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• ;.". .z � j • 'S"t f','"\ 1r{'�;"JH{- (r','... \. "f�'"' I OCTOBER PAGES WE:Ek'i;\'.�:t, �.;.< .. ,'. TOPEKA;":KANSAS, 6:, 1886. •• fSJXTEENP1_&IC?E l.l$� i .: < .' �"YE;A�. '\\ ' . ::��}.'1. . " ,- � ...... ' -. .'. .. teen buahels pe\: aere; south half. tatoo 'i' ;t! 'jf. :7o(.� I average'ln crop very light, px('ept mulched of and of pota- COUJlt. .clilnch:bugs •.. county tt'il bushels, and one-halt of thls are ,drO,!ltt;i; ·�r �� toes, which large and abundant.. Swpet are now In their KANSAS CROP bnsy gfit.tmg wheat: . REPORTS. ·Tb,:. : Qot salable; yIeld In north balf . I twenty-five potatoes are excellent and plentiful. Ap- ground is fn fair condition; filU J,afitdn!R�� :/.", bushels. oM corn on 10 : 'I'he 'KANsAs'FARMER tlns hand, per. eent.; pips much the week presents , mjured by drouth', have drop- "'ood','e- and Rtock feed will be ,p..... -,'. pltlnty.' • a full of mostly needed at home. I was the first to UH''_ very report the weather In Kansas pp(l ballly. toes are a fallure, there being not Joyel" � . use lister in this vlelnlty ; llsted acres durtna September and of the present eondi- fprty Doniphan.-Weatber during fourtb of a this year. . Septpmber ilrQP -SWI!8t.pota�;. Ion 'in 1881 and and. fifteen has t of th e crops. T he Is made of plowed planted aeree; been good; a rain are report np eVtlry wepk; lIg"t lin�oilld b.ot·be" better, of' • 1 IIsted ancl,',lenty,. short lett.ers from some before I planted the fiftt'ell frost on the last correseondents �6present- night of.tbe montb. OHrn, thelll. A.pp�'3s'a� scarce-trees juat-� Inl{ acres and some af....r; listed corn made from two nearly every county....The I{enl'ral con- tblrds of a good crop; many farmers ;In'ii: Into,ba8r1nl!;. ':A. teo to great many frult,tn!ieat dltlon Is twenty five bushels to the acre; thad as good. September was.dry In most report good corn as ,last year. A good' were nlanted thIs season. of, ",,This 'part, of planted made nothls g ; have listed ever deal or parts tbe State, .and wheat seeding was old corn on tbe drouth made Kansas Is sure tobe the stnce hand_; on ; all others the lister; corn- snme 00. pa��,pf the,f1'\l1� delayed that account, stili there I� a large adopting bnld As to the lister, some farm- growpr.. out 'r of wbeat planters ot date. has ers like It well :,." acreage sown, and most of It Is now Wbeat-seedmg and others do not.lIke It; It fiery Corn eommeneed .TackBon.":""September dry. vert' up and well. just ; acreage Increased 10 suits the exclusive corn growmg Corn is not per . men', those a short, raising light, ndt over half eron"•. No'old corn> C)d ceot. over last more than 60 cent. yt'ar. Ground - per of a full crop, per- very dry, dlverdlHed crops do like It. About all hand. was used thaD molstnre not. L.�r dJore. pitinter, tbere Is a hardly eoougb to sprout tbe the wheat ' haps, yet deal of as grain. Is done . good gooa corn seeding and mostly up and liked �uch better.: But very little as pasture very short and bare. was ever raised anywhere, and tbere Is F,,!l �lth"'lgh and looking well. Tbe condition of' the sown bere. . whe,!lt Ground and some hay crop is very Ilght I tbmk there will dl1 bard� old com on hand..An be (round II! good, and -tne fall also. unusually large pasture Fall pasture ver.y .. ot as poor.> plenty acre has been, Pota�.!'f&.bp,,� ' ,�)ff feed has been sO' tbat .feed! every eut feed Is tu Potatoes are a fair a quaDtity saved, . ,tOOk plenty. balf crop. oue Scal'Ctlly :an1, SW8!'t tbere Is and every bopes to have to sltll In ,�t.oeI,r • plenty.to carty tb� farmers 'wltb ali bay crop; early ooes, good; late ones, not Not a of � the good. very good crop apples. .' ',» tbelr sprtng, Light crop of early Sweet are . stock through ·tbe winter. Stock lS potatoes. potatoes rather a poor crop.!t4r .TackBon..-Tbe· weatber during Sweet potatoes a fair S�pteoltli�k' healtby and tn good condltlon. are average crop. Apple pies, tbe crop ever raised in App�es . largest ihlit ",asltl'nerally dey "nd warm, IMlveral crop and of medium :'l� a •. Allin 1,lght . quality. county..... fore cr�p all, tbe·State Is In , Hll{hland.-l'be part of Sep sbowt'rs tlut no Iteneral ralos. a�ut,ba�f ..Co"",j�tti.'·· tbe Coffey. ....:...Month. and tembt'r hot and ��� . very,ltQ9d condl.tion, people bave plEmty, war� windy and Very cOl_ltlnued dry; frequp-nt Ing.commenced: yield, tmltDlar�'nnu_ • sbowers since v�ry notwlthst8n4ln, �he 'season was eXQeptlon� dry,' CHrn, h�If.·a crop; farmer:i are �ather- tbe middle, wltb cool, pleas- ten to tor.ty bushel,S' P!ll' acre. little ._. � . Vtlry; '_� _' ant Corn will In most a . Ingoowj make ally'dCYand'warm. . .. pri·cetwenty·five tothlrty·cellts. days. old'oorn on band. .. places'" . Ttiellst.8r Is f·'.':·' :_._._.�" uliedby Very little old corn on soDle fiHlds are hand. The Ibter Is fatr�p; quite good.,Tbt'fe �o�� wb\IA others �tlck to :AtcMson.�Flrst .part. not tbe;(lIieet�welr. Septpmb�r dry, results were (!ood last c�nt of the old {10m crop or common tben turnfld c�. muc�.usell.; year, �� te,n.per o,! band.. '(lOol �'Ith �In ·In not this. W heat In two"h,or_se plan.tief:'�h' la.tet,� I,!lt�f ,pall.t·, p� : so!"'oO� �e'Il!IIRg ha�s ,�om- Il!e �Ister �as.� this. yan of Sta� . Ule_ �he : �ell�lked·; , .. U8ted�cor�1 ban!l. agrt'at ground bard and done and most of It up a'nd Is,very dry, ·du�ty. Fall olcely growmg the middle of'SeptelllbHr, 1S up. ('On­ deal Is to as The. !lsd preferred planter, the dry . Is In line The pasture very poor, owing to the drouth. shape. ground Is' In goo!i_r;baptl dltlon of the �rHund Is ratht'r but moist weather'does ndt It out as dry. dry bad nor Stock feed a for The fall wet, pl�nty; large acreage of corn plowing. pasture Is fine and enough to brln&t up the. wheat. Fall weatber drowned It out. little wheat PlUltUfe cut up. late and tht're Is a of v;.ery Early potatoes good; one!! very growing nicely, plenty hay is varlablA; In some localities r:r�D and sown, as the weather will oot of permit pre- scarce. Sweet potatnl's plenty and of Ilnd fodder. Ellrly potatoes are fair and and In tbe good. fresb, f)tbers, dry and brown. Stock but somll I' . paring ground; has been sown . are a fair . oue SWt'et quality. Apples, crop. genl'rally poor. potatoes a e filed plenty, a large aUlount of corn fodder. (or own use. farmllrs' Ground dry and fair to. !Coud. are Crawford.-September dry up to the 25th, Apples plentyIta Early Jl:ond; late a cloddy. Fall Feed will I vt'r! ones, vl'ry Ihtht pasture poor. be tben a rain. good git of small undersized fru1t. PI�tatUes I splendid Curn 'bt'tter tban was yl"ld. Sweet potatoes are of fine scarce, but stock Is In good order. Potatoes qualhy, the month of with a lair but expected dnrlng Au!Cust; some Edivaras.-Septt'D1ber warm, sunny and yield. Apples are plenty but of fair, f�w In tbe bill. Sweet potatoes a pieces very lI:ood. Considerable old corn on dry; Ja�t wllek cool. Corn .Is bavl' rath"r slllall size. very slim good; crop. Apples small and • jailing .hand. Have had no husked a little. badly. I'xpt'rlence wltb the Very little old corn. We Jefferson.-S.'vt'ral fine sbowel'll during lister but I myself, tho�e tbat use it IIkelt very like the lister, although opinions vary among the pll.t IUfinth, sufflcient to bring up '!I'ht'at Barber.-September dry and warm; some much. about some and fall small Wbeat.seedlng finl:;hed; a fllrmers, preferring .chec�·rowt'ril; pasturt', but more Is needad now. showers. Corn good, 90 per cent.; a larger acreae:e than usual sown. Condition those wbo use tbe liMtt'r think Cllfll some But that Ibted very sputted; pll'ces of t'arly­ large acreage. little old corn on hand. of ground v!'ry Itood. 'Fall pasture getting corn stands dry weather bolst. Wheat-seed- pllllltt'd Hnd rathl,r thin corn Is ; Lister was ulled, and liked well. little good gt'nel'lLl Very sbort. Stock ... feed, plenty for winter use. lUll: about the same asillst year; not a largt' IIv rage about 40 p"r ct'nt. 8f full crop. Old too dry and prices too low.. wheat-R�lldlng; Po�atoes a very lIe:ht a acreage. Ground �'IIII cnrn on .nODe worth ttl crop. Apples light dry. p sture and halld, mentinnlng. Ground medIUm condition. FlIll pasture crop, but what there are, are very e:ood. SIOl·k fllt'd first rate. One·balfa potalocrop. LI:;ter ·used largt>ly and well liked, good. Stock feed plenty. Potatoes rotting though Decatur.-�eptember warm and dry, with Sweet potatoes faIr. but lIIany made thll mlstakt' of the 8t'ed badly. Sweet potatoes �ood. No Appills, very few, gt'ttlnl{ apples; bllth willd�. Corn both tllO too'llew. good, early and late. lI:ood. thick. Tbe lister has cOllie to stay. . little old corn Very on band. Lister Jikl'd Ems.-·Fh'st part of Spptember, plenty of Wheat·set'dlng is done; prollably about one, continued cursed . �rown.-'Hlawatha.-Drought by some, by others.' Ground too dry. rllin; latter part dry, with frust two ul�hts tilth of u,",ual �own; louks vt'ry well until about tbe middle of had acrt'alte. September; aod hard to sow wheat. nt'ar Its FaU pasruredrylng close. Late corn, well workt'd, is a but will sOlon lieI'd ram. Groulld exct'pt considerable rain slncp. Corn Is better than !lry up. A great amount of feed good full coni not so surface fur fiv.. or six Incht's. was bHlng put up. crop; ellrly lI:ood, sal' Fall pasture anticipated; will probably average Pntatoe� not a large yield, but of two-thirds of a Htarted, but needs rain. bushels good qual- crop; wet'dy, uncultivated HI'Y short; mnch tweuty·five per acre. Considerable SWl'et .Ity. potatoes tbe same. no u;ol>d. No old corn. The Iistt'r is ctlrn cut up; probably f..ed enough. Pota­ old corn on baml. Lister was used almost ·I.com dry and much liked by tbose who have tried It aud tiles very IIgbt.; late Sw..('t exclusively; Is much and has Dlc1cI.n80n..-Abllene.-September nothing. pota­ Iikpd, been the warm. Corn will average between one-third know how to manage a ('rop put in with �t. tops fairly good. Apples are an abundant salvation of the crop the pr. sent seast)p. i and one-half a crop over this county. Old Wheat-st'edmg is irregular and ('rop hut slllall. Is In the backward, Wheat-seedhig prOl{ress: recent corn on 10 hand, per cent. Listpr is well and probably someWhat I('ss than tbe usulli .nwell-Spptt'mber was as fine a month , rains have put tbe ground In • t'x(wllentshil.�e likt'd; corn that was listed has stood the amount being :;own under the conviction that as we have eVt'r hari; no frost until the for plowlng.and dp-creased dry �tl\; seedinlt; acrl'alCe. weatber better do ! than that planted with a prices Dot warraut its extendell culture. have had .hree or fOllr showprs. but no of ground fine. vl'ry d very Fall pasture check· rower. Cond.ltlou Wheat-seeding very much de- Ground becoming dry. Fall pasturllgood as hl'ftvy rains. Cnrn is about two thirds of an 1- groWIDIC fint', bnt short ye�. Plenty of feed! layed by reason of dry weather. Ground Id usual, lind stock feed of average crop. Lots of old corn on on band If fed. pll'nty. Lll(ht crop hand. properly Early potatoes Fall dry. pasture good, and stock feed potatoes, owillg �o the early part of season Listed corn Is full as l!:ood l\S and vpry fine, late almost a fallnre. Sweet any 'other, Abuut (lne.half a Sweet tot'S pota'l plenty. crop of potatoes. btling dry. potatoes very good, ill thtl lister is well liked. Wheat seeding Is not up to an average. Apples dropped, .... fact the betlt we Apple crop light ever had. Appl..s ver) rlone and a l,uger sown than usual. off badly on account of "routh and wiud. Cheever.-Septt'mber acreage clear and two nice almost our I bril(bt; showefil during good, although first. Condition of the Itrtlunrl Is I(oori. F"U pas- Dutler.-Sl'ptember, till after middle of the first wt'ek, putting the soil iu fine tilth has turage Is also good, Rnd stock feed S month latter Harper.-Authony.-Sp.ptembtlr bl'pn plentiful. warm, part cool. Corn abont a i for and d harrowing sowlOg. Corn-buskinl!: Is vt'ry line, with three fine rains on the Potatoes are not ovt'r half of an average half crop. Little old corn on hand. Llhter' 14th, bl'cominl{ the order of the a day;' large 11th and 24th. Several days were crop. Sweet potatot's, good. The was UMed some; not liked. quit.. apple generalJy Vt'ry amount of half a light ears; crop. Old corn windy the last of the month. 'fhe corn 1:< ('rop Is good In all orchards old to .- whpat enough sowed. Grouod In good condl- on bl'ar. . '; l�ttle hllnd, 20 per cent. As to the the all cut Rnd tlOn Fall lister, I(enerally up, is quite light: lUay )\ .. pasture good. Stock feed . plenty. results are about . was warm !'qual; the Jnne planting Ilverage twent, bu:;hpls to the acre. John80n.-September and dry, both Irish and Consld- Pot.atoes, sweet, good. Ap· was put In with the Ilnly a few vl'ry light showers. Corn lister, hllnce the test was erable old corn In the hands of bUYllrs. and Is pies not a about lJalf and fair.. faIr one. Wheat-spedill!!; nearly fin : 80me In the hllnds of farmers. The lister sufflclllDtly ripe 1;1)" had a. cr�'p Clay.-Have but two slight showers IMhed; all V corn on nearly germluatl'd: four Inches' was uSlld by quite a numher of farmers, and hand. Tbe I. and frost to lI:�ther. thls.montb, t:!o do any damagtl bilo:h; strong and Ground in Ibter was ust'�� l�ttJer(lldand Iked much. Wht'at healthy. lI�ted corn stood drouth ... to gond th!3 much bett r crops or grass. Cllrn, sOllie Helds not condition, but needs rain. Fall finished and thevl'�y. pasture very' than corn planted with planters. The IIstt'r st't'Ellni·l� )'OUDII; wbeat Is worth and bave turnl'd busklng CAttle Into short aud dry. of lo"kl!lg very fine-never at tbls sea- EVI'ry variety fodder has will be generally used next year. Wht'at bette� R tbem; others cribbing now; yield live tQ fif-I been saved "nd In put stack and sbock. rQ- II • bRli been generally on ac- " I!elldlnlf dlliayed On " I,. (Continued page '-> - I OCTOBER 6, a KAN"S..A.e FARMicR�

little risk i& run in a antmal, not pecauae"of the perfect England known as "dOWDS." on which of keeping, Very only this kind with Merino emulsion formed by its mixtill'A in milk sheep wilre graze�-downs of Sussex, trial of grade or but because of its composition. downs of Hampshire, etc. Hence. we ewes. Those who pref�r the English peculiar the Sussex-downs. mutton breeds will always have a mar- which renders. it easily solubleIn PU1ILIC· SALES OF FINE' CATTLE.• have Oxford-downs, when acted the In the The ket for fat lambs and fat sheep." intestines upon by c;li­ D..tea ill..'tmed'only for salei ..dvert!sed South-downs. etc, South-downs, a .. fluids. This explains why:. IClNIA81.1'.a.BKIIB. sotnetimes called the Buasex-downs, are He has advantages that a farmer in gt!stive 14 - .... H,. Lackey'" Son, 8bprt-borJl., Pea- which will fatten up quickly upon' cicteber remarkably active. always on the watch, Kansas does not enjoy, and 'his sur- calf, 01 next Han.as OIt:v Fat milk drawu-naturally from it's dam.ls T:::r�B.::il WedD�."ay with an intelligent look, of tine make. are still what he Btock Inler S,ale Breeders' Association, Sbort- roundings different, Iho,., . thrive substituted on fat Udder, will not upon "om..' very hardy and docile', take very says in the paragraph quoted. is worth nor the new milk when fed readily and mature early; tt\e wool is thinking ab»ut in this State, for it is in food, upon to it from a pail, the latter fact being Best Breed of Sheep:for Proflt. rather short and coarse. The other line with what a great many of our due to the better mixture of saliva, The value;;of sheep is determined by DOWDS are 10 some way only a modified Kansas farmers want to do. which is a true preparatory 'digestive surrounding conditions. In the rezlon South-down, inheriting some or all of fluid, with the milk during ·the suckling of one or more large cities. the mutton their good qualities; the best among Thoughti on Animal Digestion. of calf and the irpperfect salivation breeds are most profitable and therefore them,' Perhaps being the Shropshire- the As suggested 'by Henry Stewart, in of the food when it is hastily swallowed most valuable; while far away from down, which are large-bodied, hand- - the New York PinUs, "there is a great from a Buch markets, it is better to rely upon some, orlginated, probably, from a cross pail. waste in feeding animals upon con- Much more of an interesting nature wool rather than' meat. Having this with the South-down and some other as various oil but with centrated oily food the might be said upon these points, fact in mind, one can easily understand black-faced sheep. in connection meals, rice meal and even corn·meal. forbids, and we must proceed to .why farmers in 'Pennsylvauia or -New long-wool breeds, Leicester and Cots- space This waste passea unnoticed, and is mention. some practical deductions York raise heavier sheep than we do in wold. even wrongly considered to be regained from them which serve to explain Kansas. It is cheaper t& ship the wool The improved Saxon sheep produce may . in the manure when it may not be sus- how food be and ,given of a ftock of sheep than it is to ship the the finest of all wools, perhaps, but they m'ay prepared pected, by the more intelligent persons so as to economize tbe fatty and oily sheep themselves, without regard to will hardly ever take the place now who mostly use these concentrated and avoid the far too common distance, but that difference is more occupied in the United States by the portions foods for the avowed purpose of adding waste. Perfect mastication and saliva­ than overcome, at least it is set off, by Merinos, which, after all is said and to the value of the manure, what may tion are the tirst requlsitesJotheperfect the Increased price of mutton when done in- sheep husbandry that needs escape from the digestive apparatus of of food. The saliva not only markets are near; so that, while to be said or done, will be the founda- digeetion large of it the animals. But when the oily part moistens and dilutes the food, but . flne w.ool is always in�demand, it IS tion, in part at least, of what will the food is. lost it is not regained in the exerts a chemio&l action upon it. It better for the farmer to consider meat finally be regarded as the best sheep manure, because oils and fats have no has the power of changing starch to as wellas wool whenever hercan get his here for the farmer. They are hardy, manurial value whatever.. It is there- combining one equivalent of sheep to market without ruinous ex- will bear herding in large flock� they sugar by how ran­ to fore of importance· to consider water chemically with it. and thus pense. It is well, therefore. even in produce more wool in proportion" farmers, stockmen and dairymen who it submissive to the di�estive Kansas, for the farmers to begin the weight of carcass than any other breed, dering feed of foods rich in oil in winter but it also aids In the emulsify- study of this subject. and it is the best wool, excepting oniy highly process, may save the most costly part of them of the oil and fat and of making As to what- breed is most desirable, the !lnest Saxon. And as to mutton, ing by securing their perfect digestion in these soluble. It IS clear that the food, , the object Qf raising sheep must be first the most that can be said against the A the animal's intestines. .It is well is all. the more economically dis- considered' and determinea. If for Merino is, that there is not much of it then, known that the oils and fats in food of when it .ts masti­ on one frame. Men do not discard trout posed thoroughly Dothing but wool, then the smaller the ' subataribea are valued two and one-half cated. To securethta end it should-bev breed the provided always, that because they are small fish, nor will better, and other and little times as high as starchy ground as finely as possible given the' wool is firat-olaaa ; if for mutton tBey discard these sheep simply carbohydrates, twenty-live pounds of in mixture with the coarse fodder. The chiefly" then the breedlsbouldjbe large, because they are not as large as some starch being estimated as worth no addition of to the food also makes the largest that williproduee a-grade of others. A matter of fact, Merino more than ten pounds of oil or fat; or it more savory and excites a coploua wool that isl:in. steady'demand; i if for mutton, when well made, is as good as to put it in another form, if a pound of flow of saliva during the mastIcation. both wool and mutton, ihe;best.breed is the best. starch is worth for food 1 cent, one The cost and labor of the food by which that whichiwill turn out the most meat A test of then mutton with other of fat or oil is worth 2+ cents, this is secured. is far less than an and the best wool. breeds was made at the late annual pound of these foods the of the vania and tbe market value oily for the gain in feeding. These are subject meeting at Beaver, Pennsy equtvalenc general statements, the excessive and being estimated on these bases, loss The enormous waste made in to modifications on accountjof climatic state Wool-Growers' Association, is all the greater if these fats and oils Is clearly shown when. the conditions or other local causes. Randall the one hundred judges who surrounded feeding are lost In-the where are in the of noted cows were unable to decide which manure, they rations used testing 8ays: "In selecting a breed for any the table valueless. are considered. The excessive bulk of.. all animals for absolutely . given locality, we. are to�take into con- was the best; prepared known food could not bave been digested, but sideration, first. the climate, the occasion were juicy, sweet, and de- It is a fact well by physiolo- feed,jand a8 and that no fat is has passed through the int.estines or the surroundtne natural circum- licious. gists physicians of more in the animal it waste, producing distur,bance healtl?­ stances, and second, the market English taste is a little acute, digested system except and final disease and death. facilltrea and demand. We should then perhaps in this department of the be tna state in which it is soluble in and but there is water, and that before the fluids ot One more fact should be noted, make ohoteeot the breedjwhich ...:with epicurean's pleasures, good for the and this is the important one, that in the the advantages2(possessed, (and] under authority, even among Englishmen, the digestive organs, gastric of a fine - can act of fats in the form all eircumatanoea.rwillyteld the greatest saying that Merinos can be made to pancreatic fluids, and the bile digestion substances these emulsion produced by thorough mastl­ net value of marketable products." produce first-class mutton. upon oily and faUy in this and is be in a condition of a cation, the conversion of the fats That putsj the.case accuratelY.'iiEvery But it is too small for profit, it must not only soluble. form into a soluble condition is very farmer in Kansas] ought to:study this profit the farmer needs. If the good perfect emulsion. but wholly little animal fails to much accelerated and assisted by a subject carefulty, because our towns are qualities of this first-class The highest microscoptc power be done. faintest indication of small quantity of fat already in a state growing rapidly,�our�railroad mileage is can be put into a large one let it show the any the sall­ , Hence . as of the wool or ducts in the absorbents of the of solubility. complete increasing largely, and our market and Save as' much possible pores and the blood is rein- vation of the food by a slow process of transportation facilities are multiplying quality, save the animal's hardiness intestines by which . some of the fat of the new matter. Free mastication, by which steadily. docility, and increase the size forced and fed with not taken is in its character by the mix­ The Cots frame even though the quality of the and uncombined fat will be changed . 10ng-wooIJfsheep, :r.-.s} wolds, is a pre­ meat be in nowise improved. Can this up by the blood, nor will it mix with it, ture with the saliva, necessary Leiceiit;i_iiii:i Lincoii1:>iiaveitiii,largest the KANSAS FARMER or the walls of the ab- Iiminary to the perfect digestion o( bodies,11going� as�higb,,:as three hundred be done? The pass through fat in the food, and this �and answers yes. We believe our farmers, sorbing vessels. The principal supply remaining poundsQ:sometimes, they.iproduoe mode in be- the blood is not taken bears so plainly upon the not only the most but the best mutton. especially those of them that have of fat to up by from the which concentrated foods are best In�this', country lthe;lCotswold;ris� most come well situated and have their. the direct absorption, but per- obvious to and need to tected which is taken the given to the animal" as to be popular among .the .Iarge1breeds.1 [It is lands improved enclosed, chyle up by the reader and needs no special remark. make such a change. Let Merino laeteals, and passes into the portal vein bred·:·principallYlfor·:mutton;�;..gl'OWS�UP ------�--.------ewes the best stock be selected and on its to the heart, where it rapidly to a large.atze ; and also gtves a of passage The Commercial Department of Campbell large, (handsome fleece;';lis always fat; bred to a Downs ram, -then make mingles with the circulation. During University (Holton, Kas.,) offers unusual another cross with Cotswold. Or, Jet the absorption of the chyle, the villi, 8ndiwhen�not:kept I too; fat is: a prolific of intes­ facilities In the departments Type-writing breeder. structure the Cotswold is the trial be made first with the large or absorbing membrane of the In. and Stenography. substantially. and symmetrically built, breed. Experiments thus far made in tines, becomes white and opaque: and ------having large, well-developed bodies this direction have resulted satis- the cells are filled with brilliant The Amer1.can Dairyman says that the A farmer who of Oil which is in a soluble who a cow with a view restinl( on strong limbs, and it IS a rapid factorily. Pennsylvania globules dairyman buys big grower. has studied this subject a great dea.l and condition. It is mteresting to mention of selllne her carcass for beef when through Ilkened The Leicester has longer wool than has experimented with breeds, aiming here that these cells are so small that with her In the dairy, has been aptly an several end measure to the man who bought engine the Cotswold , and the Lincoln has at the best breed for the farmer, says: 1,600 of them placed end to times too large for the work he had to do. better. Some persons prefer the Lin- "One of the surest plans for profit is to only one inch. and their diameter IS less with a view to selling It for more as .old Iron for;mutton,�also; but it is doubtful purchase good, strong, grade Merino than balf their length. It is thus seen when worn out. whether any of this class will ever ewes and cross them with a long-wool how.exceedingly finely the oil or fat of supersede the Cotswold Ameri- ram, feed them well and have the lambs the food must be divided even to reach Farm Loans. among • can the ewes fit then It must be farmers. Large sheep do not thrive come early; graze every day these cells, and even Loans on farms III eastern Kansas, at in large flocks. A thousand Merinos in on a rye field. Sell the lambs at four or made soluble or it can not gain any en­ moderate rate of Interest, and no commis­ one lot would do quite as well as fifty five months old; they will bring high trance to orany combination with the sion. Where title is perfect and securlty sat­ Cotswolds or Lincolns. prices-over three dollars per head. The blood. Butter fat as it is contained in Isfactory no person has ever had to wait The Downs or middle-wooled sheep, mothers will fatten in time tor market, the milk and has been formed in the a day for . Special low rates on large loans. Purchase money mortgages . the name from cer- use of the kind take the nature of or, if retained to for another crop mammary glands is only bought. T, E. BOWMAN & Co. tain tracts of poor, sandy land in lambs, their wool ought to pay the cost wbich can be readtly digested Lby an Bank of Topeka Bulldmg, Topeka, kas . • . .. 1886. s- . �aNer�f;I'- F��ME.:R�

great deal the,most money per pound on BRBBDEB8' D�OTORY. SEEP. the butterlne.. lIIEaINO SHEEP, ... o( lo\ree"- � Ie,_...... lAo .Br-et4. We have now commenced prosecu­ ..... � (or .1 ·_ f5;.. /Ot ""-"Ia; Berk_bl";' Hop, Short-bam Oat­ ..... and ".rletiftl or Itfall. Butter in Ohio. tione for violations 9f the law and shall MM UNMI ,L.I!I"'_'. 01 1M ,.... tip. tblrty Bogue '"" Ie _ lAo -.IM...,:::._ 0' lAo cl"'Poul�. AlIbrHdla.1tMk nconttd IItr l>lIe ID _ Mr. continue' our best efforts in direc­ ,.",. .. Epl Henry Talcott, Assistant DaIry Com­ this IOD. Wrll. for _..I••DII .,. missioner. In a recent letter to the Cleveland tion. Some difficulty has 'been ex­ "rteel. HABay MoOi7LLeun. Ptaindealer makes known some Important BoasBs. FaJetle. Mo. in our facts concerning the bogus butter traffic In perienced police courts in gett�ng that State. He our DOWNS. - Ed. Jon•• W..kel.ld. says: cases in propershape for trial, which TROTTING HOR"E8 ..nd Ola,. 00 K.I.• breed.r.Dd Import.ror IbropeblN. TH8ROUG"BB.ED-�NDPoland OhID. H.... bred·.nll for _Ie. Write for SHllIlPSDIRE. we with a littIe WI Do.D.. A iiumber of ....ml.nd .... ftlr _I•••t 1_' I presume no one' will question that hope experience '11 ",1111'_. O. B. N•• K... HlldrMb. toD. prl_.Io!lCOrdIDlltO.qu.1 t,. the first and most of soon be obsrated, and that a bogus im:portaot object W. MoAF-BE, Topell:.. K...-For .. utra PO. RFGISTERED MERINO IHEEP.. butter dealer who violates the law can • ahort-bom Bnll.. A H Ifood a.trIatered I.,IIS10 Ol:vd_ .. 1<0011:1 the law was to IMPROV1l:DI.Dd·Ohln. £10", Lllrht Brahm , Plymonl.b correct the daIry pro­ ••1. Ho... , 'l'hree mll....0fTopen. lUI It. ro.d. he taken into court and punished as .Del BroD..Turll:e,_•.u ofprl..·wtDDlnl.Ualna. bniol .Dd for "'e b, R. T. McOone, ".Bro • Lee'. BumlDlt. our . ducts of State and the sale . prevent 'as .those who there JacII:IoD oonnt,. Mo. speedily appear CATTLE. 9f imitation butter for genuine. To this every morning and are puntshed for V. PUGBLEY,Plalt.bur.,Mo.. breed.rof,lfnnro 1Ioc1t end has our COtOmiBBiQn worked. Bach getting drunk or for dtsorderly conduct ORl!EIt HERD OF SHORT·HORN OATTLE H • IhNp. K_.Verlollod nearl, 17lbe.; ...... FISH of the leadlDIl "".>111. bead.. b, ... IhI. to 88" lbe. Estra r...... Dd .WIII for ...... _ Ih.ren D.II:A. Oattle. of kind. It most is of far -eonot�ID' _. Yeun. _k for ..I•. Hnl.'eln _ Oommissioner had about any eertainly Bath'!, ). thirty counnes .... BroD.. Turll:.,I.· ylolMn a-rdl.lIy ID"'tId .nd 'more importance to the people, because ....me. Waller IMImer. proprleter. Garoett. w::... to look after, and in my division are POULTRY. they are imposed upon by having to pay located most of the and HERD OF IHORT·HQaN OATTL1I:.­ cheese factories - an unjust price for imitation butter and OAK.WOODAll �rd". 0...101' br" .DI._I, for ..IL PriCH HILL POULTRY YARDS. P.nN·.bre4 low. Ternaa -,. 1m...... Earl of Glooter .Dd Air· . COLLEGEBrOWD Leaborn aDd Houd.n 1'0 ..1. for ..I.. EIIII creameries of Ohio. It was deemed best being made to eat it when they do not drle BeN of IltaroD 4tl7U head herel. 0 S. BJchholts, in ...... D. a.Dd for prl_. W. J. GrfIIlu•• Coli... . bos 1201. WloJalta. 1: ... Hill. M.Dbatt.n. K... , to notify all parties fairly of the law and desire to. Bince our different arreste have been made in Cleveland the dealers W. H. H. PI....t Mo POULTRY YARDs-T. S. make them OUWIFF. Hill. .• pro­ JlawlIT. .understand it plainly before DR.prl.torof SUNFLOWER are getting up their signs and com­ ALTABAH BERD proPrleto�ifr'::O�8·.\ lfD FOWLS. we attempted to enforce it by proseou- Pa....bred. of the "." .raw. 'or thl. _u'. tnId•• to imitation butter and breeder of fuhloaabi. Short·homl. Stralll'ht . mencing sell agree- coDlllt.IDII oltbe ..Ieet .Dd I..dlall "arlftl"- s.all for Beoe or SbaroD bull.t head of h.rd': Fine Iho. hno. tiona, We thought we could do this my De••nd Importaotclrcul.r. Batl.factioD .. ably to law, and purchasers can buy the and other Mock ror Ale. arant·�. work by: the Istof August, butlworked goods knowingly. OATTLE.-A. J. O. O. cattl of REPUBLICAN POULTRY YARDS. as hard as I J.rae, •• could and did not fairly JERSEYDoted bDt"'r '.mlll... o�wa an effort is now hmll1 .Dd ,onlll ROCB:S.-W. E. Donel, K.... I learn that being Itncll: 01 etCher Ie" for _I.. BeDd for �rell:a. the work until the 20th of cataloga.. O. W. pLYMOUTHbreeder of PI,mouth .RocIl:I. KIp, ,1.10 per 11. accomplish • ' Talmadge. OenDetl Grove. K... , made in other cities, like Akron and Blrdl fur ..Ie .t lrom ,t to f5 eaeb. -. AUgllst� Many biends, of the law be: the· trade as ' Youngstown, to start up -·Blm Parll: PI-ce. lA.rence K... D. 411 PollI: Itreet, North To� Ir; _ came iliJptltient because lawsuits were GUERNSEYS.L. Bnllen•• d••ler ID rerrll�d Gn.rn., Came. JENOK:� advanc�s. A • breed. the ....lI:lui, and Plttiia' 1 .. the price of butter for ..I•. CoDger geQuine Y.nDllllieck Televbon. coDDectioD t.o farm. of &ocD. ftlr ..... '. Dot commenced. and even desired this PJymon'b YnuDgiltecll: , The citizpns of places assist no �Jl m\lst where violatiolls had occurred. To D. WARREN.t OO Mapl. Hill. K.... lmllOrt· the commission not'fiI cat·lOn when W ..... POULTRY YARDB.-L. E PllIl.,•••• by ....It K.... b-.ler'of E. B: R. all such'we cool." 1 '!.� EUREKA•• Wi.ndntlea•. Gtuliea, say. Not ou�.. - .... "Keep ...Dn"" ••�deebnnl·olrl ,l�', bpt'n np tne present writing; Septem- �'" ,,'? our law-makers djd give us a\lthority to bPr 17th. 1\ single large shipment of an): flo so. without.men �r monl'Y W carry It imitation huUer made in any other city into etIect. Anv citizen has a right to or fllctory in Cll'veland.. For the last prosecute unde;' t.be food'. laws. The CATTLE AND SWINE. three months the· two 'Cleveland but· POULTRY YARDS-.JDO. G. H...ltt city boards of health should i:elax no SHAWNEEProp',. Tupeka. K... breeder of obolce ftrtetl. of terine factoril's have the entire H. ALBERTY Ob.roll: K P. Cochlnl •• supplied ... , m.ltea.lpeclaU, Poult.r,. WJIBDdottelaDd peclalt,. BIlla in this and .. efforts direction, every per­ M • of bh'edlnR iiolllelb.l"rI D .nd J.rae,. oaUle. ..Dd chlcll:. for Ie. trade. Clark & Co. did not .make a PolaDd·OhID.SwtD. aDd Plymonth Roell: 11'0..... Erlll son must dOl his as a citizen duty good for lalA. AU attock recorded. r.ttle .nd 1.IDe of botb DOLLAR PER THIRTEEN-For Erp from pound of it for many weeks until the leS81 for ..Ie. to help enforce t.hese laws. Our new Correl;;oDdeDoe IDyUed. ONEmy choice PI month Roclt Fo.le aDd utra PeItlD 6th of August. and none worth mention- . . Ducll:l. Mark S. Sall8bury. 8ox81. Kan_Oit:v. Mo. soon come 10 f revenu� law will orce, VIEW HERD-Of Short. was made the Thoroaghbred ing by Union Dairy Com- hom Obeoter White .ad Novembf'r 1 t and tben h 'the pLATTEoattle. Berlllblre HOIlI. s. we ope Addreu E. M. MISCELLANEOUS. pany for the city trade. There was no FloDe," 00., Bos 790. F",moDt. N.b. ta.sk of watclnng th!l counterf... it sale of excuse for selling imitation butter be· PARK STOOK FARM.-T. A. Hnbb.. S. 131 K.o188 ....DO K... imitation butter will be made easier; rd. URMY. •• Toj>ell:a. ; X breed.r of • LI". 8tocll: Auctioneer. Sal.., m.�. I•• cau'i6 butter was so ROMEWelltartoD. .... hl,b.jlrad. Short· S 111 part genuine very cheap. h.m car or but it th ... n our eternal Oottle. B1 h,t lingle. ...110 breeder of of tbe Sl.to. OOr.....poudence .ollolted. will rpquire . Imitation butter has been sold by the pnl.nd·Chlna .Dd Large Engll.h Berll:lhlre 1I.lne. and all the we can r••pectIOD ID'fIIeti. WrIt.. vigilance help get . Cleveland factories for 11 to 13 cents per -C! A. SAWYER. M.DhattaD K... Llv� Sloek ADo .from others to cause dishonest dpalers O. ttoo.er. Saipi mad.ID .il the 8talea ':Dd ("'anad. now Gnod NremAce. Have full H�rd Book.. CuD· pound at wholesale. and the retail SWINi!:•. leta of to be properly punished. for so much pilei cataloga", prices are from 11:1 to �5 cents per pound money can be made in this counterfeit because it has been sold fot' genuiQe manner that they will continue to take Ilnd the even with butter, price put up the risks. it so no could rest. the Cattle. SuspiclOn upon J' M. MoKEE, W.llIngtoo. K.... b....td.r of Poland· Jersey goods. We purposely waited a few Business men ot to-day need to know r�.';, Cb�I�.hl�f,�o::dAlln�· r..�v�:II:d.;�%e�UII';!�: Fifty Hero{ Reglater and Grade CoWl and Helf· to the of something besides and pen· days let retail scoundrels book·kepplDg _W_rl_te_. � _ ers for sale. Stlldent.'! of the commercial ' Cleveland get fairly t.o work violating manship. OOIlK, 101•• IC.... thlrt1 ,e.re. bret'der Also several Bulls at low priOOll. department of Campbell University (Holton,. ROBERTof Poland·Obloa S ..IDe of tbe ver:v be.t .nd mo_� Address the law so we W·ould have several cases prolllable .tralDI Breeden reglltererllD O. P.·O. R. O. F. SEARL, . . in the Univer- lTIay enter an'll Cl.ttS8fl8 • 10 e cour and lD' Ka9.,,) 80101;I1"n ..cIty. Kanne to. commence upon th ts; • stty without extra charge. almost every instance 10 that city those ... ��. 'fan1��?;,.D I�r'.!�6rrg� _._ _..:.._-.--- H!:?O'. 3.��r:e), .nd Fa. . who sell the�oods did to do it Sb08p, W,.antlottool taDg.ban YOUDllllocll: attempt used for ..Ie. Wrtte for terml. Choice, Highly-Bred' Soapsuds may be advantageously ------unlawfully. ih a mean and contt'mptible around the p�ar and peac�1 trees. It is quite GROVE HERD OF POL...ND-OBINAS. manner. some of them WAf,NUTV. B. Ho..ev, "roo·rletor. bns 103. ropeka. It.. claiming they an undertaking to carry them to an orchard, My bOIll are _trlctly tboroollbbr.d. uftbe ftDe't .tralnl HEREFORD never handled imitation butter when but. there are trees and grape vines usually 10 Am.rloa, All breetl... ",corded 10 Oblo Poland· I1hlna Record. QhlerCommand.r Nn, 8;7� aI, be d Of BULLS and the lying scoundrels were then showing growing near the house and kitchen which hord. Plpfor ..le. 'Nm·2 '" 10 montbl.frem '10 10 f2Il HEIFERS, it to the trade and to the will be benefited the use of the it and selling greatly by For sale reasonable. Coma or write for Prfr. suds. very ones to whom they were talk·jng. . _ vate Cata'/.ogue. LIAII BERK8HIRE PUI., The imitation butter fac�ories of Cleve- Rt. .nd 8. Blinders on a horse are 'al ways worse than _. ('��:��.frt':R!�L���:_tlO up"ar F. M. Roo.. o & Co., Bnrllngam@,KaII.,or BoODVIll•• Mo IN TO land have been earnest hi their efforts useless. This animal has intelligence HEIFERS CALF BEAU REAL AND BEAU MONDE. ta ,ecure the sale of their goods by the enough to be mo.re afraid of what he can't GROVE HERDOtl' REGISTERED P"L\ND· 'ELM!I OblDa D Smltb. G_nleaf, see than of what he can. The blinders SwID.'_Z. dealers in compliance with the law and W..bh·lIlon 00.; .La_ Baa OD baDpro:rr,otor.pllll or .11 ORO' at relUJonable prices. Write for "II_ want or come them chafe the eyes a horse Is In you & have furnished in every in8tance'llnv�riabIY w�el� aDd lee. B.tllfaction gnaraDteed. SHOCKEY GIBB, motIOn; and If they do not IDJure the eye- the IawfuI placard to be put up in their:I . . 0.. Kan Kansas. sight. as they often do, they are a perpetual PLUMMER. 11" ('lt1. .... 'l-reeder of Lawrence, to WM.Reenrd"" Pol.nd· Oblna 8wlo�. AllO stores. fairly notify the public I Llllht t�at source of useless discomfort.. Brahm.Ohlcll:en.. Stocll: for ..Ie at reuoD.ble rate•. they sell the goods. and also With . 1010 breeder of tbe stationary free. giving full MARSHALL. , Ineat SUNNYSIDE STOCK FARM inii�ructions HAY FEVER SUFFEBEus.-The number �'.�i.!'I�!�'r how to llilt up ttoe notICes I POI.AND·OHINA HeGS AlfD proper and, of people aunually afflicted with this most PLYMOUTH ROCK _ OHICKENS. use after all this the labels; but. seems to be on tbe .had : annoying malady greatly Elflliin _·OD. ,I ror lB. OatalOllUe free. * ** been done. the dealers then commenced' increase. ·The editor of this jour­ ------' BROS., WID8eld Kao., b,..,..dp.nof 1.•rll8 the sale of these imitation butters in a naIls an and with a view to ar..ilUal Victim'. BAHNTGEEOll1l8h Berk.blre Swine or "rtze·';'IDnIDllltraln•. NODe but tbe .. ·countf>rfeit manner. the discover a speCIfic, has tried llumerous re:n­ best. Prices ... 10 ao tbe lo....t Oor· asking same: - respondeDce IIOhclted. " for them dId for edles. Of these Cream Balm" Is price they. genuine •. Ely's all odds ·the and most satlsfac­ ILLUSTRATED JOUt:NA·L.-A mil aDd com· dairy or creamery butter that cost them by qUickest OURpl.te hI.tory of th� Polaad-Oblna HOII sent rre. tory, two applications greatly allaying the on application. Stooll: of all &.JIea and coDdiUonl for from 3 to 10 cents per pound. Their 8810. Addr..,8J. oil O.STRAWN. Np...ark.Ohlo in the nose and 'We would usual trick has to place ,�veral sympton-Is (lY(ls. ?een recon mend its use by all subject to hay tubs of poor genume butter for sale by SHEEP. fever and we bear ullsolicited testl. gladly F. R. FOSTER. SONS. TOPEKA. KAfi . the side of fresh butterine and give to its in our own case. * ** efficiency lock bo" Kal.. _00- mon; . HOFFMAN. 808, WIchIta. R ..""or. anil de.I... In 'I'boro...hhrtd and Grad. customers their and • ceasor to 11'0:1 & breeder aDd of . choice, they, sup· -Medw (Pa.) Record. R Alkew, Importer HEREFORD' ·CATTLE•. Thornugbbrtd Bnlll for ,,,,,,,Ice 00 hand. posing it was all butter, would choose PURE SPANISH OR AMERIOAN MERINO 8H�ER. '�oe

. - ror on the butterine.. The scoundrels desire Send for a CataIogue 0f Cam pbeII {TnI Bab,. Lord Wool .nd YOUDI( Lord Wool .t head of breedlDg r8lll!On_bl. terms. All Buill reg_lI&eJed 11""11:. 1"111. rami aDd e••• for ..I.. OorreipoudeDce aDd lIu....D'eed b,eed.n. Com••Dd 108 Ii". W. oiIa to have them do this for they make a verslty (Holton, Kas.) 1I01I\lf� l\Dol ..tlBfactllOD guaraDteed. 101,,0n. • • KANSA.S F,ARMER. OCTOBER 6.

Ground In lood on sandy solis: some field� Injured by Stock fel'd genelally well preserved count of beIng too dry to plow. (Oontinued from page 1.) dry. chInch cut for winter teed, ------raIns. Good fall bugs; DlostIy ------condition since last and In quantity to carry through If stock 18 zood little old corn In this county. Th� SOIl a and u abundance of. stock flied. Very e conilltlnn of the are past ure, SOD of tbe year • The sheltered, Early po�toes good; late, of beth-kinds of potatoes. lister has given gt'neral satisfaction, although Is good; pesturage Is light, but lmprovmg, failure. Sweet plltat��.s, early. are zood, A very Kood ylt'ld some were raised on surface There are but one or two orchards beartna very good crops and there Is a ph'nty of stock ,feed. Early and late on-s are' very poor. The apple A acreage of wheat hat; late ones drouth. fruit In tnls cnunty. planting. larger are a good crop, but the crop Is 1I1111tl'd and'damage" by thl' potatoes been sown than was expected In the fore small and dry, wIth light local are light, Apples are unusually Mitchell.-Frt'quPllt rains dnrlng Septem- Osuge,-Sl'ptember and dust. part of tbe season: very little sown before have heen droppmg. south west winds have 'pre- showers; the same olilstory-wlnd ber; ordinarily" farmers are a fair and of the 15th, and busy sowing yet. Some flelus of corn are . warm; big rain the vallsd wl'ather has been satisfactory. Corn, yield Labette.-September ; condition. Fall nothing but Ground in good pasture first then very up to the 27th, fields good of sound corn, twen- 'golld quality; many very poor, week, vv�rm many yield fille and stock well. 'I'nere seems and some that. �ome old very doing with frost on the 28tfi and 29th. Corn Is cent. shrunken beenuse of poor cultt- nubbins, hardly ty per to be a abundance of stock fel'd, and C01'U on hand. Those who have used the great from one-fourth to one-thtrd crop on prarrle vation and ehineh-bugs. Old corn on hand more a:rass belne cut than, ever be­ One tenth Ibtd' differ In ; some elarm that prairIe and three-fourthscrop In bottom. about ten per cent, The llster Is certainly uplulun fore. 'Potatoes rather poor on account of used but llsted corn wltl stand the dry weather much old crop of corn on hand. Lister popular with the ma-ses ; SOIll", however, others dry weather and potato bugs In the early Whent- .. better that the old wa),: but gave good satlsfactlon. would not accept of It as a gift. Wher It rhau planted llttle, season. Sweet think there Is but little If any; p'ut of potatoes generally Is done, and has teen put In Is II... results are good. dlft'erencl', seeding mostly properlv managed finl'. few trees have much of the corn Ilsted this season had to be very Very apples; in excellent shape ; a areat portion thereof Wheat sPt'l1lng, not milch In �'et, nor will made a nue growth. rather cent re-Ilsted. No wheat sown )'et that 1 know up and looking well. Ground dry. there be more than stxty (jr seventy per some farmers are talking of sowlug, but Puttawatomte.-First two weeks of St'P, Fall pasture never better, Plenty of f"l'd; of last year's acreage. The condition of the of; waiting for the chinch bugs are so bad tember were very warm and dry, but last two got scared and. saved 1II0re than around Is vl'ry nice, Fall pasture Is good rain; everyone rains. and the so It would be of ito use weeks cooler. With several copIous common. Potatoes half crop and fair qual- where not overtaxed, More stock feed being ground dry until we an old soaker. Fall pasture dry Corn will be about a haJfcrop; early-planted Ity. Sweet potatoes one third 1\) one-half a saved than ever before; much sorghum and get Is were well till..d are SPV' lind especially prairie. Btock feed the best; fit'lds tqat crop. Apples, one- half crop on black soil, corn cut. Potatoes, Irish, a light crop. bare, COI'D on was rather light, butan unusual much the best. But very little uld and "ood crop and line apples on whIte and pnty ppr cent.; early Ohio, a good yleld and plenty: hay best where It amount of corn was cut up. Early potatoes band. Listed corn' is much the a:ray Roll. nice. SWt'Pt potatoes, large and abundant, much corn 1'1'111 - Were but rotting badly; late not was not dropped too thick; listing Leavenworth.- Leavenworth. St'ptPIII' and of good quality.. Apptes, late fall and good, next re- account. SOOle have had very luck and be practiced pretty generally year, ,� ber to the 9th WI\S hot -and dry, when wlnter,.have grown wonderfully thIs month. good fine sweet whileothers theresults this have been satisfactory, ftllshlllg showers and cooler weather carne; Muntgflmery.-September, first part, was raised large potatoes, year have small ones. a middling Wbeat-seedlng has not commenced yet, and' three -ralns since and tnereased eooluess ; hot, with occasional rains ; latter part, cool. got only Only of winter summer and fall as the season has been so dry,'not much last days quite cool; no frost; hardly rain Corn Is dry enough to crib. and varies ,rom crop apl'lles; more at:lli to 50 cents per plowing for fall wheat has yet been done; enough YE't for all wants. Oorn, no change nothing to fort.y bushels per acre; average, plentiful; selllng there will not be much sown: Grounci Is : since last report, except It has all matured fifteen bushers. Wheat seeding Is mostly bushel, Osborne,-Downs. pleasant Fall pasture poor�QNjt, Is get­ and generally put In shock; some of 'gnOrl done. The condition of the ground ts dry -September, very lumpy. rain farmers haye-·eat a But corn weather most of the month, with 'good tlng better. Many up quality, some poorly filled and light. and generally line; faIr pasture good; the 18th. Corn was damaged chinch large share of their corn-fodder, a!!d a-good little old corn on hand. The lister Is not fodder. much of It, dried up 11011 heavy rains QII by and an of twenty-elght of has been putup. PoI.atoel!rot- generslly··used, but where It was, some Iik.. damaged tt.. Potatnes, one fourth of a crop; bugs, average crop supply hay the bushels to tht! acre Is all It will make. Old ting badly from some killd of dry rot; ,crop _arid some ·t:I.lshke it:" Wheat seEdIng, swpet .potatoes, fifty bushels 'ppr acre. and reltJaln:Jer'I� corn on hand, probably one-l'lghth of last Is sbort. SWl'et potatoes' have done, well, bulk Is generally doue and the appl"R, half a crop but very good. Tte lister was used soml', and and will be a filII crop. Appll's are not over. ,.; -:.: bl'lng pushed forward-Is up and coming up Murrl8,-Spptembl'r vflry dry lind hot; .yeilr's crop. on ac· of excellent of the Is Corn Is gl'nl'l'ally with unsatisfactory results (lue-thlrd crop, but are quallty. finely. Tbe cOII�ltion ground good vPI'y little wind; no rain. yielding , count of not In much favor here. rain In firs't � ,! :for plowing !lnd,�eedlng. 'Fall pasturage'ls hettt'r than was I'xpectpd; think In thIs vl- pour stand; 'Rawltns.-There· was the Farmel's are nl'arly through with the balance of the s�ort, �ut. rains ht\v�Jstal:ted tile ·g_rass and it cln.lty It wIll averal(6 thirty-five bushels. No gO'nerally week of Septen,bl'r, and condition In good last three \. Is growlllg'weU.. S'took feed Is scarc", liilt old corn on hand. Lister used III oVl'r three- whellt'Reedln�: ground month \\'8S "ery dry; frosi' the short. .\.. at and wheot Fall pasture corn and will ,With economy wIilslipply the wants. Early fourths of area planted h,ere, and YIelded growIng. days. Early planted Is good Potatoes ar� a was with Stock feed shortl'r than usual. and bushels potatoll8 wllre good; late ones flillure. least 20 ppr cent."over what planted make bl'twet'n thlrty-fi.ve fifty a and rottlnll,". �weet pota- though the late rains have startl'd the vlRe. corn·planter. No whpat-seedlllg Yilt. Ground IIgbt crop many pl"r acrA; late corll Is not so good-hurt by toes .... 0sborne.-8ep- corn Sweet potatoes have come out well., iuatur- t"o dry to plow. FilII pa�ture all dried up; good. Apple:; poor chlncb bugs and drouth. Listed did tembt'l' warm and uutil 20th; cool after ing of unu�ual sIze and quality, Apple!', feeding stock now. Not enough fel'd to dry pretty well; In old �round It does better wel'ks fa- dOIl't but wltb frosts the last two days. sod cultivated wltb winter varieties, with past three cllrry thrnugh what stock I� here, I that, dry, than a plallter; but the some corn dam- vorable weatbt'r, have Improved,· are good, think. Potatoes are a very Iia:ht crop. Not Corn dried up very raplilly; the acme pulverizer, beats thelU all. Wheat little old . corn tbolfl1.'h not of tbe usual size. enough sweet potatoes ralsl'd to make any agt'd by chiacb bul1,'s. Very l!eedlnll," Is not nearly all done, but tb�t 20 cents. The lI&ter was Lyon.-W..ycnft'.-Septeu,b"r had a few mPlJlllln of. Apples, hardly enough to last on hand; wortb which wall sown In thll first part of.Septem­ used to a extent and well lIked, al- Is In IIgbt local showers, but oth'rwlse It was to Jalluary lRt. great ber Islonklng splelldldly. Ground good In sOllJe cases where ground was not nevt'r very dry. Corn hi of good quality, thllt Is; Nemaha,-S"ptpmb"r carne In very dry; though condition; faU pasturage was better, broken corn dId 1I0t do well; It Isthe of corn sound, but ttie crop Is no better than last reo good rllin on tilt' 3d, since which have had deeply save tbat It Is a little dry; plenty to corn bere. Wheat-o;elldlng .ported-one·half of the averag" crop. Old r.;III!', a.d pverything t'xcept corn Is I1,'rl'en way plant lip for stock ft'ed though but lIttle wIld hay; Corn·fields well on the but wIth a mucb smaller on corn 18 very flcarce. The lli:lter watllJot used Ilk .. spring; no killing frost. way, millet good. Potatoes, half a crOll hllh Condition of ground very Itood, a In this locality, but In other l(oIcallt.leH In the look Ilk" Dl"cl'mb..r, dead and dry: turning acreage. land and full crop on the bottoms. Sweet little Fall Immenwe cllunty it was used to the entll'e slitisfaetllln (lilt bpttl'r than was,exp"ctl'd; think It will dry. pftljturesplt'�dld. potatoes very good, not ot stock feed put up, especially ot of tbe partle9. Wheat seeding is throll!{h, make about I'lghtl'en bUtiht'ls; quality qualltIties Reno. '- Septl'mber dry; raInfall tbree- Short crop', has bet.'11 cut down the Sma I'" I ns short and not Rnd sorglluln. potato qual- but the avera"'e... hy very gOlld',parI' gra hay fourths Incb; frotlt on the 29th; weather ale a fair and a fe, ble pn about two good. Swel't !>Otatoes crop dry weather. The plant is IIJltkllll;l' vl"I'Y plump. Old ellJ'n haul1, Ity wIndy. Corn Is beIng husked for feed. and of .. and fall The lIt1t�r was Apples abundant, cOilslderlng age start. Thll ground Is v ry dry, pas· thIrds (If last yellr's surplus. good. will do to crib In a few days; crop nearly an Stuck must soen IlI'l'e live and is stead- orahards. ture poor. fl't'dltlg begill, intml1ucpd years all;O, average yltlld. But little wheat-seedinK has Ottawa.-Had mlns tbe fore part of as the grazIng Is almost gOlle. Putatoes are lIy gaining g'ound; is g.n..raHy wellllkl'd, good been done In thIs n't'lghborhoud, owIng to are rpsults thau none since; gettlnl'; quite dry. npt more than half a crop. Appttltl and in Illllht cases give!' better St'ptellIber, weather, cblnch bugs, and tbe poor crops with dry .. 8l'ltSon. we corn (.Juru Is about one-balf crop compared sn,all and rlp nlng before their planting, be!'allse plow too shallow; of the last two or thrt'e years. ConsIderable about to !Cattier. Vt'ry llttle old Marion....,Dry durillg all of St'ptelllbl"r, on deep plowing haH retained greenlle�s 1885; ready has been made In both bottom and up­ corn hay on a little corn on band. About live-sIxths of the excl'pt a lIght shower of about 011" iuch ..qual to Ii�wd beside It; try d�l'p lands. Plenty of feed has been prepared Wheat-seed was In with and the results were the 20th. Ahout 60 per ceut. of an average thorough plowing next )'ear. put Jis�r, for the wlnt.er. Cattle are In good cundltlon It; .. of last was rather lot.. as sOllie gent'rally satbfactory; gainIng popularity corn crop. Five p r ct'nt. yeltr's crop illl!; is mi,"tl,Y dune; , generally. Wheat-seedlllg Is all done in of corn lin hand. List..r was useli in a few thou�ht tlwy co.uldn't plow whl'n ground eVt'ry year. Rice.-Sterllng.-Septembcr dry; clear, In fine condItion. SI'BSOI,. .. about the 10th; good cundltlon. Ground cases with exct'llent rt'sults this ory was �o dr� � sO'l'dillg b gall cool nights and hot III the daytime. Corn be IIOt 20 Fall palSture getting short. Seems to Vt'ry little wheat sown, tllO dry; per I'arly-sowu is gl'owiu)( very fa�t,alld lJIayget ripened too fast to fill out w�lI; about two­ winter. Potatoes will hesown. Ground too Groulld ·ill lilli' conditlun pll:'lIty of feed stored for CBnt. of usual a!'reage larg". moist; thlrds,crop. Tell or 15 per cellt. of old corn faIr. stock will re- Fall but l>etter a half crop. Sweet potatoes Apples very dry. Fall pasture 'poor; for Illllwing. pasture short, on halld. Lister Is alfllo�t uulversally used fal'IIn'" 011 r"" .. StlICk but winter are ... badly. quIre feed I'arIy. UsuaI alw,uut ()f•·StAJCk thau a lUontII ago; sOllie are d'mg. fair, apples , �::!d !�t��,�ta�o;:e�();������:��r�v�:a�� !;)�� ��I1����:�.p���t��;saaf!�;��(���W��t�� raf���l:��-a�;a��;� '1a��lnf�U�����:���� �:��£�;��;�!cei!::{�:d s:��:1��!���� alld wt't. Sumt' of thtl new corn Is coming crnp. Appl�s, 50 per cent. lIf average. toes, curJy·plauted a fair crop; late ones to germlt,atl', and chInch bugsaretaklng 18 dry ... are to aud like old for cent�; McPherson.-September warm up to about poor, too dry fl!Jr them. Swe t potatoes market, selllng it. Ground hard and dry. Fall pasture very the weather In September dId not allect thtl 15th; clllhliderable willd, dry and dll�t.Y; light In quantity, but 11;0od ill quality. Ap·. dry scant. Stock feed 1'1'111 be scarce; not enlOugh dur- our much If Some farmerS have lIght shower on the 24th. Corn 1111 dry uow pl�s, v�ry lUoderate crop; fell off badly crop any. corll-fodder prepared. Potatoes, short crop. corn' hundreds of weather. their cribs full of old , ready for the crib; yield frolll twellty·live to ing dry .,Good crop of sweet potatoes. Apples,oue- weather of bushels In our town. In talking fifty bushels per acre; fair quality. Old Neoslw.-Erie.-Tbe Septem- every day came to thiS COll- warm uutil the whl'n with diffl'rent farmers, 1 corn on hand, not Vtlry much. As to the Iis- bel' was aud dry 26th, �:������cinl:sa��::"���!I����:�;u:���es ��� I�� acres Corn on the bot- cluslon: that a farmer can put In more ter, rt'llults were good where corn WIIS tellrted we had q'llte a good rain. September; balance of Il;ont.ll pleasant; 0 but I' didan and can raise Inore corn wIth tile II"ter rIg II,t b U t sOllle 0f I't got pretty Wl;ed'ty; I I S t0111 I 1IU, S IS a goo average crop; up , light fro.sts on the 28th and 2l1th. Curu is a ' - acre as the old more lan IlaIf a 'rhert! I5 but lit not as much to tl;e by way. Ilked by some and 0thas wouldII t Ilave one not tl crop. I(ood hlllf p,rop, but will 1I0t hold out In � on alld a old com un hand. The lister was not Wlloat.seedl'IIO'.. 18 rapidly glJln, at· all. Wheat �et'dlnJ{ Is vt'ry slow, ab'lUt t!e weight pel' bUhhel. Old corn not very ' 18 one. 1'1'111 be In,' the Velvet 01' I'alll. . t! Wheat seed' mostl d large ac�eage put one tblrd done, tlIe rtst wal'rIlJg f used l'h IIlg y plenty. The Ii�ter Is the c!ieapetlt way to . the In Chilli and Turkpy are the leadlllg varieties. The conditIon of the ground is very dry. and Is Coouiul{ up well; ground bemg raise corn; the yi..ld is aSl1:ood 01' better than fall Ground in I'xct'llellt condition. Having no Fall pasture Is plentiful, more prarie hay good condition alld never betteI'. The whl'n plallted by otllt'r methods. 'Acreage thlelre will he tame to amount to much, our IJasture than ever before. Potatoes fall', but pasturt! is VO'I'y )(ood. lIud f�ed grasses of lind light BOWIng put up ' whl'at-seeding small, to stock is very poor just now on account of frost. not very plenty. �wetlt potatoes are gouil- euough carry through. Early pota- seems to be COllllllon this seasoll. Condition Ilut late ones are almost a Just 1101'1' f�ed seems plenty; cornstalks are not IIJllny planted however. Appltis Koud, tOt's were good, of II,"round good except that It is fOUL In lIJany willie sweet potatoes are abun- stilll!;rel'n in most lields and blades on shows but st'arce. .fallure, cases. Fall pasture better thlln common. are about an well for feed. There will be plenty and Mtamt.-Sl'ptembl'l' was dry and windy, dRnt and VHY fiue. Apples ull badl lots of to sell, but the bIggest with three showers that laid the dust well. average crop hut fallillg y. good, potatoes �I���:' :::�v!���le�I��f:b:r���ntsw�::;:�� Nor't;()n.-Weathd ill was one half are small. Not many tlweet potatoes Corn, half a )'1.. ld only, with all acreage gt'lleral dry ; toes, one-half to two-thirds of a crop. Ap­ are. Tht're 011 twu first half of lIIonth planted; good, wlJat few' there slightly above last year. SOllie 0111 corn or g{)ot! raills; warm, pies, three-fourths of a crop; many faulty COl'll was never well are so few In thIs county It Is hardly band. Tbe lister was not uSlld much and last half cool. better; apDles and als" some fine speclmpns. . ones, sulld. Not milch old corn on worth whlltl to report. have heard no dlscus:

" " . .. & Olbb W.. W. THE ,TOPEl(A:' F4IB. Shockey first, G. West second. CIlI�. ell,ber,leX, ,lour entries-'II. IMcN1,e' IIrat. G• KlIlght of Harris; first on yparllng stallion'; Cow, 8 yea� and & Glbb W. Barnel oecond.· : The first annual fair by the Kansas FaIt over, Shllckey first, first.on marA tlll:O years old and' ,over; Ors_t G, W. Wt-stsecond. S.....,..tak -Sllv.r medal, for hest stallion ahd 11 ..0. .held four of last Cow, 2 yea�and·ullder on mare two and under second on Association, days week, 01 bill .'olta' arded to H. W. McAfee. SweepAlakos, three; 8, & first and second. was a eredttable success In Shockey Glhb, Cow, .lIver lor .. mare under two O�t on every particular. medal. bee1; brood aro. any aile. to J. H. yt'aril; sucklnJ..colt, under 2 & first and de.... The attendance �as very large on Thursday yoars, SllOckey Glbb, dan and sweepstakes on stallion (Kulghtof Hlu­ soeond. honeA ...., ...... - and Friday, resulting In a great financial Dr",,' P.rclt Tb.e esblbltora "0.... rls) and five of his colts. On �ed Norman on alKO g. Bennell '" Son: A lialel. Mlchillan Valley; G. C. success. It was less than from Sweepstakes herd, bull and cow, mare he �on second Sixty days M. F. ·prlze. Comlnll; Slout, Auburn; Small Bro;'•• Bo;t: .. & Glbb. . the time the fair was d decided ,,!ere captured by Shockey· 'I'hlrteen Short-horns were also fiultt'ly upon All S,,�e. Do'er; Veale Brol., RI�II.wa): W. B. shown, - until It was held. The 'f!le exhibitors· of herds management wall �1wrn.a, W.balar. Valley Falla: G. W. Barnes .. Dover: Jno. headed by ,thtl yoUt;lg Cruickshank bull, the were H. W. L. A. decl...dly conservatlve and promlsoo noth­ McAffle, Topeka; Knapp, VBrson. Wln('helt�r; Wm Finch. Iii.·rib. Topeka; Earl of' Gloster, the herd won second en and W. W. B. W. McAfee. Van Born'" Palrl�k &: Rlno. Ing more than they performed. Dover, Waltmlre, Carbondale, "on. bull three and over: first and second on bull The awards as forlows: 8 Stallion, 4 yeara and over, el,ht cntrl.a-A. Baoel The live stock exntbtt was a surprise to are sen, years under two years, second on cow three years and L. A. flnt. V�ale ill'Oll, IM'Cond. 'S�lIton. 3 y••ra and under had a over, Knapp first, H. W. McAfee and first on cow everyone. Every department repre­ 4, three tintrleo-Jno. Canon IIrlt, Wm. Flncb aecond over, under two 'ytlars and­ second, Bull" under 2 years, H. W. McAfee sentattve showing, and especlaliy was this "tall,lon, '2 y�arl and under 8. (onr ent,rl.s-Patrlck first lin heifer uB�er two years; also ttie stt­ first and second, 8 and true of the horse exhibit, which was one of Cow, years over, Rlno ftl8t, V!\o Hnru & Son aecODfl. 8tBllloD, unoer 2 ver medal aweepstak-s on Earl of Gloster, W. W. Waltmlre. under 2 yeara. one Born" Son. lIIare. 4 and the bt'st and most extenstve showings ever H.-Ifer, years, entry-Von years for best.Snort-horn bull, and the $.'10 IIweep­ o.. lour emrtel-G. W. Barnos fI .... n W. MCArH mad" In the and Is H. W. McAfee first, W. W. Waltmlrtt, sec- er, t, stakes for best Snort-bern West, only surpa.'lSed by • herd, In short, this ond. !IeCOod. Mare, 3 y.ara and nuder 4. Olle entry-G. W the exhibits tit St. LoUIS and thlM Is a I/;rllud record for a Chleago Barnes. Mare. � yea.. and und .. 8. two 'entrl�a- ." representative exhibit prize of $30 H. W. year. The horse stalls of the State Fair Sweppstakes-Herd Sage &: lion. Mare. under 2 yeara. one entry-Van of Clydesdale horses and Short-hOt'n cattle

Best - AS!ioclation were to the Mc�ee. Shorthorn bull, any agp, Born &: Son. COU. eltber leX, one entry Van Horn a firdt class breeder, madequate demand, . by silver to H. W. McAfee. & Son. and In addition a number of new stalls, tbe medal, Best T. A. HUBBARD. S .. Short-horn silver eepltak." -Stallion and IIv� olhlillet.• and mare Iarge sheep building was utilized. cow, any age, medal, to Oue of the lanl;llMt and btlst sbow herds of of auy all". botnoU,..r medala, awarded to Van Born wain W. W. Waltmlre. swlue on The exhibition halls had a aood show &flon. the road this eeason, conlllstlDl of HoZ8tef.n-J'rieBianB-Were of agricultural, horticultural and floral pro· represented by O.,....al aw""'laku.-(AIl draft breeda competlllg.) fifty Poland-Chinas and Berkshtres, Is owned M. E. docts In the east wing, while 'the north and Moore, Cameron, Mo., and W. A. Be.h�"lliou. that I.ae',erved flot'le•• tban len marea by T. A. Hubp'Hd, of Wellington, KaDl;as, Travis, J. G. Otis anli Geo. IhR pre..nt�a.on IIt1e·. medal, a ..arried west wings were· occupied with tasty dis­ Taylor, Topeka. enlrlel-gold Thlslnitnltllble �erd has been tlhown at four 10 E. Bennett'" lion. The t'xhlblt of M. E. Moore was Best mare. any 'agp, seven en­ plays ot teJtotile fabrics, art and mercantile large and fairs and WhO the At trl'I-.llv�r meda'. "warJed 10 J H Sanders. following premiuml4: very fine and was awarded the principal fiftllen displays. MaleA• ., Dri"'''' Hnr,u -Tbere ..ere elKbt.een en­ Winll"ld, premiums. Including sweep.. prizes. The show of machinery was sadly defi­ Irlealn 'bl. clr II Tbe IIrol prille. 116. was awarded 10 stakes on the P.hnd·Chlua BOW, Kansas ShOW:l Mrs. A. H. E, cient" like at most other Kansas fairs this Jer8ey8-Wf're by Case M, S,nker: aecond prl .... '14. to G F. Parmlee. Pride; at Wt'llington, eighteen .premlums, and S. F. th� latter Sad"� Hor.u-Were repreaented by nine emrl... l1eason. Davidson, Topeka, Indudlng sweep�takes on the Btlrkshlre all the Or�t and Jockl-Were Ihown by g. P. Sblrley. Grantville; Thtl show of poultry was very credltahle. winning swet>pstakes prizes, boar, Fllncy Boy 15829. on Ju.l'oot, an·" W. E. Site. sweepstakes thl;! - Lawrence, The Grand PrIze A and T. S. HaWley, the well-known poultry­ Sweep8taJuJs I/;old Poland-Chma sow, Nolncy, and the sweep· medal, for the oost ,ooef was awarded Not.able Exhibits, brpeder of Topt'ka, proved hlwselt an bret'd, stakes herd .. Ith his Bllrkllhlres; at WIChita to the Hereford herd owned SEXTON AND OFFORD. I!fficlent director for this department and by Shockey & WARREN, fair, he won thlrtllen prcmlulUs, IncludIng Glbb. The herd of •• made of It one of the attractions of the fair. RIlIi p lled cattle exhibited !'wet'pstakes.m the Berk�hlrs boar, Faucy HORSE EXHIBITS AND AWARDS. Me�sr.�. Otf.,rd & of To- TlIe speed ring bad all the necessary by Sexten, Warren, Boy, sWt'epstakes with the Puland-Cbllia Rnd is wlt,huut doubt onll attral'tlons, and occupied ,the attention of [ In the list of eXhibitors, wh�re no address peka Maple Hill, sow Nancy, and sweepstakbs herd with bls of the bf'st herds of this breed of cat- vl�ltnrs as satl�factorlly as that of any fair Is IClven, TOJ)flka Is the address. vt'ry Poland-China., and at Toptlka fair, el"hte�n tie now ever held In Topeka. Roadster8.-The follOWing compl'ises thfl In America, and In villw of alidl prtlllllullIS wt're won, Including sw�pstakes JIst of anli now en route, It will be on thll SWINE EXHIBITS AND AWARDS. I'..omplete I'xhlbitors award,,: t,lonallmportations Bt!rkshlre boar Jumbo 12471, ..weep­ the This Dr. A. M. Eidson, Rpadlng; F. B RIX, E. G. IlIrgeRt breeli has m.et with such stakes on the P. C. sow Nancy, and berd As for as quality Is conl'(lrned, therll never Moon, Thos, Willits, H. Hansboro, Flm.h, favor III the handA of Mr. Warren, that no swet'pstakell With his Btlrkllhlres herd. Slx­ was a better exhibit JBade, althoulI,'h the Lurd & Nelson, A. G. J. M. difficulty was ellconntt'red in disposing of ten of tbtlm number was Woodcock; ty-foUr premiums, being sweep­ consldprably less than was ever all stock. and Harr, Auburn; A. P. Benson; L. surplus to meet the "rowing stakes. Fancy a Berk­ shown at the State Fair. W. W. Stratton, boy 15829, yearling Waltmlre, Rnd tlX- Louisville; F. H, Martin, S. L. Wiley, W. G. demand, rt'gular Importations more shirt' br"d by Mr. Huub,ml, Is a modal, and of Carbondalt', showed twelve Chester White Bailey, Lewis Rain; J. B. Balit'rton. Au­ tenslve bret'dlnll; will he done by this pl'actl- Mr. Hubbard hlU! at and Niln- the of this prlce� $500; hOI/;!l, only exhibitor breed, T. A. cal and firm. burn; L R. Taylor, Silas. Rain, J. G. H. enterprlRing cy, a yt-arllng Poland-China t!Ow, brlld by Hubbard. of Wellington, exhibited twenty­ Gravf'ly, Thos. White, A. J. Whltp, J. H. DUDLEY'S BRAN FED STEERS. Mr. Huboard, Is very tiue and nllver five Berkshlrps and twenty· five P8land­ ha, MitchI'll, Chas. St... wart, J. II. Sauders; A very Illter�stillg exhibit lu the cattle been dt-ft-at- d. She weilrhll ab,lIut.600 Chinas; V. B. Hllwey, Topeka, exhlblttld pound" M. Bundy, Auburn; G. W. West, Silvt>r barn was tI...t of sev!'n gmde stLer,-, pIHC- and I� very fille all over. BOilS, the young thirty-six Poland-ChinRs; G, W. Bllrry, To­ Lake; M. E. Moore, Cameron, Mo.; W. B. Brded as "Dudley't< BrHn Feli Stel'rs." with Poland-China buar that headtl Mr. Hubbard'8 peka, eX'llbltt'd tWl'nty-five Berkshlres, and Webster. Valll\Y Fall�; W. E. Jonps, North an average wel"ht (If 1,180 pounlis. The herd, Isa lIludel, and has won lirst F, M. Rooks, Burlingame, exhibited three prelUlum TOJ)flka; W. D. Pllul, Pauline; M. Juhnson, s�t'ers were ownl'd by GuiUord Dudley, of at eVt'ry fllir this year, and has the fintut B..rkshlrl's and fourteen PolaL!I-Chlnas. Nurth To�ka; W, H.Cupp, F. R. Foster & Tt'pflka, who Is nnt' of the ptactical and eD- h,..ad we ever saw on a -Poland-China boar, The fallowing were awarded on premiums SOliS, E R Btlnnett; J. B. Miller, Tllcum­ thuslatltic advocates of fe..dlll� bran to pro- being short and broad, with a nice ear, and· . swine: seh; H. C. Lindsey, W. HUlI;hes. dnce beef. This exhibit of stet-rs, calVt'd Is a vt'ry blucky pig. Mr. Hubb4rd has sold BerkBhires.-Boar,2 years aud over-first Stallion, 4 years and over, six enLrles­ In 188/>. had nnt bet-n ft'd any COl'O but had as many as ten pl�!i In on.. day. prt'mlum, T. A. Hubbard; second. G. W. First prl\mlum, H. Hansboro; second, Finch, bl'en fattenI'd (In the light roller prnct'ss SHOCKEY'" GIBB. Bt>rry. Boar, '1 year aRd under 2, T. A. Lord & Nelson. Stallton, 8 years and llndtlr bran. They attracted unusual Rlt!'ntlol] aud The Early D4wn ht-rd of Herefords, Hubbard, first; F. M. Rooks, st'cond. Boar, ., tuur entrlee- A P. HenIOn tirat, A. G W,Jodcuck COllllllent from br�ed�r� ani:! farnll'rs gl'n�r- owned by Shockey & Glbb, LawruCt', Kan­ 6 mollths and under 1 year, G. W. I.cond. StaIllOD. I years and UDder 3. seven eDtrl.a­ I Berry, ally on accollnt of till> evennt'ss awi anlOunt sas, IIlsdtl a creditabltl exhibit of thirteen first; T. A. Hubhard. second. B. Hanob.,ro IIn� SOl'le colt, undor2. nine eDt"iee Sow,2 years of t1t>�h on stt't'rs of that age, modl'l headt'd the -Tbotl. White lint. A. J. Wblte second. Maro.4 y.ar_ Herefords, by Inv�uclble and over, T. A.. first and second. Hubbard, - lIud over. lan entrlu Tbotl. Wlllltl 11m. Mare. 8 THE SELECT HERD OF BERKSHIRES buil. B!'RU Rtlal and won In and all tlllrtt-en 1 and under Sow, year 2, G,. W. B!'rry, first; - yean and under 4. tour ennl.. B Sanlboro IIr.'. owntld by G. W. Btlrry, of Topl'ka, was preluiums, ten first and three second, Includ­ T. A. Hubbard, llecond. Sow,6 months and B. G. Moon "coDd. Mare. 1 1�a... aDd und.r 8. 11:1 shown for tbe first tillle at this fair. The Ing sweedstakes for best bull, cow and herd .ntrl• H. under 1 year, T. A. Hubbard� first; G. W. .a-W. Copp llroc. Mare, und-r Z yean. flvo • swine shown were seit:,(·t, In fa('LRs wl'llas In thel/;rand swel'pstakes gold medal for best second. Five under6 enlrl_Award. noC Illvell. Colt•• pltber lex. nln. Bl'rry, shoats, Dlonths, namf', and rllllect..d credit to (lUI' of Kallsas' b{'�f entrtea-B. C Llnd""y llrat J B. Mltcllell aecond. brt-t'd hllrd. G. W. Berry, first; T. A. Hubbard, second. 1I"..potake•.-stalllon and ave collil. four e�lrlea� Yllungl·st bret'dt'rs, who mllde his first show This i'llt... rprlslng firm commenced the Sow five and suckllog pigs, G. W. Berry, Iliver medal 10 W. and In with ' Hugbe.. Mare. any BIle. tbree cnmpptltion I'xpf'flt'nced and show seasou at St. Joe and took first in ev­ first; T. A. Hubbard, second. entrlee-tlilver medal 10 Cbao. Ste..art. . rl'pfl'sf'ntative brt-edllrs, sllcl'ep.dert in win- ery class shown for except yearling heifer and UorfIU qf AU· Work. - Tbe 101l0.. lnl lilt Poland-Qhilla8.-Boar,2 ypars over, comprloee nhll/; first on yearling sow, Lady Whitney; and calves. In this class took secund. ThtlY V. B. T. A. Hnhbard second. tb. nam.. ot exblDltors: Dr. A. E. DeCior. C. Stewllrl, Huwey firtlt, firsl. on boar undt-r twt-Ive lUonth�, Duke al,o touk the on J. B. Miller. J... II"an: Alt. Sa.e. Dover; Tbol. WII­ t.h,e grand sweepptakes bull, Buar, 1 yt'ar and under 2, V. B. 1l0wl'Y first, of St. first on litter of IItll. G C. Co, nlDg, M. B. Stoker: D. T. TYDer. Mlcb· Brldv,e; sucking pigs; twenty-six e.ntrll's, and had a tie vote for the T. A. Hubbard second. Bm\r,6 months and Jobn lir,t on fi\e shoats and second on 11180 Valley; caroon. Wlncbfll.r; 8mall brs8,. twu-year herd prizH, which finally went to o,\e that won under 1 T. A. Hubbard V. B. W. E Olear - year, filSt, B01t: Hlte, RobiDlOn; L. Stratton. Loul old sow. and st'conu on sow und"r olle year, only olle secoud prize In claiS. The next and T. A. ville: Van Born & SOD. Nortb Topeka; W. G. BdUey. Howpyspcond. Sow,2 years over, This young herd Is not ,'xcdlt·d in brt>pdlng, week, at the Iowa 8tate FaIr atDtls Moines, Hubbard fir�t and second. under 1 J. H. Sanders; W. D. PlIul, Paulllle; W. B. Web,lar. Sow, and is headed by the model boar, British were ruled out on the Valley .(I'alll; Sam'l Ecker. Auburn: 8. C. Sarver; thpy her� .. prize, for year, T. A. Hubbard first, V. B. Howpy II. M 8. Dunninllon, Menoken; Jf. W. Mc.\reel: W. E. Chaillplun technical reasolls. but· hadthe plt!asure of second. Five shoats, under 6 V. B. E. months, JOllee, ,ljcrlb TopoIta: G. W. Berry; G. W .,Weat. Sli­ BENNETT'" SON. behting the same herd at the State Fair at

.. , H�wey first, Thos. White second. ver Lake: It G Moun. Tboo. � blip. G. lit. GlbooD. The horse l xlliblt at this largest fair, and Lluculn, the wllek followlnlC. In cl�s, at 4 old and o... eleven entrlea - any age, 810. awarded Sl&llIon, yellrs r. D. L. the exhibit ever SweepBtakeB.-Boar, largest-siugle mad., by any Dlls Moines, they won second· on three-year to the boar owned Tyner IIrst. IIman Brol. _ond. Stallion. 8 years and 'BerklShlre Jumbo, by Kansas breeder, was t:lat of E. Bennett & old first and st'coud on ODder 4, tbree eutfll'8-L. Stratlon flrat. W. E Bite cow, cow two-years T. A. Hubbard. Sow, any age, $10, awarded of the and aecond. Stallloll. 2 years and under 3. tour entrlel­ Suo, Topeka, largest breed"rs old, and first and second on calves, In com­ to tbtl Pollind-China sow owned of Nancy, by VaD Horn & 80n 1I,It, AU Sage ..con". Stallion. un­ Importtlts draft horses in the west. Their petition with five of the leadlnl/; herds of tile' T. A. Hnboard. Btlst herd of swine; silver der I years. t..o entrl_G. W. Berry lI..t. Mare. 4 last of P,..rcherous dlugle impol'tatilln and country. The week following" at Llmoln, .... and tblrteen entrlee- J. Sanders awarded to the Berkshire herd owned )' ov�r. H. lI"t. .. mlldal, Vlydt'sdale hOl'slls nUlllb red 106 head. and m,..et.iug the same herds as at the Iowa State T. A. Hubbard. G. W Weat l8COud. Mare, 3 year. and under 4. tbree by sluce its arrivill they have �old 801ll1\ and won all the first entrl•.a-J. H. SaDden III.t, H. W MeA-fee aecoDd. $28,000 Fair, prizes shown for: A. W. Ruillns, of Manhattan, was selected worth of fine horst'S. In fact the Mat•• 1 years an! und�r 3. nine entrleo- S. C SaIV.r lot of and sweepstllkes In class as well as the as on swine, which was D. is a!'! t'xpert judge duty lint. VI. Paul secolld. lIIare. nnder 2 yeare. five horses magnificent array of Illodel 'I grand herd sweepstakllS in competition With with credit to hlmselt and to the enerleo-G. W. Berry flrol. AU. Sallo ••cond. Colt. draft horses as (me would desire to performed see, and' the winoer of tile SllJne prize at Des 'eutlre satisfaction of the eltber lex. tblrteen entrl_G. W. Weat lI..t, J. B. exhibitors. On wflil wOlth a trip to Topt>ka to sl'e t1wm. M"ineR. foreman MilLer _ond. Harry Loveland, of the he was as�lstl'd M. L. Stew­ swt'epslakes by By rlllftlrrlnjl; to tllfl awards It will be seen Dawn ht'rd, givt's the brief Clrdudaw Uowlng art, of M�nhattan, and Rubt. Pugh, of To­ that the number uf awardpd at- of the results (If E. IIoUbe.t oS lion. Ii. W. MCAt... J H. Sanders: G. premiums summary five weeks show­ peka. test to the valne and of W. Bamee, Dover; All. Baa., Do...r: Wm. Flncb. popularity the Inl1:: "In conlpetltion ",lth the best herds CATTLE EXIDBITS AND AWARDS. Nortb Topeka; Patrick & Rlno: B. A. Lummlnlll. horses owned bv this I'stabli�hlllent. of the cuuutry, lIulllbt'ring 4M hflad at Lln- exhibIt of Herefords was Bel1'olr; Jo:..n carson. WIDcbeelar H. w. M'AFEE HerefordB.-Tbll coin. 500 head at Des Muln(ls aad 870 hea4 at Stalllon,4 yearsalld onr. elllk' entrlea-H W. Me, I esptlclaily good, and represtlnted by the fol­ HRd a strlp.t.jy premium exhibit of draft St. Joe, the herd won first and Atee IInt,'K. Be"nett & !lon locell•• Stallion. 3 yean thirty-one brpedt-rll: Law­ borses and ;Jhort,horn cattle fro III lowing Glbb, - Shuckey.l; aDd UDder 4. tbree entrlel B. Bennote & Son IIrst, thirteen second prpmiuws." Frank H. J Farm three mill'S of rence; lckson, Ml\ple Hill; G. JObD Canon second. Stallion, I y.ars and und�r 3. west Topl'ka. This ex- Shockey & Giub are first class breeder'S and ..o hlblt W. West, Sllvtlr Lake, F. R Foster.l; t entrlee-E. Beone&! & lI11n. IIret Bnd lleCoDd. Stal­ c(lmprbed fifteen head of draft horRes, and .hnport,..rs of th� "whlt� faces," and ,do Snns and C. E. Curran & Co., Topeka. The lion. under 2y..... on. entry-H. W McAfee. Mare, thirtepn modl'l Clydl'sdalt's and twoprnspect,'Nor-, a smclly �qnare bU�Illt'S� In bUYIDII;. stllllng 4 years and over. lour entrlea-B. W. MCAfee IIrsl. ... or shOWing H ... and the more one awardR are as follows: Buil, 8 years and man h d b Y the.� P 1 .. Ii'dI SI reford�, John CarlonlOCnnd. Mare.3�.a.. and under 4. one ma�t's r.a Il... n. r, dell Is with tlwm the m ..rl\ they will be coli- over, Shockey & Gibb first, C. E Ourran & of HarriS, a �lx-year old stallion. On ; entry-H. W. McAf... Mare 2yea,I and nnder 3, four Knight vinced of this fact. When you wish to see Co. 2 Yllllrs and &; .. lOon under the bor�es he won twelve as or Rlve theru a call. Bull, und,er 8, Shockey entrl -E. BenDett & lint. Mare. I. two premiums huy Herefords, .. Glbb first and second, Bull, under 2 years, enlrl...-G. W. JlarDee IIIlt. H. W. McAf.. MCODd. lows: First OR stallion four years and over,fOI-\ (Notable exhibits oontlnuednext week,) OOTOBEB:.6;1

both,sldes riotous they"reJik�lytO'become. Bean ba� 1872 she was called, by the pepper lightly upon It(and dredge New Tork. In the. house, and with flour, For each' that has to ar,e!l good thlng,to have In of the to France, and ap­ freely chop General order, entertaining In manyclr­ be cooked, put a tablespoontlul of stock/into LogoJllachy proves pointed As�lstant General, In which capacity don't the In a eles, But simple, ehlldlsh gaines (1 of all con­ a thick iron- saucepan; lay chops she had the general supervision and the the bet­ side put on the lid, and mean Copenhagen), simpler vents In the United Statea, Canada and South slngle layer, by side, Never Again, to "Vacant Chair," simmer as as but without ter-"Going Jerusalem," America. Mothei: Hardy's official residence gently possible, and the more diverting 'Till but a mem'ry of lonll: ago tor an hour and a half. Turn the charades, like, prove da1.8 since been In Paris. She visited this eeastna, back the past with Its vivid old has other form of the entertamrseut, Brtnas giowl over when half cooked, and just be­ than any back the sound of those words saa country In 1874, and again In 1877 and 1882, chops Brlngs We. women make work of company, lind the con­ tore serving, add to the gravy. a teaspooq,ful and low, and on each occasion she visited ail of look upon It as an Breathed as w6l parted forever. of parsley. If the gravy gets we grow, many us,-to vl'nts under charge. finely chopped Can I you I her -stoek but always a�'evU. forget dried up, another spoonful or two of evU, necessary, perhaps, Cease to regret you? see the best which Is a!so, as must be added; butthere Is not much fear Could W.1l way, Never, ah, never agam I in Fashion. the we mlg-ht be not grudg­ While the stars shine bright OhopB English of this, If the chops have been stewed slowly truly, eastest, learn the some relatives are to and all Still tbat vanlsbed nlll;bt We have had with us lately and gently. Chops cooked In this way Ingly given h09Jilt\\Uty, CODIes. With the old flitter paln- residents In lesson few do not need--what got'S to make who have for many yeare been tender, and easily dlll:ested; therefore In '. As when we knew we must sever. and a model hostess.-Ruth Hall, in Good America. They were so surprised every way suitable for Invalids. up Still are standing beside me as then, to find that we make so many deli­ Housekeeping. 'pleased Pork F'rted.-Cut the as In ----- and hear Ohops; I)hops, Still IOUcan see you you again, dishes of over here, that I cious out chops mutton or from the loin, or StUt mem'ry whispers of what might have the case of lamb, 100 DOBeB One Dollar a tew hints to American housewives been thought the best end of the neck. Trim away part connected with Hood's Sar­ Had we but journeyed together. not be out of We tllink a great Is Inseparably might place. IIf the leaving a sufficient qn.ntily efface tat, only no other medicine. . Time can not, can be cooked In and Is true of deal of chops, because they of tresh but­ saparilla, Distance not on to be pleasant. Melt a shce displace a dish ac­ unanswerable as to such a of ways, and form It is an argument The scenes and the days that have flown. variety or beef In the frying-pan; ter, good dripping whUe thousands tes­ ani In all seasons. Mutton Is the meat strength and economy, Btilli dreaming ceptable Jay In the chops, and fry them slowly, anlce 'Neath night stars gleaming; pork and lamb can be tify to It.� superior blood-purifying and generally used, but rich 011 both sides. While the chops 1 am alone I brown, Hood'e Ah. dreamlilg In the same fashion. To streugthenlngqualltles. A bottle of autumn weather. cooked precisely two medium-sized onions Drear Is the bleak are cookmg, chop and will last mutton as follows: Cut Sarsaparilla contains 100 .dosee grill chops, proceed as line as and mix them with some possible, to Fall o'er the -shades of the half an Inch a while others will average last earth, deep'ulng the chops, not less than thick, As soon as month, . salt, pepper and powdered sage. night,. or t!Je best end mer a week. for economy, buy from the middle of the loin, them from not Hence, Darkness can hide not that face from my the are done enough, take the chops of the neck. If taken from the latter, them Hood's Sarsaparilla. sight! the pan, drain off all the fat, and put Its love be lI:uldance, Its eyes be my Ilzbt, bones must be saortened, and the fat, In my on a nice hot dish. Add the onions, ete., to 1 behold it In dreaming! en Ah, should be neatly trimmed. It Onromo or iii Hidden ·name Cardl, name 110. either case, the fat In the frying-pan, and fry All earth was darkened remah,ing 50 Sampleo'" terml.4c. Crown Pte. Co., NDrtntord, ct. need not be wasted, as It can easily be ren­ min­ When mine ear harkened. them a rich brown color. In about five Brushench full Words burnmg deep In my brain! dered down Into good dripping. Bea.tlrul Card.. Allentl' ...mpl. bookan\l utes, when the onions are becoming soft. cover ouUIHor EAGLE OARD w01Ute, NoI1h­ "Seek to forget me, over with clarified butter, and It 2c.ltamp. chop over them half a pint of cold water, rord.Conn. Cease to regret me." mixture: A pour , with' the toltowtna never thickly thickened with a dessertspoonful of fiour,and Gamea Never, ah, azaln, Sample Book of beaotUlll cards, 14 of bread-crumbs. verses. AU tOI While stars in yon heaven ale gleaming! tablespoonful finely-sifted Let all boll , 12 tricks In seasoi'edwlth salt 'and pepper. OIlJa m�Wbom00•• 11, a of parsley chopped very line, NEW �taUoa teaspoonful for a few' minutes; then pour It ___a_2c_._stamp. Still In my heart lives Your Image as dear together halt a teaspoonful of powdered thyme, a. GENTS MONEY WHO IIEI,L DB. As e'er we' two parted at wane of the year, over the chops, and serve as hot as possible. A CO"J� raiment for shades little and.grated nutmeg, and a And life chanaed bright salt, pepper, .. .. �'i.': Same Stewed.-Cut the half an ud�::''':''':'' !:�rtlO�:·I�.��.�n�b�'lJ �:'In The chops For ad� A. W. dark lind drear, well-beaten When covered with this, mouth.. Prlce.12.oo partieDla... egg. a i trim them and sprinkle HAMILTON .t' (,'0•• Ann ArbOr,lIl1eblran. Changed as we parted forever I In white inch thick, neatly, wrap the chops carefully paper, . Can 1 you? over them. Take a torget which has little salt and pepper . Cease to you? and place them on a gridiron, regret slice of fat and cut It, with the trim­ bacon, . Never, ah, never aeatn l been made scrupulously clean, and veryhot. ., stars are trom the chops, Into tiny pieces; put While the bright Grill them over a clear fire for eight or ten mings That departed night, them Into a with a taulespooutul stewpan, ------_._---- then arrange them neatly and serve Comes with the old bltter'paln- minutes, of of fresh of chopped parsley, a teaspoonful pow­ New Book ot Pa.o,. Work wllb 100 when we knew we must sever. them ou a very hot nlsh, with a piece As a salt­ dered sage, a finely-minced onion, I in Inter Ocean. the size of a small nut, under each, ���l�I�3:r..l%�olfJ.r.a::!ta:�;r.tt:. -May Spencer, butter, of spoonful of salt, and half that quantity FRE'H • f,Scol.."'..,.pa••r, aU' 'or 40 �. some mushroom and accompanied by catsup. NATluNAL 'J W. Broadwa,..N.Y Place the on 'he top of BAZAK. while the are white pepper. chops If a blaze should arise chops . A Woman Vioar General, these, put on the pan lid, and let the chops remove the gridiron for a moment, WANT YOUI �,!I,,:g:,T"= cooking, of an hour. smce a remarkable woman simmer gently for three-quarters to ...... n. us In ...... ,.. A 'few weeks a handful of salt over the WEprolltabl8 employment !'!'P an-t sprinkle good' month and expen!8lo or & on a and county. Salary t15 per This was the Rev. Lift them out, put them dish, keep sales If naple. died In Paris, France. order to clear It. The chops require !ILJ'Ir8 comml..lon on preferred., � fire, In pUtlculara Free. Assistant Vicar Gen­ them hot. Pour over the herbs two table­ Every one buy� Outflt and Mother Aloysl" Hardy, and this should be done SIl'ANDARD SILVEBWAlUIl 00., BOSTON, JUSB. turning frequently, of of the Order of the Sacred Heart. The stick spoonfuls of stock and a tableapoenful eral means of a fork, care being taken to by bolls made the Roman Catholic strained lemon juice. When It up, charge Is against It always Into the·fat portion of the chop. conservatism leads It skim off the add a glass of port wtne, church that Its intense If stuck Into the lean, the gravy 01' juice of fat, about the women in subordinate posi­ and serve it poured round Chops. alway!!. to keep the meat will escape, thus renderlng the cooked in them out from due opportunity but Porks Chops-or pork any .otner tions, to shut chop quite dry and tasteless, anything be .. 11:r.""..", lur ...... ,1 ... for the exercise of their talents. But a re­ which It Is in­ rorm=sbould always accompanied by "6n po.l"�6"U" the delicious morsel a bOx or wbleb will nice, . rn.... COlUY ...... woman sauce.-Aunt Chloe (London, E'n(1.), .' more IIgious body which places a among apple help all. of eltber ou. 10 moot,. tended to be. olae In tbl. Gentleman. • rlllbt away tban an,.tblnl chief of can not be wholly as are in Oountry B worken ab- Its worship PRIZ' til. objects � tewed.-Take as many loin chops A world. Fortoneo await • of the worth and ability of aclntely 801.". Term. mailed free unappreelsttve to be remove nearly all the 'Mal".. likely requlred ; TRUt. '" ("0.. AOJ'o.ta. This is shown the honor which the sex. by fat, and grill them over a bright fire for How to Entertain Ilompany, members of Its sisterhoods, BODIL 8K1f1WO • It pays to the about two minutes on each side; then place a cheery hostess "SIIIBEII"n forIJ12.80up. Warranted are To appear pleasant, and their numbers to [) New and Sent on trIal if especially those, them on-a she"t of clean blotting paper years. perfect. an evenlnl1; "party," or even the Send manifested true adminis­ throughout de�dred. Organs giveR as premiums. many,::who ha'l'e them from all Cut two large for clreular with 7.000 testimonials from free grease. short-lived call, Is truly no easy thing,' nor trative talent. We do not know of any other and them every Rta$e. We can save you alii to IbO. 'onlons Into very thin slices, put Tact Is 010. 41 W. B.D""" can somo people ever learn the art. P.lYN.E. co., 81., C.'e_ has to of the church which evel';glven any a with half a teaspoonful of .lCllllflS� Into Htew-pan an and an absolute unselfishness; of honor and re­ essential, weaker sex any 'such Pll8t allld a of a pound of fresh but­ salt, quarler the guests must be first, and they must not as this Which Mother Hardy oc­ cover the sponsibility ter. the chops over them, attention too Lay feel any sacrifice of time nor cupied for fourteen years previous to her and simmer all gently to­ stew-pan closely, All women should aim at belnl1; she filled it keenly. death. It nped not be said that until the onions are rt'duced to a pulp, gether conversationaUste, not startling nor worth. brlJ!:ht with signal ability and when the Will be sufficiently cooked. chops wonderful, but amusing, r"fiued, and espe­ The Rev. Mother was an American latter on a hot Hardy Arrange the nicely vel'y of touch. Long stories are usu� of cially light woman, and came of a Southern family stir Into the a table.,poonful of dish; gravy ally intoierable bores, and a serious, slow, She was born In which­ wealth and social pOSition. mushroom catsup, or tomato sauce, matters in heavy way of looking at general ONLY·.IIS. and was relatp.d to the Spald­ and over the Warranted fo��.)'eart!. TbeWUT. 1809, closely ever Is preferred, pour chops. Infllr.tion. Grlevallcl's of any SOlt are of Is an one of the old Catholic families is to a mound .r any Ings, A nicer way still. put a sprlghtiyacQualntancl' ��f��G�,�Y!�H!Pn\� best kept hid

various she sort.. Send this own daughter. At times taught walnuts, or anythln� of that tureen with the fded In Albany, Philadelphia, Rochester, Detroit, sauce to table in a . . Cincinnati, Providence aud Boston, and chops. Invalids.-Trlm away the fat, and dip finally she was made a Vicar over all these For In cold water; sprlQkle institutions, Includinll: the two convents In each chop quickly 1898. L'

the I besrs were looking over tbe edge otl the •• I.'4DliaJ4'�PrlC•• are low 18. NnWWb.Dbn'lno � fissure and dropping their saliva on my up- 'he!rme &0 BUY yoU R !'S'aI'Ina or.. 1'�llftB���I��� tUmedface. My realfi h d come down WItI 1 •• lCJgueoIWatoh.BRIOtharaalnl.s.ndr.rnewFRElI!:oat&-�UN8S..p0rthuiOnO"BaDdo:o.., t , me, bnt bad gone out of slgbt down tbe tls- G.w.(lIaIlla�(lo·,o.·60 DUilno 8£, New 1{Ol'U sure. I was standing straight up, stuck fast Oft within our little cottage as high up as the knees, and the lIl't1t move I As the shadowe gently fall made was to pull a revolver and open fireon When tbe sunlight touches softly the beasts raising a row above me. As thl'Y CAMPBELL UNIV-ERSITY. One sw-et face uvon the wall, were back and forth Do we .ther close _' leaping acrOI!_S the fis­ g tolCether, Jaolrson Co" And In hushed and wnder tone sure I had no trouble (n putting lead Into Eolton, lansls: Ask !:'ach other's foil forgiveness tbem. The six bullets In the first revolver FIRST For the wrong that each bas done. WINTER TERM, NOVEMBER 9. were about divided, but that time Should you wonder why this custom evenly by ' old bruin had a fiea In his ear. At the endlne of each day, got He kept Bellluning and adYBn�ed cl88.e. urganlzeolln all 'he and voice would common branch•• Eye quickly answer, back out of slght ; but of all the growling, , German, Latin, Buok·keeping, "It was once our I" " ,4.1gebra, Rbetoric and otbers, mother's way . roaring and rioting you ever'heard 'the fuss -r COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT If our home be brlght and cheery, the pair kicked up was the worst. The bul­ ... h In If It hold a welcome true, lets had stung them to and the scratch­ charge or capable and_eXperienced Instroctors, fury, Our wor!: -13 wld- Its door of prO'1lblJ.f&Ced bV 'M"11 I J b. auptrior 10 lhal qf Openln� Itreeting of their claws on the rocks sounded like To the not the Ing ""1/ lim,,,.., coll.g. ,,, Ih. We.t. B" Autual Buslno,s many, few; 'l'bl8lnRtltution Is newly.organized and Iron rakes drawn over stones hu­ and ullmmercial Law ever, term'. C1a..es In �·ype. thoroa.chlY If we share our Father's bounty being by equlpped In all Its departmento. It II .. writing and Stenography every, term, declde4lJ' With the n!:'edy,"day by day, man hands. The row continued for about ""'001 lor ,h.P

A in a Narrow ' Night Oleft With like an �IYP'Y . tlng anythlilK easy place was Impos- Bears on Guard. Grizzly less than al.l hour I madeupmy Well "I was prospecting In the Hot Creek moun- Smlblnled' talnladtin Paid Emplovment' talus, Nevada, well toward the southem, THE BEARS HAD THE CALL ON ME. Oan alway. be secured by a competent SHORT-HAND WRITER. .. You may become thll In a •• at ' mooth8, very little expense, by either to or end," said Gus Jo'risbee, an old miner and It was abuut 2 o'clock in the afternoon wben' Lruclion &0 come to 10n. I prospector, "when I had the closestsbaveof went down, and by 5 I was sore, thirsty We Can Teach You by Mail. my life. One afternoon, when about balf and desperate. I went up again, anel one of ..,. Send for large IlIuBtrated Calaloghe to bears H. A. HALE, Prmclpal, way up the side of the range, I came to a the came 110 near getting my that Wecan al.otOicbyou Book- Ilud scalp Ke.plng Penmanship by Mali.] Shoh-han Io""ute, Loull••Ue, K,-. spot where 1I0me convulsion of nature had hIs claws earrted off my fur cap. I went split an' Immense rock Into many pieces. down the cra,ck feeling that I was In for an The original rock was a solld mass, about a afternoon's job. I thought the bears mlgbt --E:h4:PORIA-_ hundred feet square, The cracks started at possIbly leave at dark. but they did not. In­ a common center and branched off like tbe deed, from what I could make out, they Commercial tees of a spider. At the center these cracks were joined by a tblrd, and perhaps a fourth. City College. FLUK.ER. BLOOK.. or fissures were three feet wide; fifty feet "I want you to understand that that night

-- away they narrowed to six or etght inches. was tbe longest one wplch ever blessed e S IX DEPAR.'J:'MEN'J:'S. -- e I stood there that America. It would have been a RUSINESS. afternoon, Inspecting and positive re­ (1) (2) SHORT-HAND. (3) TYPE-WRITING, (4) PEN ART SCHOOL. wondering, when I suddenly smelt grizzly. lief to me to have been hung head down- (5) TELEGRAPHY. (6) PREPARA'rORY. 1 mean wbat 1 I a sniff ward from the 11mb of a tree for half an Five Teachera. just say. got strong , .r Tuition lower here tnau in otuer BUBIOeM BOY in the United Stalee • lor lHteutar. College Il8nd, of bear odor, and looked up and found 'my- hour to vary the monotony. I had to keep E. H. HASI!I, arms . .. self There was a my and toward were ;t� �:O�Rbli , rrelldent,L coppered. grizzly coming up, they }DIREOTO"B.. a..D•••• m'!.dnlght . Emporia. up the path which I had followed, and there so benumbed that they scarcely had feeling. was another on the path which I must take My legs and back were racked with palns, to get away. Above this split rock I have and long enough before daylight came I had been telll It you of was a cliff up which a made up my mind that some desperate squirrel eould hardly have made his way. I chances must be taken. It did not seem that don't say 'I could pass the day down there and live. It THE BEARS HAD PLANNED was a choice between and a, • simply deaths, to get me between them. There was prob- morning came I began to work upward. It ably a den above me on the path. The one was literally Inch by inch, for 1 was thor­ had been off foraging and was returning, and oughly benumbed. However, the exertion the otber bad scented me and corne out. soon set my blood In motion, and asI drew N�Ither one was fifty feet away when I near the top 1 got ready to do some shooUn!!:. . looked up., 'fhere were two bears on watch, ane they "1 was well armed, of course, and you may bej1;an a raw. I braced myself and fired a set It down that a man who cuts loose from stray shot and yelled and screamed at them, civilization for six months at a tlm� and and directly a head came Into view and I takes his life in his hand has some little fired a hullet Into It. The bear stagl!ered nerve. 1 had bagged four or Ih'e grizzlies In around for a minute and then tumbled Into tbe previous year, and was posted as to their the crevasse to the right of me, sticking fast cunning, strength and fl'roclty. I had a at three or four feet ·from the surface. I couple of minutes to think. The bears sat tben played for tbe other, but .as he would up and peered and snifft'd and growled. I not give me a shot I worked ,to the surface bad a repeating rifie and two revolvers, and and found that he hnd turned coward and you may wonder that I didn't open fire' on gone off. There was a dead grizzly lying OR them. 1. The first shut would have brought the rock, maklllg b,o I bad finished. This tht'm both in on me. 2. 1 was rattled. 1 fellow had been sbot in the stomach the af­ could just as well tell you that 1 stood t,here ternoon before, three balls hitting him, and and popped both grizzlies over, and then he had bled to death during the night. I got went lIlY way with coolilldiffert'nce, butthat my rifle and boots aftl'r some hard work, wasll't the way of it. The shock came so and left the locality without havmg Been suddenly that 1 was upset, and my nerves anything further of my living enemles."­

were In such a state that I couldn't have hit New York Sun.. ---._.--- nn e)pphant a hundred feet away_ I felt The first winter of Univer- just like runDlng, and had there been any tepn Campbell slty opens November 9th. show for It I would have taken to my he�ls. As I said, there was a of minutes' couple The tlrst printing done In America was In grace, but they passed before 1 had any BETHANY COLLEGE plan the City of MeXICO, in 1589. There were to extricate I didn't wilt Under of the Protestant myself. entirtlly. then 200 offices In The care Ep!&copa) Church. printing Europe. For Girls and Ladles I loosened my revolvers with the Intention Young exclusively. BoardiDg second press was set up In Lima, Peru, and and Day Puplls. of using them at the but the way tbe pinch, the third in Cambridge, Mass" in 16:39. Twenty-six Omcera and Teachen. affair turned out was As the laughable. Faithful Materual over.lghtforall intrusted toonr care. bearll dropped dowu on all four'!! to charge The blltgest cannon that England has or 411 branches tau�ht-Kindergarten. Primary. Inter­ mediate Grammar, and Collegiate: Frenoh. me I touk a forward into the has ever had has arrived at Woolwich from German, jump largest tbe C18.1isics InRtrumental and Vocal 'Music E1ocul1on,. fissure, and down I went for nlneorten ftlet, Sir WIlliam Armstrong's factory. The new Drawlog, Paluting , The MIlRic Departmeut employs eight teachers, and or nntilistuck fast. It seemed as if some weapon is a 110-ton gun, Is forty-four feet In twenty, ptanos and three orgaus. In the Ar� DePU�· one t(�ok pos�esslon of me and flung me down length and sixteen and one-fourtb lDcbps In meut the Sr,udlo Is fully equipped with casts. models and copies. there. for � had no thought of my own about diameter, the actual weight being 247,795 Send for Catalogue to T. c. VAIL, Bursa.r, or BIB.oP it. Tbe first I knew 1 wss down there, and pounds. P. VAIL, President, Topeka, Kansas. .�

of for Gold and Siiver and Free Wheat and Silver. Commtttee are prominent gentlemf'n F.ights . I various political opinions 'from nearly Oomase for B�h. THE KA N SA S FAR MER An addres to th'e wheat growers of, every State In the Uhlon, Its chief ai m Faithfully yours. E.lTABLISHED IN 1863. the United States was Issued at Wash- has been to inform the people; realizing L. E HOLDEN, ington Oity, September 5th, last, 'by the EDWARD P. FERR.Y, Publishe.d Every Wednesday, by the that when once informed and aroused, B -Metallic Coinage Association. Its W. A. OLARK, the voters of America would 80 thor­ M. H. KANSAS FARMER CO. substance cannot be given in any better SLATER, ouzhly agitate the subject as to com­ Committee. -- OFFICE: than the address entire, -- way by printing and' ..... ,."3 Kausas Avenue. Topeka. Kae. mand the respectful attention which .we do below. The silver problem Oommissioners. favorable action of their Senators and Work or the Railroad H. C. DEMOTTE, - - - - - Presfdeut, is of vast importance to unquestionably even little matters - are a HEATH - Bustness Representatives Congress-and There good many g. A. Manlll(er. Amenoan farmers, all the more so be- in - - - Com- W A. PEFFER, Editor-In-Chier. of the National Executive. It has been �hat the State Board of Railroad •• a in cause India, 'already competitor which . as th 1\t mtssloners .are to .. e E t people KANSAS the State salld by the gold b f th attending The FARMER. Agricultural Britiah uses as a ugs,o. ,.fficlal markets, silver.only . of Is Iii." tbe Sl.IltA KIlUHM. pllper" we were a band of "Stlver Bonanza l!;eneral1y do not know anythinll about, or all the N..uees uf rhe III that is a de- r.aptlrplloJlbbloK Stray ate, and country . '. " who came to have no or &od 1M kept all tile 10 every cOllnty Clerk's office . Ktnga from the far West, and althouzh they authority . pendency of Great,.Britain which uses votes." This to enforce any of their recom- silver Washington to "buy power SUBSCRIPTIONS: gold as the standard, being legal that the contains no word of truth. menrtationa, it rarely happens - - - charge one 81.30 tender to the extent of 40 ahlllings only One ()opy. year, not with what the Since its our organization has companies do comply ()LUB RATES: little less than ten Whether inception (a dollars.) . are a few cases e w h0II in the Hoard upon. lIere Five one 8 11.00 raised and expend d ( y agree Copies. year the reIanon between the price of silver _.. 10.UO last Klevea Copl�a, 00... year, work above less than $16 000. reported in the Topeka papers and the of wheat is not overdrawn described) A person moy kavea Copy for himself one year price The Board dfllivered an 0IIar has b"en fat'thfU IIy ac- Saturday: free by send U8 f,·.ur names beslrleo his o w n.· bEde but very og 10 teah ddress may doubted, made teo names bestdes his owu, rEllattve to the complalnts aUdftllt dollll",; or, the counted for. Its expenditure has been opinion who bas . aDd /4" doilara, every person given suhject the • of Garnett against more for th e bene fit 0f your Iuterests hv the city ....AMPLE COPY FREE. mteII' attention is satisfied any Igent Npbraska & Dakota railroad, Term.: .1_ Ca.h In ,\.dvance. than for silver miners. We have dis Kansas, that to strike silver from our -COinage railroad and the Mis­ hundreds . of thousands of Southern Kansas to discredit our silver tributed ADVERTISING. or in any way short time the are be- souri Paerfle railroad. A ago - and people just FA'·IIER would result in injury til documents, Xdverthers will lIud till! KANSAS the money great VIsited Garnett and medium fore reaeh to call for them. are be- the Commiaslonera cheapesr aod be8t pubusued the and farmers and ginning They iteo8"Dltble rate> fur people especially The Ing ..very part 01 KllnsllH. mterested. investigated all these complaints. advertl.emeutlo will be m..de Here is the address: coming ,uD'Ob!eotiouabJe laboring people. the N. & D. kOtlWb application. of ad verttse complains that K., upou Copy We saw the mono-metallist city. menta !nteuded for the current tssue snoutd reach of 'wheat to-day? gold What is the price nelllected to cunstruct a drain along th" thl8 office oat hiter rhan Mouday forces at the opening of the first What is the result of the year's labor? gather the FARMER west side of their rallroad through Address KI\.NSAS ()O., session of the forty-ninth Oongress, and I'opeka, Kae. Lf;ok at the market reports. During The Commissioners Hnd that the that witbin city. of 8 heard them boast thirty the year 1885 the average price of the street where the drain is would secure the entire sus- portion wheat in tbe New York mar- days they bushel of fllTected to be due: is not occupied by Silver We saw but it must be remem- pension of coinage. ������������ ket was $1.07, t� railroad track, and they say there is All them defeated in the House of Bepre- bered that that was but half a crop. nO'l8w whicb the duty of building a that on a modified by fifllfls of Amprica sentatives-and wheat _ GREAT SPECIAL OFFER I the produced drain in the manner required bV the , vote of 214 to 98 J bushels, while in the proposffnon=by a only 257.000,000 city, can be imposed upon the company. And we saw 140 solid The KANSAS F,uKEII One ...Year at Bottom­ over 512.000 000. (counting pairs). year ]884, tbt'y yielded The city furtber complains that the the free of silver. ., lock Ordered Before the is votes cast for coinage .', Prices, if The present crop, country over, railroad has nelllected to make cros!lings but we need .T lat.. 1887, but haw much money W'e are greatly encouraged. &,n\1&1'1 fairly abundant, for teams, wagons and footmen where- work. 'Phose it It has cost what money to continue the will hI'ing? labor; t.he ratlroad traek crosses Seeond, ThIrd, 'ONE DOLLAR.. who have contributed to this work in do you get? Fourth, Fifth and Sixth avenues, and are to do so ag in, if tlemonetized in 1873. For the past WIlling and Silver was that nresent crosstnea" are unsafe The KANSAS FARMER is well wo t: much the" rvthers, wh0 are sure to reap ten years previous to tbat date the daneerous. The city has decided byor- to every farmer ten times its regular largest share of the profit, will help. averaze price of a bushel of wheat was dtnance that the crossings of the rail­ of a but Com- subscription price $1.50 year, ·ten At a meeting of our Executive over the track $2 Hi 9·10; for the years followtne ways shall be planked held in this on the 2.5th fn order to give everybody' a chance to the average price of a bushel of wheat mittee, city day the width of the street, and the Railroad of 810. For ten of March last, Hon, John P. Jones, that this is a ge acquainted with the best farm jour­ was only $1.21 years Commissioners hold proper of Ohio. to the demonetization of sllvet Nevada, Hon. L. E. Holden, At the Western we have con­ and reasonable requirement. nal for farmers, previout . P. of Mlchlgan, Hon. W. the average price 0f an ounce 0f that Hon. E Ferry, the is only of the width cluded, on account ofprevailinf 100w prices present planking m ... was A. of Montana, and Mr. M. H the metal, in the New York rket, Clark, of common road crosRings, which and the certain crops, to ofl't'J:' a shortage of f" II its of Colorado, were appointed is tbe ",."'I 328.�: for the tenen years owing, Slater, Board thinks is insufficient; it the one to all who subscribe committee to solicit subscriptions. paper year aVt'ra_e price was $1.]6 9.10. TbeRe sub judgment of the Board' that thfl com­ berein bottom-rock" official-and are And now, in view of tbe facts track the whole durlnl( 1886 at the" price figures are they signiffi- pany should plank its tbis tbem 10 the set forth, tbis committee makes of ONI DOLLAII cant. Any one,can verify width of the street at tile crosslOgs of office of the Librarian of Congress, or appeal to the wheat growers your mpntioned. The city in its complaint the "American Almanac" State to come to our assistance. We Missouri said that So much of our space th\s week is by a copy of ae:ainst the P,Ilcific this time an to contribute at the rate of Jne- remove ob- occupied by reports o( Fairt! and weather for the current ·year. At ask you the company had refused to wheat l'I 0f'I'Sl ver IS worth In the market balf a cent for every bushel of streets and viz., and that a deal of editorial ounce struct.ions from alley.... crops, great . w at·IS e 0f a have raised this For every on matter is omitted. onI y 93 cents; h th prICe you year. silln posts and telegraph poles Seventh necessarily .. busheI 0f wheat 'w� ho can say that he one hundred bushels of this year's crop and Fifth av&nues; the Board holds warfare at a dollar for a single bushel of you lose, by the upon silver, that it is not to remove these. Several of Fairs which are in will get necpssary reports. dollars. We a�k ,?'s H·,w many will be least-AT LEAST-fifty The also about the con- w re intende j for this issue of this year crop city complains type alld ... FIFTY to 80 cents 'I The truth is this: you to contribute for its defense dition of street C'rossings. The Hoard the FARMER are crowded out by our glad gElt . "nd for each one bundred bushels. a next While the silve�' miners have lost, CEN'l'S recommends that the company lay .. They will appear crop reports or act in- now I thousands of doUars by Lpt farmers club toO'ether,o, sidewalk across its track on Seventh week. are osing, wheat and send their the warfare upon silver, the dividllally, money-by avenue. The Cltv also complains that are draft or order-to Hon. James B. refusf'd to The cattle ,Iague scare at Chicago is growers have lost, and losing, postal the Southern Kansas plank Treasurer, Denver, Colorado, whole width of the about passed. A strict quarantine ·is millions. Grant, its crossings the of East India and dollar will used for spread- recommends that this maintained, so that there is no danger It is the open boast every Ue. street; the Board on the silver question. to western cattle interests from the dis­ speculators (and we quote their words) ing intelligence be done. the of The fact that Gl)vernor Grant was tbe ease there. The animals affected belong that "the effect of depression The wife of a farmer wheat Democratic Governor that Colorado Pennsylvania in and about the they are not' si Iver must be the ruin of the only city; and her little four-year-old daughter of America and ever elected should be a sufficient moved nor mtended to be moved in any and cotton industries a few a bis absolute were killed days ago by running of the and animals 'the development of India as the chief voucher for mtegrity. directum out city, train at Bingen Station, on the world." dollar VI ill be f'X- railway otber intended for the West wheat and cotton exporter of the Every judiclom!ly from places Nor1h Pf'nnsylvania road. While wait­ and du y accounted for. FI)r are not Will permit It? There-establish- pended �oca�ity you on tbe the child wandered �aken anywher�neart�e our of we respectfully ing platform dIsease at the dIstillerIes free of silver will honesty purpose, of the ChICago ment of the coinage from its mother and on the to Hon. J. R. Hamilton, away got --�-- refer you prevent it. A moment later a special train and Hnn. J. K. Hudson, tracks. As- little more than a year ago, the Norton, National Woman's Suffrage A came in at a high rate of T,he of members of our sight, running Bi·Metallic Associa- Topeka, your State, meet in the 26th oftbe National COinage saw the train sociation Topeka and Hon. E. N. speed. Mrs. Wagner for tbe defense of National Committee, month and cuntlnue tothe2Sth. tion was organized and toward the rail­ present Hon. E. H. Hon. coming, glancing for the defense of farmer, Morrill, Funston, It is a body in which auxiliary silver; every discovered her little daughter in delegate W. Perkins. Hon. Thomas Ryan, road, laborer and debtor in America. Hishop societit's are represented .. Olle article ot miner, the middle of the tracks. Therewasno Hon. John A. Anderson, Hon. Lewis .. in Its motto is constitution says: ..No distinction It bas no part politics. time to as second brought the Hanback and Samuel R. mem- spare, every Gold and Silver, and Peters, account of sex shall ever be made in Rights for nearer. The woman on "Equal from State. the train poor Both." This motlz) is bers of Oongress your the membership or in the selection of Free CI,inage for shrieked to the child to get off the track, of the statutes established by We ask you to act as soon as you can offi(:ers'lf this S,)ciety." Consf'qllently the I>pirit but finding that it failpd to heed the for we are in need of welcomed as framers of the constitution, and in conveniently, men have always been the warning. she sprang in front of the train 1793 to 1873. The President funds-information should be widely officers aud as members. ThePr�sideDt force from and succeeded in reaching the child, but the' COD- that Association is Hon. John P. distributed during present is, this year, Hon. Wm. D. Foulke, a of before she could Ilet back to the plat­ United States Spna- gressional campai�n-but DON'T NE- lawyer cf Indiana, and a member of the Jones, a Republican form the train dabhed by, and both were of and its GLECT 1'1' OR. FOR.GET IT. Finally, we Spnate in that State. The occasion tor from the State Nevada, imtantly James B. a ask you to support for your kil_le_d_._.... _ will befuJ.l of interest, bringing together Treasurer is HllD. Grant, respectfully in of $1 pays for four three months in this and Democratic ex·Governor of tbe State of ltf'prt'sentatives Congrpss mf'n, Only many persons of prominence National eitker who are pledged to"Equ�l lIubscriptiol'ls to the KANSAS FARMER. other States. Colorado. Composing its party. ... 9

The Shawnee Fair. letters in by the 25th day of this month, ,< OonUnued tram pO{Je 4.) and followed .by good cultivatIon, It has Oounty shown so we over good results.,., Wheat seedlug, Vtll'Y The farmtlrs of tbis did not October, that can look them county with two or three light showers; the last little done yet. The ground Is and them for our first issue in harduddry., lIke to have the witbout a 'Fair arrange week was with three frosfs. year pass ,cool, light Fall pasture good" grasi well cured. Large If the a im­ there was no otber November. lister is good Farmers at Topeka, and way arejustcommenclngtogatheroorn; crop ot stock tet'd harvested. Potatoes, we want all onr readers to know but for them to take hold and get up a plement It Is very uneven, ranging from ten to sixty good yield and I(ood qllallty. Sweet pota­ for the of IS fast bushels to the acre. V lIttle old 'eorn.on Fair of their- own, for the S ate Fair it, necessity economy t'ry toes, very few planted; Bome fine ones and if it is not a hand. Most of the corn was put in by the ,Association concluded not to do any- coming upon us, good raised. we, don't want to see lister, and It stood the dry weather much first of thing in that line this year. The 'flrst implement any -Wiwaunsee.-Pavllllon.-The part better than that 'with the planter, more wasted on it. Please re­ planted was hot and but the la�r meetiag to organize was held only a few money Septemoor dey, Not as much wheat as usual put In on ae- has been with occaslonalsbow­ weeks Farmers from ditIerent member � mail the letters in time so part cooler, ago. connt of the dry weather, but people are that tbey will reach this office the ers. Coni that was planted early Is good In portions of .the county came to town by not over 9.'> cent. mostly done; probably per this that which was Jate 2-5th. No matter if come sooner. vicinity; planted and talked the matter over, in they of what would have been sown had the agreeing Is almost a failure. There Is no old eorn on we will take care of them until the tbe end that a Fair should be held ill day wilather been favorable. Ground very dry. nand, Most of the com in this part ,was fixed was named when all will be put together for Fall dried Prob- Topl'ka, and the time Septem- pasture short; mostly up. ,planted with llstera; some used plantel'l. -use, feed in the county to ber 28th to October 2d. A board of ably jUdt about, enough The listed com seemed to stand the dry stock If we should a directors was appointed with T. J. carry \lIe through have weather much the best, Some wheat Is Wea.ther in severe' winter. Early potatoes tolerably Anderson as President and James A, September. sown, but a great mauy are waiting for more late ones Sweet a The report of Prof. Snow. of the State good, poor. potatoes light rain. The is In condition for I Troutman as Secretary. The work done ground good at shows that crop. Probably about half crop of apples. by them and others who assisted them University. Lawrence, a_ seedlna where the plowing was done early, the month just passed was the warmest Rooks.�September was very pleasant, but buett Is pretty dry for plowing ,now. Meet was very great, indeed, as tbe exhibits on the nineteen record. rather dry, with evenlugs cool. Corn has farml'rs' are well lIupplled with teed tor and attendance showed. Much credit September years' not matured as well as It would It there had stock the are There was no frost the month­ during' winter. Potatoes early isdue to all the but during managers, especially b�en more rain In about and Sweet are on bot­ not even the hoar frost. The August; averaee good. potatoes good to S who bis slightest eretary Troutman, put thirty bushels. Very little old corn on hand. tom land, but there il! a worm that Is Injur­ rainfall was only two-thirds of the Sep­ soul into the work. He bad an energetic, The Ilster was used by some of our farmers Inll; them some now. Apple trees are not tember average, and this is the' fourth aensible and efficient assistant in his with varying results; opinions are divided, so' full of fruit as last year, but It Is successive month whose' rainfall has own family, his wife. These wives are some tavorlna listing, others dlscardlng their better..... Harveyvllle.-September was ex­ been below the average. The wind one- wonderful workers. (A man without a use. Wheat-seeding Is very late; about tremely dry wltb a few local showers; oth­ velocity was normal and the cloudiness half of the IS which Is coming erwtse it was Com Is half a good wife is only half a man, and with crop sowed, pleasant. crop; was much below the mean. UP In good shape. Ground very dry on top. some few fields will make forty bushels per one he is two men.) September M.-zn and FilII pasture rather short. Stock feed plen- acre' but many will only maa:e' ten. But The display of farm products was not Tempe'rature.-Seventy-one ulneteen-hundredths deg., which is 4.83 ty; more prepared than ever before in tlns very little old coro on hand. There are va­ only creditable but flattering, when the and the The county. Potatoes are good In quallty rlous opinions respecting the lister; wbere season is considered. deg. 'above September average. unusually dry medium In quantity; worth 50 cents per it was used properly or In good season It highest temperature was 97 deg., on the Samples of grain, fruit and vegetables bushel In local market. Sweet potatoes a has been successful and Is generally liked, 7th; the lowest was 42 deg., on the 29th, were as good as those usually shown in very lI�ht crop; quality good. Very little wheat Is sown-too dry tor seed a range of 55 deg. The mercury seasonable years. Tbe stock exhibit !living Sa�ine.-From the 1st to the 8th of Bep-' to lI:ermlmlte well. 'I'be ground Is dry and reached 90 nine times, tem­ was never excelled on the same ground deg. Mean tember, dry; from the 8th to 11th, cloudy, generally loose. Fall pastures are "dried up at 7 a. at m. in numbers or quality, not even by the perature m., 63.75deg.; 2p. with a few ligbt showers; from the 11th to and feeding has commenced. The Indica­ 82.32 dp!l.; at 9 p. tu., 69,H5 dpg. the end of the with winds. tlons are that a plenty ot feed has been II&­ State Fair wbich had a year for prepara- month, dry, high and thirty-four-hun­ Corn will make about 60 per cent. of an av- cured. There Is a talr crop of early potatoes "tion. The Fair was a succeas in every Rainjall.-Two dredths which is 1 21 inches be­ erage crop, but of an Inferior quality. A but the late ones are, generally a tallure. respect, and the people of the county inches, low the Rain in large amount of old corn on hand. About 70 Only a few sweet potatoes were planted are of it. It was evidence of the September average. proud of the corn was with lister from which there Is an The measurable fell on percent, planted average crop. and nerve of om farmers and of the quantities eight grit last and the opinion apple harvest Is light-somewhat injured There were three thunder spring, prevalliD� wonderful of our suiI. days. productiveness among the/farmers Is, that It stood the drouth by the drouth and the fruit smaller than showers. The entire rainfall for the The reader will find all the detalls we better 'and will give larger returns than corn usual. nine months of 1886 now completed has have room for in another part of the planted the old way. Wheat-seedlng COID- Washington.-Septembercommenceddry, 20.22 been inches, which is 8.64 inches menced about the middle of and but we had ralos all the paper, but tlns general notice would be September, frequent through • below the averaue for tbesame months is all sowed; be a light month. About one-tenth of the old crop of incomplete without quoting and ap­ in the nearly '\V1lI falling preceding eighteen years. ' oII In the acreage, caused by low prices. The corn is on hand; is beln� fed on ac- proving the following item in the Prof. Snow's, reports are valuable be­ largely areund Is In condition, count of low prices. The lister has not Capital's report: cause they are accurate, but they apply early-plowed good only to the locality of Lawrence, in but late plowing is bad. Fall pasture very proved as successful this year as the checlr­ One remarkable feature of the Fair was eonntv. In fl'aturos good where not overstocked durlog the sum- rower. Less wheat so.wn than usual, thl1 entire absence of ev"rythlng boisterous. Douglas general owing show the State's hut not ruftllmlyor unmoral, No rousn characters they condition, mer. There has been a much larger amount to dry weather the early part of September. lin the No in detail. As will be seen in eur weather of corn usual teed "I're allowed �rnun!l.s Ilalllhlin� cut for fodder than ; wlll Condition of grouod very good. . Good l�l devices of kind were but 011 and crop reports, frost on the any permitted, appeared be plenty. Potatoes are a very poor crop; pasture. An abundance of stock feed. Po­ the contrary a large stun of IIInney was re­ 28th and of the month in some 29th'daYfl at bushel, Sweet a .. selling $1 per potatoes tatoes, two-thirds crop, and sweet potatoes a fused by th management when apnruached of the eountles, In Topeka there was but not raised here. a by the gam blers and asked til Rell them the no frost until October 1st. .falr crop, many Apples, good crop. Apples, two-thirds crop, and . a of privilege of runnlng wheel fortune. a light crop and badly damaged by worms, in fair condition; good in quality. Go�sip About St.ock. � hel'idan.-Septembe1· dry and windy. Wi18on.-Fredonia.-September dry and Corn About 100 acres of corn The Lister as a Farm Implement. w. W. Waltmlrp, Carbond:llp, made an px good. listed, warm; only light showers. Com wlll make We ask special attention to what is cpllent exhibit of Che�ter WhitA swine. and and Is likpd well. Very little wheat 80'1\ n; about fifteen bllshels per acre; will not husk Rolrl four sows ofthl8 breed to Wm. SteWftrt, too Ground Fall pastnre good out as well as said about the lister as a corn-plant dry. dry. expected earlier In the season. ing Fall�, Kas. Valll'Y al;d stock feed plenty. Potatoes. none to Very little old com on hand. Bnt one lister utensil in our crop reports. The prepon- An immense stock-brel'din,; establishment speak of. in use that I know of; will do well on IIgbt derance of opinion in its fa\'or is very for horsps. cattle and hOJl;s, Is being started Sumner.-Belle Plaine.-On the 4th,lnst., 80il, but a partial failure on wet or beavy large. In some of the counties it has In thfl �ollthern put, of county by 20 100 Harvl'y 8 20-100; 11th, 30-100; 26th rainfull. soil. Wheat-seeding Is progressing rapidly; been used and in Messrs. Doty & Walltt'r, of Halstead, Kas. quite extensivl'ly, one, Ground hard and dry. Corn, half a crop, should think two-thirds done. uround 1S in J. T. Woods' at1lf-feedinll; bin for all kinds at least, (Brown) listing is the ordiuary rflady to harvest. Some old corn on hand, fair condition. Fall pasture better than of stock Is TIghtly named "The Farmer's method. Summing up the rep9rts in but' will be fed. Some like the lister and usual. Stock feed pl,enty. Early potatoes Friend." It is consitlered the 1II0st econ­ this particular, it may be said that pub- some do not; it will do well In saody land good, late very poor. Sweet potatoes very olilical labor-�avillg feerler Invented. For in Kausas In a

out ot ..--....,.-_-I111,---!III--' handmaid leaf-roller, have mated' your mares, If they are web-worm, beath, MARIANNA 01' badly fed on Infptlor diet, you PLUM. etc.?'" health, • .. . � � - � en £)orlicu(ture cannot expect to "et It well-developed fcetus Lo have done us but little damage, M>ARLBORRO RASP "They ' that will grow into a good muscular horse. PAR R Y STRAW we have had to an eye on � --. ,f! keep .. �-� although '.------+-.- Lo_ BER'n"Y' , oA BIG OROHARD. Bubach'sNo.5" , serious _ them. The cankerworm did us � £� i. 1 Send for a sample copy of Orctuird, Vine· At b �11 n.e ,,11!t'r :04111 I ,,'rUIII'. · A. but we utterly destroyed them by �"5 Trees--The harm,' and a monthly journal � en i A Kansas' Orchard of 60,000 yard Berry Garden, I.'ok Pnx � lj,::'��In�!f·KA. the trees in the spring with Largest in the United States, spraying devoted to the Interests' of the trutt-zrowers London purple." In the West. Subscription price. ouly 50 F. The followmg Interview with Judge the "Do the insects that prey upon cents annum. J. R. Hendricks, editor, Wellhotise, of Fairmount, Leavenworth per NOTICE I Ka-, county, one of the owners. will beof Interest frUl� do you much injury?" Cawker City. • for To the Farmers. Planters, and Knrybody, that the to all readers of the KANSAS FARMER. cricket has done "Yes, sir. The tree STAR NURSERIES It describes not only the Jarltest orchard. In 'PEABODY The to rurursn, in aJulo8t an., qu!&,.tuI. but In the country. much harm the last Cew years. Arenow prepare Kansas, Grove Nursery. t"J uu l'r�t'tI, Oruameutale, 8b ube, Vwe" 8uutil .FrulU, thousands Catalpa Trre Seed­ eodlina moth has destroyed .ibade TretB rur tbeatrt'et 111 vilrlt'ty, Pore heard a deal about your KAS. T'lurA.. rt Btock "rlfave good D. C. BURSON'" co., Proprietor., TOPEKA. lluw;a hu the t1wbtu' claims, Pte. All bushels for our fruit is �tork here at would of us, although )(I'o""n. JlllltaSi.d thrifty orthpHuMtan.Apr.cot•• large orchards Fairmount, a1 "hules-le or them. Hu&£an Olivu 8n,1 Lucrttia Dell:berrtu not much tfns by e�I' .. ",.lIc.,,.11 and have to gi¥ing a injured year ELUEEER.R.Y PLANTS. lt�t9.lI. Ol- b tOjtdbe,·. (:11" I"�"II you any objections STnN"�R'& "'ON; more 4)1' less .u.werea prowl't.!y. E. curculio S,lcceed. In al. . of them ?" The apple st.ings Tbe Blueberry I· a valuable rrntt, Peabody, Kan8a•• brlef history fruit to tor marker, fruit 8011s, an» 18 a proftlable I!'row "None at all; what is it you want to every year." Dt.oerlptlve prlee 1I.t. free.' Andre•• of WEST Ml(m. knowjl" "I see your trees are full apples WILLOW RIDGE FRUIT FAnM, SEBEWA, 250 Acres, Established 1868. "Well, in the first place, when were this year; what do. you estimate your they set out and when did they com­ crop at jI" KILLIKEN'S G!EENSDUSE, �K!2��1 �t;k LAMAR NURSERIES, or more." Greeunouse and beaulug Plan","" Fluwert'lg ::ill rubs, 'menee and the jI" "Forty thousand bushels uJ bearing, YIeld cbaae aud OrnameuUlI Grape Viues, Small F'rutta, etc, HCRdquarters for Fine Nursery Stock 117 fruit how many Bend for Prtce LI.,.. "We set out our first orchard of "In gathering your ..- at. Hard ROB1':R'l' JlULLIKEN, EmporlaK••. of any Description acres in the spring of 1876, and from it grades do you make jI" Time Prices. we call shippers. (we gathered 1,594 bushels in the fall of "Three. The first Dealers and Nurserymen supplied at low­ we embraces all saved fruit to 1880, and in 1881 picked 3,887 This grade est wbolesale rates.. Parties wishing buy two and bushels, and. in 1882 it yielded 11,213 above a certain size, usually large or small quantities will save money 'l'hese bushels. The second lot, containing 160 one-quarter inches in diameter. by getting our prices. 1878 and sent to market. The We have a surplus of Apples, Berries, acres, was planted in the spring of are barreled sound Forest Trees, Osage Hedge, Russian Mul­ and yielded Its first crop, 824. bushels, second grade contains all apples defective berries. Apple Seedlings, etc, in the fall of 1882; in 1883 it produced below this size as well as the into Address C. H. FINK & SON, IBM we harvested ones above it. This grade we work 3,307 bushels; in 7,548 LAMAR, l\l!SSOURI. bushels; in 1885. 9,635 bushels, and we cider vinegar, and some of them we

· consists of estimate "the present crop at 20,000 evaporate. The third grade J. L. · fruit. STRANAHAN, bushels, Our third setting of 160 acres all rotted or partially rotten and are fed to stock or are left un­ La CYGNE was planted in the spring of'1879, These lay BROOMCORN " CommiSSion House. the first heavy crop is now growing on der the trees. J Liberal advauce. mace on con.l�IlWe,,! •. it has crops "I see you have a large warehouse it although yielded light 194 Kinzie street, CHICAGO, ILL. what do use it each since 1883." here at Fairmount, you I year NURSERY! ,', ""Do you always bringthem into bear- Pioneer Nurseries barrels and store our Hart the fourth year after planting jI" fO��e make our ing or FORT n:ANSAS, cider SCOTT, we have so far." in it. Our evaporator and �'Yes, sir; apples A fUlllllJe of Nursery Stock, Ornamental Trees. Fruit Small .,What trees did you plant jI" mill, also, are in it.'; Roses and Shrubbery. � We have DO substttu­ Trees, Fruits, aged and dellver in tton clause In our nrders, everYI.hlng and "Do pack your apples it ?" 220 Acres In Stock. "Two three-year-elds." you Q.!I spectned. NU1'sery FOREST TREE SEEDS we have houses in Bank 01 Fort Scott. Free "How many trees did you plant Oil "No. sir; .packing RPJerence: Oatalogue for that ?" on application, the 487 acres ?" the orchards purpose Established 1857. and PLANTS, the of your cider , little over "What is 'capacity .. "A 50,000." · "What varieties jI" mill and evaporator jI" Field and Garden Seeds. .. WRITE TO bushels "Winesap, Ben Davis, Missouri Pip­ "We grind and press about 500 the cider mill. The Jonathan, Maiden's Blush, and per day with m= Send for 88 page Catalogue, free, be­ pin, . , motto honest Boock Oooper'r F:arly." evaporator was warranted to dry 500 YORK NURSERY CO. for.. you buy, Our is, THE and Address fair. prl,ceB. "What of each did you bushels every twenty-foul' hours. We, proportion D. W. COZAD, • plant jI" -.' however, only dry about half that FORT SCOTT, KANSAS; Box 25, LA CYGNE, LINN co., KA8. "Seventy acres Winesap, 240 acres amount, or about 10 bushels per hour." For and Prices. to KANSAS FARMER. Ben Davis, 70 ,acres Missouri Pippin, "I have heard a good deal about the Catalogue Re fer

======�======acres. Jonathan. 8 acres Cooper's contract under which you set out these . 40, Early, and 8 acres Maiden's Blush." orchards. Would you have any objec- --_. • "Did you have much replanting to tiona to giving me the terms of it jI" NURSERY. STOCK FALL 1886 (;OMI' TO THE do il" are THE 01.1) "L._B.Wheat, my son and myself. we lost a • "Yes, great many, probably the contracting parties. The contract RELt:�LE SYRACUSE NURSERIES FI;1�t ���8�:::E eholen.t. Stuck nr l,h"lr STANDARD APPI'.ES. STI): Rnd DWARf 8,000 in all.". one. I can the With the �p.claltles, a give you e v aud Well is very long PEARS. PLUl\{S ,,11.1 CHEltRrES, r utf"reC� five years, we paying the taxes and get­ "No, sir. I do not think we ever lost ting all the grain crop. After the five a tree rabbits." by cultr­ years are up Mr. Wheat does the "Do you wrap the trees. or how do vating, takes care of the hedge. pays you protect them ?" we take care of the NURSERIES the and trees, ST. taxes, SOUTH LOUIS "We trap the rabbits. We use a Established 1859. look after the borers, caterpillars, etc., of Btock box about two feet Wo off"r for the coming trnel� season the largest and most complete assortment Nursery small trap long." Fruit Tre�8 of every and each gets half of the fruit, until G-R.C>'V(TN" -X:N" T�E 'VV'EST; embracing . "How many of these traps does it desertpuuu, Oruameutal Trees, Ro"es, lShrubs, etc. received fifteen bushels we have per the of Std. and Dwf. Pear R specialty; and Invite take .to protect all your trees ?" llQY"We mnt{{> growing tree for the two last settings and ten blsl.cetion fronl Nurserynlen And Dealers.-u;Q Wholesale price.list 011 application. accommo- "We made a little over 1,700, in which Vonsnlt your Intere't by getting our prices before buying. Tnducements and guod for the first." bushels per tree dation for agents and deniers. 8t. Mo. we have an ,immense number 0.( S. M. BAYLES, Prop., Lools, caught trial do all feel rabbits." "After ten years' you contract ?" "Do the round-headed borers bother satisfied with this considered you much il" "0, yes; we carefully "Yes, sir; they have worried us more every probable Item of expense. and our the ex­ than any other enemy we have had to aim was for each to bear balf.of contend with." pense and each to receive one-half of "How do you manage them jI". the income, and I think we got it pretty "We bank up the treeil in the spring evenly dIvided." just before they their eggs; this Oured, forces them to lay their eggs higher rip Oatarrh than they otherwise would; then.in the A"clergyman, after years of snfferlng from t.ha.t loathsome dIsease, Catarrh, and vainly try­ fall we pull this dir� away and then go knnwn remedy, at last foun.1 a pre­ .over them with knife and wire; then in inlt every scrIption which completely curednnd saved him we over them the spring go again just from death. Any sufferer from thisdrtadful dis­ before banking up in this way; with ease sendlll� a self-addreS!led stamped envelope the help of the· birds, we are able to to Dr. Lawrence, 212 East Ninth street, New York, receive thll free of charge. keep them under." wIll recipe been with the "Have you annoyed A writer in the London Live Stock. Jour­ fiat-headed horerS il" na� says he believes It is essentially neces­ '.' But very little." sary to have stock In perfect health for "How about the tent-caterpillar, fall breeding, and no matter how well you may • 11

on account ottbe for forty of not over $25. objectionable, chiefly fowl�!.at 11

will send our written to refulld tbe and . days if they are kept III the light; the this we consider better than a cem�nt guarante" Medkille Lodge intermediate polnls. money If tbe Treatm.mt does not effect a cure. THROUGH MAIL trains daily in except Snndal' flesh of those fattened tIle light is, floor. This building had better be Send money by postal note or at Qj.lr risk. between Kansas City and Jndependence and E. Market superior to that of those into two with Address L. Blake & Co., Sixth anll intermediate Stations, making cloee connec­ kept divided . however, compartments, SI reets. St. Louis. Mo. tions at Ottawa. Chanute and Cherryvale wUh in the dark. As soon as the fowls are in partItion and dOJr; the south front our trains for Emporia, BurUngton, Girard, Walnut and ('.oifeyville. be windows of six proper condition, they"should killed, should have two lights, ACVOMMODATION TRAINS daily except SUn­ otherwise they will speedily lose flesh, 8xlO glass; the east, one window. day between KanBBs City and Olathe and RUPTURE Ottawa, and become feverish and unfit for food. should be fixed at the REM EMBER tbat tickets YIa Ventilators RELIEVED AND (JURED by purchasing thlll line connection is made in tbe Union at After the fowls are removed for market on each end. The roost Drpot highest POIllt Without auy'operatlon or detention from buotofBB, by KanBBs Vlty with throtlgh trains to all poinc.. for or killing, the coops should be well should not be over two feet high and my treat.ment, or money relunded. Send ltamp avolrling transfers and' chani6l!·at way Blation•• THROUGH TICKETS can be purcbaaeCl via Ihll and dried before washed with lime about eight inches above a platform f�:�u!�� a���[ ���e":B::p�:�n::y.w��.r;tres��:: Une at any of tbe regular Coupon Stations, and treatment. here (or . your taggalle ('hecil:l'd through to other birds are placed under them. inches wide; underneath this DR. D. L. SNEDIKER, deetlnatlon, twenty East, W'8t Nort.h or South. Kaa. nest boxes can be Emporia, PULLMAN SLEEPERS on all Agreeing, as we do, with all the platform the placed night trains. For lurther Information. lee DJapll and folder.. of in. A bin mllst also be I highest authorities, that the method dns,t provided cure (ol'epllepsy orflta 10 24 hours Free to poor. or call on or address S. B. BYNEtJ. St Gen'l LAWBBNCB, 1U.N8,U, fattening poultry by "cramming" is And now you have a comfortable place euesIi " Dr. Kruae, M.e., 2336 Hickory .. St. Loute,Mo. Passenger Agt., i·a • OOTOBEtt 6,

flna In 15aI8c:,'store Koriiels Money Tells! dairy �Illgltl package lots, QareJ¥'t!te. HcMf� packed do" 12c: common, Sc. it Is a well-established fact A. D. Rob- The folil)wlng (lxcellent suggestions eon­ �hat EGGR-RecelptR light and mark. t firm at 14. �he 1D0st:important }ian df " horse bins & 179 Kansas avenue, Topeka, Kas., cet;.ntng Oo., per dozen for candled. Bales cannot be made MASON In a from the students' �HAMLIN ;WI! 1111111 �cltpplnlt can place large farm loans, of $3,000, to any without candling.

. amount required, at lower rates of Interest CHEESE-Full cream fiRts7a8c, ORGA.NS. ��.T�t:.. 13�c,'partBklm . i influence of heat the Under the dry and less commission than any aeeney in Youn� America lS�n. Kansas 6a7c. Honors at all Grent World's Exhibitions for Xuy hoof beccime8 hard, brittle and reduced when is and I'OTATOES- Irlsh potatoes, OtiC per bus. Swee. Hlf,hest Kansas, setJ"rtty sattsfactor:y ��;in":n'\l.eg:'k��ty�:i.a'���. f�p.. �� f..���. 75a1 in sise, but it does not undereo this title perfect. No unreasonable delay. Our potatoes,' ellow, 00; red, 7.c. BROOMCORN-Good short In demand. We . PIANOS. physical change in a sudden or marked business Is strictly conlldentlal-orwe could quote: Short, 4&5c; green hurl. 4Xa4%c: selt and refer to where we have placed The Improved Method of Stringing, Intr'oliueed manner, unless aided by otber circum­ you parties 18 conceded com- working. 4V-aoc: lor g eoarse, 3a8%c; crooked, 2allc I perfected by IIIASON & HAlILlM, by' "'10000 015000 000 a advance In Plano- In past year ..."5000-, ,..., ,..., , 820," radlcal .. the animal stances Of these, causing I'ROVltlIONS-FoJlolVlllg quoiartons . are fOI 4 are make Fg���J�:�«;:ete,��n8Utute loans', We prepared to AS much as Plano. r inactive on litter and the 840,000 r lund 10tB. J, b lots \..c hi, ber. 8Ullo,r.' ])0 not require one-quarter t\ldtng to stand dry usually IlIIIlI. rates than ever. Send of generally, Descrlpttve Catalogue by better descrlpt.ion cured meats or hams. '1l�(' injudiciOUS rasping of the hoof by the (canvassed plain): farrier are the most ,prominent. Over i �����!r:r� ;::���er�i��:�i I���:'P��!� ::=!�a8:le��c��, S:d��.; 6���e���":le�:.Irl���::!� the whole external face of tbe hoof .rl iI ( ) __IIIi_"_"'._IIIi_""_"._"._r�� side•. 6 �rtfl of ilK short I] applying for loans give numbers land, shoulders, 500; clear 85. SBlO� Cd!!.�_"_iil_"""·.�"'ioil_"_"_".,Iii, a translucent tbere is spread fine horn, town or range. amount of Improv'l!ments and meats: clear rib sides, 705; long clear sides. 6 s , 164 Tremont St" BOlton. 149 Wabash Ave" Ohioap. 7 00. y, wbicb bas the appearance of a varnish, number of acres under plow. shoulders. 6.2.1; shnrt clear .Ide". 46 E,Ut!! St, , :N, and whose office In all probability is to Address A. D. ROBBINS & Co., Topeka, Kas. The GTJIDE .. prevent undue drying of tbe boof and BJJYERS'. ....ued Sept. and March, consequent brittleness and finally con­ eaeh I¥ir' 312 BROOMCORN. I year. P"8ea, traction. 8% x llYs lnebe8,with over !oDd ·THE MARK.ETS. We make lIbe'81 advl\DceB on conalanments Uluatratlon. -. aent Bod msr­ 3,500 in tbe form and no IntHe8t. Betnrna prr-tuptlv , This modification charge ,vllole Picture kat prlc.& 5l'URrsntf>flO WIl'f" 11111 R,I,ri WA will kfl!Pp you 6allery. size of the boof causes pressure on the 1886. l\I.oRRISON 11& CO GIVES Wllolesale Prleea By Tel.egraph, October 4, polled, 8UMMERS, , CommIM.lon' l\lerehants, lUrectOto con.• II.""·I·.' 011 all �or more delicate underneath, and good. parts LIVE STOOK MARKETS. CHIUAGO. 174 S01ith Water street, or �..nlny use. Tells how to Robbed of its personal tloDsequently lameness. Rerer 10 N"tloual Bank or J. V. Far and exact cost oJ e"ery­ New York. Metropolltan order, gh!es Co. farrier and to such well pb Fnn t. Trt"'e 8epd HD·11.f'OO 0f\0 nt Hulf tho out- .. FOR PLAST"�R,' CO�I! F.lrP.8t Trf'f' �f·t'flltnQ'� , ff rf·d at. prtp"A that dpr{· eom­ 1 • AN)) UUG� of tow steeped In tar, rangel'h 7588 SO. InstH thc buildhur. CAllPETS p�tit;rl'n. Al�" T havp f··ro" ·1· n l:ml1ed nnmber ot 'he leather, pads and 3,000, 1,000. Butcb of same double the wear of oil cloths. Cltbllog11e taml}!'8 PoU,R11atom1e Plum Trf"e. of cow mud HOGS-Receipts thlpmen'i8 N.·l. filthy 'applications manure, l&D'nl�j'ree. W.11. FA.y ..� CO••Cnllldellt T. E. n. 1I1ASON, Shenandoah, Iowa. ers and choice beavy 440&4 65, packing grades or ·are recominended. It is scarcely clay 426&4 45. Yorkera 4 2Oa4 40, pig. 8 SOaS 84. .... some of these are necessary to say that SHEEP--Recelpta 1,000, shlpmenta 800, Feel· J. E. BONEllRAKE, Pres't. O. L. THIRLER, VI('� Prp.s't. Treasurer. M. P. ABBOTT. worthless agents. The various oils and Ing stronger. Common to choice 2 00&8 90. THEO. MOSHER, Secretary. gleases do not soften the dry crust and (lblcaCo• by penetrating into the nail holes com­ The D:-overs' Journal reports: Mar· promise the security of the shoes and CATTLE-Recelpta 7,000, shlpmenta 2,(00. Kansas Farlllers' Fire Insurance ket strong and 10al5c·hlgber. Shipping Bleers, • ,Culllvany, when rancid may act as an irritant. ----OF----· 950 to 1,500 Ibs., S 6Oa6 20: stockers and teeden 2 26 such as soda, �lk"line·substa!lces, pot­ &8 60. Texas. cattle strong at 2 65&8 65, western AEILENE,.. KANSAS, ash.and:ammonia, the natives and half·breeds 2 90&4 O�. possess property rangers I1rm, Insures farm live Stock and DetaChed of softening the hoof and disuniting its H0G8-Reoelpta 16,000, sblpments 5,000. Rough Property, Dwellings S and 4 lOa elements. and mixed 70a4 85, packing shipping A!I;alnst Fire, Tornadoes, Cyclones and Wind Storms. " 65, Ught 8 60&4 65, Toe of this fact shows at FU:r...:r...... knowledge 8BXEP-Recelpta 3,000. shipments 800. Market OAPITA:r..., PAID, $50,000. '(jnce the mistake ot allowmg horses to firm. Natives 2 26a4 26. Western B 40&8 60. Texans Tbe la.t rpport of the In.llrancp. Depa,tment of tbls Slate .bo.... t.he KANSAS FARMER�' FIRE INSUR­ ANCE COMPANY bA. more ...... for every ooe hundr.d�dollars at ri.k tbll" any oLb.. company doluB buo­ or covered with a 26&8 lambs 3 76a. 26, stand in a stable yar1 2 26, IDeM 1u thta �ti.IPt VIZ.: 'rbe KamlJl J\,,.,,.....' bR. ,1 �OO to pay ,18 00 at rl.k: tbe Home. of New ,I.CO to pa< 146.00; tb. Con­ moist manure. The moisture Kanaae (lIt,.. York, layer of tln ..ntal,o' New York ·,1.60 '0 pay teo 00: tbe German,"r I'ree�flrt., 1lI.,.t liD to Jlay flO.OO, tbe BurIlDBI.n CATTLE-Recelpta since Saturday 3,011. Ship· and tbe Illate or iowa b,." 00 to f7R.OI' at ,I.k. thus absorbed is loaded with ammonia, of lows, ,1,00 to pay .78.UO, PRY ping @teers 4 00, Lutchers steers 845110360. ordts, elements, which by their alkaline • HOG'I-Recelpta since Saturday 1.694. The J. H. PRESCOTT, Ples't. C. E. FAULKNER, Vice Pres't. dissolve properties soften the hom, the otl"rlngB to· day were light aad tbe market firm ED, C. GAY, Stlcretary. M. D. TEAGUE, Treasurt'r. BOle and frog and cause ulceration and at about Saturday's prices. Extreme range of B 60&4 bulk at 4 10a4 25. ultimately a sort of fungous growth. It aales 35. SHEEP-Receipts since Samrday 383. Market i!I evident, too, thlltt stoppings of cow 1!teady. Sales:' 125 natiTes av 86 Ibs. at 2 05,15 Tho National Mutual Firo' are In when Insurance Co., dung injurious. preference, natives avo 841bs. at 2 26, 135 natives avo 661bs, at ---OF---- there is need for restoring the moisture 1 75, 126 lambs 76c each. which has evaporated' from the hoof, SALINA,' KANSAS, PBODU(lE MARKETS. ., use clay, linseed poultice or clean water. MAKES A SPECIALTY OF INSURING FARM BUILDINGS AND STOCK The unmutilated hoof is' easily kept in New York. red, 79a85�; No. 2 red, aud Storms. health; all it requires is keeping cool WHEA1'-Ungraded Against loss by ,ire, Lightning, Tornadoes, Cyclones WlUd 8)%11850 in elevator, 84%c afloat; No, 2 red, Octo­ and J;lloisteninl occasionally with cold ber. 83%a840. Premium Notes in Force and Other Assets, $12�. ')00. water during hot' weather, or after CORN-Ungraded mixed, 44�6�c; No. 2,45% Your rnsuran�e solicited. Invited. � Wanted. [Mention severe exertion. When a journey has 110460 In elevator. Correspondence Agents KANSAS "t. Loulll. FARnER'.J bee.n long-continued and severe, the not be WHEAT-Weak and lower. No.2 cash, 7ia horse should immediately put in M. C. REVILLE. Vlc4'I Pres't. W. H. BARNES, Prps't. • but should be walked 74Y.c; November,75a76%c. the stable, gently J. n. MITCHELL, Secretary. C. ·C. WOUDS, TrtlRSUror. about until the circulation of blood in CORN-Active but weak and lower. No, 2 GEN, J. C. CALDWELL, Manager, the feet bas had time to accommodate mixed, cash, 83�c bid; November, SS�&84�c, itself to the altered condition of reat. OATS--No, 2 mixed, cash, 26��c. By this means laminit13 (infiammation RYE-Easy at 48�a48%c. ,ot the feet) is often averted. It might BARLEY-Very dull: 5Oa78c, according to qual· The Kansas Live Stock InsurancB ·be added that the common practice of Ity. COlllvany, ---OF-- cutting away the hair immediately (lhlcago. above the coronet is not to be recom­ WHEAT-No.2 red, 72a72Y.c. -----TOPEKA, KANSAS,----- mended, as this acts as a thatch in pre­ CORN-No, 2, 35c, serving the parts underneath it from OATS-No. 2, �4c. Insures Live Stock Death the eifectsof persplTation and moisture, RYE-No, 2, 48%c._ Against thus reducing the liability of thrush, BARLEY-No 2,550. EY DISEASE OR. AdcIDENT. scratches and other ditleases. FLAX SEED-No.1, 101%, Kansas Cit,.. Incorporated under and compliert with 'all the laws of thp. State of KlInRas, furnished bonrts as and receivert ccrttfil'altl of f'OIN Illsuran('e (.).'UlllltR-ion.. r to WHEAT-There was a weaker market on rpqutrl'rt, anthnrit.y Compound Fuel. do bu�iness. � Your Illsurance sollcitt'd. Agentswnut.ed, Mentillll KANSAS FARlIIER. 'change to·day and values lower. No.2 red was One of the most curious and attractive nominal except for November"whlch sold at 62% exhibits at the Kansas fair was that of City a62�c. the new made Mr. compound fuel, by J. N. CORN-No.2 cash, 29c bid, 30c aRked. Owen, of Butler, Mo" the Inventor and pro­ OATS-No.2 cash and October, 2Sc bld,nooft'er­ prietor. 'fhlll hl'atinll; substance Is composed IngB, Farm Stock combul'tlble and and of waste materials com­ Ry ,I'�No bids nor oft'erlngs. making a as well as a fuel. hinl'd, cheap .. cars. .cyclopedia, HAY ·Recelpts17 Market steady, Fancy, CONTAINING EVERY TOPIO OF INTEREST TO FARMER.'!, Parties intl'rested In tuel should make It a 'R,IN(,HJIEN, STOOKMEN, small 7 wire bound point to call and se� this wondllrful Inv�n­ baled, 00; lar.;e baled, 650; BREEDEUS. FRUIT-GROWEIlS, GAIIDENEElS AND APIARiSTS. tlon, or write Mr. OWen regal'dlng It. It Is 50c less. useful form of all tbat Is of Interest and value to ,,11 for the \lIl ton Is 0. condensation Into pro.ctlnotl anrl cla./l��' just·thethlng North and West, where OIL CAKE-""... 100 Ibe., sRcked ,;.,.,,',126 22 �o .' rauchmen and breeder-, lu all 8wtum.. I "the ripe pro,luct.,f 'we1ve of tb" m"Rt fuel I!! and snow ofallrlcl1lturlsl8, hllth-prlced, block­ free on board cars. Car 2100 ton. .. during lot�. per .emlnent writer" and l,ro,(]lIclLl wnrkers In the laud It treals ov r 1.0tH) impo,lanl lopic. comprIsed ades so difficult to obtain. It Is made elth�r FLAXSEED-We at 94c per bus. the In one "Clavo v.,lume of'l,lS4 fl8ges. It contain" 40 sep".ralP. dep,,·!l1TIe1It••..Rch· quote ' upon �Ipgaut Imperial or In solid liquid form, and Is perfectly safe In I'self anrl aloll" worth Ih .. rof th.. "nlir" hrl' k. II. Is I'mtoetllBh"d with 4"0 elp�ant bulB at pure, complete price and portable, either compreRsed or nncom­ and p'actlca1 engravings, a"d Itt its rem"rkulJllI I.,w pnce (11114.50) IF within the rucb of rvery one, CASTOR at 150 bus, pressed, and can be manufactured at any BEANS-Quoted per No man who 1111. o.II a"re 01 J!r,,"nn or owu. a h,·a.; ofstoc� ''''Ii afford to dn wlt.huut this a'�mlrable point, East or West! at the low cost of 83 BUTTER-l:!upply 1I11ht and' market firm. work. Sent to any addre•• po'tpalrl, 011 re�elpt 01 price. Adelr"••. with remltt.r.nce. ton. and see or to F-ABLE General Welltern Kansas per Go I� write Mr. Owen. We quote: Creamery, fancy, 23c; good, 18&21c; HAMMOND•. 11& HAMMOND. Ageuts. City, Mo 1886 .KANSAS

THE STRAY LIST. JOHNSON BROS. Garnett, Kansas. Sexton & Offord, In oonneetlon with .MR. G. M. SEXTON. Auctiori.­ HOW TO POS·. A STRAY. eer to the Shtre HorBe SoCletll of Englam.d; Im- THB FliES. FtNII8 AND PEN ALTIEB FOR NOT POST­ porters and Breeders of' .., 'ING BY AN Am of tb. r.e.1.latnre. approved February 27.1866, """,Ion 1. wh.n the ..ppralseo value of a .tray shrr&(l;)rafl) Horses or suays t!xc.etid.d teu dollartl, tbo Coullty Clerk II English "Ithln ten ..Rtr a reqnirl'd, da)o receiving certUI.d RED POLLED OATTLE and LARGE' . J dee 1",\100 anu avprataement, to ror" afd by WMl!, . cental desc. or ,.ald i � aortce Ding c()mp!"rt� I"tlo[" �IGS" , r dtra)81 , YOltKS�I�E I on "blch ..ere taken their ..I••o tbe day .theyB. up appr a choice collection on to be and 'be I1Rme and r••14.nce 01 t Ha�e very 'han!! sold 1'alue. tbe ,ker·up. to ' tile KANU. FARMER to�etber wltb. ths-: IUW of fI!ty ·cheap. 'Correspondence sotlctted, cenbl for each aDlwal contained in 8t1oid notice. 34. East Fifth Street, TOPEKA, 'KA1'iSA,!,I, Breed... of and o...lera In. Imporl"d and ntgb·Grade III���e�u."u�e�lICy"81�,\���ft��I�a���.ln1tt?: ���Mtt! d nty or tile pro�rlotor. ot tbe Ii ANU. FA RMER to send tbfl paper. 0031. to every Uouoty Clerk In Ibe French Draft Horses. {ru.qf - :��ii' ��n8"r;;��t�dt�ube���:!� lO���t�u�ef��O! Chofee StalIIona for' "I- on ea.y term•. Wrlle us First Prize Hereford ·R,era: f5.00 to 15" 00 10 affixed to ..ny f.llure of .. Juattee of and KANSAS' FAI�MEB. II,entiop . tbe P.ace. a CeumyofJlerk. or tile proprletera of tbe AT THE GREAT 'ST. LOUIS PAIR. 188'5. ' FARMER for-a violation of t.hls la". , Z":------_ Hl'rd 1'9mprlRe8 300 .heat1 of enotee Hl'refordli,' Broloen aRlmals can be taken up at any time In tbe STRIMPLE & GARVEY headed bv the following first-prize and sweep" year. . '. . stakes Bulls: " :f!J:.';:wc�r ��.'J ,to .. Ib���ro::; '��P�,,?o�"1';;';.!� MoCUNE, KANSAS, . The eel bratet1 FORTUNE 2080. e:lc.pt wben found J R tbe lawful enclosure of me '. SIR EVELYN an illustrious SOB cif taker up., . 9650, No peJ'80DP, except r.1UZE'D8 �BDd householders can Breeders of and Lord Wilton. a take np Atray. GROVE 4TH 13788s noted Grove 3d. . !>y the an Dealers in Import­ If anl0181 liable to be taken up••ball come upon DEWESBUH.Y 2d, 'by Dollie. tbe prendseB or anv uerseu, and he taHa lor tfoon d8) B, I'd RIllI Home-bred the,famous after b9tDIZ'.nottlled iu writ.tog ot the (act, AUY other clUzen and houeebulder way take up the same. Grades Bought and Sold. ADV nersou til"tng up RO"p.l"tray, InUBt tUJme{U8�ly CLUESDALE Correspondence solicited. Cattle on exhlbl- �:��:e:I':::::;i,�et�� �g�t!��I��r:rv���·t:Dc�;:!�t" d�D lion at stables, 1616 Bell street. Kansas City, Mo� oC�}"��c"b O�t���h r:r��t proven up at t�e expiration of II ten days, the taller-upshall ",0 be'nre R.D:t' Justice 01 the . Peace of the town.hlp. Rod ale' a" affirt.vlt stath.� NCaMAN"HO!SES, =i======A�d�dr�es�s=J�.�S.�.H�A�W�E�S�.C�O�L�ON='Y�,KA�-�S�.· that 8ur.h,etray W8R fakpD UII on hh preurlses, that he did not drive nor cause It t.o be driven ther•• tbat be •• baa a· vertloed It lor ,pn da a. that tbe marks ann CHOICE STALLIONS •• braurls bav Dot twfln alterad ; also he nbalJ 'IVfI A. (ull •• .' . on 'SALE! deocrlptlon ofth� sam. and II. ca-h value, 'He shal] For sale at very low prlees and easy JOINT PUBLIC a lb.· of aho IIlve bond to !Mate double the value 01 terms. Write for what you waut. Satisfac­ -OF-- - sUl1h atrsy. , tion Tbe Juslloe of the Pea.....hali ..lIbln twenty days guaranteed. from the lime aueh atl &V wa, take" up e"po days arter Thirty Head of and ... Imported poRti",g). male out, anrl r turn to the ('..0' ntv Cle' k. a certided co'pyot ,he.ip.Ar.rlptioll and valueor'�q hrtr,ray. L. HASTINGS, Home-bred Irsuch ,;tray shall bp valued at, mor» than tpn dollars. It ooall be a

' p ..wnee Countt' ...l. F. Whitney, Clerk ��l��t\t��';;itr���h����e'��U'e. 7���ill!�:���dob��� 0' lo�"e PONY-,_Taken up loy E W. RtlIl".s, L-rned tp,.· • • ======::::======• • BUTTONS ���!{ 9���:'��)ht:��t:b\t�:rfit��p: i8�1 f�:, 8���"�r��d�; LITTLE JOKER valued a",20. HOLSTEIN ·PARK. Come Off. Riley countv--O. C. B ,rner, olerk. For Marking Stock. Never pn ------HOR E- T" up oy' Theo. WI",bs.lhaum. of . Ollnfm onp horsfi 14 hanris alJll\lt 15 I bay hhh. ye"'� PBICE PEB 100, NO'MBEBED. SEND FOB SAMPLE. olel blM f-_t "bite. star In for.bead. dlamond·sbape $5.00 brand 00 Ion. bl�. Nemaha cou.,ty -R. B RobbinB, 'Clerk. LEAVENWORTH NOVEqY WORKS, LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS, PONV-T,.kf'1J np hy Tavlor Swyth, or" R.ock ("rppk hpr one roan rulV� \ pun tp., SfO,tpm 7 1886, pon", 8 010 t branrip.rl6 on left. hlp. ,.ttall·mark' below 8addle·mark, Ie!' bln� foot wblte; v..lned at ,211. IStraysfor we�k ending October 6, '86. Lyon oounty-Roland Lakin, olerk. MA.R -TH.ktm up by .las, U. I vine.of AmfOrlcll'ltp., 8eplemb�1\9, 1886 one dark b·n or urOWfl ·r.. XSol marp &l��'n': r..e:�B.t�I�: ����da�nl����l�l�l�q �a�l� 0B� '��t WM, A, & A. F, Wyandotte oounty-Wm. Ir.. ConnolleY, olerk. TRAVIS, '1'bl. In.Ulution "aa Established Fou..teen ulI'.ifr tb� Slbte CALF-Taken 'Ip hy Ja�. C. Grinl,er... r W\ antio1t.p BREEDERS OF Yea.rs Ago. aDd i8 lnCOII,ora.L�tl tp, AII�UHI,3. hs86, one ff-H w,ale calf ab"ut 6 Dlllnths ia", tl VI K..a.1It5d.8 Duriug that time tL '18a uonp a dlmr­ slir. or under-biL in left eRr made uy frost Ishtug uUHinf'88 alJd wade mp.ny rpmtt.rllBble curH, old, bite; - valued at $8 Holstein Friesian Cattle. The lU8tltnte til provideo wtth tbp vt-ry bf'st facilIties fur LJ't�atlll" every kind of tlefOl'lllIty. Hue" 88 - ph,}stcJ:ll Osage- oounty R H. McClair, clerk. Inter-Ocean Stables. North Topeka. 'HIO·Julnt D'8e8Ae. Lluh Flint., Wr,v . tock and �pinal lfORSE-I'akell up bv D, tJ, O'n, ne,,]' Lyudon, In ClllvaLure, havluR' a 8kHl�d; workman whn wakt-II Drook Sel,teUitier onto tu In Vallpy tp I 6, 1886, hOD Jlray every applianCE" rfquired artbropodlc surJlE'ry borae. (Flex out glvelt), about 16 I,aud" high, alit in ctpleut thlucer curt>d,and all kindelll tumoMlremo\'ed. right. par Rnrl· c.-.r Oil Ipf' j ·LW: V.·, tllert at tan. DI8p.l>SeS o(tbe.Blooo aorl NervoufII8,.'sutm "UC"f>�Rfully THE CITY HOTEL, treated, N08P, Throat and LunJZ Dil"azo.e8, H curf\ble, ylphl rf'artily to tllJeclftc treat.ment 88 here employed OHIOAGO. All (orwR o( FewRle WeaknE'e8 relieve,t. TRpe Worm rp.woved iu froUl one to (our bours. All Cbronic and STRAYED. S. )<;. Cur•. tat" and 16th stl'eets. SnrglcRI Dlsoas,'.sclenUllcally an

. the of tbe Ilt No. 26 M"n- , From premls'8 Rubscrtbpr, THE STOCKMEN'S HOME PATIENTS TREATED AT HOl\IE • C<>rresp0111'.nce Aollclted. Con.ultatlon free. Send f�;6�t:�t�'h1'tr:ykM:r� c;!o���I�\:bhe�5tf�:�( :hl'�C,IUI��:e Rate to Per and lIat or .. Stockmen, $1.50 tor circular prlvat� alJd (ace'" hite mane roached, a (pw wl,.ite balr", clos Special Day. qUfetiofls, Nf'areet Rotel outstdfl tbe can toRPt,ber on l ..r1, litdp of neck. Pony was 6 years old. YardA. ('"able p�8t DRS. "'ello:bs abollt 650 pounds, was J'er(pctly gentle. Suit· HouMe.f,., all parts 01 tho City M3��:!t :���t:!e�¥�::.���KA" W aLle rewarn will OP given r.,r the pouy OJ' tutormation F ORCUTT. Proprietor. le..dlng to 118 recove.y. J H. l{EI...Y . No. 26 Monroe KRS. ,. OheavestEatingODEarthI· atr.eet" Topeka. ASX"'rO'UB GBOOEB:roB BLU": RIBBON COUNTY OF FRINK S R UPTURE R EMEDY mBK.. FOR ALL. .ao a week and ex­ GR"�ATX E \.STF;HN KANi!!A". '. TH.OWlaINAL and . Jeifersoneounty tJ Va, utl,ui.. OUtftt dud .. Will cure any c.... of hernia or rnpt"re. Ex- . p(lrth.�-� clon't owe dOllar. "rice List uf Farm., quickly OIlLY a.NUIN•• f'�'':: Auur•• and te.tlmonlall f...... AddreBB , ':;��rR etc •• fl·ee. , III Indey, Uskaloosa, plana.lon I. Meta�er . .-.-"d . • 163 Ne" York. T."a- no. WORK P.O,VJqKE�Y, AU&'1l8t..,�a.qe. .b..... CutLbl.out. I O. FRINK. Broad"ay, rrRASK'S'AR. OCTOBER 14 KANSAS FARMER. 6,

something of the same nature and BERKSHIRES. (lfae 18etetinatian. is called eczema rubrum, erythema MANHATTAN HERD OF mercuriale. In short, it is a bad state £The pa!'8lP'l\phs in this department are of the blood, and although it shows it­ FARM- ,athered from our exchanges.-ED. self so external treatment is of ' plainly .B.1 no avail unless active internal remedies BLOODY MILK.-I have a cow that are quickly given a little at a time and one of her has given bloody milk out of often, so as not to weaken or disturb teats for three weeks past. Now an­ the alimentary organs. The proper and successful mode of treatment is to drive other is affected 'the same way. Please the matter out to the surface of the skin tell me the cause and what to do for and drive the effete matter through the her. L There are several causes for a in this pores. As if it _be driven mternally by cow giving bloody milk. But cold then tyaema or blood-poisoning case it is caused by injury to that quar­ takes place and the horse dies a mass of ter of the gland. Foment the bag sev­ corruption. There is no remedy so safe eral times a day with warm water, and and efficacious as compound pepsin internally: Elixir of vitriol, 1 give balsam of given internally, and bealing ounce; cinchona, 2 ounces; tincture ointment iron, 2 ounces. Mix, and give one tea­ external�y.] If there spoonful three times a day. Be merciful todumb animals. Heal SOVEB.EIGN.,D'OB:E 3819.---( From Life, by Lou Burk.) are cracks or sores outside apply all sores and cuts with Stewart's other any open SOVEREIGN DUKE 3819, at head or ramoua Manhattan Herd. Am.>ng many honon, elaewbere. at the St. Louts ralr. iodine lli and 50 cents a box. thIs splendtd stre won five hlue rtbbons durf ng two BUcceB.lve yean great Inclndln. ointment.] Healing Powder, never obtarned other boar. 8weep8takpR DS best boar of any age or breed, each year-a,record bj' any At the St. Louts ann otber leadln2 falra o( 1882 the Manhattan Herd austained It. well-parnod prl:oe·wln­ ENLARGED KNEE.-I have a valua­ Mexlean of the lor, Sweet lemons are a favorite nina- rsuutatton of former YflarR by wlnntnJ,r 0. ma.1or1ty, over all competitors, premiums competed bel nz thlrteen sw ee ".takes and tJrt,v·elRbt prizes for that year. ble colt, three weeks old, which has a damty. -They are the shape, color and size Twenty cbolce young Boars for sale at lower prices than formerly. soft, ronnd swelling, half the size of a of the lemons of commerce. but are sweeter ��� from a bealthy herd, and satlsractt than bananas. gua:!��e��tir�!:nfd�!r:��::t 1�:;;lrl�:/ ��':���'}�����;'.,d i�:��hl� goose egg, on the outside of the fore leg Kansas. under the knee. there is heat and A. W. ROLLINS, Manhattan, [If Turnips will stand frost better than any .maatfested on the pain pressing part, other root except the parsnip. They are with warm water half bathe twice daily best stored in pits, but all the white kinds Pot A N"�r.HINA � an hour at a time, and in the ii'l'tervals must be gotten out early and sold. or they LARGErBERKSHIRES THOROUGH8RF� apply a warm poultice of linseed' meal, will become 1lltti'y and worthless. Yellow G. W. B.�RRY. TOPEKA. KAS,' reduced. If of the Swedish variety, till the inflammation is turnips, especially hprd nrlll,h Champion II. 13481.1Rat: the head of tho • are better late but also should famtlteR and there is no inflammation present; paint keepers, they 8,11('1 the fOWA rppl eaent the bPRt prlze­ are distln be stored In pits. wlnntnl!' F:trnlnA In America. TheFe hogs the part over once daily with tincture 12'1Iif't'lpn for Ellzp, parly· npvrJflpmf"nt., and nnell,. rthpOflit'onq. Brf'fdpr� rf'glbtpl"E'n I offer none but of iodine till it gets sore, then apply Orat claa- atnck (or sale, fresh lard for a few days, at the end of -I'SEDGWICJ['I� 'KING of the tinc­ STEV[N� , which time the application _", ,{, BERKSHIRES. VOL-. &. 1'/", ENGLISH ... ture ma.y be resumed.] .....(1 bred bv A C. MOOB!!" Gbtl'o,., Aft prollu('t'd SONB, ' WIRE FENCE best In t.be world. We bave made·'a KIDNEY WORJlIs.-I have niue pigs, ·STEEL- Ill, The hog specialty of Ihls breed for 38 year.. We are tbe larj[esl th� world. three months old, that have been sick hr...�e.,; of Ihorouphbred Poland C:iI("", In '�"f"l·erl over 700 pili' In 1883 and could not ""pply Ih. five weeks. They were taken with high dpmRnd \Vp ore raifling 1,000 pl�8 ror this aelr.l'On'. fever, constipation and rush of blood ����: ��� ��;:d�fi��r��r;J���r���lrn�;::rl�:J!.t�nJ. RUOf'd. PIR' all elillibl. t,o record. Photo card o( 4R to the head. After a few days t1IPY breeder- free Swime J()1t,.,,,,} 25 etR. in 2·CP.Dt stamp" AP(' onr tfnot as .... p .111 fever Increased. Come anll stock: reprefllented began scouring, They pay your exnenses. 8pp.clA,1 rat...8 bv flxprellllll. are very weak in the back and dizzy. Three have died and the I'Pst are Jo:ASXEltN.KANSAS HERD OF

t.' , apparently getting worse. The pigs TIJE w ".,,,(llnN HERD II' w e ll-bred and IUl' P' ,., •• ! HJ;;ltl{SHIRES I. hpade;l by nopetul J()fo POLAND-CHINA HOG.S. were quite fat. [You describe It case I��U. Tilt,,: ""Iii C'"ltli:"ll,"! ell twentv matured hruod 80,,"" n' III .. OPIIoI. rUllllllpA. Thl,.. herl' ha'" no auperlnr for AI 7." of kidney worms. As the pigs are nml QII:dlt,\. an,1 tllf� ,"pry rPRt. fltrRio,", o( BprkAhtre blon('. Stl)ck 1\lll'el'nl'ilpd In A. R. R. Correaponder ce weak and prostrated, very mild treat­ nlln Inspp('tloll invltHi AfMnPR ment must be followed to save them. �T.. H. n,EAOY. "'ellington, I{as. First, I cautiou you not to drench or force medicme down them. as ill e very Large English Berkshires case you will kill the pigs by choklng. Take porter or strong ale, half a pint to each pig, two tablespoonfuls of mo­ and Whtte EAr 8117 at head of bordo mixed in' oatmeal Two PH' Y D 58.i1 lasses gruel. AmonR' thp. flOWS are MUla 6666 (0 R.), sired by Btre� hours after the same dose. Add hpr'sCor6119: Faucy Ge rn 12448,8ired by Gem's U.B. give 2.::;01: thrpp f!hWS hrpn hv B. F'. DONey" dona, .. Ired hy one of and spir­ �t. Lout- Klnsz 1993: tIX8ow"88Ir�c\ b.v I'flok'. U A.8'.9. teaspoonful turpentine 811tt the tfmes " t! and HoI'S" J�(lu"ator. Ch-dce plgR tor Rale at prtces to In"pPc" of Watch to see them eat tlon Invited; Recorded In O. P.,f), RON,rll, StOt'k all its camphor. r � I �I � I performs all Surgical ''''or "ll!I!S1111, V II., ' heallhy. it,up clean.' Next morning when hun­ Operll.tiou8 on HORSI�S and CAT'I'Ll�. Rlchmo�d,AFr�:k�:���K", Castrating Riduling Horse., "'lid Spallin!] Heifer., and then tone gry give them ,the same, a spectfllty Success Guaranteed, He the operatlon on Rldglings by a BRED AbiO !"Vh .')" Lt. UY OTTAWA HERD OF them up with skim milk and oatmeal performs new melhod, using no cla,mps, and takes tbe les, JOHN B. gruel-a little at· a time. When you Llcle out througb its natural channel without. t.ne THOMPSON, use of a knife except to open the �crotu\Il, The PJ,ATTSllUR{�, lIUSSOURI. Poland-China and Duree Jersev Red 10281 see them one returning strength give horse can be worked every day,., The success The very heat. imported boarA and SOW" thai. mone,) .. in the can at head of berd. Fine young Btock from ounce of Glauber each, in the mo­ which haA ttended Prof. Rlgg; perform', procure , to or both lOr sale. Satisfac­ anpe of this operation has jJronounced him one ptJ!:8 up yearl1nJlB, flexeR, \V J 1 e for Illustra!ed and lasses and Keep them in a well­ of the most and operators in I,he tion gutfornnte('(1. catalogue gruel. skillfuZ 811CCC8.'

--_.__ .. _------._--- DELPltOS,· ItAHSAS. TROWGH. Sawing Made Easy� IlOXI_ r.w:i:Dmo SAWIlIG JU.C.HiRB a conseruc­ Farmers and .I."ck-ralsers wlll find, In tbe contrivance for watering Btock h.r.wlth llhatrated. "SUIte ot and tton cal-utated to pave time and trl')uule, promote cleanitueea, prevent water, yet alwa,8 perform i��:oe;�'�,i,�:c�:�"����'�,o���j������: ��:t��Ilr��ra�J �����ha���'.r:�tt�ht:c���� �:a����� 'li::�o�::e:t�::, a�'� and when the otrthe will return to Ita normal 'DIal sl.ps upon It the cover wJIl be raised, Rnlmals,"pa platform tbe Cl'ooa bare aero.. the the 1""llIon.1'lIo tbe rover will autouratlcatlv close over the trough. top prev.ntlng �ohni�Cl�����v��e!�t;;�l� �P��rf�:����::: n�e:�!!.II��\':1 :��f.r; c;::e���g:llt�:::tt�rt:; a':��J�:��O ���'�fl bot tbo of tbe water 10 the that, tbe wxter "Ill al","yo '11\"<1 at. the same b.l�ht In tooth cOI4I,artwente. hllgbt whicb water when It falla below a certain ftrR1 ttlvleion is controlled Uy a atop cock actuated by a fioat., admit, 80 there can be no overflow or waste water. The level and CUf" off the supply a� it rises above f,bat; revel, that wltb donble the betwpeo them BtdFRt,ends and bottoms 0'- the trough, and ita covers, are made walls, apace non-conductor of cold or a .ubala�tlal pro­ hpj nR carerull .• packed ..-lIh asb••to" mllboard, R•• heat, milking a whlcb oUh. Carmere 10 some oC oor tectdnn ajralnst tile frepzlng of the ..ater In cold w.atb,r, difficulty many 8 sertous one. Tbe cover baa a amall aperture weete-n StU.te�, whet e water Ie scarce, have founr1 to he most, are 80 made that can wlt.h wlr leb Ihe111'erlo'l- of the trouah mAY be vonWllted. and tho Interior partitions t\ley . . 1888. . be readily removed for cleanlng.-Sciellt!fic .America... Jan,,,u-1I914, TESrtMONIALS: Jun. 1886. OFFICE OF KANSAS STATE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, MANBATTAN, KA8., II, . 7b wllo71l it "'laY concern: Witll tile TRIUMPH STEAM-OENERATOR M.,�,�I.·d���;��t�Yil���;,"o�D:I�o�n����!�,":.���:eo:Il"e�t�,t��d'�:.:'l�.'eS��I::.te"";t�.T���t"h��.w�� aud to out oC It wilL SIJ.ve �.to !.(iof your >Dtlroly ",II'f,ctory frow tbe first. 'The T,ouRha8nd connecttona Rfe simple notUk.11100n get tq Automatic. 10 aucb a WIJ &8 to the �roo,bB con· freely keep . feed, and your sfock will r..palr, Al1d thp supvly anparatus ptrlctly worklog �H:m thrive better and fatten This Trougb seems to be a useful addition to our lIat of farm appllanClell. .talllly supplJed. Eo M. SHELTON. Quicker. Send for tltuetrut­ Yoorstruly. ed circular and . pamphlet MllfNEAPOLIS Jono 1886, PHEPARtNG }<'I!:ED 1,-'01\ . IrAB., IS, ,.011 ttatlaf'llctlon. and I BISHOP :SSR8. GnoD�IN-D,ar Uf1 ACME \V11�i�'���ti.t CO., ' ::'�ST���;. 42 Wetit Munroe SI., CbJeago. :�d� :���Yp��tn:,�i���.O;�!� ,,;,�'� ����I}��':l'·th���I��boo:�:��r,g\:�dtb'��,�j,. :�r::d:l� ���R"°f.!�bo.!�It�:; (Pat'tl March'. '88. Jone. '88.) accel!l8 fresh water at all con- conatrterattons, cannot. he oVeresthnRtl'd S8 it i8 well known that to pure tlD;le8 than all ot.her eau.... combined. ' uuces more to the Reneral geed health or domestic AnImal. Will extermi­ , Comml8Bloner. effectpally Respectfully, J. T. WHITE, Live Stock Sanitary nate P R A I R IE DOGS GET THE BEST, AND TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE, •. �Good commission paid for setting Trought; ,TerrltorY,for·sale. Wrlte:forpartlculars. STITES &. CO'S STANDARD GOPHERS and SKUNKS. MEASURES :IRON .. � Their Inte"t Improvements are Balled Price O�y $4.00. Half Busbels. and combined. Stable FEED MILL Bushel. Your Grn­ Bucket and Half IDEAL The ACME SMOKER cervman ought to have tbem. For sale AND HORSE POWER to that bv the leadlug hardware houses, Send never falls do all Is COMBINED. for C_ilcnlars and Price Lists. Address, rov.resented, and will never �TITE8 & CO.. Mnnu1"nctorers, fall. to rId 'allY place ot Cincinnati, Ohio. •l:i90 Ealltern Avenue. Prairie Dogs;etc. Can be operated by a -SO:El.G:B:UlW- Boy" . 'Address " EVAPORATORS WILSON KEYS, and NULLS. STERLING, KANSAS. Cheapest aud Best. Write for free·copy of. the Sor­ ghum Growors' Guide. HAPMAN & CO., IlIntlisoll, Intl.

The Vanaless Monitor -iB- MASTlf!�Y,,�!MA�URERS UNEQUALED .AS A OF A FARM N;��;;:;ent. � MILL. � > TURBINE FENCE-BUILDER! IRON S,QPO MILIES IN THE SYSTEM, With Traina Pullmal z. Elellkn! Through cuntalnlng d u r a b I Portable, simple, e, � WIND Palace Sleeping, Dining and Chair Car., between a renee r...' strouz, Butlds picket � the following prominent cities wllthout c;hange: ill sub- 1"'1'1 on the posts the field, r--:I ENGINES CHICACO, PEORIA, stantlal, ecouormeal. The most will not ,..k ..... Strong and Durable, ST. LOUIS, KANSAS CITY, machine yet devised. or Rattle praetical L:"".J Swell, Shrink, Wal'p, \WI III the Wind. DENVER, OMAHA, ....t JOHN P. BROWN, ...... ST: JOSEPH, QUINCY, � RiBing Sun, - - - Indiana.. V BURLINCTON, HANNIBAL, KEOKUK, DES MOINES, ROCK only suc­ ISLAND, LINCOLN, COUNCIL BLUFFS, cessful Ro­ BUCKEYEFORGE PUMP � Works eaayand throWlfa conSlant Lined and c:I ATCHISON, TOPEKA, tary pnwer In stream. Has Porcelain lJras. Oyllnders. Is .... set. Is tbe gj LEAVENWORTH, Wurld. Illo the W'::lge���n���sto�°m:'all��P�QeWs� j SIOUX CITY, ST. PAUL, freezes In Over 90.000 In use. Never M MINNEAPOLIS. of WIND Wlllter. Also manufacturers of the I!C 811ND for CATALOCUE . Over 400 Equipped Passenger Trains Bnckeye Lnwn Illowers_, Buck- Elegantly etc. Addreu Lnwn daUyover this perfect system, passing MILLS, Iron Pumps, eye H08e Reels and Sprlnl COUNCIL BLUFFS, OMAHA', SIOUX CITY, MOINESijST. PA L and MINNEAPOLIS. 'l'be most practlcnl, large si7.cd KANSAS CITY, ATCHISON ST. JOSEPH and 011 CRn in the market. Lalllpslll'C QUINCY, HANNIBAL and CHICAGO, Without Change. fiLled direct by the PUJIlP wjtholll RICHMOND J.-- F. OEH'L MQR., K. c., .T. 01. 6: c. B. AND lifting cnD. No drippinj? oil UII BARNARD, HI & ST. J ST. JOn'H. �""Ioor or '!'uble. No };�nllcet to •• CHAMPION , OIl""" PAIl" K. aT. oJ. 4 C. Be AND leakund wust.econtelltsurCllHI'iC A. C. DAWES, AG'T, 0'1 H. " eT. 01" 'IT. JoeIPH. explosions. CIAseR pel'fectly nil' tight. No Lenklll&'e-lVo E'Wul'''' FENCE orntlon - A lUtolut,,]y ",n"c. , with and meet with snccess re- Don't be Humbugged Pat••ted NOT. IU, 1886. MACHI NE wortbles. Imitat.lon.. Buy the quircs a knowledge of th< FENCES� Surpasses all other wire and loketfunce machines, TO uGood 'Value 0 and a correctly_ adv!. EuolIlJ'b." l\lan'f'd,.IJy for Illaklng strong and dur..�le fences In the field, JDVERTISEnews","pers, 'l'o secure such that no stocl< will break down. On rough, hilly WINFIELD MANF'G. as will enable you informationJUDICto advertise OUSLY CO., gm��::;.!�h��:��l1 r��k�ft'hg�[������ta:dJ�l�e�� d'iPlayed Ohio. lIses klnll of and Warren, It Is easy t{l handle, any pickets, CON S U LT � �����FARMERS . THOM·AS olrcular and LORD Sold Flr.t-ClIl88 DenIers Everywhere. ·Wanted. Catnloglle �n:i size of wire. Write for price. .by Wbolesale a"d Retail. A!!,ellts Ind. �EWSPAPE!\ C�ICAGO, ILLINOIS• •-UPPI.IED BY JOBBEUS, free. STANDARD IlJFG. CO., Ciucinnatl, O. WAYNE AGRICULTURAL CO., Riohmond, AJ:)ViiR'l:ISING, OCTOBER, !J.

Sendy for Sample . Send for Sample Send for Sample' RUBBER P,QO per 100 square feet, for complete Protects and preserves old shingles or Un. Water and .wlnd-proot, strong .and , root. Ready for use, thoroughly water- � STOPS Al-L LEAKS. durable. Kel'ps building warm In . ROOFING l tight, and suitable for all out-buildings. SLATE}PAINT Excellent for barns, fences, etc. Prices low . SHEATHING}PAPER winter, cool In summer. .•

, INDIANA PA�NT & ROOFING CO. Indianapolis, Ind.: -

TWO-OENT OOLUMN. C. W. WARNER & co.,

• "JIIJr' ... "'...... _, mall ....-. (or - � .,." , Wholesale Commission .01 Coi· Merchants, - ,"""�oMrged--_�.tor...... __.. OM ioord. QuA Fruit. Rancb Produc•• :i.A�...... -; :I����"a!�t!!.t :::I'D.��"ry. 39'7 Holladay 'atreet, Denver, C.olorado. -011'-'- : BALE- HolatelD Ball. BereDo loU S, H. B,. BIae Jtu. FOB I. B, BarnN. Moand. , :ESTABLISHED 1,000 poaD4-. IS711. WELL-BRED BALB - Cbolce 70aDI Tboroallbbred Jene7 J. D. BEST & CO., FOBBall-tlJ. A. B. Bmltb, box 180. Tope.... Ku. GENERAL , .

Butter from • tow IIr.t·ol_ dalrlu. box Jtu. CO rnrnlaslon Merchants. WANTED-II. lladllOa, 71. Tope"', SHORT-HORN Dealera in Dutter ad CATTLE, BEEDLINGB-Fo,r ..Ie; No.1, 11.75 per Fru1ta. Eggs, APPLE1,000; No. 2, ,1110. All kind. ornaner7 .Iocl< at A,len'. for" Sll,er S'a,. Flour," 10'11' ra'ee. .. Lawrence. Ku. Because of onr DoaRI OoaDt7·Naner,. 3'73 Holliday St.. DENVER, COLORADO. long-eontlnued sickness In (Octobar 1, 1888.) Wm. Plul

. . ..D!rTERMS: -Cash,or good bankable notes, at 10 per for I . cent., tWl!lve,months. . /,J call\"'IlUt'R rt'ady aftt'r October 1st, and will be sl'nt on 81'plication. PEABODY Is on the maln line of the A., T. & S. F. R. R., anel reached by three ' trains each mornlDg. " , & .\, S. A. SON, •. I COL� �AWYE'R,AAuc�l�nh�CKEY Peab'ody, �as: �I TI'MBER ��!_NE H�RO PUELIC SALE! BA'8T110LOMEW " 00,1 Real Eetate and t.nID H LS TEl N CATTLE UI':����Io=�r�-:�::�':,����::-.,.�r:aI·::r.:: 0 --:'-____;_'--oW-lng-to-I-1l health In my,f,amUy, I ' have conclUded to be au,.ent for Blate. or laD... ftlrinlOr olt, propert;r. -.--4ND- ao lDu@oolte' . p"rlnrl and havlnll r.nted my r.rm will IPII .t Pabllo Slle at M7 farm. "Yen mU. nortbweet or - CaD m.... u POLAND-OHINA unMPLOYED MBR mODey rut HOGS. 'hlad=r:olo:�n�r;:�r:��n�:{�� �=: llampl. tne. Add__ N. L. We are before the nnblfe tor the yrar 1886 with

��:.P���r:."r. . some of 'he fiDcilt HOL1TEfN _BULLS there is in ADd olX mllea Dortb_ ot BoblnlOD, HA.VB FOB BALE-Tit. tollowlDI Hop. bre.t from the State,ano COWiI aDd HEIFERS of like merit. I .leoIlnDI from M. B. Berl<.hlre herd ....1. : On October KeooQ·. At to Suit the Times. Friday, 15, 1886, , �r�ces eDtlre .boat g:: =,� a::��01:1�. UI&"OI:";s::; e;:l�!I\:�: In our herd has to be seen to he 'M7 berd. comprl.lng Orden IOUotted. Addreee J. H. Doulhert7, "eIltDR' Hogs. only toD.E... admired. We have a tlne lot of March and April Pigs. Ask for whal you want. ,100 POLAND�CHINASI W. J.• ESTES " SQNS, All Thoroue:hbred arid Recorded as follows: Slxty·flve Pigs, from two to four Kansas. Stock, Andover, month- 01,1; 20 Brood Sow•• on.. 1.0 ''11'0 Y"RfR old; 11 MAl... , Crom .Ix menrns te tirO ,elll1l old. For deaorlp. ,Do Yon Want a Homo? YOSt !.Inn ora pa,1. oUbl. b.rd, .Fe Vol•. 8 aDd 7 of Amerloan A, P.·C. Record. Then Wrlte·to Will. J. E8TlII..L • CO., Med­ AIeo••t tbe ..me tllD. aDd place. J wlll.ell .Ixleen head of Becorded and Hhrb­ lolae Lodae, Kaa. Tbe, b....e for ..Ie onr one OAKLAND STOCK FARM. SHO"T,,-RO"H" CATTLE"grade 8hort,horn Co,,, and Helfon••Ix Tbol(;Ullbl red BprlDIl CAI ...ee-toar Iiund ...d tracy or Cbolce Land In Barber coaDt7. Kail h.sr... Rnd two bull. AI.o Ibe Tborongbbred SHORT.HORN BULL. ROYAL ARCH No. mOIl. a IItrallbt- .... IDllabl. for ftlrm. or ranob.. I'., ..eDte ·cub. or brt'd Younu Mqrv BnlJ. . larm. to IaIt parcb_r. Tho"" deelrlnll to locate In �JX FINE TWO·YEAR-OLD FILLIE�--lIalf to three·foarth. Norman and C1,deedale blood. Plo one etc ::::"�:�t�:��O�d�l�o':.t��'Jo ':�I� .... W�on, .• � MedlclDe nl1r!.t.�� .!��Nt.�M�Ns�tEq'¥'8 �:��'il-c�aTI-"'1o ��&c�. A':"�. t.ndre--In loti �lIl50 teet. at low cub - prlcee. TERM tI OF BALE: All Bum. unrler 16, ca'b Ove,' as,. crPdlt ofolx month. '11'111 ba .110'11'0<1. wlUloat Inte...t trpRld wben rlue; trnot.o pal�.10 per cent ""r .naam '11'111 be cbarred from date. Purcb...... from a dl.t.nce can bave Btock bClled and delivered at depot tree. TO , CATTLE': FEEDERS Y . J. F. GLIOK. Two Thousand Head Doubly- wintered ELI ZIMMERMAN. Auctioneer. Proprietor Ash Grove Stock Farm. NOIthem Texas Steers for sale. Three and a halfJears oIll; 111 good flesh aud condi­ tion. Will be sold ·In lots and on time to suit buyers. Apply to FIRST ANNUAL SALE I JOHN R. MULVANE W. S. WHITE, Sabetha, -011'-­ President Bank of TOPllka, Topeka, kas. Kansas, Breeder or High-class Short-horns. '11'111 .ell R.E;lOOR.DED oomec"olce Fewale.ln car 101.8 or olugly. to .ult pur· OO""""'SSION_4 chMen. AI80. Cew good Bullo. Prj"". low. Write - IS89 • •• .STAB'DA D FERRY & CO ., DEALERS IN or come. ,POLAND CHINA SWINE --AND­ ::::::==:::::::==::::::::=:::::::::=:::::::::=::::::= B ROOMCORN HIGH:; - GR.ADE :128 � AI '22'7 Kinzie at.. CHICAGO. . We.renotGen.ral Comml••loD Mercban1.8 ban�' � 1.111s IInl..,e."tlnl. but ..... e:lclualvely Broomcora b,:al.n HOLSTEIN CATTLE! .nd b....e.n __bllabon Acklem, months five Sows kDlre or IIptare. Bates 11th 20th Duke of Consisting of thlrty·five Male Pllts, from five to seven Yl'arllng by Airdrlf-l 13.872, 8f

600 Merino Sheep tor Sale. THE LITTLE GIANT FENCE-WEAvER Jdoelly EWei. aooUmated and free from dll_. I and JIl1l0� IIf!II ae my rllu�e I. "II ""QtlJi Enelo thPDl .n. Slmpl', nar.ble, cb.ap eul1, BaI ..meD wanted. PRrtlcula'. f'reto. J. C. at . ... DWBl!I..E,.. Att'7 Law. 'l'Orl<.d.

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