t-ord . 2.40 [01" 076 >n I-oUU Bred. $3.50 liver- 2.50 liver- rhs. puented JUN 7868.â€" 36: .3853; 1.833 78589 78589 1.808..â€" 18330 you scented 2h She (2321115111311 7 gut-t. - “Several ‘ lean ï¬asevm cold- amended with a ugh.» â€.531, that allowed me no rest. either day or night. The dov- wts pronounced my case hopeless. A [ï¬end learning of my trouble. sent me ‘a bottle 0} Ayer’s Cherry Pectorai. By the time I had used the whole bottle, I was caught? cured. and I believe it saved 13%|! e.â€-â€" . 8. Wm, 8 Quixnby Ave., Lo , Mass. AYER’S WM Plan Described and Illustratedâ€"Tempera- ture Required For Dlflerent Vegetables. In building a greenhouse for growing vegetables 3 three-quarter span is, in the opinion of some builders, the best. although good results are obtained in the even span. Most growers agree that the wider the house the more they can get out of it. For a house 56 feet long, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral LmDsAYj'RmAY» running east and west, 20 feet would be a good width and could be built as per the following sketch from Ameri- can Gardening: . If you anticipate building in the fu- ture another house parallel with the ï¬rst one, it will be necessary to have them separated by a few feet; otherwise one will interfere with the other. If it was not intended to build another house on the north. the writer describing the plan here illustrated suggests placing the potting house there and thinks it would be much better to have it built so. Then an additional house can be added to the south connecting the two by a narrow passage. The reason for placing the potting shed on the north is to prevent any shade that would be pres- ent if it was built either on the east or West ends of the greenhouse. LL - --_‘A "can: Vuuh- .â€" -_- The heating pipes should be the same as for an ordinary greenhouse. The tem- perature required will be from 50 to 65 degrees, according to the kind of vege- tables grown. some requiring more heat than others. If -cucumbers are to be grown, the glass in the roof and sides should be either ground or painted over to prevent the direct rays of the sun from striking the plants. They require a high temperature. Tomatoes will do HOUSE FOR GROWING VEGETABLES. best under clear glass. as will lettuce. radishes, beans, etc. Such a house can be built for from $975 to $1.150, ac- cording to the kind of construction, the former price being where the owner buys his material and does his own work. The potting house and chimney, with cellar underneath for boiler's, will cost from $250 up, according to the way it is built. Futtonlng Poultry. For fattening fowls for market an English authority recommends the use of a barred coop about 3 feet long by 2 in height and in depth for 12 birds. He says: These should be selected when 3 months old in summer and 4 months and upward in winter. Birds of a feather they must beâ€"i. 9., having been reared togetherâ€"lest in the 000p they disagree. Ground oats mixed with milk, in a moderately liquid state, will fatten them in a fortnight. Do not for- get the fresh water or the turf. which. like the occasional supply of sand and gravel, may be placed on a ledgeor in a trough in front of the coop. Near the border the birds should have abar on which they may peroh while feeding. Eighest Amds :t World‘- - “Av- -_.,., _,, The coops, especially during the cm- ming Process, must be covered with matting or sacks and under shelter. Mutton fat, chopped ï¬ne and boiled with the milk, willbe a good ingredient with the ground oats or buckwheat. and the food is then administered in small doses or “mums.†which are helped down to the crop. This W is re- peated morning and evening. The dan- geronhofowlbeoomingcropbonndmay be obviated on thereon-tome! the sec: ond mealtime by forcing some warm msythmbefadasbafome. Abo‘utvtm'ee~ weeks of this treatment would sufloay tndthebird ahanldboxnadomhfltfor “13.612th beforeitiskflled. I! is better and easier-to pluck stow! when ithutillwarm. and thiaisalsoanld- Mama! â€mm of 412123222232 PLAN FOR VEGETABI A LIFE SAVEâ€"D PLAN VEGETABLE GHttNHUUb't. ' 1 a!“ % rau the Best Family Pk!“- BY TAKING CHERRY REENHOITSE. 20 feet would uld be built as from Ameri- Table of the Mount Constituent- Wanted In Live Stock Food. Animals need three kinds of aliment especially. These have been divided into flesh formers, heat producers and fat producers. This is a somewhat reugh distribution. but it answers the purpose. and as flesh consists chiefly, or sum- ciently for this purpose, of nitrogenous matters the so called fles’nh formers are the foods that are rich in nitrogen as those hereafter enumerated under this head. The heat producers are those that contain carbon mostly, and the fat pro- ducers are those foods that contain oil or fatty matters. And in calling atten- tion to the following tables it may be said that the nitrogenous matters in foods are generally included under the name of .rotein 19: convenience: FOODS commute 93mm “MEL? m DRY tartan. HAY. Pea vine clover.......... Common red clover. . . . . . Alsiko clover... ..... ..... comoiotlltbbidb Barley ..... Peas ...... ....... Beans........... Millet........... Linseed oil meal.............. Cotton 011 meaL............... Buckwheat middling: Gluten meal............ Brewers'grains............... Mdt sprouts.................. room CONTAINING snacn Millet gran-1...... ..... muu Linseed cake........ ...40.61 Cotton meal................ ..... 28.00 13111n.............................61.?7 Gluten meal.....................57.4s Com germ meal................L‘.’.49 Cocoanutmeal............. ..... 40.00 Starch meal.....................59.00 Cocoadust .......... . ........ ....4§.oo [now 7.16 12.26 5.15 8. 18 12.17 12.38 10.17 26.“) Knowing the constituents of the vari- ous feeds, it is an easy thing to make such a ration as shall supply all the de- mands of any animal, for .its mainten- ance ï¬rst, and for its desired produw next. â€I A. ~_â€" “CA 0. For we know that an animal of, say. 1,000 pounds of live weight must have a certain quantity of each of these ele. ments of nutrition for its maintenance in healthâ€"ï¬rst, of the carbonaceous matters for the support of the vital heat, then of the protein for the repair of the muscular tissue worn by every motion, of whatever kind it may be, and, lastly, of fat for the replenishing of this indspensable part of the system. And these quantiitios have been found to be supplied. by 20 pounds of the best- meadow or clover hay for the full grown animal at rest and producing nothing. â€"Moutreal Herald. Fresh cut 1 ducer is attr from all our progress ers. In addition to I increase in eggs, it is late and invigorate the melting: period. say that chickens n12 when fed liberally with cut bone. The phosphate of lime. the nitrogenous ele- ments. the rich juices so abundant in a. soluble and easily digested form. which or almost wholly lacking in dry bone or scrap, may perhaps account for such results. To derive the greatest beneï¬t it is essential that the food be fresh and sweet. In order to insure this, a. bone cutter is a necessity, and where large flocks are kept a good one will soon pay for itself in eggs alone. Professor Clarence M. Weed of the New Hampshire Agricultural college says that clean farming, involving the removal and destruction by burning of all refuse of the cabbage or turnip ï¬eld, together with constant crop rotation. is the chief safeguard against the club- root fungus. The only way to lessen at- tack is to use preventive measures, for when once the fungus has obtained a hold upon the plant it cannot be got rid It is a common thi tugging and straining vain eï¬â€˜ort to pull it ging. A little ingem now To PULL A p051: ican Gardening, will save all trouble in this direction. Take a rail or pole and tie it to the post as shown in sketch. Lift the long arm of the lever, and the post will come up with very little ef- fort. . Farm Topics. American Cultivator does not advise northern growers to plant potatoes in the fall. If you want the very earliest potatoes, grow them on ground plowed up in narrow lands. with a ridge in the center, that can be worked as soon as frost is out of the ground in spring. An eastern poultry keeper estimates the total cost of food for each bird at 60 aents and gets them to weigh an aver- Ige of 15 pounds each, making the cost bf turkey meat about 3 1.3 cents per pound. Strawberries ought to be mnlohed an noon as the ground is well frozen. Straw free from weeds and mode is good material. or coarse litter will answer. Snow process at its tobaooq gtaï¬dl! “ Donegal this year, but Vi“ nos-tinn- _ ,_3‘_ 1‘â€" 'vâ€"vaâ€"c ---_ ' 7â€", , ‘mlts. As the barn usedwhadefor spring hogshead tom itwa-proba- bly not adapted for curing cigar iogf. . In the Connecticut and Houstonio valleys the tobacco crop promises to be the best in years, the best (nope fully equal to the popular 1892, though as a whole it is more uneven. The color is light, texture ï¬ne, percentage of ï¬ne wrappers large. The New York tobacco top is also good- Green Bone as an Egg Producer. rush out green bone as an egg pro- or is attracting deserved attention a all our progressive poultry grow- In addition to producing a. large ease in eggs, it is thought to stimu- and invigorate the fowls during melting: period. Broiler raisers that chickens mature much earlier 211 fed liberally with cut bone. The sphate of lime. the nitrogenous ole- uts. the rich juices so abundant in a ,iL: -I. ooo Hoot-nan. a common thing to see a man ; and straining at a post in the fort to pull it up without dig- A little ingenuity, says Amer- 2.11.2.1... ....... 8.8 5...... 1.11.5.3 5.11.. 1.3.8 ..... .. .554 52.5 90E....1....:::ï¬.5 925 ....... ..... 5.8 .#.1..... ........ 1.55.8 .......... ............5.8 HOW TO FEED. ARTIFICIAL FEEDS. Pulling l’osts. GRAINS. > SEARCH [um III In 1m! nunzn. Starch. Per Cent. Fat. Per Cent. Wfll of an AW and Paul- Ibblo mood. ' Few fowls are more sprightly and trim than the Leghorn. The carriage is very upright, and the large and gayly parent size and adds greatly to his beauty. The red, darkly striped hackle: of the male and his solid black breast make a very attractive combination in colors, and the warm brawn of the fe- males possesses a quiet beauty scarcely less attractive in its way than the richer colors of the male. A __‘_. pull 14. weeks old. Ordinarily the pallets wfll la] wptsp 4 to 5months old. This Facts Thrown at the Heads of Thorough- l bred Fowl Banners. i When anybody, and especially a breed- er of thoroughbred fowls, says Funny ‘I Field in Farm Poultry. runs down the common henâ€"says that she never did and never will pay her way on the farm or anywhere else, and that no farmer who is anything of a farmer anyway will keep anything but the very thor- oughest of thoroughbred poultryâ€"it makes me mad clear through, and I gen- . erally throw some facts andï¬gures at l the heads of the thoroughbred boasters. Today I have some new facts for those ‘ who claim that tho common hen doom't pay. For the ten weeks ending Sept. 8-13 very common hens (about half of [ them melting, and some of them 8 , years old) laid 25% dozen eggs which sold (market priceâ€"cash at the door) for $5.25. Food for the time “1581.65, i which leaves $3. 60 clear proï¬t. , -L-) U555 Lw my“ -â€".__c in. Broiler raisersoftenuseacroasofe Leghorn male on some heavier breed to increase the growth of the chickens in the ï¬rst two months of their lives. Brown Leghorns are reasonably hardy, but do best when they can have liberty. They are excellent for-users and will on a farm during the summer months pick up a good share of their living. r~~J _ -AAA mom In winter they need a good, warm house, to prevent the (rooï¬ng of their combs, and if provided with such a house will lay quite well, even in very cold weather. But it is during the warm days of spring and the hot days of sum- mer that they produce the greatest number of eggs. The eggs of the Leg- horn are a pearly white, all, or nearly all, of the same shade, giving them a very uniform appearance. Once in a gr at while there will be a Leghorn hen that will lay an egg with a slight bnï¬ tint, but so rarely does this happen that one is almost safe in declaring that-their eggs are always pure white. They are of good marketable size, and, being white. really look to be large. “HAW auuvvu ‘-v.-- _,. The food was wheat bran, cracked corn and a few old potatoes, and not an- other thing. The potatoes, while they lasted, were boiled, mashed, mixed with bran and given in the morning. The cracked corn was fed at night. Between meals they wandered at their own sweet will, and at night they roasted in a tree or under an open shed, just as they got nothing beyond what I have men- tioned and what they picked up in their rambles? Because, my dear, I took care of those hens myself part of the time, and my daughter the other-part. “Noth- ing to brag aboutâ€"an average of only a fraction over four eggs a day for 18 hens,†says the thoroughbred Leghorn man. That‘s all, my dear air, but can you scare up a baker's dozen 2 and 3 year old hens of your favorite or any other breed, half of them molting, that you feel sure could have done any bet- ,“ J __"L ‘Iâ€"A anmn JVâ€" _v'_ ter on the flame food and with the same lack of care and codqung? u..r ,A_ _‘ “Critical period of molting†isone of the strings that some poultry writers have harped upon so much that some poultry keepers actually believe their hens won’t come through it alive unless they are well housed and potted and pampered end coddled generally. 7L -4. ALMA “MAJ ywywvu â€"_ v- Now, when I look at those ragged, disreputable looking common hens who roost where they please, and who eat and scratch and lay right along. I won- der if they are aware they are pming through a â€critical time,†and 13.150 wonder if some of the hardiness of the despised common hen Wouldn‘t be a good thing to graft on to some of the standard breeds. . It In Cheap, Easily Built and Accommodate. More Fowla Than Do Ordinary Houses. Of all the plans for poultry houses which are oflered from time to time an Ohio farmer assures Southern Culti- vator he has yet to see one that will prove as satisfactory and proï¬table as the one herewith described by him. It is cheap. It is easily built. It looks well. It will accommodate comfortably at least twice the numbero! fowls as will an inclosed building of like dimenv sions, and the fowls kept in it. if prop erly fed, will shell out the eggs and keep healthy, no matter what the weather. He says: The advice is often given to keep not over 15 or at most 20 fowls together in one building. but I keep 50 hens all winter long in such a building. 12 by 20, and not a single case of diseasahave downwu'dand forward Misha“ eaves-othatitï¬'rmsutdm ant! leaves the catalog“ totho frontwaoudiï¬ieetlrigh. _ 7 “A .1- __:1 CANADIAN POST. LIN DSAY: A PRACTICAL POULTRY THE BROWN LEGHORNS. TOO MUCH CODDLING. HOUSE. ' woman: now to: roam. .3110!) alevelandarelB inch-39‘“- .Onewindow it the south undo! the .mplaoegim lightwmblethe Ifowhtoaeethem A1008 “190'“ £1110th mâ€â€˜hin3°d lmwhiohdropsdmâ€â€˜h°d’°9' ‘pingsoanbompedont. ._Boaddu§t croonl ghumhptou 'thoflooro! themting room. Intbe “hinged boardnretwohole3.8by1° ,inchesforthefowlstogom- Th0†holes no lotto?“ ï¬rm-MW .beingnlittleabavethem. Asladdbe- 'foro, thismï¬ngplweuhonldbomudo ughtmdwmn. and thew-mm†thebodiesof thefowlwillmakothom mundoomhrublontnish‘ 13Ҡmorning theywilloomoantmd much , _A_-_ _LIA‘| but scatter wheat and other grain in the straw, a small handful to eaohfowl. and make them scratch it out. The success of the whole thing lies in the fact that the fowls are warm and comfortable at night and are not conï¬ned by {our walls by day. They are contented and busy and can see out. so that they do not ap- pear to be conï¬ned. rim-d [our Ila-Io Equal-anno- Why-Nonlnakoï¬m- A North ngou correspondent 0‘ Th0 , - __ nl_-._.o..4l a permanent crib would be in the wn A than ï¬rm is ARencion is 03110 Homestead toe feed crib thatcanbe put in position at a moment's notice endwhen notinuse can beturnedup mngly against the wall. Less space still would be taken by leaving the lower part of the slat work hinged directly to the wall. Pieces of repeat straps could take the place of the chains if desired. The beneï¬ts of this raokare tooepperent toneedex- planation further. The whole cast of making and putting in position is slight. and any man handy with tools can put me together in half an hour. The average yield per acre of pota- toes is returned as 62.3 bushels. In 1893 the yield was 72.2. and in 1892. 68. The quality is fair. standing at 84. The Incubator. This is the season for artiï¬cial incu- bators when early broilers are required. The hen is a ï¬rst rate medium for he- teling in the spring and summer. but as the hens do not sit in winter. except rarely. the early broilers must be hatch- ed with incubators. which bring out several hundred chicks at a time. and as it costs but little more to care for a large number of chicks than to attend ‘ to a hen or two in unseasonable weather the incubator is niuch cheaper. does turn her eggsmorsorleuwhcn aheflndsaplace for her feet in the nest. and when she gathers the eggs under her. but she does not proceed systemat- FOLDING RACK Pdou and Van “Ashen- yo 3 lot 0! 88m: wnnw nu- mt of potash and I“; W )sphoric acid. That means of potash worth-$5 and 30 hmphorio acid worth $1.50. all. This $6.50 represents nonnt of potash and PM" would cost if 3'03 bought Mum-ad. The nrice to 5'0“ 0?“ AND emu FRIDAY. JANUARY 11.‘ 1995. Wwfll E milk! I: ' Iain-loom. The W<chhldiddc¢ ha mundugmat repuudon in m- ing celexy for not only the western wmmmddaumll. Tho gallium tied in panel-of condom andlbnnchea. Mot the-elndlvid- nnlclnsmhnttnchedmudnclomot. This not is mfnlly trimmed to . blunt point with the mlh nicely bleached-dimofsoowinohu. nun sou: mum otthotongnondonnp qfthym Ihuvo 1;- “)4 oh .0107!“an â€in; muddle low by pawns the other two holes 13:: {not the lad- 77 --_ A“ mulchooae. Thod whotherhin leaders are nhmotthoworkornoc the short event-rs wry that I do no' WOW homes in this tour horse to: VERTICAL vuzw. horse! to the drill (7 to 12 feet). to the burrow (18 to 20 feet). to the binder (6 to 9 feet). to the grain tank (100 to 150 bushels) and tothoplovu 24m Winches}. “3â€â€me nun! m: mum. Smallsâ€"mun; Int-mo Itching sud m.mwl‘¢“= “m†mm'mummm.um m'gngmMc-m mom tho Put W Lstdl mm. Icemanâ€. Wm.†nun. ohmic W “a 8"“ ulnar! my will. In the mcdv. It mmmtfmvfld'hwm cough Ayn-ECW150130“! ha a not: Moulded. Wotan-m undmufllyb! tho u. “a“ medl- clue. It hoe-unwound nit-W. any. bump-flan. "14 Mm tho In: not EQUAUZERS FOR HORSES that I do not work mu! :1: without them. I ham or one gum! 910'- the three ham 0‘3““! cm are “tucked to the l cwinglen'co centers m4 Mum mummy {Immune-acme EB mm†718131738 ll( ml to the long one uy centers and cleviues. ething to equalize our The driver clause :1 In doinz their Tlu DYEING. I'ALIZER 'VIINSOS uliw the abort the long one by Svunm‘u Om - Sun-t. 5.5.: M50 _. _ __ 19?}: unknown wombat m iSIartlingiam Fur Sensible Balm Boone-m. mum-m. Spring-i 'hblel. Ohdrl. Sideboards. Lounge: and Cook Stoves, Tin- m. Crockery, (flatware. KnivesJorh 3nd Iooohng Gm 9 Brooms for 256. 10 Ban Electra: Soap The Auction mm. Jammy‘ $15 1 2 â€"ruu Ivv- â€"â€"v ~-â€"-â€" Kennedy, Dim 5011.1 m 1139.....- W and bowels. flm 1' mnmcmulm’n l1‘ \I‘lv 02H n.rr )ï¬urmp €4.26 # .ZmC-uflw 0000 0.9““.302. 3.3m. swamâ€".8...» «gran Ill. m Oahu- no. ran-cor u M l “ hymn"... IIIII .8 mum-- 3; J. Wotnuug. EEO. meg; r. .H. LODBQP. Castoria, DLJJ'. W “W13.“ ‘0 Wm W 13 â€-9 opp. Benson House mean-WWW! klndl or an“!!! «0.. “was up JESS. What i Jaw Cu toâ€: 25o. n â€my SM, N.‘ Y“ Git!- 37's prescription for Inï¬ll" rithcr Opium, Morphlno W is is a harmless mm 2):: Syrups, and Mr 0". m is thirty yearl' use by :1: So. MEIR. mu. I. r. “mmyddmtnthochfldm‘lm months“: spokcn Mauro! Monsi- enoehtbdr outside Wumm and among-.5 wo only In.†won; our medical cuppflm what‘s ho" a! min! nets, yet, wean {new om'.-.flfll mmzsof Cancun-Ivan uhhokvfl: ; .‘II‘ I I .......... . Rsï¬vvamuxa Raina. bell an J_OEL DAY, Dairy! (3V0 E, Maxsom. _____.____,‘___,__,_._.._ ' ‘HE LINDSAY GREEN HOUSE. cur noun. sunâ€"17¢; immune-s CIIYIAII'IKOII. A Choice Selection of Plants. EDWARD WM. ..._â€"â€" Lust 0. SUI". Mn relebhone 102 r viotcsnuininc U scro- north cud. Linda-y. have m "09!ng wall cim. cw. -- ~~ -ninnnn :TRAYEDtâ€"flgï¬ MNOOI.U.ODIOIO -' tau... Accumulated fuudl......... for our cl: TIMBER FOR SALE. my SALE. mew W5uu ~.---.,_. , fl DR. WILSON. or RICKAIID SL‘ LILLY’SA II_E_|_I..V_E_ Plus d!†M “mu I' ll‘ imam William â€w MIG?! Farms for Rent. Castoria. Lm mar-III?- nvnmnc m. no. AW" ‘3’ IL‘OU-r now mpMâ€"di'buv the law will w-mm [or No. I BAY. Pu“.- l'hy o! tint qullily will ï¬nd on 106. â€MW-3w 1m 4m» the premises of the OX8 Y EABUNG 811588 and tho [mint 0! the under-tend ONE 'flEH-‘EB. upm in right on with 3 AV. Dalrylnplo ‘l4pd. In: an or. ‘ ’23.;°g.¢tuu ‘ .5; Elana 32 Elan-m. mom-n gamble on the!†n.m.. ow. Forrï¬ï¬lï¬'. -‘t- N (‘7 gm ’. BIA ZIN; my. Lind-ii:-