, in yortr of Greater New York. Thla is said to braska Fwmer. That is more heathenin at tor anywhere Ohio, delivery prices paper of May 12, I may Inform hint be nearly 1,000,000 quarts. dally, and ish than ths burning of eorn for fueL which bring its actual phosphoric acid they do not digest their food properly. of Distribution. The Th result is, too mheb gas accumulates Centre New there are several causes of diarrhoea, of the the proposed capital enterprise There is some show of reason for that. below S cents per pound, and as the or production dis- in the stomach,' and hi apt to produce writes A Hemsley in Fanciers Gazette. is $10,000,000. The plan is to buy tbs But a straw stack la an innocent thing sprinkling of acid phosphate or super' big shipping points now the big distributing whatever it may The cause, ar tricts bloat or colic. To neutralize or counLondon. 66 each of him and be dealer, on it may business giving on the farm, turned to phosphate barnyard manure is beand not the be asd to the country removed, of large teract this gas, I have many time requires only points 50 be, in stock of the j great good. A farmer had better keep lieved to have a beneficial effect In preper cenL in cash and as heretofore. Whether this will given salt or soda, say C. H. Mitchell, cities, diligent search should be made for it, new concern. The price of milk wllij his hands in his pockets when he bewaste of ammbnta from the venting tbs work to the advantage of the producer in Rural World, and in almost every before any good can beaccompllahed. not be advanced, but economies effected gins to think of burning bis straw .manure, it would seem that the use of or runs are If kept first your not is aa Interesting subject for de- Instance have Yected a cur tn a short the place. In stacks. Ex. In handling. Ex. acid phosphate In this manner might water tins and The prices for a car are tele- time. A teacupiul of equal parts, mixed, your bate. perfectly clean, serve the double purpose of preserving broadcast to every town large will in most cases cur a cow or hoqia. filled once daily, and kept located Shredded Corn Fodder. The woeful the ammonia of the manure and ia graphed Many American .weeds which ars consume a car of potatoes, If relief Is not obtained in a short time, I to a advise complete enough a to a place, with f corn waste shady now neglected, according r In botanist, fashion fodder will creasing the effectiveness of both Its or any other product a little more can be given. Iglve It by tomatoes ' ebange of diet, and give wheiOen bread are good to eaL The tender shoots of stop. Cut np, shredded and baled, it ammonia and potash. Experiments on melons, market. The great taking some in hand and .putting it nl a chalk taolespoon-tfor milk-wee- d are said to resemble in tast keeps green And sweet, and is a rich, .this point ars now in progress at the raised fiour and prepared to the distributor come from into th mouth Of ths anlmaL Have losses est of chalk to a pound of o&tmeal, asparagus. Pigweed is related to beets nutritious food. In this shape It promOhio station. ' the goods and then used this remedy- - very successfully the class that ordershem with two or three tablespoonsful of and splnaeh. The nettle, too, is declarises to be an important item of food in on some pre-tex-t with cce?t all neutralizes to acirefuses sheep that had eaten too much. fiour. The chalk ed to be well flavored, although it is ths future. Ex. The Mole. i , la the cause when the market fails to reveal s most cases, in , which, coarse and dic stringy. somewhat au'lval of goods. Fruil An English paper sajfk: The profesmargin on of diarrhoea, especially in warm weathSecretary Wilson says that we make sional mole catcher was Chemical Milk Preserver The presJournaL in an quite of contents the Trad Garden. The state- In thla country the finest' cheese and er. The fermentation A 'Well-Fille- d ervation of milk by chemicals, even If In Like slitution my youth. of the crop and gizzard is too raplfc ment waa made at a fanners club in butter in ths world, but are handiwere Justifiable to prat Ice It, Is not a g. and poschlng, Small Ridze. The email rHgee left It that in any manner or form thus if is acetuous fermentation seta Great Britain that ths Income of one capped by the adulterated stuffs that remain. procedure should night-lin- e They prothe drill setting, and even causes irritation of the in garden of ten acre, covered with are palmed off on the foreign markets. should be contemplated by fair minded from the )n which wind plant In of - r salmon young close 4 sea the tect the spearing the winter, for people, nor le It In any way conducive of ternal mucous membrane. Dry corn is glass, .exceeded that from 1,000 acres ran In families, and from heaving In, chickens. If of the best farm land of the country. The Farmers Review some time ago on, mole catching that very poor food for baby pull, the plants better results towards attaining a milk agency it canses too heavy Ex. . asked 1U readers as to the kind of floor and I have known It to run through ,he same roots molders the ridges with keeptng qualities sufficiently prolbey eat sufficient the men These several on by generations. most' serviceable la a poultry boos In dry mt! need to serve alj requirements, aa 4hirst and indigestion, sal's precursors "went on circuit, and carried their down at the Mm Armour A Co. of Chicago art re- The majority of the replies favored We have far too methods such as cooling. Pasteurization :0f tbii complaint find more moisture of destruction with them weather the plants to have thrown aside the implement ed foods in and ths floor. meals ported Board ci sterilizing, and which are now j If the were surface many fancy business and turned their plants end undertook, for a stipulated price In the valley than to be the only methods ehick " market And sharps should bs used the be to swept by wind, Dial soils seldom will level prove sat pm dozen carcases, to clear the farm Prairie into creameries for the making of gea with broom. Ex. should bs countenanced aay where.' writh great care for the first month. tsfactry in the growing of orchards. of jeolea. On a large farm where I was as a floor week the excessive heat nine butter. last the purtng win have had a damaging affect upon many things. I have known chickens, ducka, geese, pigs, and even calves kill NtBE3TiNO CHAPTERS FOR ed by too much heat. The system beOUR RURAL READERS. comes so relaxed, causing much fatty matter to be liberated, which passe the bowels, causing one of the through fiMiwifai rarmen Operate This worst dysenteries. My feeding m ature pnBnt of the Farm A Few to about two months of consisU of to tho Caro lte ,n,0re IZTur Poultry. a trace TV or whiting, poultry. rp-to-- Il 1 Hortli-ulluro- T F'htjrr ! 1 j rat-uralls- f tne-cro- ker-flut- in butter-produci- , ed y, j j - - mole-catch- one-ten- er th good-conditi- on, 2-- $20-co- A sub-stati- prize-wlnne- ra two-thir- de 1-- one-eigh- th bull-head- ed bird-snari- but-terl- ne - .on-ced- is"! |