WEEK·L"I'. iS84. A ESTABLI8HED.1863.}VOr... XXII, No. 2Z". TOPEKA, KANSAS, 14AY 2,8, {!!!IXTiEEN,PA:GESPRICE••r.50 YEAR. , , I

as its habits are sinmar and the rem- very while'a repitI- voo whieh might remalnin the soU. This last Ohapter on Out-Worms and Grubs. worms, second Pl,Ltt materially, edy about the same. It Is hardly,necessary 'tion same as early In the sPrWg as would.be unnecessary, If ,the In our own personal experience we never oU�e tJle, p�ecau�Ion to a of; all permit, gIve our partners plants be caref�lY IItted, by meana OI a, 'bad much trouble wItb cut-worms. But tbat gIve descriptIon th� WhI� grub sea80� "'flll' wlll. farmers are so well acqualJited With; Iluffice another lIupply of at a time when ·broad-blll-qed knife. T�e aCCl5mpanying.' experIence, such as it was, and observatIon food!.�u6t it to that this

in use more the better for us all. The SOOI1 sores. The same - use only the common names among many-the fiy says the plants may be preserved by dip- der,'w,hlch produces terms of cause of tho increasE! of in- collar can bo fitted to hOl'ses with necks of 1 farmers, dIscarding tb.e scientific principal rapid plDg the roots, when they are transplanted entomologists. sects, is the decrease III numbers of our in- from the seed-beds, into oil or lye of ashe!j., di.tJerent sizes and shape, as each collar is There is another class called climbing cut- sectiverous birds. They are ourmost reliable Powdered tObacco, or the fiue dust from to- adjustable at the top and bOttom. Pressure their habit of ascending truit insecticide. Encourage by all means possi- over the the windpipe 'and the pOSSIbilIty of ... worms, froDl bacco scattered plants, upon �.' r fac'tories, ' of J trees at night and committing great havoc ble their increase. will preserve them from attack. The use of ,c.l!,Q�i\ig are provented by the shdpe the has been 'among the expandIng buds and foliage. Having for;ned the partnership, let it be super-phosphate of lime has beenadvlsed, as "collar at the.bott�m. T.bls collar in hot and cold A.mong the climbers are the variegated cut- -tho duty of the party of the first part to as a preventive against the deposit of the thQroughly tested extreme· on the of the and for and worm, often found twigs plow the land earlyill,thefall, especially any eglla. If cabbages are not grown upon the wet weather, light heavydraught, -, thedark-sidedcut- has results and apple, cherry and peach; meadows to be used for crops the next sea- same ground for successive years, and the an� It given good Is highly which is a of those them. worm; the climbIng cut-worm, son, that the bluebirds, robins, larks and ground, meantime, thorou�hly cultivated spoken by USing does a deal of --.-.-- very active cUmber, aud great blackbirds may J\ave a feast- of fat thIngs, with some other crop. the Insect will be ma- '. ··Is this beautiful little gIrl your grand­ injury to fruit trees; and 'the lllark�d eut- before leaving for their southern winter terially reduce4 in numbers. In some expel"- child, Mrs. Yerger?" asked that demented woi1n, which has also been fOlUldfeedingon home. And, by the way;our brother farm-' iments at the Michigan State Agricultural creature, Gilliooly. Exasperated, and stung buds, aithough It more frequently at- In the southern States should ail a strong decoction, of tobacco was apple ers protect College the and to the quick at not being taken,for child's tacks low bushes, 'lluch as currants goose- such birds with a jealous care, as it is to freely applied to'the plants, but without ap- . Mrs. retorted: mother, Yerger unthinkingly . berries. . th'elr benefit t·0 dIll0 so, as we, as ours lere i'n preClab 1e bene.fit Pro...f J A Lintnerwrites in the "Is that child large enongh already'to be I shall not space describing , occupy the North. And again this fall, plowing upon the subject as follows: "When the and or to takell for a grandchild P" appeamnce oftllo larvlll moths, give feathered friend of attack of larvre has reaQhed that of will give that,valuable stage --._.-- the natural and habits of these vari- history the farmer-the chance to assist the progress that the plants unmistakably show A little said to his mother are quail-a four-year-old ous species, as farmers and gardeners other birds, and by so dQ\J;lg on to it by wilting and the leaves tUrIlmgtoafnint last week: "Mother, I believe �d thinks! more in how to overcome fle�h interested learning severe�ut our all such should aid them in enduring the cold of lend color, beproruptly ,11ll dead." "Why?" as)j:ed the remeclies to use In Ilxter- tak.c, I tpother, them and the best '!lnd the hole left should be WI. I long winters. ,up, ,tilled �jlllewhatastonishedattheremark. "'Cause , mlnatln.l them. I ot the 11\1'- 1 for a I shau class the May JJeetle with cut- Deep llarrowiDi will aid the party of the strong brine of lye to deetroY,aJlY ha.ven't sa.id my prayers week." MAY 28,

be gradually changed, by a proper sys- was a and was of I great suckler, capable strength and can tem of ' powers o,f digestion, feeding, into palatable and more milk than her profl- giviug littEll' at two assimilate food and resist the untoward table mutton. It is claimed that the weeks old needed, and that she and of PUBLIC SA,LES OF FINE CATTLE. they ,effects impurity ()f atmosphere and French have so changed the MerIno at most of their Dates claimed for sales were spending time sleep- drink and to a only advertfaed ill the the Rambouillet feed, large extent; but K .. NBAS establishment:" It is. iug and would have seen F.unIEK. eating, they the young die rapidly or lay the founda-, June 8-J. H. Potla .. Son, quite certain that our best breeders of that sooner or later some Jacklonvllle,'m. derangement tionsor disease in ", June'Uand li-'S, 1'. Bennett & Co" Sbort·bornB, Snr· Merinos have filthy quarters. greatly improved them must follow. The liver becomes torpid, Park Herd ot from Tho sow must eat for herself and her In'!:�i��Urll.am Short·horDI, Abilene, the original Spanish form. The stomach bowels deranged, constipated, and • '" lind litter, must have enough wholesome J�':'i8-Stu)'Vfiant Foot, Sbort.horns Polled, 'American Merinos appear almost like 'a and a feverish oendition of the system and nutritious food to nourish her Juo:.lf:!.�hoe. HOgh�:Sbort.hornl Chlcngo. distinct breed. About 50 per cent. has follows. svs­ September 30-018)' Hreeders' tem Co., Mo., 8hort.�orll AB', been added to and furnish milk for her IOOlatlon. Liberty, Mo. their weight, mid young. " October 9-C. S. .' -they The effect on the sow is to make the Corn 1!.lchhoIUl. Wlpbltn, lius "Sbort,hornB" mature earlier. alone aa not enough, nor the-most Novem�6-S. E, Ward '" 'Son, lianBIlB '!'his work should " Sbort,hornB, good milk Mo. less wholesome. The are in suitable nor City, ." pigs' be cont'mued >ll economical feed for the' till thiIS breed sha11 be , E. Holsteins, nt St, LouiS, eon- condition now to show NU�!"ber ,!llllIer, effects of indlges-: sow; she needs grass and made from 20-;OS. sidered as for mutton as for slop superior tion attacks of if by scours; or, the de- mill-feed or milk. If there is no wool. Their weight call be made graas, equal rangement of the has not then (Jur . ,stomch been roots must the Inoreasing Mutt9n aheey. to the Southdown, and when their flesh supply corrective '.rhe attended with damp and feed. : FARMER fully agrees with the shall be as cold, weather, ofgratn She needs Ilberal couraes universallv esteemed as the a National rapid'laying on of fat the of Live.Stock Jou1'naZ when it says then the best Is-made, grain, slop, and grasa or roots. A� Down, mutton and best to that it is the of wool pigs begin show a change in the soon as the to tax 'the mlafortune our wool will be combined in one breed, pigs begin sow, that breathing, and m two or three days it and the milk does not growers they do,...not sufficiently But while this improvement is supply satisfy tJie - goingon, becomes so prize the carcass, as well as the tleece, labored' that the most care- pigs, we must for let the common mode if improving the, arrange supplying Now that the on less observer must see it. this time their wants in some duty wool has been re- mutton our By other' of common way.-Sw(ne. grade Merinos- the duced, and many ,fear that it will be diaphragm and muscles involved in Breeders' Joumal. crossing upon them a Southdown, lowered still instead of the old respiratlon, with which the pneumo­ further, Leicester, or Cotswold ram-be more nerves are are duty being ,restored, it behooves . gastric associated, all sheep generally practiced. The first cross farmers to their sympathetically affected, and the study resources. makes a remarkable in pig 3n t�e improvement the shows Ii labored "It has long been our that breathing. One man IDairy. opinion mutton, the lambs bringing a much says, now it .is the heart an- simple wool is not warrante affected', ' growing higher The lamb is often Th A 0 price. worth it's the f'".w.ak'109 Butter, on Iand worth' more'tlIan twent 0dartother, lungs. The pig may y t more'than two fleeces. An ' OhIO who thoITt d0 and breathe with dairyman lives where y 11cars per acre. 'I'he SImpIe cough 'difficulty, and "In to mutton with good butter is made tells the ft 1'f changing wool, its days are ended. readers of eece, even wooI b'e ...AO t0...A5 cents per nearly the sheep farmer WIll require to study the Ohio Former how the thing is done. pound, will not pay where cultivated If the disease be' noticed in time, it is the: feeding problem more than hereto- Making butter in winter and grasses are grown and housed as lood easy to cure. The first step is to correct summer fore, for the quality of his mutton will differs In for a long winter. Since Nature has constipation, move the bowels, reduce materially. winter when depend much upon this. It is food that milch cows are p:Fovided for' a double increase, why the feed of the dam, compel her and the mostly on dry feed, it is grows fine mutton or beef. But he will more difficult to make .should not the sheep farmer avail him- pigs to take exercise, If the weather is gilt-edge bilttm' find his profit in a liberal supply. The than in self of both to the fullest extent? Our not too bad, The p1'evention is moderate the, summer, and especially in well-fed lamb will nearly double that of spring of the people do mit fully appreciate mutton feed of sow that is a great suckler. If year (May) when cows are the poorly-fe� one. on blue as a food " and we good grass , cannot be considered pigs seem oonatipated.Teed sow more pasture. Anyone as in bran and can make a fair article of butter expert raising mutton as beef, but roots, if there is no grass for then, Scala of Points for Ohester in if we Judging Whit� her run both quality and color. But in examine the' quotations�. of our to to. This watchfulness in the fresh beef H'oge, winter it requires extra care both of and mutton exported, we find time, with exercise of sow and litter the , " Prepared by the Indiana Chester White milk and tha� our mutton UDI'fonm 1 outseIIs our every d wi'II t 1most cream, �nd the best and most y Swine Breeders' ay, preven,a ent'11'e1v, Association. suitable food to beef. It must be , the loss of obtain,., the best results. understood 'that the 10-Divided any young pigs from thumps. Head, as follows: Nose, Their feed in winter seek the best of both for ex- When the' disease has should consist of exporters 2-of medium and advanced, to a length pointed, Ear. corn wheat bran port. And: If we mut- stage that fatty formation about the meal, and middlings appreciated good 4.-Small, stiff or 4- ton as as drooped, Jowl, equal portions mucb ,�he English ',p.eople dg, heart, and general derangement of by weight (not bulk), and .Hea\lY. a few feeds we should have a nerves' and each week of Irish 'Very large market"at:''' Neck, 4-Short and full. pneuma-gastric diaphragm potatoes . or i wurzel J �. home. There are strong reasons are Involved.jhe pigs will die, mangel beets, adding one why Shoulders, 16-JVide and well formed. usually 'farmers should pound of cottonseed or linseed consume more mutton: But we have seen quite hopeless cases meal to Chest, 12-Full. each feed, the first is, that it ia healthier than recover after of My choice is cottonseed meal. Back, and broad with injections tepid soap- and 10-Straight and Theil' rough feed, clover pork; the, second Ia, tliat it can be ribs well suds, drenching the pig with a half hay, Hungarian' sprung. or corn used fresh in summer better than of in which was grass fodder. On the above any and gill milk, stirred a tea- Sides,10-Long deep, should the other meat. The quarters of a spoonful of amlxture of feed, butter be too light sheep Loin, 8-In line with sides andhams. equal parts of pf can be kept, aid of a little in the soda and color, grate two medium-SIzed ,I by ice, Flank,2-Low. ginger, Epsom salts once a day carrots, hotter till for which will be sufficient for five or weather, consumed by the three days; or, if a bad twice a six' Hams, IS-Broad, full and well down case, It A pounds of butter. Strain the contents family. certainly would promote the to hock, day. teaspoonful of the powder to a health of farmers and their families to gill of sweet milk isa through a cotton or linen cloth, Tail, 3-Large and dose. Prevention, pressing ' bushy. the exchange some 0f the f t saIt k f is the main juice out, pour it into the cream a, por, 91' Limbs, I)-as follows: however, thing, He only 5-Bone me- when commence good, fresh mutton. It is evident will be able to use that is a you churning', add or very dium size and keen. Feet, Who careful that our home for mutton is ' 'i-Standing observer of his diminish the quanity to give the desired market on toes. daily stock. Pigs not a straight color. it capable of great expansion, and that the month old get all their nourishment Try and you will never use General appearance, 7-as follows:' income derived from from the anv other butter coloring. thrs.would greatly Hair, 2-fine and dam, and the source of-their assist in straight. Style, 3:_ cheering up the discouraged food supply must be 01' will With good butter cows, a milk Neatness and symmetry. Action,2. right, they good sheep farmers. It is reasonable to be- sooner or later be out of condition. room, and with good fiworable The face should be slightly dished and feed, lieve that a of weather and cleanlieess in complete development of width between the But with' the sow that is not a all the de- the good eyes. good mutton side of the indus- partments where the cream and sheep 'The above scale will be ad- suekler we have .no such dangers. In butter would stictly are try render it more this case we handled, there is no trouble for profitable, hered to, and experts or committees are to' supplement food, good without any to than-when butter makers to make regard duty, must, in cases of fill We have had sows that did not gilt-edge butte1' at it is dispute, out the give simply on wool, protected with any.season of the year; but with any scale of points for each animal contest- enough milk for half their pigs. If the unfav­ possible duty. We say this as an en- orable weather in summer or ing, pigs shrink in flesh, are sure get winter it couragement, and not as the extra care both of the indicating such a check in as to' re- requires milk and growtthheY greattloy cream. propriety of the for we Oare reducing tariff, of Sow and duce their value as makers, The Young Pigs, pork in warm think wool is entitled to a Milk set in a fairly rea-' The of born in the pigs that are wIll to weather, good majority pigs year hungry learn drink ' sonable milk room or cellar where no �' protection. come in the fresh vegetables months of April and March. cow's milk from' a trough very "Let us are or suppose, as an The care to It kept, any impure air, and the illustration, given young animals While young. will cost little to arrange a tha�, a fihe-wool sheep will 5 temperature ranges near or above 60 deg average following the dams is most important. small trough so' the sow cannot get at it, pounds of wool, and that it is sold at 4.0 (there should be a thermometer in the It is the when the' but where the can be fed a period growth is pigs small milk cents; this would yield $2 pet year, and most room), may remain thirty-six to rapid. A good start or a poor start quantity of fresh milk three times a and in would amount to $8. forty-eight hours before it will need to 41'ears makes a profitable or an unprofitable day, A quart at a time, and given three a be skimmed, unless 'the milk is "Now, good mutton sheep would as a times a dis­ animal, general rule. If the sow is day, is better than a gallon or weigh, alive, at a little over two turbed; but should the 'milk be shaken years" a good suckler, the for the first mora at the little danger given once; fellows so as to 200 lb., and would be in break or crack the or worth, market, six weeks is not that the will not will get into it with their feet and cream, pigs defile a I fat, from $10 to $12, so that the carcass jarred by thunder storm so as to mix get enotlgh milk, but too much, If they and waste it, A clean trough, with of a mutton would be worth- the milk and cream, it should be ( t sheep more are confined to a close or small clean feed, in a clean will pen lot, pen, pay bet- skimmed at the end of the second year than the immediately. In cold weather and the sOW has no chance to take them ter than leaving the hungry litter to fleece of a it may remain from fine-wool in, foul' out for a forty-eight to sixty she�p years, daily sunning and exercise, sow and worry off their flesh' I and there would two ,tease t�e !lOurs (two or -three days), but II be, b,esldes, fleeces the chances are that the best Sticklers anel her s. milk sh(mld 1 of the mutton sheep; and It would not will always be skimmed as soon as lose their best pigs with" thumps." We have of the two ,cost 80 much to the mutton spoken extremes. it becomes a little acid. No definite keep sheep This disease comes on tIme, stealthily, Now for the average sow and we can III two as the four litter, be given; it must be learned care- years fine-wool years. we hear by though men say, "It came on would say in 'It\. "Our cities are general: sunny, dry ful observation and as : f lat:ge every year ap- in one were all experience, I night; pigs right the bed, a and a grassy lot, solid, clean, feed- change of has much to do preciating good mutton better, and night before, and the next temperature I morning they ing-floor are essentials in with the time I there IS every to were profitable for milk to be in the prop­ 'II encouragement breed thumping," rfhat means simply management of young pigs. The 'er for ! and feed for mutton and wool. We are young condItion skimming, If the milk 11 that the feeders have not been close ob- pig does not thrive in filthy quarters. should become ole� that sheep not soured in less than the pot ftnEtIVQoled may !;Iervers. Had they noticed that tlle �ow r;rbe .ol4e1.' I hog, tll!'t b�1,I developed time mentioned there mUl,lt be some· ' I: I II J -, "

18M. :KA.NSAS 11'ARKER,." .� .,...., ,: 8

, ...... thing with the milk room or the' wrong dition, and·coD.sequeJitly, instead of'the BREEDERS' J;>�CTORY. SWINE. mtlk pans. Should there be any small gilt.edge have a mass of product they . 'L. WHIPPLE, Ottawa Kos.• breeder of Recoriiiad . left on or about stuff that will particlesloilsoured"mllk greasy only pass inspec- GllrdioIIA,:u'lmu o,.leaa;��ftlurletH"'JiaBr""- I , Pollmd·Cblna and Red Berk.hlre Swine. Stock fItt .'. ,10.00_II""r.Ilt'tfi.00/Ot oIoi the or the milk will Bot tion while ,er'"DW«JIOI1Ilor _".,; lii\Je J_ll su seasons. Correspondeuce .ollelted. pans cracks, fresh, but horrible when ten eacA tJddUi(naa1 """•. _r _ of 171<1 , ,2.,","'" •• �A J'II_ • tl/UI b. unI IIIi atlwrli.... I"., "'"'""-- or dtlriftq 01171<1 n' V .." keep sweet-more than twelve twenty- or fifteen days old. Another fault 'of- oar". 1: W ASHBY C Ih III II b k .1..J. "blres. Imj,or� �:ial Ih::Jr or four hours in warm weather. Stone tenhes in the fact that after the butter T':;ro��.:-e457;�t h_er_d_._In_spec_I_lo_n_so_I_lc_lI_ed_. �� crocks sHould be boiled in water twice' has so CA:TTLE. been churned it will gather, B. breeder they BALDRIDGE. PanonIJrae.• of TueB- a week -in the summer and in on R• OUGnDRED lUCORDED ...OLARD·QuIllA S'lrlD•• ontle keep until it becomes '" churning salvy & Slock for me. of herd or M:MAROY SON. Walmru... Shawnee Co.• liM.. Inapeol'n eorre&poDd!nce Iov. a cool and J • breed of, 'winter, theI\oset in, place. They then work it so much that it loses Thoroughbred Short-homli I'BIhlonnble -_ ... z; cows le(t COOK. 1"1110. Allen county, KaDIBI. 1m- Should n'ever uti set iil the hot sun, as is its aroma and grain waxiness, and it ��m���,fe�=����:"IU��g �or ROBERTporter Bnd breeder ot fOland·Chlna Hop. l'iaI warranted ftrat-clBle. Wrltli. often the custom. should be will then soon become rancid. They PARK .J!'ARM. Frank Playter. Prop'r. nnsed in cold before WALNUT . water, they are used:l. To make the finest and best-flavored again. ShOd.%���u:at?f:rn(Os'!�;,r:�an:f!� 1:l!ee:tt�:r:'I�� . butter, and that which can be kept for CO_r_re8_po_lI_de_n_C8_I_n_v_lted_. _ is often made of bitter CompllijDt the of the cream Mo POULTRY YARDB-J. Q. Hoover.Wleh-· greatest length time, HAMILTON. Butler. .• Thoroughbred Gallo­ WICHITA milk and cream. The butter is a A of by Ita, Kaneae. breeder of PARTRIDGa (lo(JullI'. B.WI' long must a As undergo ripening process. Glilio::: g�m�'f��:a'l:��eaout Shorl.ho�n CoOnJN. UORT lInUJIA. PLYMOUTU ROOK, BB01t'Jl, time coming or it fails to come, c�wa especi- soon as the cream becomes sour little LEGHORR. HOUDANS and BLAOK BpAJ(ulI (a D. WARREN & CO. Maple Hill. Kas., Im­ Ponlw. ally in 'the winter. There be sev- and now for sale. may acid), which will be in twenty-four to WM.porters breeders Of Red Polltd caltle.. i!lock Ejrgs eral causes that' for .ale. Correepondence aollclted. R. R. atatlon St. lead to this result. Marys. KIIoI. thirty-six hours altei' it has been heated 'DOLLAR per 13 (or Rock Pe- .------�------PI:rmouth eggIi: Good milk or is spoiled un- ONEkin Duck eggs the same. Three .lttlngs·_for 82,110. easily or as a' CATTLE ARD SHROPSHIRE cream. ,to seventy-five eighty degrees, SHEEP Mark S. Sall.bury. I�. O. b.ox 931. KanBBl crty. Mo.' less have a smtable to HoLsTEINbred and Imported Joa. E. Ellwood by . you place keep Miller. '1 general rule will then be in the proper Slock Farma; Belleville. IU; to breeder ot the keep them, .and good butter could condition for The' NYE. leRdlol( varletlel of Oholce chumtng. tempera­ NIt.• Poultry. Leavenworth, KRD8III. Send 1br clr· W. LILLARD. Nevada. Mo .• Breeder of TUOR­ be from or cular, . hardly bitter .• . expected ture of the cream when you commence J OOOUBnED IIUORT-UORRS. Ji.. Younl{ Mary bUll at �OOt head of Slock for me. •. herd. YOUDII Batllfacllon cream � The room where mnk and cream guar­ churning should range from sixty to anteed. POULTRY YARDS, Weldleln & Byer­ is should or PEABODYrum Dna Dark Brahm kept range at near a regular P. proprlelors. ,Light ... W. sixty-two degrees. Butter may be mGINBOTHAIII. Manbattan. Riley 00. and B. Bull' and Pert. and Blick ·WIII. ot the Leghoflls. Oochlna, temperature to the best results- KanlM, Proprietor Blue Valley Herd of B. B, R. G. W. F. B. Spanleb. Lell'leehe B. ob_tain in first Recorded Short-horn caltle ot the and ,BButlim.!'" spoiled chumlng, by churning bo!8Uamlileil, aa; Game. S. S ... limburgh. Blk. Java•• W. E. B. from to in summer and P. fifty .siXty forty when the cream not in condi­ Pollah. Hourlflus. Roeks, Lanll8han.. Klgs now 1br is proper �t�l: "t\'���n�� :J�. 'bora:: ��I�e&:'� so�: ,2 per settlog. Cblckeue 16tb. to m winter. of bulla for J!I!Ie: Se"t. fifty But there is such a tion of the Southern and Weatlirn acidity; by over-churning, or at f,rowlnll raree call at the as not at all VALLEY POULTRY YARDS.-Eltab­ thing obtaining good the as will Brrut:�:R: =i. I�=-.Jrr:ft�n.:;,ell�f�� mi1� wrong temperature, this at­ NEOSHo Pure- bred Light Bralimae. times from the best of and If there . COWd, fect the texture and the VIEW FARM. Wm. Brown. Oochlns.lIab.dI1870.P ymouth Boeka. EilIISlu sell8Ou. Slock In 001. changes prop­ Lawrence, " PLEASANTBreeder or 'Seod'orc·lrcu\ar. Wm.Hemmond.boxl90.Emporla"II'....•• is anything wrong with the milk the KanBBl. JaB8EY CATTLB ot the bel. I, aT to a limn!. grain waxiness sticky greasiness. . cream can be to be breeder hardly expected WOOD C. S. ·WIGHTMAN. Ottawa, Kanll8". of of time for IlERD. Elchholtz, Wichita. K.. WM.hlJrh·clBls and Brown 7ime.-Length churning Live Slock AucUoneeer and poultry-White Leghorn! sweet and make butter. OAK breeder' or Thorough- and Buti' Cochlos. (or thirteen. good bred Short-horn Eggs. 92.00 at a moderate motion to obtain the best Catlle. _. If the above rules are strictlyobserved v is from to POULTRY YARDB.. Cricket Randolph . butter, twenty thirty minutes. and ydu do not, obtain results Hereford Cattle. RIVERSIDEProp'r.. Emporia. Kal. 1'Iymouth Rock. PIirt· good Should the butter come in less than rldl{e Ligbt Brahma•• or Drowu CochiD. . Lellhorn 1!f&I, (good there must be 12.00 for .3.' butter) something twenty minutes the cream has stood too S. SHOCKEY, Lawrence'. Kan8aa. breeder of E • Thoroullhbreo Hereford Cattle. Three' cows and wrong in the room, with the YJl.:LAND POULTRY the has been too 11 bulla for.sale. Also Grade bulla and heifers for sale.. YARDS. Waveland. Sha,.... ��k f�ed, long, temperature high WADee KaDBRII. W. J. breeder 01 or cohdltlOn of the county. McOolm. COws-bItter � Ullht Brabmllol. Bock•• and Pekin DQ,*,- in,the OJ: the was too If over C. McGA Howard Plymouth churning rapid. vOCK. Frankllu. 00., Mo.. Stock- for now, weeds or are sale Eggs (or hatcblog In &eaIOIl; alao tropure food eaten, or im- W BufI' thirty minul;es, the cream was not inthe ford � Coch._I_n_f_ggs_. _ water drank. The water should ·a��".:'J!h��ro�r�l:'"",\�u:e:g:ilr::�:�;for ppre condition of or the cream Short-:-hom Hellers me. proper acidity --_._. ROCKS-Corbln's Improved 1tra1D- be as as the water we drink pLYMOUTH15;00 per Irlo; egg. 10 Beasoll. Also l'eIt1n DDok just, pure was too W. SMITH Breeder of Thor- COld. Churning when the tem­ .....Woodlandvllle. Mo., 'eggs. Addreas M. J. Hllnler. Coocordla. Kai.�· ourselves. or can not F • ougbbred Here(ord Cattle. Dictator 1980 heada ...:..:. ...:.... Cabbage turnips of cream is below Ihe herd. 50 Grade Bulll tor aale. �- perature SiKty degrees W. PLEASANT. Wright City. breedl the!,817 be fed in without . Mo�, large quantities giving is loss of time. As soon as the G • beat L. Brahmas. P .. . W. LeR· butter UDGELL &; IndelMludence, Mo., Import- coehlns._P .Ialrs nol ENDERS ture, as so much depends upon the tem­ T. J. KELLAM, BRAWJTH BUDS. SEcRETs,and others trQpl related. Invite correspondence or Inspection of stock. the celebrated herd of A. Crulcksbank. 8ltlylon. A ber­ of the milk room perature where the 183 Kansas Ave., Topeka, Kansas. deenshlre. Scotlaud. GOLDEN DROPS. nnd milk and cream is kept to obtain the J. CARPENTER. Milford Kanau. 'breeder of URY9�e- RENDERING ESTABLISH.­ • Thoroughbre(1 Poland-CWn" Swln'e. Stocl, tor m��lj�r.fr�mbe:�:e;:I�I�:.�!gco�r�:d.or lilOCam/oui� best results. Others appear to be in too TOPEKAMENT.-Neal' ShungBllunga creek, oue·half mile sa!e. IDspee�lon and correspondence Invited. aouU. ot the clly. Tallow In tbe rough bougbt; al80 Mt'::��Br��;ovr�iL=: �.!:l�1Eg��t����d. much of a Imp. DOUDLE GLOSTER head the herd. hurry to chum. They do not flit dead hUR8.-mUlI be In 1100<1 condition and be de- PLUMMER. OaaIIe Olty. KnoBBl. breeder of Uvered on the aroundB. OSCAR Recorded 1I0Dth.U.P BISHOFF-J,__ WM. Poland-Ch1nll SwIne, .lOCk ror R. '¥1 miles weet . of J[&J1I8I • tOI; to in YOWl,., R., 01 Jo,Iu WI'U tile (lJ'elWl be prover COJl· Ollloe, oe ..... 4ve., 8111� lit reMollll111e 1'IItee, ... l'0lll'kII,_ Ljll1,.u-Llnwood.LeaVenworthCo.�Ku.0I�0IIltI O1IIPPlleatlO1l, 0111111'1$14;

• , - ,MAY 28,

think that there is a gradual climatic change Pottawatomie's Pride. , Give or Take blood on the sire's side,:an'd here whicn . taking place will be productive Spccla.l'correspondence KANSAS FARMER. Perfection on the dam's side. There will,be of splendid results, and wlll be the means of over bred animals for , ;. Almbst every county in' central, Kansas fifty very nicely saI_e. making a in and this 'Late'Oom for Fodder. qnite change timber fruit has been heard from when anyone of its season. The breedlne swine are of hiS: culture. The rains that came in own and from such well .Klimas Farmer: formerly stockmen have started an establishment for raising kno�he�,8 dashing suowsrs, which lasted but a few the of and as C. W. Jones, Duffiald.& Perhapa there are others who prefer com dissemination pure-bred stock, Michigan,; Bh�­ minutes, now falls in gentle rains that some- such Is commendable and merits labarger, B. F.: Doraey: S,on, nu­ to 80r"hu!p'for'feed, such Lglve my ex- enterprise Ohit;); � '! fo).' times last for a day and night. I've also nois; and Miller Bro.'s, Kansas. , pertenee for what it is worth. I have tried, notice. It requires money and public spirit "J, been told that rain ill the winter or early In addition to swine, Mr. a number of methods for growing it for fod- to embark in such ventures which result in Arnoldlsllft'gelr 'spring was a thing almost unknown until the engaged in the sheep his hav­ but iast I was bettcr satisfied than the Improvement of our domestic steek and business, so� del'; year last three years, but-Is now quite a common of the hig recently purchased 500 acres in .ever before. T,rylng to get two crops from 'enhances the wealth farmer. The O�'Bome occurrence. So from the above I am this State, whichwill be well stocked one has been so far a faHure in this State. facts, breeding of pure-bred stock is a profession county, \ induced to believe that if there is no more with a lot of good Merinos. Arnold & S!lll To let corn get ripe enough to save, the that cannot be accomplished satlsfactorUv rain falls In the year than formerly It C61'- ha.ve purchased 500 1tlerlnos ofC. F. Hardick husks become dry, and very often the most by everyone, perhaps not one 'in II; hundred is better and & Son talnly 'distributed, does more can make it a success. It for this ranch, that for uniformity of them lblow off,· leaving very little to pay requires �ears of good to the fannkig interest generallv, surpass any flock I have-seen In tM State.· 101' Last I ill acres patient and thought and work to cuttiIig' up.' year put foul' judicious . I am to be happy able 'to say that our Hor- reach that in the liuslness to merit tile Another established breeder in thlB county by plowing in June .and planting with a polnt tlcultural Society Is doing a work of vast is F. M.,Neal, Pleasant Run, of common planter, dropping flve or elgl�t leer- patronage and confidence of the farmer and proprietor importance, and one that cannot be praised Woodside Stock Farm, which is nels In a place about fifteen inches apart, stockman and when a breeder is thus wellstockec;t too highly; for if there is anything that our with Short-horn cattle, Poland-China and about the middle of the month; cnltlvatecl established he deserves support and Is farmers need more than it another certainly of notice. In view of this a Berkshire' swine, and Cotswold sheep. Dur­ twice. About the middle of it 'worthy • fact, September Is in knowledge regard to tree plantmg of F ing this season an excellent was SUfficiently matured to cut up, which I and, representative the ARlIHnR determined to tho�ough�red culture, such as the Forestry' Report tur- Norman stallion has 'been added to the farm. did, putting nine rows square in ashoek, visit Pottawatomle.county and some of the nlshes., A brief mention has been made 'for the first­ binding each shock from three to four times worthy breeders in that magnificent and After an �amination of the different time of all of these breeders that III I 'fed It till and it was well watered county, which has no repreSent making; superior . March, of methods culture as pursued by different for its natural the blooded stock 'and the pride of Potta- bright and green to the last; and It stood up adaptation for stock raising. persons, I have come to the conclusion well all winter. that After a brief visit at Louisville, at which watomte county. Readers of this sketch close planting with good cultivation In the I took will do well to look up their cards, In this As a feed for cattle, especially milch cows, place occasion to visit �hepicturesque months of May and .LUlie, followed a good Iron paper and cultivate their acquaintance. H. U,has no superior, and eats it by park and the springs there, which are , everything . mulch is productive of the best results. And greedily. ,The only fault 1 found with it owned by R. M. Chilcott. This spring and of the .many kinds of trees ill cultivation Was I did park will some be a noted resort of the Oatrots for Horses. have neal' day . 'n,ot. enough. On the honey locust deserves the first place in our for the of Wgh ground it wall so dry that there were kind, verdict every visitor is that A wi'lter in the CotoradO Fan-mer speaks ,I Ilsts, , J. J. A. It Is very few ears on U, but on creek bottom "the loveliest place I have yet seen In very highly of carrots for horse fee.d He Custer, Kansas. the thete were small ears on every stalk. State;" however a good I10tel must be says he has fed them about five years and 'Some of the that it is buUt to Insure its likes them better He advantages are, put • popularIty. every year. says: Solomon In:after·tbe hurry of the' season,' while the Valley Shearing. c. F. lURDICK '" SON. Our horses are very fond of' -them and con- of it comes so SpeCial correspondence FARMEII. sider corn and oats maturing late that the hot KANSA!l In.company with J. W. Arnold the repre- "poor truck" by the side The annual and of winds are past and it is more comfortable sheep-ahearlug festival of sentatlve of the FARMER first visited the es- carrots. To those who have fine YOuni the Solomon Wool work to clit it up. '1'0 those that have had Valley Growers' As�ocl- tabllshment of that"efficlent and veteran horses (and nofarmer who loves hll.\ profes­ ation was held at to cut up corn In August to save it. the latter Asherville, Mitchell conn- breeder of Merino sheep, C. F. Hardick, slon will have any other), I would say;,w ty, on 22. item will be appreciated. E. W. BROWN. Thursday, May The attendance, who has been engaged in breeding Merino all means feed carrots. You will soon have the wasII ' them , notwitbstanding rainy weather, very sheep since 1859. He came to Loulsvllle, following you about like a dog,l'�d good, over forty flock-masters were have to snub em - The'Timber Oulture Laws. present Kas., about five years ago, and in the mean- you won't th up t0 a c0,tton '., with their' besides the usual wood when break Kllma8 Farmer: families, large time has been rearing such a flock of pure- you them. Now for the number of visitors who makethlsoc- cultivation. the always bred Merinos that are In " Allow me.to say a few. words in regard to suitable and profitable Prepare ground finely easton an annual picnic. A new feature of bods as to With a small the 'I'lmber Culture act of Congress. The for the flock-masters of this country. Prof- 110 irrigate head of -the festival this year was the wate'r the first time. Pick out the best land people are the 1 baby show, iting by a rich and mature Hte?s experience gElnerally opposed·to repea -free for all. you have got. Sow pretty thick, In rows The contest was, and ex in this r. Har k Ilas of said act, but all that it needs-to be lively, industry, M dlc, sueceeded fourteen Inches apart, with a seed drill. admit citement ran high. in a Mix a little radish seed in so remodeled so that parties holding lands establishing tlock of 160 thoroughbred you can seethe The awards made on were: ,For rows quickly, as yon want to them as l' "I under be compelled to raise sheep American Merino ewes, mainly 01 the At- work. 8ail\;act shpuld ram 'soon as oan, for a stitch In ohny age, 1st, E., C. 2d, L. strains ;vou tlllle, etc.• the aiD.outoUlmber required by Iaw or sur- Baker; wood of blood. The llock Is headed Pagett. Ram 2 years J. render Sald c'lands into the hands of old, 1st, M. Ver-' 'by' the stock ram Stranger, bred. by E. :E�th%:�I���lb� thostl non' 2d J. N. Grau. J. theetop;e���\I�I���t�waLJl�and who would do it. '. Yearling rams, 1st, Townsend, Pavillion, N. Y. This ram Is a glan as,they give largest Yield are M. J. N. easy'to harvest. Cultivate a doubIe­ As the law Ve�OIr;, 2d, Gran, The awards to and Atwood. A of the �ith noow stan�' parties who wish straight pure portion wheel hoe. The farmers shearers were: First of greatest objection to can hold said tfmber claims until it be- prize $5 to E. O. present flock was purchased of the now de- Parkhurst time 18 minutes; second of comes valu'able and then sell, or until prize ceased Geo. H. Brown, Buffalo, Wilson l��eat�o����jt ��� ���a c:�n�totl�t�;ytR�� ..i.. thelr $3 to J. time 15 third In the winter; but roots are verv eaSily kept ehlldren be_come 0f age, so thattliev can take L.'Jamison, minutes; county, Kas., who in his time had the most , of to If once knows how. When ready prize $2 W. Hostetler, time 15 minutes 0 it as a homestead, famous flock f M'ermos In the State . The to anybodl.'harves , irrigate the ground and let it for, an 18 lb. 8 oz. get And I lleece. Brown flock from an so that the dirt will not stick to the wiH further say that a great many originated Importation dry, c�r- Over 2,500 sheep were rots and, you can pull them by hand. claims are" held who no represented, and of pure Merinos from made Try by parties have in- Spain, by David them. I have raised with the exception of a half dozen over forty tons per acre. tention of, 'plimtlng out ,timber as contem- members, Humphreys. From him they passed through the Hocks owned are less than 5OOeach. The the plated 'by law, butthinkthey can make more hands o_f Daniel Bacon and Jacob Lelli' Dandelion TonIc. taken in �a.ll doses, shearing began late and several by holding them for a few years and then sheep were Blakesley, the latter selling to Geo. H. after meal, will, In almost a.11 cases, restore that untouched.' The following is a of the 108" or"vital force" tha.t is so to selling them.to ne:w-c9mers for homesteads. ' report Brown, of this State, and after his ,humUl�Ung tbe, shearing: dece�se sufferer. TJ)e consequence is, you find'all tile "timber seventy-five of the choice ewes were pur- is cl�ims" taken up, and but very few with chased by the present owner, C. F. Hardick It saId that 21,000.000 acres of land are held timber on th"em. � & Son. The flock has always been bred in thIs country by foreigners, paIr of It beIng by ',�_ �.,; � .. :t three corpora.tions in Texa.s a.nd FlorIda.. As a renledy for this state of affairs I � .;J pure ani! Is remarkable for good constitution NAMES OF OWNER{. � 0.., � would be in favor of and an even dense fleece. This 1l0ck is B,State'lawgivlngevery 'a ,;g, now . farmer in fourth hands from the and "Buohu-paiba;" jivlng,in the'west part of the State a i�0 only importer Quick, complete cure, aU a.nnoylog Kidney bonnty of after ! � � � ....� each one of these men are prominent as acre, ------Bla.dder $20:pllr who, -- a.nd selecting - Urlna.ry 81. Druggists. careful and l?isea.se9. a good site br location, will and culti- 'iN:Gra.u � yr ram thor 108 reliable breeders. plant U· 2214 , 4 yr ra.m Ihor 163 16 vate for a period of not.less than five .. Mr. Harcll'ck makes a of years, .. specialty 2 yr ra.m thor 129 16� breeding five or more ,acres of the State to Ib ewe for and a even ' timber, grde 9J� 14 good constitution, fine, and make , Ib ewe grdc 67 12� An. Old tile selectIon of'kh'J.ds, nnd,thenumb"er .. dense fleece. The object IS,fine wool Soldier"s .. sought Ib . ewe grde 13% of trees acre. J. S. Grau ; per , 5 yr ram 6b� and plenty of it. In the show rlJig Har- " .. �hor 16!4 Mr., EXPERIENCE. , l44(i I·favor such a law for the f011 owI I'ea- , I,b. ewe grde 96}4 11 'dick has never shown ng L. anything except sheep " Pagett : : 4'yr rail! 153 viz-: I live' .. 2714 of C�lvert, Texas, 80I:1S, far ellougli Wcst to know . : 2 yr ram thor,thor 149 his own raising, Instead of it for " buying that it is no fool ·of a b f a f Ib ra.m grde 17 tile and May3,188Z. jo or arlA,el' t0 88\4 occasion, he has novE,lr had reason to "I H. F, Baker , ram 28 wish to express my of .. 4'yr- �hor appreciation the raise. timber out for to do so he .. of his success in here, must· Ib ram complain winning prizes. va.lnable quaUtlcsof J. select the best Iands on l'llS 1 Ian M. Vernon l yr ra.m Ig� p ace, d'in, " gmT.lleOJ; (� 23� the Breeders' in 2 yr ram mor By consulting Directory fact .. 14���13y:! 13'.. " that ��� ' he. needs for other and,' .. purposes 1 yr ewe thor this paper, our readers will observe the gard can hardI'y aI WI·tlIOU.t It I J • .t.. Gifford 7 yt ewe tbor 125�t � Pectoral get ong fact 1�i'5� of C. F.' Hardick & Son. This, IS the first Ayer's Cherry that very few farmers in the extremesa,west- , time he has ever advertised, simply becauso as Do cough romedy. ern part of the State have lands suitable Pretty dOyle),!! for the cake basket are he has been slowly building up his desirable "While with Churchill's army, just before for tile of timbe,r and made by embroidering in ptirpose growing, wlth- prett1J,ittle figures flock to such size as 'the battle of I a to be able to supply Vicksburg, contracted so- , . the comers of out offer'them an plain white 'Vere you quite inducement they napkins; fringe something more than home demand. cold, whIch termiuated In a ,dangerous the if are not will not use sal'd la.D.ds for edges, they cough. I found no relief till on our forestry. alreadY',ftlnged; It is worth the time of anyone, especially maroh From own I haye overcast when you stop and if we came to a country oli my obaervations con- raveling, you, a young flock-mastl'r, to visit the home of store. where, asking can do so for some I cluded that timber on make a border of drawn work. remedy, was urged to try AYER'S grOwing the high lands this old and efficient breeder who is such a in the western' .------__ CIIERBY PECTORAL. counties will not " "pay; , tll_e lover and believer in this Said he "What a fresh complexion Miss B. industry. r' did and was growllb. is too and the has," so, rapidly cured. Since slow, dry summers to your "I am not discour- said a gentleman to a young at a representative: then I have kept the P.J!:CTORAL here would entall more or lady party. constnntly by less loss every in the least. I have for "Yes," the who a of aged passed through me, fnmlly use, and I have fOlllld It to be But it is replied lady year. altogether different on the wa� riy-al one and I an invaluablo for Miss B. 's, "its quite early in the evening, sheep paniC, fully expect to see remedy throat and lung bottom rands, there timber raising could be the as diseases. J. W. business within two WHITLEY." : , yet, you and it hasn't had time to good or three made a and Imow, success, one that would pay dry." years as it has been since,1868." , -���__'__, Thousands of testimonials to largely, and be successful a doubt. certify the beyond CATALPA GROVE STOCltFA�M cure of 11.11 bronchial and I have never seen timber grow as fast as prompt It, Mother Swan's Worm Is the of l�ng Syrup. property J. W. Arnold. of Louis- affections, the uso' of :AYER'S does here on 'the bottom lands, so I conclude' Infallible. tltsteles�. "'Lrmless, for py ClIElmY cat,harlic; and Is one of the best located 600 " ville, acres PECTORAL. �e' . Being ,ver,y tho that it would take but 'few years to verishncse• rcst1fs�UeSJ, worms, constipation. P!llatable, ,"oupg­ grow 2!io, in the and has all, the county .' modern co"-... est ohildren take trees of sufficient size to realize l�ge retums It'rendily. \ "venience�' for the prosecution of fine stock I from the sale of such trees as necessarily The great auk which is now PREPARED BY extinct was raiSing. "ThIl'class of stock made a specialty would be taken for the purpose of thinnillg common 'yery along the coast ,within a cen- at this place are the ever popular Poland­ out tile balance of the • bilL tho Dr.J.C.Ayer'·&Co.,lowell,Mas9�f • last was • ")..latch." tury, killed on an island Ch1na swine. Black Du�e, ;recOl\'led In tile' The old settler's in this county seem t{) near Iceland In 1S44. Soid by all Druggists. I Ohio Poland Ohlna Record, pa.rta�ee of the 5 181M. "X:.NSAS . lJ"IA:R,:M::ma.

. l :::�;:��::�======��======�F.:��::�:=��.��,�====����,�=§��,�.�.�.�;;;-;;�.=:�====�=T==�======�===:::�:i::====::�� ene the TOPBKA Will always' 'remab.l strong J'nd -have lot's of:hogs; fee� whol1Y'in pen ' feed feed,theother ��fte ���JI)'hA. ,pl�ntv of time to provision itself for. and on'dry aildslops; Ml?dlcal:&Sur,glcaf 'lIuo,u,"'M .. lot the and them have. ip .same way let., . Win�r.., the INB'1'l'1'J7TI. • aY. the grass • It IS thus that the mak- grass they want, an,d 'of by TblslnBtltutlon I. Incorpo· How, to Obtain a Great 'Honey . bee-keeper; stones a sort of fed lot will improye' faster than the Q�antIty honey " . , mg·of the lower It=,::,?dif:'h:-�II�u':r.:�- From One Hive. tried it be able him- other" EYeJ!'y,farmer that ever , chamber, will to procure [Translated from the FtenOh.] the best 'of' all-feeds duriOIl wblcb t{m� OlO118&':,r. �:'&"::'':I:�rlJ:r:f self 'a:, surplus of honey without knows that gras,sJ� 'are In accord on large In All bee-keepers �his " Pb'J.lclan.· for the, mere puepoaes of "ordinary d1�:.e��r::n�1:l:�:���=�'e' devote denying to the bees, ,cbar beel1Ies dolog an acute, city practice. for a to much any ..., csbroil1o and point; 'Colony is nature's ro- to trea$meot of aU kl)Jdi(o[ ,t.h�t f�sh growth. Indeed,' grass p' �_l"'" �e their IIftI'al be 1 Will be v:erv if any of fel- dl.... In whlcb direction lIei It IS necessacy' that tb;e,colonv hap,py my .lIr�oal , and Bar honey, for animals. :All is grass. �llIJtly Ib BU!-IeJ7. Gya'0lCc11ob' 'ao� Ey. hu.._ think it werth wlille to visio.il f!esh and that . t worker bees occupy low pers .. bee-kee. For thIS reason f�er ought ,S",:uug, �e 1 learn that every themselves exclusively to tl;l,e work of tty this process, and if they ::.t=��uccedto�J.:r. �':i= 'to have for Jiis hogs. Fbr young ':��J:!r II Dr°P'T. turned have, obtained good results.; �l.'st1,tre r:,.J: without " p.t;tteJ;lng ho�ey b�ing pigs and fllr, shotes it is specially val- ula,. DYlPe�,le&'�88:�:i":D. or, the rear- '�':i t:qe ,pollen crop, by And it is well to, keep up a ���u���ter�J:lY� 00$ �ide'.by How,to Make a few'Stands of Be�8 Supply uable, ,mg of, yeung .brood, that the Queen, the 'time :l'�:7. t�· Trade., regular gl'ai,p.. feeding at same !':'�i!:e�:.t;:�:J'e.'!l'=�e�gr�e 'dlieaielr ,Ta"e her marvelous produces the raniily Bladder. Rectum, iand alLprtvate' with • hollJ'l without fecundity, are to be In trom nne to four if the animals. slaughtered' Worma remoo:ed bee- . Ole - each The follo1Ving is from a practical . fll8tJng; Hemorrboldaor PIl.e8CurJ!l!.....�tbout day. the fastest is, tu.... ; arLiDclale"sln""l1ed. In this'Wu.y gain possible' oC,lheklllfeorU.. , . D. 'Rusk. We copy from MULV.&NE. MUN&�f)(�LVANE. the first of my apieul- keeper-J. ..,.,' Dunng " days secured. ,,' '. Oregon City Enterprise. 'Procure some tural trials, when I found a' colony Grass is healthful food. Animals w!lr:o�ro�c:LAt���re!"��:ec:J:��tl.IO,ral hives and be sure you a movable frame take strong, an�"w.ished to obtain great that run on are not liable to b.Rllrer",c"':-Bon.�John�clo.:P:�D,.p.I.BQne-rake. J. R. Hallowell. U. Ii. Attorn�. grass ' kind of hive Iiketo r' tried the of pickoutthe you quantityofhoney,I plan diseases as ,pen fed stock is." One may '/ . to ... handle-one that is convenient " ren the the fed animals denng colony, queenless by reasonably expec] liis grass -:, manipulate your bee'S in during swarm- AYER'S ;/' 8ttppression of the queen; The bees to be healthy and vigorous growers. ' ing time. ' To prepare your frames for then gave themse1ves a great deal of As to what particular variety of grass • ti'ansferrinp;, make some splints to go "·�I'a' trouble to build queen cells'till they had is best, opinions will not be found alike. S frame and with one- ,arsapa:r.i1J.'' , crosswise of the "'.(, 'obtl!>ined a new queen. 1 obtained by While prefer clover or orchard grass, _,of inch wire nails, tack two on one side ",e. Is a htCbly oonCl!.,..-a¥�. flttr®t this a of but bI90�-purlfY1n&' ,plan surplus honey, yet we think a more important question', Saraaparilla and ';dl�r �ood and one on the two on the op-, ' -7 at the of other, of water to your clean, some the tite well keep qands best with j)olsons,fl'om systen;t!enrl�heSlj.lldrenewa this end without, dimIniShinp; 01' If red top succeeds /' rotten hard wood to burn in smoker, .graes; the blood, and restores lits vl.Lill$g power., of the but for a long time all means have plenty 0" "hive, you, by known for b�ing one cold-ehiael to cut the 'nails in the t�en It is the best remedy. Scro� WIthout success. For two years now, or t»l'ng c blue grass red top. 'The great or old hatchet answer. all EryBlp" use of old hive, an '\\Iill and Scrorl;l1oUfJ,Complaln�. this being the third, 1 have made and we would advise t1)a grow- this lesson to, the' novice, I grass, elas, lBIotchel. which to have Now, as il! �s do' best Ecz�ma, Itlng\\lor�,t an appears mg of t)lat'variety which·will eXf�dient', would say, put on, a beeveil and a pair solved the to the pro- oruers problem; Increase on the land. '::�'19,t D, T�m;r8,n so ll"�I:"��Ptlon. of rubber gloves. Place your boards or 'S;�':' without the s or e duction of honey enfeebling And there to be 'arrangements n III nnel::l�lmpovcr'ori'nhed• corrupcauset hive on one ought ,y°b °th' d,d bench the set . the secret. 1m- by bees, your there such ail colony; ,and beheld, every farm by means whe�eof condition of t,ha blOOll, Bbeiunatlam, ' the . end of the hench, the one next ,to 'ijeneral, , �he queen at the proper moment, be fresh and tender of some Nourrugin, Rbeuma�lo Q«Jut, ,pns�n, the but not too gra�s inter- bees. ,,:ould the nne} Scroftil'ouI' Catarrh. , and m such manner 8S pees, kmd for all the tIme Qf Debility, . ,not to, Now·sm�ke them. 'Let ready hogs � mUCh, or you WIll smother of 'j ,;1 J rupt the laymg of eggs, and that the growiI)g season. With the aid oats, them have time to fill themselves with Rheumatism· of an- there is Inflammatory ,eure'. bees will not dream procuIlng rye, and sorghum, then the hive and lay its c?",n, mille,t, cured me'ot " pick up a S,\hSAl'ATIlr,LA has other I will in a few words, ex- honey, reason there can not be "AYlm'S queen. hive. no gpod, why :WJ� side on the benqh open to the new all tho IDfln!!1::;�:""Y nlleuinRtlsm, sotliat all succession of fresh grass . pJain my system, bee-keepers contmu_ous which I havo sUlrer�(l for many 'Years., a .lay a ' , If have board:long enough, you . W.'HiMOOD.'�,,,, can it tor themselves: h th-e summe!.. ' try ..... throug ",' . on combs on, 'Q � "..�k or two it, lay tlle as:., prOV:IS- 'March ,2; hive with three And then, to be Dur'h;a;nl, 1�2.',,' ,t '!lsed the Sartori off the adhel'- �ught � ,In;, them out brush . t�ere you or ,i.,:, -', .... lower t�e IOn for 1D wlDter ensilage PR1fPA.I\'E�j])'{,t stories of fra.mes. When the two a grass l?Y: ,"'. bees, !Dtb the new hive wl�h is are'full to the'diaphram, and lng" Dr� J'� CO.,; Low�lf,:Mali'� ,stories up duster or whisk Cut the on? �ot. pJ:�- �"Ayer'& a If six bouics for Gil. indications that b��?m. �r0 :oth.eep Wh��e sIlo, , Sold all Druggists; �l. ,root�pare by " when the colony gives 1D 11': o� . combs so as to fit snl!gly your clalDP g�een: .eeU then season approaches, takel'l he not belIeve ensIlarge, .' . the swarming movable cleats �n , Place your\wo doe.s ar- the him pdtatoes, I .'.... out the wooden plug that closes frame,s. two gNw turlllps, 'or splints and tack fast the encis l�t between the second' and .. , M� compmnicatlOn and hang it in the hive. By a of th�.ijme esasammasw�U�Pki��, a�� S�Ch �eget�- 1'":OI"""AC�U;"'.T�bwITHT�I�'OORAP",!O��"'SCOUN-" and it by �;chokes MAP THAT third stories, replace niece three .ea a. �an a?e:lD Tnv WILL se. BV if"'· :r�1 combsll,the WInter 'Xf'MININO 'wire just close youca�gett�oor winter. are III clean, bright cloth, bees WIll to cluster. Keep a good T�ese thlI�gS. begm IS summer. By to the passage of the growmg grass enough prevent lookout for the queen that she does not w�at �� and" ill t1IS a open the fly hole a lIttle study �ay " llees. ,I Immediately mashed between the combs, or fall c�re' get fatten hiS hogs,successfully the third and lift up from the farmer may of story on the and tramped upon ground get the stories the comb on which is the and hardly feel expense. lower and ki�ed. If the combs are straight it with all the queen, and place together bs to fill one E. enough Prell't E. N. MORRILl,. Treas.• JNO. I you may get com. J. p. DAVIS. .. bees found on it, in the third story. t MOON, Bec'y. b0d f your hive, ap.d 1f you ge more, brood. do likewise with all the uncapped �,o hive and lD the upper story of the TheKANSAS put , these I afterward add worker comb To fill out with foundation. Keep them to need. The empty spaces this Mutual Life Association-. according supplied with as fo�dati�n, KAS. 1 fill as much as 'Possible with �ell Of HIAWATHA. below IS a to them lD making honey. great help Lire ABsoclBtlon offering comb as itholds more honey and .... 'l1Je only Co-operattve drone I the full size using shee�s?f Absolute Pratectlen In Old Age. more t�ken perfer. the honey �an be easily to fill the frames to wIthlll Journal RIIi! Leaflet. giving extractor. This foundatlO.n Agents wanted. Bend for .from it_by the opera- end and, bottom J. Sec'y. one-half lllch of the fulllnf�rmatlon, to E,MOON. achieved I cover up the hive agalll' . and tIon bars. Then combs are true .. your ,ns the' Impf.lSOned or By thI'S mea queen, easy t0 Iiandle, "'thel er large �mall. her_ without her knowledge and feelin When the bees have mended the trans­ emI'd t'0f her f 'I ;.lll\l1lS take the off. seIf'lD th s. a�1 y, �on fer comb you may splints disturbed. to lay eggs WIthout bemg Bees cared for in this way will usually ONLY 'rRUE to a as much comb THE The bees care not cyeate n�w queen, give two or three times and feel theIr mother will in the ?ecaus? the! see or extracted honey as they CmCAGO ROCK ISLAlID & PA�C R'Y The does not them. I have couna'ote tho m theIr mIdst. colony 0Id 0f handling tbe canhal pOBltion or Its line. • way By tho shortest routll. and oar­ fI IS IRON East and'tlle Wcet by ecause the l' eggs the amount of several df d· in'ish b aymg 0.,. taken honey to ries passengers, 'WitJlout ohange and KanBne City. CO\lUall B)liftlJ ea"an­ � Chtcago It and young 'from a few stands kept Atchison, �nnoapoli8 and O&r8:J.etweenSt. auL unlllte�uped, be�ause th? dollars' worth, worth. whIch hatch out lD the story which re uired but little �l��e��E�tl�I�!n�trt::rA'� bees �hlrd in this way,. q TONIC fi��':,"l���� an continue to take care of the young more labor to produce than does, e��i��':int,,�e ���tV���?o�at\eIllU'::ci .. �;�:.n�l�te Re- WIll])urlf'y tho BLOOD,regtl­ Beautlflll 'bay, 0lder bees remalD lD the old You will nna iJJbrtou brood • The empty b'm the way. lIIte tllo L:IVER KIDNEY� mnObO!l lI/[G8Dlllo�t' and RESTOIlJll TIlE JlEALT.Ii. tf,i'JBibe 'il!�a£�':.e' �� Hr:rnial:�� habi- .0:' �\�'!,�I�gCS:��. and stories to which were to care for cows and VIGOR ot YOUTlL D.78<- in tho World. Three Traina between Ohicago lower they work diligently and erai­ of 'In­ MIB!eml River Points. 'Two TralnB �twcan Wunt ' from the third sto' WI·th the and while the bees a.nd Minneapolis Bnd St. Paul. via the FamoWl tuated ry, sheep hogs, pOESln.d gestlon, LackAP'feUte.0 Strenlrtll. ollilo ' , horses, TlredFeellngabsolulelr to work for to take care of the and "ALBERT LEA lIOUTE." are forced honey are not a chance oured. BOllCS, muscles and queen, given Dlreot vtaSoJ1oQIS and 'XankD.· nerves rccelvo newtorce. A Ncw'd'nd Line: nature that to between Rlchlllond delicious sweets of go the mind uod kee, has reoently been op;)11c4 only. , Enlivens Chattanool''', Atlant-a Ab.! IIralll Power. NOl'folk, Nowport Newa, chance favors us so that we can do . y'ear after suppllcs Louisvillo, LexiB8'ton. Ctnoin'natt, If waste about your premises Stifrerll1gfrom complaints will ,uata, ND.8hVilleA this at the best of the honey season, we year. ADIE,S'pecullarto their scx on�:�3���i��1 a��ttK::�:J1�t�;gr:ia�inneap- ' L: TONIO .. oaf.. anel Uad In DB. HARTER'S IRON PasseniIors Travel o� ��� �xpresa with in two healthy complexion. find our hives gorged honey IRoody cure. Gives a clcar. T�iln;.hl'OUgh connterfeltlng only add for .�le at all I'rlneipnl Ticket omoo. In in Pasture. ]'l'cquclIt nttempts at Ticket. ' then but to extract Pigs Do not expcr1- United Bt!1.tcs and C�uada. weeks. We have to tile popularity ottho original. the CAl'S al­ alone will not make 'Pork rapid- ment-"getthe ORIGINAL AND �EST. Baggage checlted _t'hl'ough and rates of to' back the queen Grass that.offer advau.- the honey, and put :vournddre••toTbeDr. WI low all oompet!tora lcSlf maintain the ordinary the lower but it will �a�:. Fold- and all the combs to stories, ly; );�r:l.!!����t���HarterMed.Co.) 10r detailed information.Ket tholl/[apaBDd I .1' in '(Bmid • corn and other grains era of the not to reclose the communi- growth, and forgetting fat. CREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE meal be used to furnish the hole the second and may nBare.t Tlck.WllieD. or addro.... cation betwe�n for At ;your Grass is better for pigs that are fed R. R. 'CABLE. E.6T.,.JOH!4. the wooden and to •••• third stories plug, •. GeD'1 Ttl••�P ",*,: \ by be Vice·Pre '& Geo'll:l'g'r, that " I flesh than any other feed" may close the fly hole of the third story: QHJCAQO. in its Take tWo similar The colony will not have suffered. It used place.

• 6, K:.A.NS.AS FARMER. MAY 28, - AmI my spirit seemed to nestle lnHlsboaom the globe." In other words, thahvhichnow like a dove. Knaok. makes the In rare rest I lay till crowning prlde of ali American: dawning, If we turn to the dictionary we find that Till the light shone through the citizen, that the States of thee Union are Stood stone ,awning, knack means readiness." I like Psyche in the mormng spread from the Atlantic to the was "dexterity; "Nevermore." When the angel murmered love. Pacltlc, the word as applied to then held up by a patriotic ]'ederalist as the womanly qualities In slumbers I was tletter than which my dreaming But with 'vel'y extreme of danger. The to "faculty," really may "The sver-deep'nlng sweetness ", O'er Raven'S mystic meaning; that antidote mean the same" with a difterenoo. The the Rings message's completeness, this deadly peril, the means of O'er 'poet, ,sad and maddened and beart- the establishing Throukh heavens through the some short, sharp monosyllable seems to , valleys, communication with these adapted sore; the of the "remotest O'er the and i through budding grove, any small, everyday occurrence, or household shadow, dark haunt ng; With a sweet and corners of th� globe," must be found first of O'er Iltrane;e insistance, the eye that watched him, taunting; all in emergency. Mrs. uses the little death's vast after ' internal Brownipg O'er the voice that croaked Brightening distance, improveinents. At Ieast, so, vaunting; God shall conquer sin's 'word with graceful effect when she of 6f that.ternble "Nevermore." resistance, under these circumstances of alarm, a 4igh- says 'Heal its pain ann teach His love. women: Or two , -Fannie im way migbt be held a reasonable prop- Bolton, Intm'-Ocean. know a And seemed ---_.... "Tiley sl.Jhple, merry; tender knack my"braln thrl?bbing, reeling; - osition, and tho new President, in his 'With a surging tide of of tying feellng, Inaugural address, the sashes, fitting baby' shoes, and As I dreamed the poem won­ Great of Internal approached subject upon pond'ring, Epol)h Improvements. with stringing pretty words no sense, wing more and more; something of the lingering that,lJlake The four years' admlnlstratlon of John statelin�ss and fnll sense Into 'q>oor crazed heart," I sighed, "'twas sad of those days: kissing empty words." 11e9S Quincy ,Adams is commonly of as a And what cannot the woman spoken "The perform wbo Made thee dream that magnificence' and splendor of their dream of madness, VIll'Y uninteresting period, but it WIIS in one has knack In her head, anti at her finger­ Ah I ' I wonder hast thou gladness. .... more public works are among the respect important than the twenty Imperishable ends? Put her in an even And thy loved, long-lost Lenore?" of the ordinary shabby that went glories ancient republics. The roads years before it or the ten years room, and in ten minutes the pos­ and aqueducts of Rome have been the admi- w�inan ThEIn there came a terrible that followed. For the first time the lnhab- sessed of knack will diffuse an vision­ ration of indescribable Faces leered in dark itants of the all after-ages, and, have survived derision, United States began to find out air of neatness, and, often, even elegance, Evil faces, wild, which I ne'er had thousands of years, after all, her uneanny, how very large a country they liven in. conquests over what was before her seen before, have been entrance simply , From swallowed up in orbe- All the about seemed OCCUpying a mere strip of land on the despotism, utilitarian. She knows how to fur­ night choklng come the of arrange With black forms of demons Atlantic they had spoil barbarians. Some diver- niture so that the , spread thin in the mocking, already through of places carpet :With weird ravens, , sity opmlon has prevailed with to rasping, croaking New York and Ohio; but it was by detached regard are out of Sight. She tempers the light, and or""",� frIghtful "Nevermore." the powers of Oongress for emigrations, of which the nation was hardly legislation upon the faded red-covered sofa is lef�,ln �ecom­ 'And subjects of this nature, The most oe""een their ranks' conscious, by great single waves of respect- Ing shadow. She moves a perspectlve, popula- ful ehalr here and Through a':")und of dread Invective, tion here deference is due to doubts On I passed to sweepIng and there. After 1825 orIginatlng1n tilere and gives somehow a hospitable, In­ �eary regions, where blue this pure patriotism. and sustained venerated Ilames forevbo development became a self-conscious lly viting air to what was but a seat. a But With dRour,A, and authority. nearly twenty years have Smiting ghostly, white deliberate thing, recognized and legis- bit of lace or ribbon, a a fancy In the deserts death spirits since the brIght cushion, lu"erits, Iated for, never passed construction of the first or whIte 'Where the evil then- though systemncically 01'- rug, bedspread, she converts some reap merlts national road was commenced. The author- Anti the terrible "Nevermore." ganized by the nation, When, between 18"...0 tiny spare chamber into a tempting resting and ity for its construction was then 1830, Michil!:an increased 260 unques- place. , Territory _ There were faces tioned," To anguished, per eent., Illinois 180 how many thousands of our Souls that hag!'.l\rd; per cent., ,Arkansas The housewife w.ith knack Is possessed of fainted, tottered, staggel'l:ll countrymen has it a TerrItory 142 per cent·, and 133 proved benefit? To enviable Out of the Dying, living, gasping, shrieking on Indiana per what capital. scantiest ma- centuries score thrO-tgh it sine;le individual has it ever an on score; cent., indicated not a mere Ise but a proved terials she wil1 evolve daln,ty, There life's impu, 'injury?" appetizing bewailing drear error not a wave a but tIde. The' llteadl progress, Now We mus 'dishes. remains ora well-finished roast Where Lethe's waters like a t remem ber tlIRt when J01III mirror, that �e are accustomed to the are Flashed each face back wild with vast statistics Adams converted into an epicure'bs ate, or an Thus terror: of Quincy became President the nation they dwelt In "Nevermore." to-dav, it may not seem to know egg (the last in the a bit exciting had been for a basket), of butter, a that tho governed quarter of a century of the whole dust of a Now population nation rose under a mustard, few drops of vinegar, a they moaned and now sat staring, 'from succession of Democratic admlnls- With a nearly ten millions (9.633,822) in 1820 to trifle of cabbage or io I retrospective glaring, trations, more more on lettuce, and, atempt- On a nearly acting a�d Federalist vision of their livmgwhen they'd dwelt thirteen (12,866,020) in 1830; but this Ing salad. 01' if she cannot make on principles. The of really earth of yore' gain of one-third was tra!litions States-rights at the time the most out of so , had "something nothing," she wlll ar­ Grazed, they'd tear their wild hair hoary; steadily receded, and the reality of a Ohl the horror I astounding demonstration of national prog- range her.meagre table as to conceal defic- Even, Dore strong and expanding nation had taken its 'ress. It enables us to Has not pictured all the gory understand the Im- iencies in fare by the tasteful of place. The very statesmen Who had at first disposition Death-wan dream of "Nevermore." mense importance attached in John her the Quincy put into the most definite dishes, daintiness of her drapery; Adams' time to 1\ shape·theseStates- "Oh 1'1- I in phrase now commonplace she will not even forget to increase the cried, anguished weeping, and rights opinions had, by their done "Is there not e'en rest almost action, of in sleeping? meanlngless-"lnteniallmproye- most to overthrow beauty her 0':"0 toilet, as I �ew of one Must these hosts ments.' It 4s them, Jefferson above all. unnumbered suffer true that under John woman's' in a ' suffer, Quincy By tile of doing e,mergency. thus forevermore I' Adams more purchase Louisiana hEthad, per- domesnc commercial treaties 'were or- There was no dessert for Oan with in ' unexpected they sln� JOY heaven than haps uneonsetouslv, done more to build up guests, When tliese so gantzed under all his but butthe wail, racked and riven? predecessors ; national than undaunted hostess hastened to add Oh I if is this, a.fter all, was Do unuor feeling any President before heaven piled on heaven neaent, Tlili nun, ,flowers and lace to her God must hear Having, by. a and in dress, and sat com­ through score times foreign commerce of the United States is at seven"- spite of all his ownhapPY,lmpulse, posedly the head of the table. now, theories, All the itself, comparatively speaking, 'subor- enormously It is the woman with ground showed' snake-heads, brlst­ enlarged th�oint territory, he had knack who "gavs ling, It is our vast Internal reeog- auld claes hissing, whistling "NevermO'l·c." din\te; development nized the need of amatst as Given that makes us a opening and Weel'sthenew." nation. It is as the great enlightening some odd widths ,Suddenly I 'seemed to the new possession; he had set the of cashmere, siilcorvelvet, waken, epoch of internal that example and .All my lieart within me shakeu. improvements ijle of proposing national she evolves a "combination" suit which four 1825 to 1829 appropriations for B�dly dld_ I dare to whisper, dld 1 years from will forever be may bring her the hardly roads, cauala, mill even and had upon slander of "e�trava-' dare to move; momentous in the history of the United education; glven his sanction gance," while her calculate the But the moonlight flowed in splendor States. (March 24. 1806) to bnild- neighbors O'er the tloor and wall and Ing a national road from probable cost of the beplumed tritle which fender, Inl8?.5 the nation ill tho Maryland to Ohio, :And an angel, lovely, tender was, posit,jon of a first adorns her head. She obtaining thc consent of Statcs only knows where 'Stood and "God is young man who has become nwure murmured, iove." that he the, the lace and covel' through which it was to pass. '1'0 the plectug, and owns a vast estate, but finds it be continue How fear broke into too mostly this how many dollars her dextrous my gladness, policy WOUld, he admltted, COIl- fingers have I had had the unproductive, and hardly even marketable. require saved her.' poet's madness: stitutional amendments. hut iu ' But I knew it all hall Such a hi$ closing vanished, and I mur- person sometimes hits upon an ener- Inthe cabin or message he favored these mnnslou, the woman with mered, "Gentle Dove." getic agent, who convinces just changes. It him that t Iie es- . knack knows how to make the "God's'white'dove of peace, sweet was but a step from 'I most of every- spirit, seutlal thing is to build a few favoring constttuttona Tell me, do weak mortals merit roads, bridge thing. Her quick eye a amendments for this 'purpose to readily discovers, and 'J.1hat dread, woe I few streams, and some doing with- dreamed they layout building out them. she does not the smallest And she inherit?" lots. It Jefferson, Madison, Monroe had despise detail answered, "God Is love." was just in this of coura- which capacity done the John may be of use in aiding her to adorn adviser that one, Quincy Adams did the "Does �eous John Quincy AdaUls was her home, that poorl sad singer know it? other.-T. W. Hiaainson, Did GQd cOlDfor� that quite ready to offer himself. On the of aZ'line. 'lnHarpm"s Mag- In poor poet? day her complete home, Mrs. has Did he find' the bliss for h'IS i t'IOn e Wright which he ever nallgura th greater pal'tofOhlowas drawn a Miriam deemed he hopeless strove? picture of the woman with ' yet covered with and lllinois Did Lenore kiss tiack his forests, was a Salt Yeast Bread. knack,'and one wlll be well to sighing? wilderness. repaid 100k Sweetly, The vast size of the country I will send Mrs. over it. tenderly, denying Shepherd my way of mak- Then, my sister, whoever you are, AU that croaking raven's was still a source rather of crying?" anxiety than of ing salt as I think it maiden or with Stlll she "God is yeast bread, better than matron, knack, you have a whispered, love." pride. Monroe had d the f expresse ear tllat Aunt Polly's: Take 7.( pint of sweet milk womanly gift beyond the price of • no money- "'God is love.', 0 f republican government could con- 1 a course, I know it; safely tablespoonful of corn-meal, 1 gift which may brighten and adorn a Hills and heavens and trol a nation teaspoon home, s show it. rcaching as far as the Mlssis- and a or a God makes sugar small pinch of salt. Let this Single room, as (without it) the treas­ green the earthValley!be ow us and so sipi; and after blue tile Livingston, negotiating for boil till it thickens, then fill the full ures of wealth have no to sky above; , the cup of power add.-Lucy we His purchase of Low.isiana, had comforted warm water and Though Slight l

.some one of ancient directions ate .....��n·."""� talnig'hatn.''d !t�I'8"- finnost the Furst pare the quarters of the loffe round co�position oj! �npowder, Geber ol_l the Idone remarkable as a llg�ver. It has a BlHe about, properties of acids, -V:an Iilelmont on �he na- jaw- so lemanged that it fisb:'twice . C�ize of Phrases, kull the upper cruste for sover- Qrigin Popular The� your rue of gas, and Dr., Glauber on the "salts" its size, and easily swallow "ns stom- ayne and to him about. the� Sing a Song a Sixpcnce.-This J!amous' which bear Ilis name. aoh has the elastic quality of ·JI' ott the Indl�l'\lbber. nursery bailad of Pourtng Upon TroubZed. Waters. means "withered- lit stretches .. to enormous " WaZZ-Eyea.-Properly .proportlo� and . a a full of -The of this was ex- Sing song'a sixpence, pocket rye; origin expression eyed." People are .w.all-eye·d when the appears like a great transparent Four"and-twenty blackbirds baked in a pie; time in bali-qB plained some ago this column, but. white is Unusually liuge and the sight de- hanging; under the fish, and containing.llb .,' When the pie was opened the birds began to for the benefit of a who . fa�r correspondent' fectIve; hence Shakspeare has wan.eyed . prey. �,. 'W�!¥fthiS a daintv dish to set before the seems to have overlooked it at the time, and wrath, wall-eyed slave, etc. When King The last expedltlen sent out by France king\' - who now desires to be on the to some remarkafile forms.·. enlightened 'John says, "My rage was bliniL," .he virtu- brought light ' may be thus it is herewith with a The oft! Morocco from a , paraphmsed: snbject, given, slight ally says his "wrath waswall-eyed." [Saxon, dredge brought up

. a a . SlDg- song of bribery in hous� at Rye, addition as to the efficacy, in a literal sense, depth of over one and a h",lf mUeS·a fishthat r!!: � hweUvn,' to wIther. r;rhe word is often Fotir-and-twenty parsons making u.p a plot; of oU in troubled waters: to be aU and It . stilling written or whatZieiL from the appeared head mou�h.· was 11>' the was wlwZZ-eyea.' . \, When. plot ready, the parsons swore. oil small and the 'twas tme- The phl'l\B6 I\P()uring olluponthe teoubled I verb whaZZy. size, lenlth QUtlIJpouth this a to set before was about four-fifths of the entire 80 Wasn't dainty King waters," occurs in Bede's "Ec- Wake.-To body; , �lot o.riginally· keep vigUs tSaxon wooccoo). tliat if 'the had been 'Charles the Two I body severoo;!Hjhma:the .,. eleslastlcal History," written in Datin 1150, Spelman \'llttUy derives it from the Saxon head, tt, and two or three Uke'lt. cO)lJd have doggerel is a sarcasm on been stowed In ·the v 'fhls cond?nsed years ago•. The story of its origin, as.traus- �vac, drunkenness A viglt celebrated away capac�ous poucli , (?). ' I t . � the Ry�house Plot, which was got up by lated by Stapleton in 1565, is as follows: with juuketing and'c:lan,clng. ,.Titus Oates, a of the �uN��J'��e�t�erts disreputable ctergyman The venerable Bede 'i& of v��1,itt�O�l�Ug��Pm.� speaking lUshop '''It may, therefore, be permitted them animal parts and the "I' was m 1688. The stu- re)ooting rest�- EngLish.church....,thls Aidan 'who was to mira- work . permitted on the or other . dedication , . dents ot history Will find that there were (the Irish), day cles, A priest called Vtta (Vtta) was sent in The solemn days of lJl8l'tyrs, to make them bow; '"Ir"& :m3:),"C'�.A.T::EODil',p.A.. t�enty paraons concerned thla plot. - into Kent to fetch Eaufiede King Edwine's ers them- about the churches 'and'- refresh sobriquet of "I,llackbirds" was given to them daughter who was to be m'arried, to King 'after on account of the clergy wearing black selves, feasting together !I. good The KANSAS Oswin. e was to but to return H' go by land, ligi killing tl i t0 th gowns. water. Before hls Vtta re.oussort; .leroxennow , ': u'; by departure v.is- oj! God and increase of eState I C0II on the Tree praise charlty, whleh Agricultura' ege Hushra-by, .Bq,by, Top.-The ited the and besought his for , Bishop i ... pmyers were wont to sacrifice' to the has been traced to 'the of they !ft...... followin�' reign be�ore .. lt�:;u,�,"!\ ,;._,,8. a The blessed _ .. •..,�a·6·'" _ .A '.Il 4., !, prosperous journey. BIshop the to MeUtu8. ''1'0 .""A,"'lrI!BS'..I.�.'Q � 11Ji14'UI_ Henry VI., and alludes to the battle of Bar- devll."-Gregory Great for his a . bim, and predicted return great was-an abbot who came over with A (Jl).l tour years' coane or Itudy In' EDg1lJh and I net, which was fought in 1471, and In which '[MeHtus tempest and a contrary wmd that should rIse St. in the great Earl of Warwick was-kllled: Augustine,.]-.Tohannes Factotum, �� suddenly, gave him a pot of oil, saying: �:';:�C:::'::"t.!f..I:�l =��o:;::� f on the tree , GZobe-Democr�t. justedto the wanta of .uunll \hrOulhollthUle - late, ,Hush-a-by, baby top,. , "Remembor that·;you caste into the sea thIs __ " � When,the wind blows the cradle will rQck', , with'sborter coUl'le8ln common b....chll. and all . anon " When the breaks thecmdlewillfaJl- oyeJ that I give you'" and , the winde I'l'shes'That and bough Oarry Lanterns, Light up Tuition 1"ree. Down comes the baby, cradle and all. being Ialed comfortable, fayer weather shall the Ooean I' Depths. Other expenlle8 are- reaaonabie. lind �PP!lrtnnlttli to � It was in this occult way that the popular ensue on the seal. which shaJl sende you Many curious forms of ,fisl;les have recently help one'• ..,If by labOr &ie. a1ro�eit· to lOme extent: Il.entlment of England expressed its idea of agayne with as pleasant a passage as you been in the �eep sea, says tl.,e New· The work of tbe farm, orebardl, vtpeyirdl, gardeDI. the "Last of the whose was �ound Barons," power have "'ished" The tempest came as pr� ground. and bu1ldln�... "eU .. or .hope aDd om._. " " Y01'k Sun. 0ne fisI dred d from a de th ..: " . I, ge p 'typified as the "wind," while the "bough" the so. d to cast" Ill, II done chiefly by stnden"', with an aVera&e pay-roU 0 "'il . dicted, ors·assaye. aDl,lar of nearly three miles trom the surface, shows was the House of Lancaster; the "baby," of the water to fill the and ,200 a montb, vain, begun ship, a .- complete modification of structure. At 11 course, being the son of Henry VI., ltilleli but death was looked for." THE TWENTY.FIRST YEaR OF THE OOLLEGB "nothing. present ' this distance the surface the _ I. from .pressure 'BEGINS BEPr. 18TH. 1888. by the cruel Duke of Gloster after. the battle At the near- of death came the approach can be It is estimated that hardly realized, with Ilxteen S50 of tewksbury. of the and the of oil. Instructors, Itullimtal �u1ldln.. wort... thought Bishop pot this fish has to contend a against pressure ,00,000. atock and apparatua "orth �;IH!O. and a pro. • tf } You've Shot YoWl' Granny.-An Ameri- It in his hands, the cast the I Talting priest equal t� 'two and one.half tlms to every ,!lnetlve endowment or4Oll.000: ',,' for the CILI!- equiv,alent English saying, oil Into the seas, when, as if by magic, it be- For and square incll of surface. A sealelig.lass tube, fullinformatlpn catalogu� ad.�_. "You'·ve found a mare's nest." and and the was d� PBII8, .came quiet calm, sh�p inclosed in a perforated copper covering, has W'tZZ for the Deed.-A common that he bad it from QJ£()i4"���4 saying livered. Bede declares at two mileS been reduced to fin'e powder, which had its origin In a plaY entitled "Ri· "a credible man, a of our very priest church, while-the metal was tlvisted out of shape. LAUdE CARD!!, Imported D..lg." ':II:"'0 011 II, val-Fools," by 0oZZey 0mE;�3rr:i�.fcft.���lIr.?�'!: ·pressure. and. __-----.,---:----:--;:::;-:-- -. word,S signifying "I came, I saw, I con- miracle was l'Ylodern wrought." experi- muscular systems are not fully developed; quered." Plutarch, in his Life of Julius ments show that it was no and it miracle, the bones ate permeated with pores and says: "In the Cresar to Cresar, account, gave was altogether probable that the scene oc- fissures. The calcareous matter is at.a min­ the Roman Senate of the and dis- rapidity curred precisely as described. Tile expres- are imum and the bones of the veJ)tebrre . Send .Ix cents tor �ge. Bud recel'l'e patch with wbich he the over oil the free ·a box of whloh "Ill gained victory sion, upon troublei:1' so that in the cootly loOdo �"Pouring together liftiut , joined loosely" . Ilelp all. otellher !leX to,more monllJ Pharasuces at Zela, in Asia Minor, he only is now a common used waters," metaphor, larger fishes out of the water they often faIl A PRIZB• �Ight ,..04y tban au:vt{,lnl else In \hI. made use of these three words." Suetonis commotion of world. Fortlllies Bwalt \he-,'II"Orlr:enab­ of all efforts to allay anyldnd Tile muscles are and the apart. all thlp, vet ROlutely sure. At once mId"". TaU." CO•• Anguilla "It was an upon a banner of In the in- . 'says: inscription by smooth wor(ls conmliation tissue seelUS Maine.. '. . connective ,almost wanting. carried before Cresar as suggestive of the ce- The terest of peace. following,in�eference Yet these fishes are able to tlart about and We'WlU'sendyollawatClioracnaID-, lerlty of the ·victory." It might, however, to the efficacy of oil in soothing troubled . IIY MAIL 01' V. O.D., to Il.! capture prey. exnmlned beforeUPIEaal.pay nganymone have been 1\ both. waters, is frOID an Englisll paper of a recent and If not IIBUSfac.t"9r;Y.i ttl.turned Sunlight penetrates about 1,200 feet We al. b�low our expcnse... man�llCture Viva Voce.-Latin for, "by the living date: SO the surface of �he sea. At 8,000 feet the our wBtebea and eave :rou p!\r voice." 'Viva voce eVldence is spol{ell testi- "The bar of Peterhead harbor is lashed ccnt. Cataloguctor 2IiQ ,tylcs'freo. b;Y lowers to 40 and I WAtcB-wl.BIl.lJffttt.o ..ApDBIUMJ ; temperature degrees l!'ah., 'EVBRT ,.mony as distinguished from written, or that huge green and recently some 011 aTAHDARD AMEIICA" WATC1f. VD., billows! from about a mile from t.ho surface to the l'lTl'SBlJ1I.(lH, pA:. ' whIch is is given on affidavit. A v'liVa voce was pumped upon lt from a reservoir 011 the b'ottom; four or five miles, the temperature vote in an assemby is either aye or nay, a)!- shore. The water was at soothed, and o�ce is about the same. the world over-j nst above nounced orally by the parties voting. 'fhe IIny vessel have crossed the This co�l� bar., freezilig. How do the fishes and other forms phmse is divided into four syllables thus- process of stlllmg troubled waters IS not ' here see? vi va vo ce, new, as all readers of the Bible know, The 'I'heir eyes are lllodified IlS well as their Used U1J,-The first known use of this Syrian fishermen have always uscd it, Ilnd other parts. The Hshes that live 500 feet familiar expression in print occurs in Sam, Persian boatmen tow bladders after them from t�e sUfface have larger eyes than those Slic7c's "Human Nature." p. 192. "Well, filled with oil, which leaks out 'gradually. in the zone above them, so that they can ab­ being out, night arter night. she got kinder All whalers know the effect of cutting up sOl'b the faint rays that reacll them" til a used up." blubber alongside a ship; and it is said ,that zone below this, mauy forms with small eves 1'u7'rtcont.-The name of tUf.nooat, which a small schooner was saved by ladling out begin to have curious tentacles, feelers, or in this country is applied to one who fre- blubber and train oil in a violent storm organs of touch. quelltly and for trivial reasons changes his which sunk other ships off Sable Island. Many of.these deep sea fishes have special politics, took its rise from one of the first Indeed, it seems to be an established fact organs on their sides and heads that arEl. Dukes of Savoy, whose dominions lying that oil will calm the troubled and 'Yaters, known to possess aluminous quality. Other open to attack both from France and· Spain, the now experime�ts being.made 1Il.England organs are considered accessory eyes, so that was oblige(l to temporize and fall in with .are to ascertam the best kmds of 011 for tile the fishes have rows of eyes on their ventral A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE. that power that was most likely to distress purpose, and the best method of using i�." surfaces looking downward, while near are him, according to the success of their arms "Professor Horsford, by emptying a vlal of , ,I luminous spots that provide them WIth light. against one- another. So, being 'frequently oil upon the sea in a stlff stilled its DeTOtet! to Society, Lod�, Amuaement and iD�O bree�e, One of the of these deep sea torch- News, good Literature, etc. Will be pnbllshed III_ 'obliged to change sides, he humorouslv got surface; and Commodore of the largest Wllke" is a fish six feet with a tall. peclally for the State ot �aDB88,. fll a year; ,1 a coat made was blue on one and saw the same effect bearers, long, that side :Unite� navy, pro- tne,Te�, State� d I fin extending the entire length for.1x month.. Speclm�n copy white the other, and might be indiffer- duced in a violent off the Cape of uearly ,on' :M:. O. FROBr &: PUbe.. stor� 'fhe tips of this :fin are lumin' Address BON, . worn out. in Good oi! from a whale o���e bOd;. ently either slEle While the Hope by leakmg , Topeka. KaIll88, d also a broad patch on its head. Spanish interest l�e wore the blue side out, ·ship."- [Brewer. Clubbed with tbe KAli"U8 FABJIIm tot tl.7G. sides of the are a double row and the white side was the for the Stone.-The to wealth. ���n:�he body badge PhiZ080phcj"s way . . of lummous spots. French. He was, tlwrefore, caUed "Emman- TIIe ancIent aIIleUllSts thought there was a � 0 of these uel the Turncoat" to him from substance which would convert all baser O· f the most ferocious deep " distinguish • .

sea orms IS tlle chanI'10dus.Its mouth. is other princes of metas1 lDt0 go.Id Tli1 S SUbStance they called nfe thesamena�eofthathouse. ,fair! overfiowine; with teeth, that 'Uppel' 07'Ust.-This term IS oftentime ap- stone. The word In protrude th? philosopher's s.!.one in a manner. The fins are all plied in a slang way to the upper ranks of tins case equal to the word sub-. �orbiddin IS. ab?ut tl ed with spots, while along the society It scems that long ago the upper stratum, whIch IS compounded of the Latin .pp Naming dorsal f ext I's a 0f t tl at crust of a loaf of bread was the orthodox /tub and stratus (spread under), the latter !'Jl( . , . e so WID ows n a t0 tlIe verb sta·nil stooel and appearsulrikace maloY �owd 'ISPtOhSe fiSlh, part to place before dlstmguished visitors. bemg reI ted , , h which li ht'IS SI" In WynIDlJft de ·Wo7·ue's BoIce of Ke7'wtnge meaning something on which the experi- throug. g IImng. HALL TYPE-W'nI!Elt. are . lu­ - [carving] are tllcse directions: "Than take ment stands. It was, in fact, a red powder The httle fishes, Bombay ducks, --ONLlY $40.-' a lofe in your lyfte hande and pare ye lofte or amalgum to drive off the impurities of minous over their entire surface, and whe;n Phenomenal in its simplicIty and eft'ootiven91s. and none of the bad ones rounde aboute; then cut the otter cruste to baser metais. According to lagend, Noah numbers are collected together they present All the best fe&tule8 of compettton. Same capacity 'as 185 and 8100 mao cut the to true and an the youre souerayne, and nelthercruste, was commanded hang up. the �ost chines of other makes.. l!IBt.lsfacUon guaranteed. , asto�ishing spec�cle. One?f of IS thechlas­ Invaluable to all who write. seven and voyde payn(Je, and touche the lofe genuine stone in the ark, to interestmg these light-givers, Weighs' �he philosopher'.s pounds in CMa. Send for circular. no more after it is so 8ertted." In Furni give light to every livmg creature therein. modus, a fish that attains a length of only HALL TYPE·WRITER valL's manncrs ancl mentB in macn Times, It was'in searching for this treasure that;. thirteen inches. The top of its heaE! is the 48 Madlson St., Chicago,AGENCYi11. 8

He abandon that do not must crops pay ' What Farmers Must Do. W4ea.t· Farming•. and he must raise do THE KA14'SAS ,FARMER When it is said that the farmer has them �hat pay. Like every other co�Odity, wheat . wheat to. Ever� Wednesday, by the advantages not enjoyed by persons ill W.hen drops per�a�entlv rises and falls in the market In perfect PIJIV(!hed pnces that only under .paad labor can FARMER CO. anf other vocation, a simple tact-ts accord with the law .of demand and �.NSA:S stated. It is tbe primitive employment produce it and sa�e m?ney for the land- supply.' Prices paid for wheat the last . . . '.' President, farmer DBMOTTE. of and is therefore of the first im- lord, then the thnfty must drop six months or more have nat been If·o. .. man, .• • ". ner uoneea .. for' and raise /u]l,·A. BHREO.WTN,'" � elseIs wheat, except familv use, We had not the same ...... tor. portance. Evervthing secondary encouraging. W.A.PEFF.!!:.. , TreasureGerandBaluB·lneI8SMa�nagene�. in it If there is and in some wav an outgrowth of agri- something; ,,:ithmoney ", faith in better-markets tor 'the crop of TERMS: OASH IN ADVANOE, more m tban III culture, or a dependency, auxiliary or profit poultry peaches, 1883 that· we bad in 1882. Accumula-' : is the If corn then better crop. tions of so, no .1 Slnllle 8ab.crlp&lon.: servant. poultry. wheat were great that ' 8::=�I:��eJ:.:'�, ' .�:= But agriculture, like other callings, pays.�tter � be�f, or pork.or ?u.tter reasonable hope could' be. entertained ... than It does III then It Into Vlub Rate.. long ago moved away from its original cribs, put that prices would rise before that year's

. . ' one . articles. more 1I'l1'8 ooplea, year. ,7.50 one the better If'it was a . . the last Of is . In hundred still ., There Teaoopl. one,year. 18.20 Simplicity. paying. i.s crop disposed .. one - . . . 18.441 fitabl to k one. d cow than I'lfteen . l:"r, years, farmers have grown in produe- pro �. eep g�o great deaJ of old wheat in the, country, three Inferior that IS the kind to "::a:� :tinr "f��:;'i �.a-,�,,:,prb!O�����r tive powers fast., .and in the last' ones, and the supply from Australia, India .. named in 111M of above·three very liabilarille Oftll .tlle elulle, If bette'r than beans Iii the amount·of caIh. 'half of that their has keep apples pay , and Russia is , _mpanled coiTeepondlnr period, progress '.' larger every ' succeeding Wben eleven, or Ilxteen pereonuvllh to unite at,Ji, been wonderful. Out of this growth has then raIse apples. I� short. 40 that year. ·�yt'':,ittr��r,���d�fI'�����YtlB�I�v���'��':; which is most It is not at all that there a u that is marvelous profitable. . likely :r.ear tor IT:50, or eleven copies one year for 1£8.20, or com'e nevelopment ,will ror do .0, ilXlilen'coples One year ,18,4O"-tbey may when we all its As settlement advances and social be any decrease in the quantities of consider . When OIl

, . service to us as T. W. Harvey .. Public 8ale 0/ OatUe. in manv other matters.' We now plow condition will come to all farDiers. It special farmers. Russia A. H. lifartln." , .. Durham Park. Herd Sale, steam. Two men will is fast us in Kan- produces first-class wheat and so does .. plow crowding upon here Henry. Blakesley 81wrt hom bulls/or 8ale. by twenty. C. F: Hardick & soa . B card. ·Australia. Breeder' acres in one day. sas. Many men, feeling the pressure; }T�en, we. have Canada J. W. Arnold .. Breeder's card. at our as wheat N. E.,Palnt:'& ell Co .. , Roofing Paint, Out of this expansionof power among and not having courage to resist or right doors, gooda C. S. Eicholtz.. ; ...... Breeder's card. farmers has come an expansion of ter- knowledge to move ahead, sold out and country as lies under the sun. ritory occupied by farmers and a vast wentzo newer lands to be followed up' It Is an established fact that wheat Kansas stood first on the list last year . in the amount of their there the 'same as here. Those men in cold 'produc- grows-wel! latitudes, . and that, tor of com acre. Increase . av�rage yield per , tions. While the number of farmers as. that have kept pace with the times are as a general thing, it is not profitably nch. But their The company that advertised Rex compared with numbers engaged in all getting methods are grown in tropical regions. It is equally. other is not as now as unlike were when 'were well understood that :Magnus is reported to us insolvent. vocations, great very they they in colder cUmates - . It was a hundred years ago, still we "roughing it." toe variety of crops is less in number Although this js the 28th day of May, have more of and the work than m them they We desire to impress upon the minds warmer places. That argues we have had no' warm weather. . really do is vastly greater than ever before. of our readers the fact that be- that .the northern farmers will contiiiue . farmers, But other callings show still greater the are. most of ail to raIse wheat; as much neceSSity first, . Th�s·./w.jn not be a ,good year for ing important �om improvement than'. do. the farmers. as from desire. cannot chinoh, bogs. It starts out too cold men, vet, unless they change from They grow Take It is only about worse to better as other men some crops that are farther and wet for them, manufactures. do and profitable since wer� able and can ------forty years Americans. condense their labor and propert; into south, they get little profit out Next week the Republican National to make their own musline and calico. most valuable forms they Will fail in of stock. In warmer lati�udes farmers convention meets to place in nomina­ When .George Washington· was Presi- their hii'h calling. :Farmers must keep have opportunltles that their northern -tion candidates for President and Vice dent, we had no woolen mills, no foun- in the front in that neighbors do not enjoy. They can . everything pertaina 'President.' dries or machine shops. Railroads to material and' moral chan� from one thing to another as . growth. came after Jackson's time, telegraphs occasion and make out Reports from dlfferent parts of the requires money in of all. . and now we can talk on Kansas Btook ..., State show. wheat in excellent condi­ Buchanan's, Oity Fa.t Show.• a WIre two hundred miles . long. In These considerations tend to teach' tion and' corn Ii little backward on We are in receipt of premium list for 1775 there were only' 37 newspapers in us that the days of wheat­ accountof late, cold spring weather. the Kansas City Fat Stock Show to be �rofitable t�e the in the southern of our country; in 17QO the entire lenth of held October so to November 0 next. farmin.: one-hi'lf all our mail routes was no are Our Kansas Are the iI�a$OnS �eallY changing? Or longer than We have not room for ItIn detail. But country passed. flU'Dl­ from re- rrs are line­ are the dQ'ferences we' observe in cli­ Boston to Denver. It would we are anxious to see the show succeed intliitively falling into·tliis matic condItions hEire in trace­ two of 1G each of thought. Many of them tlUs year ;Kansas quird freight tJ:aill:> cars and to have Kansas animals carry off able to our'worlt in and 10 tons to to have little if any more wheat plOwing allowing every car, calTY the prizes, or as many of them as pos- growing planting? all of the number of news- than they expect to use in their own average daily sible, and for that reason we advise every families. papers printed in the United States, raiser in the State to to But they are doing more There is no better way to provide .stock wJ;ite the and upwards of sixty thousand persons than formerly in other directions.. It agabist drouth. than bV deep plowing Secretary, Edward Ha.ven, for a copy of are to handle the people's costs 25 to 30 cents to take a bushel of lmless it be .the· c.ollection of water in required the premium list. Premiums offered mails. wheat from Topeka to New York. which it be 'are large enough to be worth working large �setvoirs.fr.om may These are some of the evidences of That is for. For from cheap-verv low, but it is a 1'tiD land as needed .. sheep, they range $30 'ov:e,r t�e progress in other directions. Men have large percentage of the ·value of the down to $5; for hogs from $100 to $25; . winter feed for gone out into almost numberles� ways wheat. It will be wise to shorten up a' •. potat_d_e�ll.ate good cattle .$100 to $25. Then there are of and all live off of what cows and Milch cows are much living, they little in our wheat and lengthen out in . · hogs. special premiums offered bV Breedm"s springs forth from the earth. -While all fruit and meat. both in . bti_n�fited by eating potatoes, Gazette, and several stock associations. -- .....-- this has been going on, relations in a flesh and milk. Cut up small and fed Total of premiums offered is' thousand have Values a�0l:lnt .In Dodge City Times we find these with grain or meal are much rel­ ways changed. they $7,165, diVIded among, $5,255, "It is not of are not now as they once were. ca�tle good suggestions: probably ished by cows. For hogs are bet­ things they hogs $1,075. sileep Chicago offers understood a of A bushel of wheat and a yard of calico $�5. by great majority peo- � boiled. more tban thIS for her only $30 show. pIe that fiour and some other articles of were about -- equal in parts of this country .... however Deep and shallow CUltivation In those same food, good originally, may be plowing' sixty years ago. places The 0 the State . . -f-· Horticultural report rendered unfit to for com. The first working, if done land is now at one hundred to entll'ely eat· by being rating society of 1883 is published and is a c1oseI confined in a closet or with small teeth or may· be two hundred dollars acre. y any other hoes, deep per Coming most int volume. It contains a eristing with if the ground was in the or home to Kansas we have lands apartment, coal oil, oniOns, etc., plowed fall, rating great 'amount. 'of infcfrmation that is very early and has been'hardened to and Kansas being'placed in contact with ·them. A spring grom $2.50 $150 per acre, useful to the practical horticulturist 'with rain.. After that can of coal oil or bag of onions will con- · let the was as a working organlzed Territory only thirty and farmer. It covers the whole . . field, tammo. e a'sac 0 . t k f fiour be shallowi Years ago. as' certainly as .-.-.-.....-.- containingsomelhingforeverylnquirer. a case of small pox will infect a "'With land held at five dollars or less . G. C. is sec- healthy Mr. Jacob Nixon, Cowley county, Brackett, Lawrence, Kas., if in Per acre men live cheaply. Their con- person brought contact with him. · and has of the writes us tbat peach trees are over­ retary,. charge report. A Iell,k oil can veniences and comfort!! are few, though y being carried in a wag- loaded fruit. full. How many he has to distribute we do with Apples Small on with flour will often it a the of nature are give . gifts profuse. We not k a card fruits ... a few left from now, but postal from any dit� Peas, very cannot remain monarchs of nau'.!eating taste, immediately con- long large directed to Mr. will May 3rd· freeze. Early planted corn, person Brackett, demn the flour. areas. Settlement comes, and with it Therefore, such ar- a receive attention. nQt verY...... stand. Farmers prompt go�d busy numerous social necessities. School ticles should always be carried and tame plowing corn, grasses dOing well. stored entirely separate. Butter and houses and reaping machines cost When setting out cabbage plants or cream also Imbibe the odors of oil is time now to money; so do and offices or if a and It late post indeed anv ... . prepare potato brIdges tomato, "'lants, piece onions." grom\d. 'Plow deep, manure well and and blacksmith shops. of paper, with the ends joined so as to _....._ keep clean. It is better tQ spread Out of all these things come local and make an open cylinder like a piece of Mrs. H. M. Crider, York, .Pa., has necessities. If a traveler manure on the ground thickly, then personal stove pipe, is set down over the plant prepared and published a little pam­ ploW under and let lie a few weeks. would reach his destination on time he and the lower end settled in the ground, pblet entitled "How' to Grow Fine Then cross plow shallow. Use large must not jump off the train. If the it m\\y save the plants from destruction Celery-a New Method," and sells it at farmer would with the potatoes and healthy. Cut to one or k�ep up general by cut worms. Old fruit cans will do 25 cents! It will well pay that anybody. two eyes in large pieces. proil'eBs he must improve his methodf!. well for same purpose. thinks of growinll celery. The at Cqicago, Rai;Iroad Association. '. Kansas State Agrioultural OoJJ.ee:e. the ··fore lel1:8 are taken: the. same and can ". ." THE . its meetipg in Chicago, May. 10th, 1884., hardly a short ",. '. .M�. Prisident Faircliild publisheq some �v.:31k....,...p.erhaps wa�lt dlstanc� ...... ,reed to return members of the Ameri- f . and theu fall oyer, They luive acts reeently concermg the coII at good appe- "'" ege B'II 11, Miay..,; 1"""----"""!o can annual ntes and seemtngty-all riaht, only aftllcted Tetegrap, .' -r Association, attending Manhattan which ought to be known in their legs."" ", meeting,fromCb-icago,atone-thil'd.fare, Iby:every citizen of Kansas. A very ,. S'1'QOK'���r'" on of REPLY.-The symptoms described ·K&Dlla. l certificate Secretary. TQ_at Asso- common error indio. CltT." receives, apparently om- cate of the ';' ciation is of the General Pas., presence kidney worm. The' The Live Stook Inillc!atorJtepgrill: composed eial from the in sanction, statement the best remedy we have of is tur':' head. The senger and Ticket of the rail- kuowledge C,ATTLE��ec;elpts �-!1,IlYi 1,974 Agents . immigration pamphlet issued recently pentine. One of market to·dllY roads tablespoopful turpentine wlia;w� ';Ddflllo�J :'!1th.:valueu, terminating'in C�cago, by: the Secretary. of the State Board of poured on the "small of the sbllde Iooc1 __...... -- back," ev:ery f?r shlpp�ng ��" for three Is l�w:erstuff steady at :w�e, Agriculture, that the at day' da.ys ' said to be a certain butchell_ wfA!J I'" ,�. Legislature . ' '. 1 , THE GLORIOUS FOURTH.�The Kan- . e, cure ill case. Bale!lwllre 560&'&05.' -�r·��IY .. each,season approprlates mpney for the every in ley Bas Fort Scott & and Kansas �?rn soaked, HOGS RecJllptB, slnco)Bllturda,.-a.Q8I! head. CIty,' salaries the made from wood aehes,' is. a good pr.event- Gulf,. payment oj in: State Agricul� The or' City. & MemphIS Mr. mark�t to·,dIlY opened w""lt a�''''''eclID' Sp�ngfield Railroad� tural Ttis current tve, will sell College. notion is' cobu�:�.__ l Compames Excursion TJckets, '5cfromSaturdaY'�Prllles; 1"�iln,�y�,.aaWl and has been, mistake"'for fif- I. ' feelllig . whoUv,a w;ellk!lr to and from all stations on . w�s devel�pe'd ) . these lines , GoSSlp About S declln6 of weak' �lttta,·",�UODal• teen years past. toQk. 50, clodng wlm, run 4ee11ne\9f > at hGlf fare . . and 10c from ., except between such. Senate have. on a De- Baturdlly's prloes. ,'-sales • The State Hou[te a�eed ·rnge41i 1� reelved from the . National . stations where the each of Animal 545; bulk at 5;211&6 85., I ." - 1 partment. , Industry. way ' . , loc�l fare. land grant,' for support and mainten- 'SHERP head. make 25 cents or less m which case no ;Rf!ce1pla :slnC!' \Bat�Yi .� ance 0f the A'igr euIturaIU Q11 a r(;!,1 P�rsonsinterestedinHolstelncattl�sMuld. Marketllowexcep't fOr good Bal811i9uaU'fel reduction willbe eg�, not fail to the of m�de. "l'heSe tickets read John· IlV. 8 tIe over advertisement 94lbs. OO.. avo . acres, now ISO'dQ. 711bi. 885.: t on nearly all sold, P.,Hall's sale 8. This ' will. be sale July,3 and 4 good to re- �,OO? June Is a good oppor- J ,"Ii and an Chlcaco• fumlahing endownment of ( tum on July tunitv to purchase good specimens of this The Drov.em' Joumal ripoitl: half a .....__ nearly million dollars, the best � Invested milking breed. HOGI! BeqelJ5lall"'lO!I,�pJDenla.l.700. Kark. in bonds and the interest of General Butlerhas acccepted the anti- contracts, The Leonards, of Missouri, had 'a partial falrly activ.e at 5dO lower. Roqh.� UGa which all the 585, lOa ' pavs current expenses of publle sale of their Polled cattle at an4, '7q. �h&·1i nomination for the 'W1ppID�. ' , Presi . ' 5�. monopoly . Omaha, PIlCkipg the 5 65, skips S 75&11 00, In his letter of College, and has done so for fifteen Neb., and Dodge City, last week, The dency. acceptance. he CA'l'TLE Recelpta8,OO()� liar.' years average was about K�s;, did not sblPDleutl"toO. past. . $400. rhey sell does not go into detail as to his opinions; ket brISk for beat, but lo� iracJea '111&1110 lower. The appropriations' made from time ,all that they had'at these places. but in a letter to a Detroit paper he ,Exports 6 50&6 71;" gOQd tq, obll1ce·,II)$P.i!1iIa 6 GOa to time, in the common 15 says he favors a tariff that oWill afford amounting twenty-two 1. II. Barnes, MaJ;lhattan,' K;as" sold three «\ 40; ,�medium 90t.- com fed do. 76� � June to .. • revenue. to years ending 30th, 1885, $282,- thoroughbred Holstein to go to 'Gen. J. 4,50a5OO, 5,00&6 a-: enough defray the . . �ows 1. expenses ", ImEEP Jlarbt OOO,have been chIefly for S·C• asement,t PamesvI IIIe, 011.to' Tit'e d Becelpts2,OOO.ihIpmenDj.88S. 'of the government, and so adjusted that apeeinctm- goo SlOW'. ill' and of Kansas seems to be In Inferlor:tO"ILlrlli70,;8�,Jlled1\Do:top04 provements buildings grounds, demand, " necessaries and raw materials that we s�,ck bllt 8'75a450, chotce to:e� 4.75&660: 'J .,,� thlS shipment is a little out of the usual do not here shall. be and includiDg repairs, as required by the law A Journlll'S weak produce free, order. . Liverpoo� �b!e IIlYlc;aWl,p.re of the orlzinal"" Belt that the articles Congress making grant, . .' U�l taxed should. be such and,.ste,ady, Aoierlc_al!1'- ' lm,erloua and,for H. of OsaKe ,shatedeep Il yat 16.Il17c.· as ' special lines of experiment and Ward, county, recently pur- protect American ,. would. workm�n. chased,an Adelaide heifer trom P. & Loull. The of the . _-_....._ apparatus. property Col- Marcr .St., • .. . I . . CATTLE liar.• m these not the Son, Wakarusa,. paying $175. M.Honghton, .Receipts,2,OOO.·!il\Ipmeutal,880. The time is in Kansas when lege lines, ket active and to coming coun�g BQlliDgame bought from same persons five strbn![. ;Exportal6 �,75, goocl .of forests, choice farmers will growth orchards, vlenyards shlppIDg •. t9 arrange for g cows at each.' Messrs.. ·5:�6,SO comm9.lJ(I irrigatin_ s.mall $100 . Andrew Olson med11UB. " and is - 5 40115 stockers Ilnd II ornamental trees ' valued at-$105 , • 85, com fed . tracts of land. This can be 'done at and Fred J0hnson each bought a bull from feede}'8' 7�{215! '. 25lIli 4 . 000. The Texlls!i 75, gr&88 do. ()()al75. . total expenses to the State, same�. . all h 11 sHlmP iiecelpta 100, De-- then, oyer the present value of property sblpilieDtii 2,2iIO. ::die:x::�seif m:�e T. W. Harvey, Turlington, Neb., makes mand exceeds sUpply. oUp}le418 IiOd DO. p!n: :�::\�S has ' '�8t1ve been less than . $70,OOO,-barely. announcement in this Tenns 8 ooas 50 �, for a'hundred dollars issue of a sale . ,.' that would caw_h .. public h tQ sust'am the C0IIege m d at 'New York. water to five acres of enou� goo Tnrlington, Tuesday,· June 11, of some enough irrigate CA:TTLE Beeves, 4,000; Ita'tket working order for two years. All the choice Short-horn and Polled cattle. receipta barel7 ground. If wells can be fonnd Angus, good . Ilclive. 8tricUy 'prime strong, euler. for Mr. Is coiu.mon maintenance twenty years is a wft Harvey considered the l>est breeder in ,.- at slight expense, water may be raised Texas steers 450&6 50, native Iteen>7JODa750. fat that • of the to the State, this is his"first sale at ' Nation of Kansas. .llI).d public . ., i people dlst.1llery . by wind pumps. But in that case, I b� 471i&5 b9. the 'furlinl1:ton Stock Farm. SHEEP firmer. there must be a reservoir to hold the Such an error is the source of much . . Reoeipts.i9iOj)9. Market.�, . Hon. LIlmbs lowllr: Sheepl'OOa6 water as bickering about taxes for educa- W. B. Ives, Sherbrook, Canada, held OQ',l�1!!'�:fjoa711O. it is pumped until it ,is needed higher HOGS 18 COO M&riet dun,and Recelpta . llaht.. tion or public sale of Hereford on the land. industlial education, for the i�ported yearling Pigs 5 25aIi 50. .: "; li� _ __ bulls at Kansas D. . few hundreds wh0 aval'1 themse1Ves of City, May 28, with S. .' :.J " J___. - . Blue is in. Kansas' Harrla as auctioneer. Thirty-threB bulls PRODUCE grass spreading .tlle privilege. The ,fact is, that all the �.IUo,I,�. ( m&de an average of $895. The . like it did many years ago in Indiana State invests in buildings and machin- highest :.tallll" ill"." aud priced bull, Downton Wonder, sold for $705, Kentucky. In the northeastern ery for education here a WHEAT There wu pot muoaUfe In the mar­ brings large to A. P. Kas. Wizer, Emporia, keHo.dllY on ohange. CIIIh NO!'2'wu nOmtual counties of the State, this grass has per cent of annual profit from the Na- and'MIlY sold a, ukeel left inclosures and is in State Veterinarian Holcombe sev- 84��o &ga1iII& long ago 'se�n tional not . reports grant which �)Uld be received June and�� eral cases Bilturday. waB',nomInal July lOkI at .... of glanders among Kansas h01'ses. many planes where the seed was never for other How a any purpose 79c-�c lower than BaturdllJ's . great .. ... He has'examined the matter and . IUIklng.prlcewhen • sown by DJ.an.. And t'he same thing is that let the work of the personally 7Sc wu bid. '. IS, Colo. has in the A profi�. found glanders among the horses in CORN The market to.day WIll agaln:·weak on takiugplace southwest. late lege m the next twenty years tellmore seven counties, as follows:. Leavenworth; chllDge,.wlthcuh·No.2 Blued seWBe,at � number of 'the Dodge 'City Times says plainly. Neosho, ,_, : --�-- Montgomery, Greenwood, Ottawa, Ilflllinst(6a.46y.joSalurday. \ that remarks on the blue-grass questi�n C,ASTOR Quoted 60 bUl. , Marion ",t " Edwards and Shawnee. DEAl!:'S 15ll!l-\ .per have caused observation, and patches Announoement. FLAX SEED We quote 1lt_140 per bus. npon . 'tl , .' AttentIon is called to the .' _ B�le at the basis of of it are found'in many parts of the The Fifteenth commence public pure. �'.I a�ual Abilene, Kas�, Wednesday, June 18, when BUTTER Receipts 1a.uly large and the bullt 11 ' ment of the Ii ranges east and south. It is found State Agncultural college A. H. Martin will sell the entire Durham ofppor qUllllty. Market Is ,low' forall grades \' most in those parts most frequented by will take place June 8th to 11th iQ.- Park herd of cattle, consisting of 160 pure- Supply accumulating. We quote: .Cholcle cream­ and from the and shin- clusive. birds, groves bred Short-horns. This is,one of the most ery lSc, good creamery.160, fine d.ut In lIiD,le nllries is spreading to an extellt that The annual examinations, conducted 'celebrated herds in the and almost package lots 160,' IIIqla . West, storepacked,. �d,. . 11c. � ora11 and 1U Wrl·t· packllkes . shows the soil and climate are well y mg, will be heId'III the every breeder 0f promlDence in Kansas h as EGG3 and market at . Receipts l&rger, stead)' adapted to it. Of course the theory is several class·roomsand shops from 8 :30 some stock bred at Durham Park. 'Thiswill 11c. . that a. m. to 12:10 m.· be the most sale of the season. the birds have brought the seed p. , June 9th and 10th. important CHEESE We quote! Full' cream'lIie, part from other A number of tufts skim Young Am�rlca ]6� parts. The Baccalaureate, sermon and the F. S. Frew, Churchill, Ottawa county, flats1lll11�O, of WOOL We quote: MiBBourl and KaJiIl&l tub. the genuine article have been brought annual address will be in the col- Kas., writes: I wish to correct an error in given washed Ilt 28&80c; unwa.a)led,jchoice mMium 17. in and us your issue of May 21.· 1I1r. F. T. sh,own lately. lege chapel, where the undergraduates' Hastings, 230; fllir do. at.171l.19c; coarse i41l16o; -- .. N:ew!(exlco --..... ' . exhibit·Ion d the of Lincoin county, 'reports my three-year-old 121l140. ,an exerCIses 0f the . . I.' It is a to that' ram etc. Ohillalr0" • mistake suppose ever- class will also be as,shearing21lbs., Myramsheared graduating held. WHEA'l' Oood dem�n�. "rrIIlY 8�%C, June trees can not be d WI·th 251bs. of wool and his carcass weighed 70 green prune Visitors will be welcomed to ail of In that Ibs. after being clipped. 1 find no record safety. respect they are like these and 85����cFlllr demllnd. Cuh' exercises, . given opportunities with a of wool to u3���.• other tree. The of shade larger proportion weight of active, any prunning for the in all its OATS Steady, Cash �a8ic. examining college dll- carcass. �y thoroughbred rams RYE Qulet Ilt 61c. and ornamental trees, after they are clipped partments-museums, laboratories, the from 20 Ibs. to 32 Ibs, and the ewes from' 8 ' well to be for .. started, ought shape only. farm and its stock and 20 �t�:i:�LJ>°:lh�6��·169 crops, orchards Ibs;to Ibs.· ·St. LotWI;' Taste in its -- ....-- __ pruning has reward in and forest plantations. WHEAT CMh, MIlY Ilnd Juo,e lower. otb.er op· comely form of tree. The.naturalshape According to a writer in the Bj'eedej"s Public conveyances Will carty passen- tions higher, No, 2 red.111� QUh aDd,1day, t 08 of is alid for that . . Shott-horn cows in evergreen conical, a ar an C(;)nVeDlent III 1'- Gazette, registered June 94�1l95�c July, 91%a92� .1Ul\Ut.. �a gers. tIdregu te ,I, reason the lower branches ought not to Vol. 25 A. H. B. are distributed among 91�c·for·tbeYellr. . vals, to all of the exerciSes of com- CORN Mllrket hlgber but InlctJye. at. be removed far above the the several 'States as �1�a58c ground. mencement. follows: Illinois', CMh, . , , New York. r ' r .' When well developed' the under __...... __ 1;374; Iowa, 1,265;' Missouri, 1,235; Ken- WHEAT Recelptsl6B,OOObUl,u� 132,000. branches ought to be close to the earth. 1,085; Ohio� 816; In- Inquiries Answered, tucky, Kansas, 676; No.2 Chlcllgo 951l96�c, No. II red 1 ou 02�;funelllel If branches t too far , shorten 237: 1 01111 , grow The er dialia, 344', Virginia, 253; Michigan, 280,000 bus. at 02". July sales '1,001.000 bu. poultry about .. • breed. inquired by. them in off the Cut 1 047A t 1 1 ()(lV by cutting endEr. Sarah is the Nebraska, 201', ...._ M well esteemed by Pennsylvauia, 128', •. �.;...,. � poultry people Iltc100R3\1.:N·1l Bece/SI;phISUgu2',8800 "us08'sf:aels, -...... ,000. from the under side .and outward 80 as' generally. Minnesota, 126; WisconSin, 115; New No, 2 63�1l6B�c, � not to a West Brltlsh Grain Mar"ket•. present mutilat!ld appearance, The Wcstem RttmL Is published at Chi- York, 111; Virginia,31; Massachu- MIlY ·Lane· and cut near to a branch that is proper- cago, Ills., and the Nat'tonaL Stockman at setts,26; Tennessee, 2-5; Mal'yland� 24; LONnON, 26.-The.Mlli� bpreu review the ly curved upwards. If' the leader is Pittsburg, Pa. Colorado, 13;' MiSSissippi, 10; Dakota weekly sars blazing .wi�. IlUltecl whellts which are growing f&8t. 'A; warm WG- broken or injured train another from A reader of the FARMER wants to know Territory, 8; New Hampshire 8; Oregon, rllllis desired, Prices 01 breadltuftll are dropplDJ - ! the first branch below. Nature who has for Montaila . good Embden eggs and 8', Texas, 7', Utah geese sale, Territory�, 7', �.- .... - .. t�ctejP8tsltohwe.flnM�tlzwehlsltes}!rclielle... " !.�1'· will the injury. also Bronze eggs. Territory, 7; help:repair. Wyoming Territory, 6; .!-!"lTsOd�d&,.\th. --�---' �t���\,��! t��1:",:1v�1��&�!: :rg=�� J. K. M. say's his stocle hogs, shoats and California, 6; Maine, 4; New J!lrsey,3; witbdrllwn&nd three remain. .-. are in Bales of whellt the week Experiment stations growing sows are out of oraer-"hind legs get weak, Rh,0 de·Is1 and 3 ; N01'th Caro1·rna, 1 ; Con- English past 68.0157 quarters Ilt 88s. �llln8t 66,220 quarten,at 4Bl7d favor wherever they are established. change from one foot to the other, and then necticut, 1. for the oorrespondlIlg week lut Jear; r, .s 10 XANBAS FARMER. . "

a of 'I'he soil of the in thehr mon=v li'�'l their 'but a a' a • woodland, rl carpet green. gar- chiklren; trees, grove, forest, , t:::" "I 'orti�ufture. den, field, knoll and ravine was care- they 1,1�r"; !' ,,,.011 .. ,:\ -:s whether a and if nature has not supplied these, or fullyexamined to know wbatvegetable, proper roundutton i., 'J_:ug laid for their if the desecrating hand or man has EduoationalInfluence of Horticulture, grain or tree was best adapted to sons and daughters, This in turn shorn you of your highest blessing, the then Governor Furnas Prof. Read before the Mississippi Valley Hortl- certain localities.' Succession of gar- stimulates young .people, and lit- and cultural-Society at Kansas City, by Mrs. G. den and field crops were systematically erarv societies and debating clubs are Lazenby will give you definite instruc- Ill. Tryon, Galesburg, most of a to take on tion how to to secure this , arranged to make the founded; they begin refine- just proceed last week.) (Oontinued-from season, and keep the soil in best con- ment of manners. Art is studied. boon. It will require faith, patience, •. "" 'J ,I one of this class take hold of But let dition, The family did not leave Farm decoration, house decoration, and public spirit to start an" enterpnse .iiorticulture if we want to see the ;" : behind them the polish and culture of personal adornment follows in due that will take ten, fifteen, or fifty vears," of a versus a absurdity theoretical, refined society; but this was all so time. Church and state, private chari- to complete. But aside from the Im­ education. There comes to practical, thoroughly enveloped by a social, ties and missionary interests receive portant part it plays in our' landscape, the mind a gentleman bearing highest neighborly interest, that the hearts of attention and support.' The whole and its usefulness in the arts and J 1 4 .. ( honors. This was followed ' collegiate their rural friends were won. They community is transformed from a num- economies of life and its climatic effects, for the . by comprehensive preparation began to enjoy the new state of things, bel' of uninteresting, illiterate farmer every farmer's family needs'the. restful, But his mind soared so _.... ministry. lofty and soon found that nothing, in the families to a community of refined heart-lifting influence of t4eforest.•The far above the masses' with whom he way of cultivation nor expense, had Intelligence. There' has been no lack groves were God's fir(!t ,temples, and . ..:, had to that short were do, pastorates been undertaken but what they them- of honest toil.' But when we work they are just as pure to.day' as when II' ine:vitable. he to At'length thought selves could do. Little by little the witlr nature intelligently there is noth- they crowned the hills of Paradise, and turn his to in .attention fancy farming, surrounding farms began to take 011 a ing to blunt the sensibilIties nor dwarf during all the intervening ages they he had was bound the which, read, up more cheerful aspect. Weeds no longer the soul. Every day there is some new have offered a sacred retreat where '.AI'" fortune -which would maintain his rap- had their own way. Neighbor- development of the creative power. The man may meet the heavenly mfluences. "I -,.rI thinga idly-mcreasing and expensive family. fences and of the earth the sacred and him- • hood about line opening by tiny leaf; The writers, Christ I .. quarrels '. He took no-hints from nature. Soil, unruly cattle settled themselves, and the unfolding of a flower; the ripening self, were devout students of nature . were of no .•j( surface, surroundings were forgotten. Order and thrift soon of the fruit; the growth and perfection Most of theirincomparablelllustrations • • ,li" "consideration. He studied catalogues. took the place of carelessness and neg- of an edible root, everything, is caleu- and happiest truths were' drawn trom - Every,thing I was to be Utopian. The ligence. to and the the cultivated ,lated develop, elevate . the field, ,",:1:r purify spreading tree, was called in. was started landscape gardener Even the district; school mind and heart of man. And from the sower of seed, the household garden, Lawn and-garden were laid, out in the into new life the introduction of such and ,"; u. by communities and such surround- the ripening fruit, the tender vine, The hum- ,most a!'ltonishing, patterns: Imported new faces and 'new voices. ings often come our strongest, truest, even the withering grass, and the seeds, and. bulbs, only, met his approval. drum routine of school life without purest public men-men that the nation fading flower. The sweet singer of and the choicest to :Bare exotics, plants progress and wljhout interest began delights to own and honor. Israel seems to have found the I: 'l'. highest and vegetables of his own country, only, be to the children. The His oppressive Horticulture is progressive in a ma- place in the heart of nature.' were fit to his and tickle new-comer adorn grounds complimentarily suggested terial sense. Several instances could inimitable psalms are fraught with her his palate. Fast horses, fancy stock, that had the material for the best they be CIted a or tender and her ' where slip of geranium breathings, boundlng , gay-plumaged fowls, took their place as school in the not have the county, why a and pulsations. The pure in heart are , .. ,I i '1 '" begonia grieves bv losing friend, stiper"added ornaments. He read about teacher? One was and . best procured in a to a tree' the rivers I " placed broken tea-pot or old fruit compared planted by getting ahead of' nature in the use of retained. The prophetic suggestion can, has been the begmnlng of -a grand of water, and the wicked to ehaff, He and hot-bed. He decided was fulfilled. In two it actually 'C9ld-ffaQles years success; The Slip grows, and delicately sees the hills to Skip hke Iambs, and to aatonlah his neighbor by untimely became the school of the banner county, better a vase is the trees to their in praise suggests quarters; pro- clap hands' lettuce and All this was welf the number and �.adishes. taking greatest highest cured. There it lo.:vingly hints eompan- of the Great Creator. But neither farm nor ., I" garden in the educational department .... en�ugh. premium Ionshlp. One by one other plants take Thus we see that nature, inte'nigently .;,,1', ,c",n be wound up and .set going like an at the and rich county fail', gaining their place in the little window. interpreted, touches every part of our 1.,1,1, clock. One of .the most this "eight-dav prac- laurels at the State fair. From Natural and successive addi-' growth being. , tical lessons in husbaudry is uniform school have out seven successful gone tions soon call for more room. Then Horticulture is a eo-partnersbipawlth • n,' While he and his diligence. family teachers. Eight have taken, or are nature as senior And what- ' extra care and diligence are given to partner. the country in a The farms �er� l'idinll "through. taking college course. garden, field, fruit and fowl, that extra ever dividends are declared a� the years their luxurlous carriage, things did not are still Wealth is increas- improving. dollars may be saved for the coveted go round, enrich the individual farmer take of set in . He c ,,�e the��!'llves. attainments' and social ing. Literary bay-window. It is soon radiant; from and the world. As a rule the amount a great variety of operations, the of mo�on refinements satisfy aspirations top to bottom with plants. The lesson of this dividend depends upon the in- lacked a balance wheel. btitthey the young. And farm life, conducted of thrift is of the ,farmer. '" economical not lost. The telligent co-operation � all his boasted on horticultural is • ,I , With knowledge of scientific, principles One law of nature is the' farmer I' intelligent cultivation and disposal of order, , ')� and kindred fast of trades and astronomy, meteorology taking precedence fruits, vegetables, and grains soon put must obey it. Another IS. 'methodical, " to ,subjects, he failed note the propel' protesslons, in that community. the farmer condition to the Due in gratify systematic thoroughness: . regard time for and How such hamlets scattered transplanting, cultivating' many growing desire of the family for a new to this. will .prove the, philosopher's .• A very in mathe- throughout I the and breadth of stone WIth WhICh to secure the golden �iesting genius length house with conservatory . This creates . . future.. matics, he failed to keep the balance this Mississippi valley are awaiting the a qutet demand for choice plants at As man's inventive genius eontinues between expense and debt and of some common- income, magnetic presence quiet prices. simply covering cost. Cut to bring to his aid 'labor-saving ma­ interest and discount. These unselfish to craillt, sense,' energetic, family flowers are freely given for festive and c�:linery, almos] autl?mat�c i� its perfee­ problems he did not solve. The stir them into and direction to result, life, give funera� occ�sions. The �emand grows, not the one aimed at, but bankruptcy, willing hearts and ready hands. There and WIth It the for ����sisthceo::i��;�s�t�naJ�E.�t\��C�f neeesslty market the world. We seem to be entermg was soon reached. Instead of a bless- is no of size on the face of place equal prices. The farmer sees there is money upon a new civilization, which demands ; , ing he became a laughing stock in the the earth better adapted to the highest in It. of us greater intelligence and a higher to its Like our first he perfection of horticulture than this A is and car- edt!catIOll meet .,requirements. , ,cominunity. . ":", ,,,,":, 'parents," green-house suggested, .' . . TIns means a happiness m our ' homes, educated the people magnificent containing as it ned int0 execution. A Iucrat·rve busiUSl- negatively. valley, a satisfaction til our labor and a Ju , • Let us take another as does the most combination ness :,. picture, just wond-erful is established, which carries a prosperity in our calling far above what to facts as the above. An educated of climate, benediction with it into thousands of we now enjoy. ' �rue ; soil, vegetables, flowers, ., .') . . Then let us not as an asso- meJ;chan,t' WlShmg fr'�edom from Ill- trees, biIIds, mmeraIs, animaIs and homes. hesitate, ciation, to raise the standard of culture '; toil and constant contact with of the choicest In a son , :4001' the the Floral Guide for of every description build- 1883, high, and yet higher, until horticulture, I : ',varying. phases of human nature, ing materials. Just the place where the, late lamented Viek says: "Well do in all its varied departments, shall be bought a. farm, the cultivated portion we may strive with a laudable ambition I remember the time when father universally acknowledged as standing of which was a mass pre-eminent among the great industries tangled of brush, to regain the lost Eden. . The success- brought his whole day's mail home in of the world as an educator of the weeds, half-used straw stacks, decaying fnl continuance of this association Will his pocket, the next morning carrying , people. rails, unkempt orchard, and an aceum- be a strong factor in elevating the his seeds to the office in a small market ======ulation of rubbish generally. standard of horticulture, by discussing basket, and published a four-page eata- Trial 111110 at 3 Yeal's' 1:40. Having been from boyhood, a close and printing the best and newest and logue. Last winter we mailed nearly a IVA""HOE,010� • 0111, observer of he, saw at a most to and the of a million of Floral Dark Bay. 15 3-4 hands high, weight " nature, glance profitable thing do, quarter Guides, . . 1,100 pounds th�t she had ,been lavish iu her expend- best way of doing it. 130 recervmg some days pages each, Stlm<1B 3t GLENYIEW FARM. 8 mlles southwest of itures and which 'the Scien title has a and adornments, farming developed over three thousand letters, requir- lIumbol<1t, at $20 to Insure. Free plISture for mares. ,slovenly farmer had not been able to literature all its own. of the ing several wagons to carry freight and Sired by Glendower, (Bon or Evergreen' and Imp. ", , �ome obliterate. First began the work of most ably-conducted journals in this express packages, and more than one ����I�� �/�il��Y�f.'i.>r�,Whd��\�hl���:�' �� ��st�:'�: 6th by Imp. Dare Devil. renovation. Father, son and country and in are devoted to take the seeds mother, England wagon every day FQr a comblnAtlon or blood, 'slze, style, Bpeedand down to the daughter, little four-year- mainly to the interests of horticulttll�e. bagged and stamped to the postal-car. action, united ... Itb beauty of t11e hlgbest type and I.be ' " lent a hand. A beautiful These are often the All these he lived to and power or transmitting tbese quaUties to,bls progeny, • 'old, . helping journals entering changes see, ',.. bas fow G. A. shade tree took the of t11101101'80 equals. LAUDE. place the rickety wedge for high intellectual attainments. yet amidst all his career he was never lIumboldt,.Kas. coop no� tIm feet from the As soon as a community of farmers is too busy to wear a cheerful face, say a house. A rose bush superseded the made to realize the possibilities within kind word, or give a friendly bit of MARQUIS ash-balTel. All the for their want to 2D, appliances grasp, they naturally advice." . so�p-making were removed to a more know the best way of doing things for If anyone department is more soul·, A Pediuree English Shire Horse, corner. The quiet bonfire, made up of profit and for beauty. This necessity inspiring than another, or better calcu­ Stands for the season at Fowler's Ranch, Maple front yard adornments, was magnifi- creates a demand for a magazine club, lated to draw out and awake to new lIlli, Kos., on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thurs·' at tbe West llanch on and at ,cent, and the children wished there or a circulating library. Finding them- life the spiritual natq.re. it is the culti­ days; Mondays, St. l\{i\ry�, on Saturdays, In each week. 'were more. The pigs and s.elves impeded by ,lack of early vation and growth, 01' even the simple i'ERMS OF came to SERVICE: soon understand that their education, they no longer confidingly presence of trees. No farmer can afford To Insure, $25,-paYllble when mare proves In was , proper place about the trust their children to the care of to the barn-yard. do without educating influence foal or frowner disposes oCher. Single services' The bare ground was soon covered with strangers, who may possibly see more of trees; not only ornamental and fruit 81G,-payable to man in charge, at time of service i 11

ac�e lJeterinacian. �i.'VeE' &:lc:Je :a:,e::rcl..

TThe paragraphs in this department are gathered from our excbanges.s-En. F.A.lUI­ p � L U D'S: •. EB.] A ,If-IB',RIII1111 WARTs.-'.rhe following treatment is said to be effective: Cut a hole in a of piece leather sufficiontly large to pass the wart through, then mix the follow­ . ing on a piece of glass. Take a. small quantity of flour of sulphur, mix with equal parts of water and sulphuric acid to a thick paste. ,Then place the leather over the wart and apply the ointment with a stick; be careful not to get it on your fingers. After the application re­ ,move the leather. In ten or twelve minutes a little lard or sweet oil. apply Btabl.pi,r:,��vQ':,JT�l7:'h��1e�I�':!�rr,:a�:rln:ta�:�f?b�of tue IImler.lllnell this seasou.c-the one III One is tbe otber at t20.00. application usually sufficient to 825,UU, to Insure. Both horse. rrom Scotland in 1882 and nnnnrteu remoye any ordinary wart. recorded In A. C, I!. Bouk, P�I�� �,:�d Uf' h-grade LAMB and SlallionB, Donald Doan CHOLERA.-Cause: King ,vifllam. will stanu at aame Generally ea"h plucs 1\1 J---" to lnoure. . 110,00 'rbes. two uersea were sirell and a of milk which sours noled large-amount on gmnd·oired by Imported CIYllesllllle t!�IUon". iIIIIElIi.BlrlllWiiiiCII1 Et:IC'CLT,,..' the lambs stomach, and works off in the My stock ivaI selected from the)!eat Iier.ta'in Jlllnols, seiv��'."e��A'�£'lb��d.A"J�m""'tR,:�s1}8R''l:'lf�.your. Indiana and Ohio. Younillock 'or aim hllb· bowels and is fatal. Treat­ , 11. W. ltlcAFEE. clasa Poultry. Send lor.oa1810*"8 and _. generally Three miles West,of JOHN ment: To�eka. 6th St. roa(l. WRIGHT. _�e,;91$7. Xu. Give the lamb an ounce of J. P. FENI,oN, P.O. Box US, oil, . Leavenwort.h, l{,antlllll, ' SlX -Breeder of- adding of . drops turpentine. When Mt. Pleasnnt stock U.:I ��:I . Farm, Anderson the oil Colony, oo., SHO&T-HO&N operates, usually in about; two' • Kansas. CATTLE, A d�hinas of the mOBt noted beet nil indi­ ,cme,,Qer\iL:'g�i�Q.L��.·,!'f. one-half strains, "nd SlIl'erlor .. �;.c. ... hours. give teaspoonful of vidual•. soda; J. S. HAVV'ES and repeat in two hours with a less Ji'OR SALE-Forty Tboroullbbre,1 Pure guort-hcm Bullo- UOBe of YOUDll '1\1Id I1l11101'ler auu Breeder of Shal'on, Mary l'rlncetlB, amount. Treatment of dam: Put the tram 9 mouths to 2 year. 0111' also, 60 Hlgh·grade Bulh!, all Red and lu line condition. rrom tbree·quar· ewe on 'a diet and ters dry rather light feed. H.EREFORD grade cows and pedigr�e bull•. No as she will then Correspondence or Inspection ot berd cordially in- salt, drink, and this vIted. Oa1:1:1e. . increases the fiow of milk, which must I have one of tbe I..rllest herds at tbese tamous cattle becheoked. In the country, numbering about'200 head. Many are trom the noted If you feed one wood ashes to Englfsh breeders, T. J. Carwardlne, part J.ll. Green, B. RogerB, W. S. Powell, Warren Evan. Thoroughbred Poland-Chinas and P. two of salt when you salt Turner. 'rhe bull. In servtce are "FOR'rUNE," your ewes, .weep8takes bull with live of bls Ilet at KansM State Fair. 1S82 . you'will not be apt to have so much, if and 1883; Imp. "Lord Wilton" bull "SI& :.. .--:'i'!:1r' Fully the ltandard In Ped­ ", any, trouble with what is ��f� :-ril,e up'to highest �,',I'I/pect.I commonly }":i�Orol:It�f,O��rn:�����r lr�'rl\�� {?O�B (or either American or Ohio fnmllhed "Dauphin 18th;" and "THE GROVl!l4th," by "The Igreel, Recorill, called"'lamb cholera." though I doubt if Grove8d!' with each lillie. Alllnquirle.a To promptly._.red. this is the parties wlsblnl1 to Btart n IIerd I will give very Addresl STEWART ok BOYLE. WJOhIta, Ka.-.. proper name. low IIgureB. Wrlte or come.

, There is such a thing as the larvie PLEASANT VALLEY ORB of the or common gad-fly. horse ' bot, Pure-bred in Be;b� . :Swlne. lodging the of the HEREFORD - glottis horse, in­ '_;t_ ,...:.'" stead of the entering atomaeh. During AS PRODUCED AND BRED BY the months of CATTLE. spring, 01' some time be­ A. O. Moore &0 Sons, Oanton. Illinois. TIIOROUtiHBRED BUJ,LS and HIGH-GRADE fore the are over 800 tor thlB bot usually leaves its habita­ BULLS and HEIFERS for Hale. We railing plga season's trade. Inquirteaprompt­ of that bave takfn mar. and tion in ly answered. Progeny bOg8 larger the horse, it is apt to cause some Bweepstakes Rnd pork-packers' premiums than can be showu other man on and by Rny any otber breed. Stock all irritation annoyance, WALTER MORGAN & healthy Rnd doing well. Have made a specialty of thll especially . �ON, at for 37 when at the breed hogs years. Those desiring the thor­ lodged entrance .to the Irving, Marshall Co., KaD6BB. oughbrell Polllnd·Chln,as Bhould send to headquarters. stomach From 0ur breeders wllibe registered In the American Poland pipe. this location Cbl nil Record. they U. &. & Pbotogmph of:W breeders. free. SllIi.M are not HUGHES SON, Journal 25 centa. Three·cent taken. easily dislodged, any application �tamp. 1 have thirty breedlnl .oWI� mi.mred animal. of Mo., and of tbo very best Itralu 'ot. hloo4: '1 am 9""1 by way injection 01' drench will not three splendid ImporRd boan. lieacJ'" by the .plendld ot live GIH affect and is more to prl.Al.wlnner Plantaaenet 291P. wlnne� them, apt injure medal Rt the 1"""llIllhoWI In CAnada the horse. They may be let alone until "rlze.sIn 1881.andfoldam now prepared to GIl'orders for p_11III 0' either BeX 1I0t akin. or tor matured !'r.Il!>"", PrI.,.. warmer- weather appears, when rensonable, I!nU.faction guaranteed c;ala· they ..e. I"KIIO and price Ust. ' S, McCU , will 'IIoiJiLLdUGtnnr" depart.voluntarily. Now, it is pos­ �I.""w", Kan_, sible thAt you are mistaken in the cause of the occasional uneasiness of the horse about his head; but we could not, from the information received, determine what else it may be. FROST BITEs.-The Brooders ot Short-born Cattle and turnlshers of Blgh· effects of frost ROlllE PARK. grade Red and Roan Bulls and IIeifers. at STOCK F,\.R1\I,located.even Specialty mttes south or Sumner bites are a swelling in the heel and back Weillugtoot Co•• KnnsD.B; Rome Grade l'olled·AnSU3 aud Galloway Cattle for Western depot adjotnlng farm. I bave 3. breedrng 80WS-PO' parts of the hind legs, until the skin trade. lillld-Chlnil and Large English Berkshire swlue. AI80 200 choice Cow. an,1 230 Short·born cattle. stocu In Hlyh'yr«(lc Ifeije>,.jOl· 8alc.. hlgh·grade recorded breaks and sores ami ulcers follow Oblo alld Amertcau Records, ,'l'he RnlwalBof ItJls herd were and Rre prlze.wlnners Rnd deecendanls of prize· which are ... frequently attributed to Winne , selected with care from tbe 1I0iabie berds In scratches. It not tbe dllrereut Stateo wltbout regard to price. 'l'he best is to enumer­ lot of .ows to be Been, Am Blx ... necessary . FOR SALEI using boal· -COrn· KanBas ate the causes of frost TBB BREEDERS' ASSOCIATION Queen, pride, Cora's Victor, HerdBotpure·bredand high RfIIde Shon-horn cat­ bites; they may shell2djKau8llllOblo K ng. Hubliard'. Orders tle Poland-China Swine. DoII8 and . or CLINTON and CLAY COUNTIES, Cbolce.-sweepslakes. be attributed to or booked lor Spring Pigs. Address Plymoutb Rook Fowll. The 'Sh'rlh81'1lbeIi bud 0' Poland· carelessness inhuman . Mo, • about _SHORT-HORNS.owl! T. A, BUBBARD. CblnM west at tbe MI8IIsa1ppi river, hMd� by Black· treatment. In a light attack the first Wellington. Kan8118. foot 2261. YOllng U. S. 4491. Lauaable. vol. 6 (own 1,000 Short-horn brother to LOOk·No-Fartber 4006) 'and Beek-No· indications are: a Cows, son at purple color of the and raise tor sale each Fartber (a Look-No·FarLher.). All llock IOld year eligible to Ohio Record. skin of the a WELLINGTON lIEltD the, injm;ed parts; cracking of Nea.r 400 Bulls. Be�1l���e:R��011". 1Iox 298, JuncUon k... the skin and a of Will sell ENGLISH _Olty, discharge bloody males or f.wRles at all tlmeB as low 118 they BERKSHIRES. serum. If the case is decidedly severe, Clln be bought elsewhere. Ti\e Anll\Jal Publlc Sale will the skin and the tissues underneath be hehl tho first and 'Vmlnes(la:l_;year. artles Improved Polaod-Ctitljjl Hog� will bec()me dried up and dead. �hile i!'��'tl:,�dt!tl1��h����rn�fw���"t, J. 111. Cf.AY. President: Plattsburg. Mo.; the skin of the heel will crack and badly H. C. DUNCAN, Vice Pl'eRhlent,OGborn,1I10. and will or not heal. The treatment is S. C. DUNCAN. Secretaoy. Smithville. Mo. and if ;, simple. only chilled a slight rub-' will Wm, & bing be about all that is necessary. Gentry Sons, Sedalia, Pettis Co" Mo. If Joel B. & Co" frozen, clothe the animal very warm­ Gentry Hughesville, ly; rub tile parts with snow, and when Pettis CO'I Mo.

' .. partial circulation is restored put the parts in cold water and rub till circula­ tion and heat is entirely restored. If We have been breeding Pola!ld-OhlnlL HPII8 for&wen­ ty years. The 10nl1 Ii.. enabled the sores appear, twice a experienCe obtall\.ed apply day to Ub to select none but tbe cbolceat B�lmellll tor breed­ the raw a We now . parts, mixture of equal parts ing gurpOllel. haye of lime water and linseed oil and lime well rubbed Hogs of Quick together. Cheoter Whit.. Berksblre (howth, RIHI Poland· China Esslly fattened Bud early matur� ••howlng a great Im­ PII!8, In form aurt In Cuts from barbcd ,.iro cure" �'hle RetrerR, Scotcb Colltes, provement Il;Yle••speci,ally the het¥! fence, i?'nx Hounds nuu HenalE's, conBlo& of tb. 'Iot at with Stewart's HcaliJlg Powder. bred Rml for oale by PEOPLES augu�a��eedera IInest: Bon lWei

r That and the Other, ._. Thi�, June - At Abilene, Kansas, Wednesday, 18th, Persons who pick up a hving-miners. A'call to arms-"John, take.the baby I" WILL L�� OFFERED AT PUBLIC SAL:E T1HE Marble hauls-the winnings of the small "Will man smoke Y" was set. . thO'cowlng I!qY. tied by Prof. FIBk In W. charming pam. =:r;ENTIRE= dollar is an ; it has lost ;\.' The·trade orpban phlet. He ....ys. moreovcr, that the rational its par. way to use tobacco Is throUBh the pipe. Ileet tobacco ahould as in a fortress that parleys All agree that ouly the � love, war, . be need. WhIch Is the beaU That to is half taken. whlcll Nature has contributed the moet ex­ Blackwell's Bull Durham PARK of a quislte flllVurB. . the DURHAM '" sight HERD, The Danish peasants rel(ard Smoking Tobacco fills the bill completely. that the is of allthe tobaecogrown of" '. ·raven as an omen' parish priest two.tllirds Oonsist.ing , Neariy on !.ho Golden Tobll.Cco'belt of North Caro­ , aboUt to die. lln ... 11'008 Into tho manufactory of Blll.Ck. -::, household roll of the Countess of Lel-' well, lit Durham. They. buy !.he pick of The . Hence the the entire section. cester for the year'l265, gives lady's Blackwell's Bull Durham w&shiJlg'bUl from JanuarY to June as fifteen Smoking TobaccQ, Is the - . Don't . best of tbat tobacco. . , ',P.4!DC6.' bo deceived when YOU buy. ! ...,) To ornament a tidy made of any ,material Durham Bull ·trad<:. 'il l'bo �andJedR:ed with, antique lace, covertheround ...... mark in on every "" bmbrold­ Il'onulno in·tlie lace with .. !lots brlght-eolored . . . ,,"clrnge , erysilk. _, . . of monks � ", dt._ The'dreBS of the dilJerent orders "M I Genulno Bull Durham orders of Blnckwell's Ii,the same as that of tlie lowest is tile cholce of nil jurigo.' of ��� � Smolriug'1'ob.cco. the JlOPulation at the time the orders were '. AND SIXTY I,.foundea. . ONE HUNDRED · Observation has caused the intelligent to the of hounds decide that 'packs spectral - which are supposed, in Lancashire, to yelp Tho ro bred Sh.o·rt are wild hO.rna, in before a death only ugh tJle air.just ( geese. LATE THE PltOPERTY OF MR. ALBERT oRANE. wishes to en­ . When a Hindoo cart-driver I have decided to clOlle' the above·named·berd, together with the Durham Park esw.te, purchased In small him "mother- at time Bnd above menl.loned, Bod to dllp"se of the ]lIDd . .a he cattle auction .the place ' bullock, HAVINGout tbe by ...-Ioourage c,lls publ1c at Park hal been disposed of .; Foi a number of years past tbe surpills cattle .Iocl< Dnrham " Is tracls at private sale. when vitnpemtion for the porcbase of ': 'tb-law's darling;" at prlvllte treaty, anll no opportunity hM beretofore been presented the animal becomes "son of a .necessaey, MANY CHOICE BREEDING ANIMALS widow." THE In up tbe herd-lIIr. Crane not only patronized • finds that In pro­ Collected with such n liberal band by 1IIr; Crane. building A,French investigator notable 8al... tbe ""veralof tbe American breeders but made purchases at several English Including leading endeavor made to maintain B to its size a bee can pull thirtytlmes KANSAS FARMERS ofthe pur••t breeding have been need, and every. portion uds!,"rur��ie s���� ali much as ahorse. HeprobabJygot t��:�::::�� since the an,l bas catalogued· for walght The proprlptor has refused to dispose of anything at printe s.le pnrchase. from the hands of 1\[r. Crane, wltbont a .hfs.fdea t)'olil the great power with wbichhe this """""Ion tbe entire herd Just as it wa!l received . 0 '. . ·canpnsh. . single reservation' Catalogue 011 application to A. H. 1\[ARTIN, Durham Park, EaB. In india thl,l presents from Do bride's par­ lutnal Ftto Insnranco S. A. SAWYER, AUCTIONEBIl. ents are not displayed at the bride's house, but are ·sent to that of the bridegroom bv PUBLIC SALE OF· servants who march through the streets in Company, -OF- .procession. ,. A. ,contemporary SIloVS: "In selecting a ABILENE, : KANSAS. Short-horn and ' one that not fade." What Pnro-brod will Abordoon-AnRns wife choose '-- I' woUld you have aman do? Askal1;irlbefore ==CA'rTLE ' - . her OFFIOEBS: , he'mames her if she paints? No I Ask --AT- wUl Wash. J. 'E; BONEBRAKE, Presldent." ; Jlrif' �e . 0 I • Farm • C. H. LEBOLD, VI!l8 President.. Turlington Stock. ': It Is. stlU "good fOrlD" to ornament the W. A. MOR�N, Secretary. annual sale of Short-bora and Aberdeen-Angus cattle from ·the - _amp lihade by covering the porcelain over 'fhe first pure-bred will be held at the farm, with a thin outer cov.erlng of tinted sUk and Tnrlington herds, INSURE,S 1884. .�·t�l�i or (if lace alone, put on in rows over Tueada:y, June 17th, are Rim ROSE RElNIOJ[ tarlatlU}' or fine net. Among the SHORT-HORNS to be catalogued P'RINOEliSES, Farm and Live Stock DUCH' Against. ROAN , Property • OF some of the POppy branch), MAZURKAS, dressing for chopped cabbage is ROSE SHAR9NB (including etc. . �ellent Tornadoes Jnd ESSES, EASTER DAYS, ROSAMONDS, YOUNG MARYS, etc., Fire, Lightning, . a small of with . \. made by heating cup vinegar embrace SYBILS, PRIDES, DUOHESSES Storms, The ABERDEEN·ANGUS will ERIOAS, JILTS; a lump of butter or a well beaten egg; salt Wind I DRUlIIIN etc. OF CARRON, DUOHESSES OF FERNYFI,ATT, FYVIE FLOWERS, Luoys, and to suit your taste. Pour while et and 'high breeding J:lepQlll' AGENTS WANTED in Every C��ty �n Q-Thls draft of �O Heall from the above herds in point individuality over the cabb�e. Itansas. 0 cannot l!e excelled. hol. to addrese Ihe Catalogues to be had on application • Invalid IIJr For 'lIoy Information, Secretary,' One-way to beguile an Into taking COT" L. P. lIIUIR. T. W. HARVEY, Abllen8,K"nllll8.· .Nebraaka. more beef tea than he is willing for, Is to FRED. M. WOODS,'}AucUoneers Tl1rlington, add in it and let It cool in a mould, & M. R. llfteen miles west ot Nebraska City, gelatine FREE. . Is on the B. R., on B. When it is hard and like jelly serve it with n. & A. P. "" NEoO •. and thirty-five mUes cast of Lincoln: Passengers & M. S', LACEr, TU�LINGT�N'�,;g , P�t.nt Att ra. Waoblnllton.D.O. • salt and with wafers. PATENTSHand-BOOk ston at TURLINGTON, which is on the Farm. A very little cream of tartar in tile frost­ lug for' a cake will hasten the hardening SHORT-HORN SALES. J process. If the knife Is often dipped into SIXTH ANNUAL SALE water while the it will spreading frostin�, or rive a gloss or polish greatly to be deslred. A mad Prlneess of the house of Bourbon asked the reigns of Queens ILLINOIS SERIES. . o� being why Short-Horn· Cattio CENTRAL "Were in general more prosperous than the under AT reigns of lQngs replied: "Because series wlll commence We are authorlzed to announce that this celebrated Kings women govern-under queens, men." MO., PLATTSBURC, T "O'::m &::J:).A. V, .,. 'D' N' EJ 8 ea, 1 004. make a. delicious addition to ice Bananas --AT-- cream. - Slice thin and stir In jul;t as the Wednesday and Thursday, near cream is beginning to freeze, or served with Grove Park Farm, Berlin, Sangamon County, III., ' are nice. amI from J. N. BROWN'S SONS', It without freezlug they Thev . an of about 50 head or cows, Heifers. BuUs, J une '4th and 5 1884 by offering ILLUSTRIOUS, BAR- th, of �how and stock. of such famllleU9 should be cut and set on ice for an liour Berlln. 111., herd-a I(rand lot prize up 'WESTERN' LADY, ILnd CONSTANCE. Tbe hold their RINGTON, MAZURKA, YOUNG MARY, The breeders of Clinton county will EDGEWATER 38342. Lunch at 11 before serving. bulls will be heltded by the high B$tes·topped DUKE OF Sixth Annual Sale of Short·born ofabout . Caute, Sale to commence at 12. On day, An fiorist exhibited some a. m. next, English recently one bundred and ten head. consisting of very large chrysanthemums, and almostsuc- . � EJ ::J:) N' :m S ::J:),.A. 'Y. J"V'lSTE 401;]1, 1004, . 9eeded'ln'obtainlng a prize for them, but at 50' Cows and Hel"fiera and 60. Bus·.II r 1. n Fal.r the .moment It was discovered'that At S P gfield GrOunds, . last they From the following popular families! Ill .• and J. B. iUGIiIMORE. were made bv one flower into the Messrs. S" E. PRATHER, Snrlngfleld, Ill" D. W. SMITH, Bates, piJU1lng and representatives of the • Whl·te and Red Roses sell 60 head or Cows, Heifers, Bulls. splendid '.� Mar98 Rochester, Ill.• will of Young " NELLY center another. families! BOSE OF SHARON, YOUNG nARY, YOUNG PHYLLIS. . following '. Elizabeths Phillis WHITJil ROSE Lady ' Young ' MISS 'VILEY. ILLUSTRIOUS, 1\IAZUltKA. KNIGHTLEY, In North Germanv the belief is that the . . BLY, BELL AIRDRIE MISI;! CAROLINE, LADY BAR1\[TON, FLORA, and GE"[, including the bull Severs, DalBles, Rubys, . first time in the vear that a hears a next . girl. 84516. On day, Rose of . If it clatters with its she will Louans, Sharons, B,tork, bill, T � "[J'::E'I.. S ::J:).A.'Y, J' 'D' N':m 61;]1, 1004, o something; if it be flying, she will be Mrs, Mottes, break at a 'bride before the year is out: if it be stand­ And other good families. Messrs, PICKRELL, THOMAS & SMITH, Harristown, III., These will be a choice lot of Bulls ana Heifers. as ROSE OF SHARON, lilg, she will be asked to stand godmother. will Rell 72 head' of Cows, Heifers, an(l null�. of suoh famllieR DUKE 7th DUItE OF' Bale positive, regardless of weather, as shelter YOUNG 1\[AltY, JOSEPHINE. etc. etc. WATEIU.OO 2d, 41247, and BREASTPLATE fi3170, will be Included. Bl'EOIAL 1 BARRINGTON 60881. PIONEER will be provided,and wlll commence at o'clock, Cur tbe a"le to commence at 10:30 II. m. ',l'RAIN Irom SprlngOeld will reacb Harrt&town I n time sharp. NURSERY COMPANY TERMS-CASH, or 9 mont.hs credit with 10 per F ::E'I.. Z ::J:) .A. .,. "0' 1'1"::m a 1; ]1, 1 0 0 4 , . V. (Established 1870)' Nurseries and cent. Interest with approved note. Green Houses at FORT SCOTT, KANSAS. All.mornlng trains arrive In time for sale. w1ll be May 20, and will be and Green Honse Catalogues ready by JacksonvillsJ Largest Stock of NnrSery Rent·on application to At Illin.ois, BEAUTlI'ULLY ILLUS­ at.reet 3� be,,� from their Plants In the West. JAB. M. CLAY. President. Mesars. J. H' POT.TS '" SON will eell at their farm (en� of railway). cham_llion . RO�ABELLA BUTTER­ TRATED CATALOGUE . now ready, Plattsburg, Mo. herd oC onob famillee as YOUNG I'IARY. JUBILEE. GWYNNE, e'c. Tbe Crulckabllnl< bul! Imp. Anti- H. C. DUNCAN, Vice President. FLY, A1\IELIA. LOUAN, CAROLINE. PRICILLA. · Mailed to free. of Riclllnond 2Ifi25. applicants 49774, aod two or tllree youog bulls by old Dulce " YOORK Osborn. Mo. quary • ? Secretary . S. C. DUNCAN, be the Boss Series of the season. Write to. the' as or belrs. send R;'amp for circular sbow· Smithvillc, Mo. This will parties I. entitled 10 boun- Ing wbo �nslolla, B. F. WINN, Assistant Becretary. above for ty, &0. L. C. WOOD. Edgerton, Mo. Catalogues. - BOl[ 31 Washington, D. O. J. W, & C, C. JUDY, Auctioneers" I�LDIDII, COI". L. p. MUIR. Auclloneer. ,1' HOW TO POST A STRAY, llT Alii' ACT otthe �tnre,approved Feb !'I,lll841, _Uon I, wben'",e a'ppralled value of a stray or atia:rl uceeds ten dollars, .'lie OOunly Olerk II required, With­ ID ten d.,. after recetvlng a oertilled iteacrlptlon and appraleement, to·torward by mall, notice contal1llng 8 complete deacrlptlon ofaald straYI, the aay 011 whlcb they were taken..up, their appralaed value, and thf name andresidence ottlle taker n;; to the KAIiSAS FAB- ::.r:,�\����th�l:te��wc��'� t:'3n�tgrn:��� s:ali' be published In .tbe EABIIBB In three sncceaelve II. meaoC.the Paper.; It Ilmade the duty of the proprla­ tonottbeKAl

How to POlt a �tray, the feel· linel and pen­ alties for not pOlting. Brokenanlma1loanbe·taken up at anT time In tLle

�broken animalscan-onJ,Y bo taken up between =wt�r��O�%�l'a�I!��I��t�� ���;

penoo., citizens and CAn ulj-o uoept h011leholdera,. kklup a It'"" It au anlni&l'lIable to be taltln shall' come upon' tke premue. oran" penon, and lie' �aul tor teo daTI, after belDg notilled In wrhlng .ot the tact, anT other CItlIllIl and hOU8eholder may take up the lame. Any penon takl� up'an eatray, must Immediately advertlle the om. by poiltlJig threo �:! from the tlme.ucb waataken .... lItmy up, (ten da,. att.e, '"1 polling) make out ann return to the County Clerk. a certtfted oftb. Q::l ::; copy d":-;:r.tlOn and value ofluch strar· TXLE l'l la�,"':�!'!is;:n.�e�� ��dtl:! ��r:SAt:�A�e:!l��n � tot three oucoe8ll1ve numbere. . '"1 Q TlieownerofanyBtray, may within twelve month. 1:1 from the time oUaklnil' up, prove the same hy evldenCt' before any JUStiCR of th. Peace of the county, having .•lint nOtilled tile taker of time H, Brewer & Co" MICh, ·tor up the when... and the Tecumseh, , Carle; E, Jnatlce before whom proofwill be onered. The stray Iban be dollvoreil 'to. the'owner, on the order oC tho Jnatlce, ann lIPon tbe p"Yment. 01 all obarges.and costa. It the owner of a st.ray tallJl to uwnershlp wtthlu twelve monthe aCter the Ume 0fro..t4kln", a C�TIl' dletel,IUe.nall .est In tbe taker up. At the end of B yeRr arter R stray 18 taken up,tbo Jus­ tic.. or the Peace sb"UIMue B summons to three house­ holders to BINDIDt and such summons to TI!JNE. "pre"r appraise strRY, � be aerved by ib. taker up "..pmlser, or two of After II test ot It'our years has the unqnalffled tbem ahaliin aU respecta . 'l""ldescrtbe and truly \"Rluo s"ld endorsement of and Furmcrs _... "tray,aud make B sworn return oCthe same to the J"s­ M!lclilne-makers ROOFING PAINT_-Arrests decay and renews the WUl outwear. tin or Ihioglee. III'PlIe

.Choking with PACKER TRIP. . Labette oounty-F, 'W, Felt, olerk. impossiblo Handles bad and Gond grain alike •

. PONY-Taken Wm In Binder DOUlllJE PAOKER TRIP, up 'tIy King, Hackberry tp, Only using Including an $8.00 aet ot nne brown 7 gelding ponT, yearo old: I8 strongly built and peneticn! iu working; extra o.tto.clW,euUl of Q �ll�::i�i .���4, eBn be run without expert holp. ISlnger'�::�S:'="1;5and needles, 011 anil piece� PONY-By samo, one hay lIeldlng pony, 4 yeare each. old, �tensivo)y imitated, but equaled by none, usu.. 1 outfit of 12 pieces with wblte Attl" on n08e ; valued at '15. Erenl1 on Il'1cnl or 5t"nd fnr PONY-BY same, one brown mare pony, 7 ycaro old, nscnt, nr.scriptivo ond Tes­ timoillal tJ.rculnrto UI'l.LlaI1111w.:tuI'CI'S. �aUrfradn.,e�J',erfeok,.p�q�;: star In forchead; valued at ,20. 'In'a_rwlll durntYc. quiet an.f'tlgbt runDfllg. MINNEAPOliS HARVESTER WORKS Don'tpo.y 130 to '50tormachln8'l�0 DaVls oounty-p, V. Trovinger, olerk. better. 'Tcwnltt:D4ouh�_ M'inneapolis, Minn. trl:\ I hernre OJrculars tree. FILLEY-Taken up by A 0 Rdl, In Smoky Hill lV, ''''111\(:. April 28, 1884, ono roan 1II1fY, wblte _pot In fac., about &. 3 years old, pony size, no ma rks or brands; valued at c?O����&t��i�:,'b"hio.:�tilf ,10, Strays for week ending May 30, '84, . Linn oounty-J. B. Madden, olerk, Il�m���':tkoe: �J:,�;h�a!��:l'';g: �� o�ol�n ��o�r.m Oulls and Wind­ "ACME'I. and small H OR lett hlp, darK mane lind tn11, email fall Apples Blar In·forehead. W�'RTH 50 CENTS P"wnee County-·J. F, Whitney, Clerk. PER BUSHEL HAY RIC�E'R. " ' 10 NET, COW-Taken'np by Joseph Sblrl.y, Plfn,ant Val, '�(/o ' \��' ley I p, one ",<1 rORn cow allout 3 year. 01<1, hrsnde'l 0 lh., 0.0 with cun'e,l line underneath: valued at $23 l ...... SAVE· "'ormation ..diM� COW-Ry snme, olte red ('ow, allout !i years olt1. THEM I teg By tile Write to J. lB. ::E"O�� brc�1"��B;I!�'r:;��:�� �!���uc�1�,r�e���111�h:,�3 ��;::: lAnd and ued aUD. -.:II X X Immigl'l1tlon Commissioner, Bt. & Manltobo. ., CALF-By same, one red calf, 0 month. olt!: .sluod Paul, MInD.apolls R'y, III. ,9, ST. PAUL, MINN." MARE-Taken up by N Edick. In Garfield Ip, In �IW Aprll, 1884. one strawbfTl'Y r09D mare. Rbod all nrounu1 no marko or brands; valued r t $20. �� THE DINGEE & CONARD CO'S Graham oounty.-�H. J. Hal'wi, Clerk, -.:II S HORSE-Taken up by }fPUI v Garrett. In Wild H0l'lle tp, Apr1l20,1884. one boy herA", "hout 10 YfllI'S old, 11 handa blgh, left (ore foot and 1I0tb hind feet White, �S saddle mArk. on back, uo other mnrks or brands: .,,1- AND ued atf3o. lis; LOADER RAKES. Protected by the onry OrlslnarPaten,�. TheR-OSESe.tablishment a SPECIAL Reno oounty-W. R. Mar8hiln, olerk. � X making X 8S of RO ES. eo LARCE HOUSES PONY-Taken up Ily J D Millard, III Albion. l.p, BUSIN )eBaT���nhdlnm ��et'!JftE���¥ t:'yO�:roM� IESalone. known method. One Ricker and two aRkea ted bv April 28. 18&1, one dun pony marc, 6 years old, inde- Illustrated and Cataloguo and full forROon� �eCIVE AWAY,IDPreml­ . D�ecrlptlvo moat e_tab- take from . and" more ROSES than flve e d 0 brand on left valued at JIm. ElItra., emplo es, wI! I 0 hlp: $30. Particulars mailed free. Plants Bnltablefor Imme­ tbe swa .... e�rlbable . 1l8llDlents I'IYW. ,8trong Pot Qcres ot1u,yJ>er'ee[ly cr.an �Xm rfii' same nn the ataoll: or Greenwood W. olerk. diat8 bloom delivered wely, J>Ot!tJ>atd.to any poet-olllce. the mower. and pitch tbe WIIjJOII,lia,:A'fJ., oounty---A. Hart, 6 splendid varletlee, your .,holoe, all labeled, for t! I; betler condition than twice the forco can wlndrow'and , SEVEN HOGS-'raken up by Jobn Willis, In Bach- ?LUMME& F&UIT EVAPO&ATD! CO" 12for.2; 19ror.3; 315 for 155; 7Bfor I� elor 26for�4; tp, April 8•.18841 one white and ono spotted bar­ 810' 100ror.13. Our NEW CUIDE "OOI"1'/el. �g��t�::;:a'P:m!c����trt,OU\,Of ��;;; h�ut 118 w:lt.e for row, one whlletand one black sow, two .potted sows, No. Delaware St., f'realueOft the Bo.e. 'lc!p'D. elBnantlu ilfr.ullrrtfcdFREE afford '10 do p:lce'tlm terms circular tull IDformation. . marked with crop olf nnd slit in left CI THE: DINgEE &, CONARD CO_ ¢. an(l' rlabt .,car, on� , oro__, We.t Groy.!', Olleator r. ACME HAY HAR EST 1\ CO" Peoria, m. wblte I3OW-no marku i valued atl57,76, z.er.YOZl.worth, Eanaal, ... 00., w�t�tJt. Mrs., ,. 14 KANSAS FARMER.. MAY 28,

be more than 18 repaid by the droppings chickens, can sell them altain for two­ if alone; properlv saved; and when the thirds their cost, or more, which will lc.1n has her can passed usefulness, she make your expense of hatching a .small Oarelessness. .( be"'sold for all It cost to raise her to ma­ affair. KaJn8a8 turity. Our then show a new You can make an F�: ,_ figures, hardly important We sent to a poultry breeder in hen for an old one every year, thus mistake in setting your hens. A barrel Leavenworth for three Silver Sparrgled keeping your stock good, and an annual sawed in the middle will give two tubs Hamburgs, and' told 'liim to send us a profit of $2 per hen; and we are unable -one Will, of couse, be bottomless, but card three days before sending, for we to see where we have not kept within no worse on that account, and you can­ knew the station agent here would not bounds in making our calculations. not easily find anything better or cheap­ ,'notify us. We have lost by hls "care­ The beginner will ask, "Is it probable er or more readily procured to make lessness" before. ..:rhe breeder got our tIlat the business will be overdone ?" nests in, as they allow ample breathing order and shipped immediately, that We are firmly of the opinion that dur­ room for the hens after being securely cold spell ffrst of March, and they stayed ing tIie lifetime of anyone who now covered up, as hens thus set should be at depot in the cold for two days and contemplates adoping the poultry busi­ and taken off every second day whether had no the first-class wish or not. nights. They feed and took ness, trade of any large they Another good way is ,,;;;OC Wlu,t Outteura Does for j\Ic I" cold, were eyes and city in the United States can never eveu to make a nest in a barrel on the wlieezing, watering, placed and B1rLh. Humors, Milk CrmtL INI!'ANTILEI!called Head, aDd form or had fever. When we them tbe roos­ be It never ground in a sheltered or in Eczeniaa, every got fully sppplied. certainly locality, a Itohlng, Scaly, 80rofuiouB and Inherited DlsellSes Pimply,. ter's head looked scaly, and I believe be has been in Boston. Weare called shed or unused corner, of the and of tbe Blood. "kin and 8calp, with Lo.. of bam, Hair, cured hy the CUTICURA. RE!IEDIE8. Allfolutel,l has chronic catarrh. I never had such large but=our customers are securely blocked to pI". and Ba/c. Cutleura, ',he great 8klD 60 shippers, prevent hav­ Cure. " rolling, cta.; Cutleura 801\11, nn exquisite Skin Beautiller and a case and I have as a a raised several thous­ merely drop in the bucket, and we ing eoopJn front, to which, later in only I\ledlclnal Daby Soap. 25 cts.! ..ud Cutlcum ResolveDt, tbe new 1lI00d Purtfler. ,1. are 80hl by and chickens. Will some one cannot the the hen Potter and please always entirely meet their season, may have free ac­ drUllltlsls, Drllg Chemical Co•• Doston. 1¥ir Send for "How to Cure SkiD Diseases." tell me if catarrh is hereditary? I keep wants. One of them in the height of cess to obtain food and drink at pleas­ bim sbut his ure up alone, not even letting him busy season uses 200 dozen eggs per ; but in cold weather, especially if near bis one 1 little out of hen. She is a beauty, day. 'I'hree others, 100 dozen each per doors, a broad cover will be re­ M and it burts me to put her eggs in the day. Here are 3,500 dozen per week quired in front of the barrel, and held market in basket. The oldest hen died, used by only four parties, to say noth­ place by the coop, as a protection all with the care I could give. We are ing of several others, besides our cafe from cold and storms. thinking seriously of cutting the roos­ and store trade and one large firm who Keep the hens on nest eggs until ter's head off" he is so much bother, and handles more than all of them put to­ satisfied that they mean busmess, be­ no at all. We sent for fore good two roosters gether. What poultry farm could sup­ giving them valuable eggs. It is a and hen. He sent us oIl:e one rooster; ply them alone ? 'I'aklug' our former poor plan to set only one hen at once, as said he didn1t to she 1"ant part thein, why figures of eight dozen eggs per year from will probably hatch too small a fam­ didn't be waIt and refer to us one it would waste and see if hen, require 22,750 fowls to ily1;o her time iu raising. If you we wanted two hens? '1'11e breeder of­ supply these four customers. We must set seven hens, for instance, and hatch fered to send -us a two of course dollar setting of take only the cream of this sixty chickens it is not very bad for for his eggs carelessness and letting trade, at a comparatively high price, early March. You can give the chick­ them take cold. We don't want and let the balance be ens to five them supplied by the hens, and place fresh eggs from a breeder tb�t sends out diseased, cheaper "commercial egg", under the other two hens, renewing scally legged and One their nests a lousy chickens, when of the largest and wealthiest es­ little, and by that time you are so coaloil_-ailll'lard cheap. And tablishments in Boston has offered forty may have found three 01' four more set­ how would have been to to e!(8y1t fasten cents per dozen the year round for 150 ting hens set with them, and so on. an ear of, soaked or burnt corn in We their dozen fresh .eggs per day-only 1,050 would not set a hen more than six box with a Wire.' The chickens cost us dozen as per week-but everyone of them weeks, she wiII lose vitality; nor over th�ee' and we think must should we • 9011ars apiece, it be known to be absolutely fresh, give chickens to a hen which a loss hard to hear .besides we wanted beyond all question. To suppose th�y had set much over three weeks, not only them with our other hens. are for the So much for so, or to replace a stale one with same reason, but because she N "carelessness". S. S. SEYMOUR. will be forty goods ones, will, not do, and yet, likely to wean them too soon. Mankato, Kas. not a Feed poulterer has been found who your setting hens on nothing but dares tackle the contract and glve bonds corn and. water to guard against loosing � Poultry,Farming. for the faithful performance. It would of the bowels and consequent destruc­ Mr. W. H. an Rudd. a auceessful be an matter to tion of eggs. S< poultrv perhaps, easy accom­ ar raiser, some ea gives valuable truths con­ plish it at most seasons of the We would advise that aim for year, but you 200 N cerning the business. We find in the next the fol­ fall, when your fowls had been pullets fall, and this, as before re­ lowing condensation in the Poult1'Y killed, or would not be laying if alive, marked, implies aiming also for 500 Keeper of what Mr. Rudd said in the and before your pullets had commenced chickens this spring, for, after deduct­ Poultry World. It is a sketch of to losses what lay much, it would require a larger ing and crowers, and doing some -r may be done with $500' and flock than capital the anyone man evei; kept since necessary culling in the fall, you will possession of a few acres of land or Noah's even lone pair first stepped out of the probably not have many if any over 200 , of some worn out farm near a mar­ ark. We have had left. If a city apphcatlon to sup­ pullets good proportion of ket, Mr. Rudd's experience is based ply a large hotel in New York city with your chickens are hatched early, the sale on keeping choice fowls and table of for raising only eggs permanently, but were obliged crowers brollers, etc., will very II large, fine, superior for the decline aid in � eggs best tQ it; and we are willing to sub­ largely paying the expense of city trade. Yet his ideas are valuable mit the question to the intelligent read= your pullets, and we have often in this to those who are the raised investigating, poul- er, whether, from all the signs of the way pullets to maturity for con­ try and ;..- egg business. , 'there is less times, any danger of an over­ siderably than nothing-but as' Taking the of corn at price eighty production. ready money is required to do even this cents per bushel as a basis for our cal­ What are the we shoutd best breeds? First, our suggest appropriating say culations, says Mr. answer for Rudd, $1.20 per year would he, keep only one breed. $200 buying your eggs and will raising teed an ordinary hen. will Unlimited is your for They range not essential to the chickens; the larger they grow, give at least eight dozen a the heavier eggs year greatest production of eggs, but it is draughts they of course and raise one brood of chickens. ' '1'his absolutely necessary for fowls make on the grain bin and is a low breeding consequent- estimate for well-bred fowl. if you are to attain on the the highest success ly, wallet; but if you find in Large brown eggs will sell in cities at with numerous November and vlgorous chickens. that �ou have 200 111, cents laying fo< thirty per dozen the year He who several pullets and that round;' keeps varieties must your $200, or a large lie' thus the ou eight dozen will command have them bred on of $2.4.0. different farms at it, has returned to it til. Your hen p�rtion you, should raise chick­ will do Cll! you eight considerable distances apart. 'There yeti no harm, and even if but call they 1I� ens, it six. If they 2n­ are several have cost the pit weigh good breeds" but after twelve you whole of it, they are first of pounds June they in we well worth it at the, will, years' experience have selected the that-season of the year Ij Boston, command forty cents with per pound Plymouth Rocks as best for us. Each eggs at forty cents and upward pe; alive, which is at half person must select If . )east profit, say the breed that suits dozen.. you have many over 200 we $3: If you hatch late and but fif­ him would lj ,:: get best, but be sure to get a good lay­ cull down to about that number teen to eighteen cents A SURE CURE FOR f 11:: per pound, the ing strain, one which has been and not cramp yourself with too on six carefully a load. heavy �� profit your chickens cannot be bred for years WIth this Sick particular , Headache, Dyspepsia, Langour, ClC figured at less than cents for in With eighty the quality view. necessary buildings we' should Nervous Exhaustion arising from over- z( lot whether sell them or call 111- you You should $200 for • keep them. try and get out what more; although you may work or exoess of any 11) A kind, • comforifbble can be chickens build for 01' even -AND poultry-bouse yon can during March and $100, less we should FOR- built for cents in our �fty per hen, but if you to obtain own case, to' have April, good prices for early perfer then{ r" . ,intend making this more your permanent broilers, and secure laying pullets in the expesivs, and then the fowls will e business, you will be much do better in If maeI We a kn e sses. better sat­ fall when eggs are scarce them, while the extra con­ and high-al­ -IT PREVENTS- isfied with houses which cost s; if venience in pel' hen though you decide on Borne quick caring for them is no small and which will last as as consideration. 'long you do maturing breed, they will do well Your remaining $100 we Malarial POisonill[ and Fever and very AIDlB., (if you die in kind of if as should reserve any season). One hatched late as the first of June. for worklna capital, to And i� !l :'pccific for Oh.�lil1atu dollar will give a very We will enable you to to pretty building, therefore say, you can no doubt operate best and ten advantages per cent. is a large estimate for buy hens of such as buying setting for your winter's grain in " � rent of neighbors, $1 tbe CQNSTIPATION, rtlflJ"fJ It, which win and f!tll, etc., supeior bird PEf! SIX FOR cert�inl;y each, aft�n' or!l ",. prilq BOTTLE) $5.00 they have weaned their ally, It ocgaRign- �"OO opport\\W�y p�esen�, il�?J,.D BY )�lfU.GGJ$l,'� �V,f;R);,W»Jl:RS. '. ,,,it � . ., 1884. ( :. 15

('Norwood Park is 10 miles from Ohicago, on the 0, & N. W. R. Jt.) READ! READ! I DAIRY 00008. The Great Poultry Show at Chicago, Nov. 1888. We blake. from tho best mal-c. 14-22, LIGHT 4th and 5th. rial, superior article. of DBtry BRAHMAS-Oock-1st, 2d, 3d, Hens-1st, 2d, Sd, 4th and 5th. Goods that nrc modllt of Oockerels-None)hown. Pullets-1st, 2d, 3d, 4th. Pen-let and 2d. 8treD�th Breeding , P�RTBIDGE COCHINS-Cocl[-lst. 2d, '4th and 5th. HeIlR-1st, 2d, sa, 4th and 5th', ��:r:.�mli!��L�liutt!':��-:r\�:'� 4th and . I'n.tory (lhurns ROIt Pown CQckereIR-lst. se, 5th Pullets-1st, 2d, 3d, 4th. 5th. Breeding Pen-1st, 2d and 3d. ,,",orb"_ 2 gold ond 14 sliver BUFF COCHINS-Oock'·lst. Hen··lst; score 95�. medals awarded for superiority. PLYl\IOUTH ROCKS--Hen-3d. Pullet-·4th. Pan .. 3d. Ono Ohurn at wbcleaale where Breeding we have D(J ngent, Wrlto for Erlcce. All gooda wnemntcd, STATE FAIR AT CHICAGO and ST. LOUIS I'ORMISH, CURTIS &. OREENE, FAIR,.1883. "ort Atklnlon. WI.. . Ohioago, September 24, 1883, Winning on every Pair of Fowls shown. LIGHT BRAHI\IAS-lst and 2d on Fowls; 1st and lid on Chicks. PARTRIDGE COCHINS-1stand 2d on Fowls; 1st on Chicks. .",. BUFF on COCHINS-let and 2d Fowls. • 'PI,YI\IOUTH ROOKS-1st on Fowls; 1st and 2d on Chick�. Is WITHOUT A nrvAL St. Louis Great Ootober N, FOr. Fair, 2, 1883,-B, Pieroe,�Jude:e, I,IGHT BRAIUIAS-1At on Pair; 1st on Breeding Pen. REAL I\1ERIT. ]'ARTRIDGE COCHINS-13t on Pair; 1st on Breedlng Pen. Is the verrltct oC the many that PLYl\IOUTH ROOKS-2d on Pair. are u.lng It. It saves more labor, no baa double the LIGBT 1'AltTBIDGE ana. :BUFF ana. 1'. requires Ice; • :BltAHMAS, OOCHINS BOCXS J4Y SPECIALTY. for 1 ��lt���al�tr.I·IIScW��{ee:.mer -lrV" All correspondence cheer1ully answered. Send Stamp ror 4·page Illnstrated Oircular. i'IIWAY&WOODRUFF.lI[allUrm, Geneseo, III.

' - .. FARMERS, Remember the Bestis Oh••p­ est I TIlEO.K.CHURN. We are manufacturtnl the, beet IIa!I Improvements over Farm, Gard�n and Ornamenlal Fence THE in the market. It will turn all kiDd, BEST! ot slock. Our SHORT FENCE 18 Easy to olean, ellBY to operate, made especially for Sheep and HOJII, Willnotwenrout; covercllStinga aud 18 the (lbeapeet, Stron... aDd will not brenk. Sendforcircular. Moet Durable Fence that can be JOHN bunt. S. CARTER, For Sole circulars giving desorlpUon of manufacturcr, Fence, addle." SVUAUU8E. :N. Y. DEMING & RENOS. TBE :BATCHELLER Topeka, or, Geo. N. Deming & Son. BARREL CHURN'- Tho Lawrenee. X••• Cheallest and beat, No Iron rim In the toll Cor nutter ror cream to adhere to. All ����;U��� u\i��l�� g��ltt�:: Worker". A.l.o all sizes Box Ohurna for Creameries. All goods warranted as repre­ Victorious seuted. Dairy Churn nt wholesale price where we Everywhere! have 110 aeeut, Send fOl' C. circular. H. F. Batcheller " & Son, Rock Falla, Ill. EPL::I:PSE FRICK & 00., Waynosboro, Manufacturers, P::&;I-_.

Traction, Portable and , . , SUGAR MILLS Plowing, Threshing, , ElgM;r Sizcs, ror llnnd, Saw Mills, Wood-" Stcnm anel Wat('r Power, Stationary Engines, Dingee blDt"f, .. , .. The Best. The Clfeapest bury Horse-Powers, BOilers, &c., &C. f Thousands in usc throurrhout Address for to the Tropical World IIUt.! by nl! applications Catalogues BRANCH HOUSE, 32, 34. 36 the Icading Sorghum �rowcrs and MO. I of tne West, l'atnloguu Rnd 38, Ewing S�reet, KANSAS CITY, l'rll!e� nnd Pror'll. 'H'EnF.tt lit SCOVJJ.J.S Nnrthl'.rn CAN.: IIAA:UAlJ j;f'nt tree b1 GIW. L. SQUIEU, Buffalo, N. Y. PEERLESS

CCIMAX SULKY HAY RAKES. 1IIa<1e with 'l'hllls and Tongue. '1'hc Peerless Is a per­ fcct worktng sel r dump, drop tooth rake, comblulug new and essenttnl reutures thnt experience nnd thor­ ough test hnvo proven to he goutl, 'l'llOl1Sands of these Hakes have beeu III use this season, nud ' eustomera sny t.hey cau't, be bent. I)fist'he Ulhnn-x Is a �1��;,c��ro��;,3�6�: ��:�I�'l!:::;'���f�;li�.'tI���rougbIY BARNES MANUFACT'G CO. FjWt':.lbYr.· ,., "

:: &: Ditcher Chicago Scraper '0, .. 1 CHALLENGE For Olrcula.rs a.ddresll r·..... "/ 1 WIND MILL MAYWOOD CO., MAYWOOD. ILL, AND

: FEED MILL CO. 'I'' 11 t I BATAVIA. ILL. SET YOUR OVVN TIRES .. MONARCH HORSE HOE FARMERS,, MIlnufnctul'C1'3 of �HD CULTIVATOR THE DIMON WACON IMPLEMENT. COMBINED '" ,1' ' of a Jack 'fIre Wrench and Bolt to hold on the doubletrees. a For Grinding Grain, Consisting a.rew, Tightenfl'. Adjustable All J,ck ": Cutting Feed, Shell' Screw Tire Tightener, It Is the most complete Implement ever Invented. Tbe principle of t1gh\enlog tI"" b,. ing Corn ,Pump­ swelllng the Celloes and putUngwasbers on tbe shoulder of Ihe spokes Is recommended by the "SclentillO Amer­ and Ing Waler, lean," "American Agrlcullurlst,," and also by the largeat wagon manufactortea In tbe United States. The price running all kind. 18 $1.00 al. Ute factcry, and If you cnn II at get them at your hardware stores write to The Dimon Implement 01 Ma· COJllIHUlY, Fort Scott, l{nuR"e • .Agenls wanted where It hns oot been Introduced. It Bello at Bight. chinery. 'l'wellly.flv'e .old. b)' aile 1I10U In one

.� . 16 KANSAS FARMm�. MA.Y 28.

" -. T�B D.A.:J:N-­ -;-C· Improved Automatic Hay - Stacker- and Gatheerers:.,' THE- MOST WONDERFUL LABOR-SAVIN(:. �'ONEY-SA'VINC, TIME-SAVINC MACHINERY EVER ----:-INTRODUCED EON:,THE lFARM.------Manufactured -REYNOLDS &. Kansas': Missouri. TRUM8ULL,' , by 'ALLEN, City,j I" We'mnde and �old of these Machines last 'over.. . �. , 1,0.0.0 year....:the first 9£ its Introduction. Art! turUl�g out 3,000 this season, and could sell more If we could make them. Shall increase our capachy for another season to try and supply -the demand. Our object this season wi'll be to supply the- natural demand that comes to us voluntarily, without working the trade vigorously. We have already more orders thau all we sold last season. received - Our latest order for Ii car load came (rom the Swan Cattle Co., of Cheyenne, Wyoming, for the ranches of their company and neighbors, the order coming-toJ)l, voluntarily; by letter, .after hearing of the merits of this machinery. , We give theso few facts 8S the strongest arguments we could use to show you what the farmers 8IJd ranchmen who have examined into this maehmery think of it. Hay IS put. up at ia savinir of 5J) to 75 per: oent, over the old way. It does the work b�tter than it can be done by hand, so that the 'Hay keeps better and is worth $1.00 per ton more.' Takes the Hay direct from the swath to the stack, ,1' iaves win-rowing and cocking. Hay -is not toueh- ed with Ii fou from the time it leaves the mower until it is on stack, , . , • the. , 'The�pfice of a Staoker and two Gatherers saved In putnng np 70 to 75 tons of Hay. .any time's Its price often saved in pntting up ,1Iay of ten men and six horses the old of the way of storms, ne man, three boys and five horses, with this machinery, will do the work quiokly,i,0ut to it. war, ,an, do l�, :better. N 0, �m_�ll farmer0, can affo;rd to be witRQut n. No large farmer 'or ra�chman can afford, be without : • We 1),tlifliB� hundreds of testlmonials Hke the following from 'the iargest' and best farmers in the country _, c�,n a man on I can do all the work with I cannot hire who will do the La.EX": XANii,u, March 5,1883,-1 put up tbe past eeason, with a Dalu Stacker and Gatherer. 800 tons of the exception of the stack, boys. pltobers,

, HENRY WEDD. Cloyer and Timothy Hay, at an t:rp..... 012Jj ctnt'per Ion Bfter It lert the mower, when It I,... been costing me work 88 we111111 this SlIIeker. tI.OO per ton the "old way." My hOJ' baa kepI better thBD It ever did ,and I consider It .00r/4 11.00 per ton mort ' , - Mu"., Tr 4: Aue.. , Ka".a. G.-I1,m... : '''''"lI''II .lalcr4 'A. "ol","":;';wlth;a jlllclh-fork. In fact, I Mver.ln my whr.le experience of farming, put up I ELDoBADO, KANSAS, An�u.t 8, 1888. um6t

WWQ...CENT OOLUMN. WASHBURN COLLEGE I PUBLIC SALE OF 600 HEAD' TOPEKA, KANSAS. -,-OF-- Pure-bred and High-grade Short-horn-Cattle. SALlE-Four ,-earllng Sbort-horn Dulla. Gnod '�/rr--AT-­ FOBIndlyldnal.. Stralgbt pctllgree8, without oblec­ tlon.bl. c�1I. H_!nry Blakesley, Peabod,., Kas. Buokeye Farm, IIALE-An Aultman'" Tay lor Trnction Thresh­ FORIng, Engln�. Been UBed on. year under cover. Chase Tracllon ,parta bav. not been u'.II. Ev.r"tbing In SAFFORD, Co., KAS., uce11ent order. Address S. H. Downs, Topeka tleed and ' House,Topeka. , , Wednesday Thursday, by,Ihe Car Load. 'Addreas, WANTKD-SawduBt- Co • 11 Bl\rciIlY Oream.r! Darclay, Kas, JUNE and 12, 1884. Fol1 BALE' - Of Ltght: Brahma and Dla.k EGGS Obl�)l:ens, by Ilirs. M. Waltmlre,Carbon- BEGINNI;NG' at 12 M, Wednesday, the 11th, dal.���b we wilt sell OUR ENTIRE RERD OF SHORT­ WINTER TERlI1-0pened Janual'Y 2d, 18al, BALE,-DOe beal�by Sh;;�,-ml\i�ii bll!b':;�de HORN CATTJ,E. FOB)IerinOl. ,Pholce Rilms. In lois to .ult 'rERlI1-0peus .Apr1l2d�"IS84. pur- ON June 12th, beginning at-10 a. m, we will sell about 26 HEAD OF GRADE cb_n••t .....on.ble prloeo, or will exohange-tor lund, THURSDAY, Ad..... •• Connelly Bro , Council Grove, KII!l. NORMAN about 800 HEAD OF HIGH-GRADE COWS AWD HEIFERS, 1150 OPEN BOTH SEXES. HORSES, • TQ .' on 'HEAD OF STEERS. , TO LOAN R.al Eltate, S or 5 yeara. at a \ .. , low ortnlereet. Frank MONEY � B. Thomllll,117 KIUI8II.B Foul' Courses of Study-Classical, Academ­ Train wi11leave Emporia at 9 a. m. on Wednesda.y. �Y8D!l., Topeka, Kas. 8clentillo, .Q-Special Ic. BuslnellB, Persoollisupervision exercised. 'Separate For furth�r information or Ca.talogue, addrel!s Christian Homes provided for young women, T1!n S. E. PRATHER and J. F. PRATHER, or S. T. BENNETT, ... Ioslructors employed, Excellent IIppllances of LI­ A. TAF,T & Ill" Safford, Chase Co., Kansas. CO., brary, Apparattts Rnd Cllblnet. Expenses reasonable. Springfield, �." a.t Ill. (Formerly Taft, Emory '" Co.), PETER :McVICAR, President, 11Ji" Attention is called to B. E, Prather's Bale on June ,Ub, next, Springfield, 1Se Kansas A. ve., Topeka, On James River, Va" In a Northern I ta.nt a.1e FAR settlement. Illustrated circular free now an mpor S M- S Are open with entire N(IW _____.. J. F. MANOHA, Clar.mont. Virginia �0 0' L, Stock. all of which is offered at ex­ tremely low prices. Commission. [Say you saw this In the FAR'UIR.] A. J. CHILD, 209 nlarkct St., St. Louis

� ' F.-RANK ORANE. Tho �JOId W atof n·"IV. �:��:cr�:,:���:�:c:a�t::t��:I�� ����::nf�e:l�h:: Formerly or the linn of A, A. CrAne'" Q" A HIGHLY· CONCENTRATED CHEMICAl. fo,' circular Rnd menUon thlsllnper. ' Son, fl'�rite FLUID! nnd DOD-corrosive , 08C9, III., NOIl-polBonons Sheep Dip and Wash lor aU Domestic Anlmnl.. A snr. IInu Bure Remeuy .gafnst 1111 kinds of Pnraeltoa lu PbnlB ILLUSTRATED ANNUAL. or Animals, 'A powerful dlBlnfectant, Honu for pa­ FREE to all Farmera. Seed and COMM1SSION A.GENT p.rs glYing fulllnstructioll3 to SENT Grain, , Elevntor men sending us their addr•••. DONALI) MoKAY. Special .. -For the Sale Agt of­ ltose Bank, Dicklll80n Co., Kno, JOHNSON 8& FIELD, RacIne, Wis. HEREFORD Of Thoroughbl;'ed Holstein PO�r,.j'p ANGUS, Cattle, At C';-! Ul-...GALLOWAYS, EMPORIA, KAS., JUNE 3, '84. WOOL CROWERS

' ",-- SHORT-HORN. SCaB! The otrerlng conslsls of 15 Cows and Heifers and 1 Whose Ji"looks Show SCAB or VER1'415 are aud Grade And ThQroU;bbnd' Cattle or 'all breeds. four-year-old Bull and,. 1 Bull Calf. The Cowa \1ero 1m p piW¥H5 reminded that Lots .01.01..11 trom thnt 0103\ noled New Yorl, herd ofGerrlt Oarlq:� a,Specialty. 8. Miller's. LADD'S TOBAOOO s:::a:::mmp DZP Btabl.. FlIrk. AddreiIIJ , Riverview SIX OJ!' TIm COWS ARE IMPORTED, F. P. Is' to ERADICATE SCAB and 8S surely in mid-winter as in mid· ORANE, They are of extra good .Ize, weighing from 1,600 to gnaranteed VERMIN Stook Yards; KBD8B8 City, Mo. 1,700 pounds, and are quite heayy milker.. Thec.�tt1e Bummer. Thoall who have \lsed other with no, or invited • Dips partiBlsnccess, are'espeoially are acclimated, The cow. "re Itt calf. FOR SALE.-I bave a few colonies to give onr� a trial, Its use more than ropAYs its cost in Itn INCREASED GROWTH OF BEESoC TERlI1S-Cssh, Italian Bud Hybrid bees tor ss.le-a.ll in Bend for it. BETTER WOO�. Our new for free distribution. _ aood condlUon. .6:110, '!I'Ul bave cbolce Italflln Queen8 A