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New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892

July 15, 1885 · Page 5 of 8

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WPP1 PfSfffSffSWF muqwuMMiMfiu 45 PAEMAIH) HOUSEHOLD. sometimes do- not reevery Heavy carpet3 The- evergreen tree delights- in heat. nnr WIFE'S AW AY. that we adopted a more rational mode and much lauded paint the Country year,.unless in quire taking up JL close- observer*remarked tome a of developing these precious charges Gentleman says, "In using petroleum constant use. Take out ther tacks from What's that sensation round my heart few- days ago,- that there- was- jost as committed to our care neither forcing the first thing to be distinctly understood Farm Notes. these fold the carpets back, wash the That feels as if I'd lost a part great a difference* in. the flow otsap of them into unnatural precocity, nor is that it cannot be used as a floor in strong suds, with a tablespoonful Of self, and makes my feelings smart? the evergreens in* cool and wa rm making them mimic slaves of fashion /The statement.is made that a hop* component part of paint. Its value of 1)orax dissolved in them. Dash weather, as there is in the- flow" of molasses and luxury, but rather leading them grower of Western New York, who refused My wife's-away. consists in penetrating the pores of &i**V& with insect powder, or lay tobacco in winter and summer. I gently into paths where the whole nature, $ 1 a pound for his crop in '82, the wood, and not remaining like paint What happy voice at rosy morn, *.s leaves along the edge and retack. All thought the illustration was- an. apt physical, mental and moral, may on the outside. W could not, therefore, had it sold the other day, by the sheriff, moths can be kept away, andtiae eggs On music's wings that once was borne, one. be evenly and harmoniously developed recommend the mixture of crude for 5 to 7 cents a pound. destroyed by this means. Is missed, and things look so forlorn? The Norway spruce and the-Austrian according to nature's unerring laws. petroleum and Venetian red often recommended, Ingrain, or other carpetsrafter shaking, My wife's away. An agricultural expert in New York, pines are among- the best in this latitude, Philadelphia Ledger. as it would be months in are brightened by sprinkling a and especially so for the prairies produced a hybrid of wheat and rye, What makes me have the bluest blues, drying, much of the petroleum going potmd of salt over the surface and Pleasant for the Guest. west of the Mississippi river. The-heinlocks and then crossed this again with rye, into the wood andleavingthe Venetian And all the world blame and abuse, sweeping carefully and thoroughly. and arbor vitses do best where At a dinner given lately in Philadelphia choosel red on the surface. If, however, a considerable the result being a grain one-fourth And sulky melancholy It is also an excellent plan to wipe ofl they are partly shaded by building- or each gentleman on entering the portion of drying linseed oil My wife's away. wheat and three-fourths rye. the carpet with borax water using a other trees from the mid-day sun. Th house had an envelope handed to him is added, it will lessen the difficulty. thick flannel cloth wru ng tightly. Be wre find the best What's vacant at the takle-head, hemlock is the most graceful of evergreens. About 18,000 clothes-baskets were After long experience, ith his own name on the outside and careful to clean every grease spot with Where ansel-like, dispensing bread. After they are setnot in made in Syracuse, N. Y., last year from way to use petroleum is to apply it inside the name of the lady he was to ammonia and water,' not too strong, rows, but in triangular groups about She sat, and now a blank instead? the product of a thousa nd acres set to heavily on the outside, so that it take into dinner. Is not this a rather and a dark woolen cloth. Tie pieces a rod apart, well to the right and left My wife's away. willow thereabout, at one foot distance may penetrate the pores freely and convenient and pleasant arrangement? of camphor into little bundles, and put or .the yardmulch them with any in rows three feet apart, spring then after some weeks, if paint is Convenient for the hostess, because What ails my undergarment kit? one in each article. Wrap the articles light, loose substance, composed in wanted, to apply a coat or two of worked with cultivator and the growth the guests being placed, in her own Not one of them will rightly fit in newspapers, as printer's ink. is a part: of well-rotted barn-yard manure, paint. Th oil inside and the paint -cut close each fall. Th price has fallen mind, days before, it still remainedfor great preventiv of moths, and then It drives me nearly in a fit. and give them an occasional watering outside, ma ke a very thorough protection. from $3 0 to $20, and the business her to communicate to each gentleman ew them up in strong sheeting bags, My lfe's away. with cool soap-suds, and success is certain. Bu the petroleum alone answers is considered overdone. labeled, so that it will not be necessary her will and pleasure, whiclTthe E. B. W. The socksnot two of them will pair: well." to open them during the summer, except little envelope does most satisfactorily. Prof. Riley says lie has handled thousands The shirtsnot one without a tear Raspberry Culture. for use. This is a good way foi Pleasant for the guest, because during of seventeen-year locusts and The buttons, too, are never there. The Farmers' Magizme and Rural Guide. those who do not possess cedar boxes, the few moments spent in the dressingroom, Personal Paragraphs. I was never stung. believes they are My wife's away. and the articles need have no othei The modern system of cultivating regarding his white tie with joy Sam Jones the evangilist, says a german incapable of inflicting injury. investigated care, it every spot is treated as directed, the raspberry obviates the neee-sity of or chagrin, as the case may be he The sooty servant now is boss, and found that large wasps is "nothing but hugging set to and the garments are not lefl any kind of support, and the plants lias ample opportunity to sketch i^ut And turns her nose up v\ ith. a toss, preyed upon the locusts, and that music." hanging in the closet too long before are managed so that they are able to his plan of conversation for the evening, And looks at me so aivful cross: putting away for the season. in every instance where an actual injury support themselves when full of tiuit. suiting it. if he is happy enough\to The Bayard family of Delaware is 1 My life's away. This is accomplished by allowing the occured it was traceable to the know the fair one who is to be-his descended from Anna Bayard, sister Hints for the Garden. first ear's growth of newly set out What makes the evenna:s seem so lon^ Wasp and not the locusts. company tor some hours to come,- to of Peter Stuyvesant, Governor ol Ornnsre Coun':* Farmer plants grow undisturbed the second And as still as nteht, where once was song, her tastes and attainments, evert indulgently New Amsterdam. Thomas Franci" Mr. M. Samuels, a "strawberry In almost all gardens there are certain ear two or more shoots will be produced, ids. Or music sn eet, charmed time along. pandering to her hobbies if Bayard's grandfather, Jam es Ashton 1 king" of Tennessee, has fifty acres of standard vegetables grown, year and when these have reached My v, lie's away. he be aimable. If the lady is a fair unknown, Bayard, was a member of Congress Wilson, which he reports as cloin? well after ear. and but little attention is to a height ot about two feet, their My wife, Goi bless her angel face' a guest from another town, a from Delaware. His son, likewise paid to those products which are lesa in that State. The Lutesville Vidette tops are p-nched off so as to stop their And bring her safe to my embrace, few leading remarks upon other cities, Jam es Ashton Bayard, was a United common, but not less desirable. The mentions this variety as "never known further upward growth. They will To me the empress of the race ah\ ays complimentary to the absent, States Senator from Delaware from kitchen garden is such an important then proceed to put out side shoots to fail of a good crop" in Missouri will fit in pleasant)}- and will soon My wife's away. March 4, 1831, to March 5, 1860 factor in"the health and comfort of the balancing and supporting themselves since its introduction there ten years bring into view the favored place Thomas Bayard succeeded his father home, that one should cast about from I very effectually, and appearing: like ago. FARM, GARDEX AND HOUSEHOLD. whence she has come, after which an time to time to seo how it could be improved. in the Senate in the same year. small, e\enly headed trees. When inexhaustible subject of conversation There are gardens here and Cauliflower, the most delicate vegetable growth has been completed for the season A considerable sensation has been will hold the floor until the last course there, whic-n. of course, do not come of the cabbage tribe, is less Alfili' As a Pork-Producer. and the leaves have fallen, those excited in Vienna "society" by the an- 1 within the scope of this article, but it is and the rising of the hostess announces Prof. E. M.Shelton of the Kansas Agricultural grown and appreciated in this country side shoots ai*e pruned back so as to nouncempnt of thebethrothal of Prince not for such we write. that dinner is over. College, reports an interesting have them from twelve to sixteen inches than its merits deserve. I requires Lichtenstein to the daughter of a merchant experiment in which a half acre of long, according to their strength. rather higher culture than the cabbage First of all. many gardens have no in the city, such a marriage being Care of the Feet. altalfa, seeded the previous seamen, This can be done quite rapidly by pruning to secure a good crop. We have had asparagus bed, that prince of early regarded as a mesalliance by the was pastured by pigs during the summer shears. vegetables. It comes early in the excellent success with the Imperial, N. Y. Tribune.For soft corns, take austere purists of the Court of Austria. of 1884, the pigs being carefully season, "s a great yielder, and after Giant White Italian and Lackawanna a small bit of fine, soft cotton and put A Home to Live In This Prince was formerly well known weighed each niontn, and the number be'.nc: once established, needs very little Donald Mitchell Henderson's Early Snowball is credited it between the toes affected, a lock just in London, and his first Avife was Miss carefully adjusted to the quantity of care. Then there is Kale, Broccoli with having marvelous virtues. The home and its apartments should large enough to keep the toes from Fox, the adopted daughter of Lady forage. I addition to the alfalfa, and Brussels Sprouts, all of which are not be treated as a dead thing, where touching each other. Change the cotton wre make besc arrangements ot its fit- each pig received two pounds of corn Holland. easily grow and one or the other ot every morning and in a short time For the Cook. in the ear, thus giving that combination which should find a place. Cauliflower tings, and there leave it. It must your corn will have vanished. Or, wear Rev. M. Cramer, late United of foods which experienced feeders VEGETABLE SOUP.Cut up a large is seldom grown by the farmei grow in range and in expression with loose cloth or canvass shoes. Or, apply States minister to Denmark and have found so well adapted to pork plateful of any kind of vegetables you for hU own tableand yet in sections our necessities, and diverging and developing a slice of lemon, renewing it every Switzerland, and who has just been production. The result was that the may have, such as onions, potato es where it does well, it is a most desirable tastes. The best decorators day and the corn can soon be picked elected professor of systematic theology naif acre of alfalfa, in connection with addition to the table. Egg Plant {boil potato es in other water), parsnips, cannot put that last finish which must out by the root. Or dust daily between in the University of Boston, 2,146 pounds of ear cornay3(H bushelsgave is seldom seen. Parsley is such a delicious parsley, asparagus, cabbage, turnips, come from home hand-.. It is a .great the toes affected burnt alum and speaks the German, French, Italian, support during 154 days to flavoring for soups and stews canvas always on the easel before us &c. First put into a saucepan half borax in equal part M. D. writes that rather more than nine pigs having the Spanish and Danish languages fluently, that it could hardly be spared. Okra growing in its power to interest every a cup of clarified butter. When it is if N. B. D. who suffers from Tender feet average weight of 140 pounds, and and ranks high as a Hebrew, Latin and is a valuable material for soups also day and yearnever getting its last very hot put in the sliced onions stir growrth amount- will put a teaspoonful of burnt alum caused an increased and is veiy easily grown. Salsify 01 Greek scholar. studied at Leipzig. touchesnever quite ready to be taken well to prevent burning. When it assumes and borax in equal parts finely powdered ing to 717 pounds. Tne 1,146 pounds vegetable o\ster is another excellent down and parted with." No home a redish color, stir in a large A Lewiston physician, says the Lewiston in each of his stockings the mixture of ear corn would be equivalent to vegetable for spring use and who have should so far out top the tastes of its tablespoonful of sifted flour until it (Me.) Journal, relates a case will toughen and tan the skin of 1,760 pounds of shelled corn, and previous once tried it are seldom willing to dispense inmates that they cannot somewhere his own family of the possession of a has the same color as the onions. his feet and relieve the suffering. For experiments on the same farm with it. Spinach is another dish and somehow' deck it with the record OR peculiar mark from one generation to Now stir in a pint of hot water and had given an average increase of one hard corns, wet the end of a stick of lunar for the early season and comes most of their love and culture. It is an awful another. His father, when quite pound live weight for 5.34 pounds some salt and pepper. Do not put caustic and apply to thecornonce acceptable in a time when ev erythiag thing to live in a house where no young, was one day bitten by a shelled corn. At this rate the total increase a day for several days in succession. salt and pepper in at first, as green is desirable. Celery is becoming new nail can be driven in the Avail,and due to the 30J bushels corn vicious horsethe horse's teeth closing This will blacken the skin, and after a quite general in the farm garden, the onions and flour would more no tray of wild flower*, or wood mosses would amount to 329 pounds of live over his ear lobe and taking out a though too many neglect it yet. Let couple of weeks the core of the corn will readily burn. Add also all the other to Le set upon a window sill. The weight, and that due to the alfalfa small piece of the upper part. Th each of our farmer readers add atlGast peel out together with all the skin ways are endless, in short, in whiclua vegetables. Le them simmer, adding would amount to 388 pounds. Thus mark of the wounded ear skipped one one or more ot th.2 vegetables enumerated touched by the caustic. (This remedy house can be endowed with that home more hot water when necessary, for the half acre of alfalfa, requiring no above, which has not been found generation and has appeared in the atmosphere which shall be redolent of should be used with great care and mod- two hours. Then press through a colander. cultivation nor harvesting, gave a before in his garden and he will find Lewiston physician's son, there being the tastes of its inmates. eration.Ed.) For chilblains, work Return them to the range in greater return in growth than half an himself amply repaid for the trifling on the little fellow's ear the plain pulverized chalk into lard until a stiff ftlulchlns Bearing Fruit Trees. soup-kettle and keep hot until ready to acre of corn yielding 61 bushels per amount of extra labor it involves. marking of the ear that showed years ointment is made, then rub in well on P. T. Quinu recently wrote to the serve. acre. ago upon his grandfather. retiring at night. This remedy requires New York Tribune concerning the advantage Farm Notes. persevering application once or twice of mulching orchards and Corn-and-cob 3leal for Pigs. FRIED SWEETBREAD.Pai'boil them, The first person born in the White The best way to preserve eggs,according a week will not cure. Th above is the gardens. He says: This hould be cut into even-sized pieces, season with House, and perhaps the only one born The experiment in feeding cqrn-and to recent tests, are packing in salt, substance of many letters received from more generally practiced in fruit producing salt and pepper, egg and bread crumb there, is now a candidate for office in cob meal to steers, was repeated at the oil:ng the shells beef dropping maybe correspondents. districts, for it is the least expensive Washington. Mrs. Mary E Wilcox them, and try in boiling lard. Put on Kansas Agricultural College during used, and immersing in lime waten an a most effective method, of was a daughter of Andrew Donaldson, the past winter, the meal being fed in a hot dish and garnish with new peas. It pays better and affords more satisfaction protecting the fruit trees against the Which Breed. the adopted son of General Jackson. this instance to pigs instead of steers. and pleasure to raise the-finer bad results often following the frequent BAK ED BEEPTake five pounds of tolerably Donaldson was private secretary The results of the experiment (of which The question of what breed they varieties of anything, whether plant or and sudden changes of temperature lean beef, same as would be used to Jackson during his term as President the full details are published in the annual shall raise is one that troubles many vegetable, and it is the successful, most during the summer and fall and resided there with his family, report of the agricultural department for a-la-mode. Put into a bake-pan people much more than there is really prosperous and intelligent farmers-who months, when the surface of the of the college) are summarized Mrs. Donaldson being lady of the any occasion for. Almost any of the do so. with two onions and a carrot sliced, ground is left exposed to the direct as follows by Professor Shelton: house in the absence of the president's improyed breeds are good enough if the two or three sprigs of parsley, three rays of the sun. Aga'n, when the :S. Keep a few sheep on the farm, ifi not ife. I was during Mi', and Mrs. Donaldson's With steers, 1 bushel (70 lb-) cornand man possessing one of them will handle cloves, some celery tops if procurable, mulch is put two or three inche-, in many. Wool will always bring: cash time that their daughter cob meal gave 9.56 pounds of increase and a quart of boiling water. Cover it to the best advantage. If large thickness, the surface soil is constantly at some price and it comes oft when wh le with the pigs 1 bushel Mary was born. This child of the as tightly as possible, with pan same hogs are wanted, either Poland-Chinas, moist and loose, even when no rain there is little else to sell. Mutton (70 ft.) corn-and-cob meal gave 10.76 White House married in the course of size, and place into the oven. Le tit falls for a term of several weeks, and Berkshires, or Duroc-Jer&eys will fill always sells well and is always good pounds of increase and with the steers time, becoming Mrs. Wilcox. coo about three hours, replenishing the trees of fruit receive no check for the bill and grow big enough for anybody for the table. again 1 bushel (56 ft.) corn meal gave with a little boiling water if the steam want of mo'oture and food under in fact, no one knows how big, Says the Bainbridge, Ga.,Democrat: 7.04 pounds of increase, while with the The Gardeners' Monthly says that 2 escapes too much. such circumstances. My method is to or which will grow biggest in the shortest There is a negro woman now living pigs 1 bushel (56 lb.) of corn meal little windmill, such as some boys car cultivate the space between the rows time. If small hogs are desirsble, within five miles of this city, who, we gave 8.35 pound of increase. The fact HORSERADISH SAUCE.Simmer together make with a jack-knife, will keep of trees in the orchaid, us*ng_ a small there is abundant range in size between for a quarter of an hour a half that the pigs were fed during the late are informed by good authority, is the i birds out of a cherry tree in casa-atinv one-horse plow and cultivator running, the Suffolks, small Yorkshires, severe winter season, while the steers cup full of cracker meal, half cup full of mother of forty-two children and who bell is attached to it. It is better that not more than two inches deep, during and Essex. In the Western and were fed during the comparatively mild does not look to be a day over forty grated horseradish, one cup of cream, a stuffed cat or an imitation hawk. the early part of the season. From the Central States, where land and corn are winter of 1883-4, is a sufficient explanation years old. Th name of this remarkable a tablespoonful of the fat from the first to the fifteenth of July. I have cheap, the larger sorts are most popular It will not be forgotten, while repairing of the near approach of the cost female is Jane Gatwell, and was, water in which the beef is cooked put on a hea\y coating of salt, hay or and doubtless most profitable, the fences, that good fences of a pound of increase of the pigs to up to the time of death, the wife of 1 .season well. Now place the beef on the straw, covering the surface as far as make peaceable stock, but that poor but in the East, where smaller numbers that of the steers. That an animal old Charley Gatwell, the ferryman for the branches extend. After this there platter on which it will be served, ones are trainers ol breaehy stoek, and are reared and food is more expensive, possessing the comparatively simple Col. G. Arnett in the days of lang is-no more trouble with weeds or grass. garnish nicely with parsley, pour the an open menace to growing ccops. those less bulky are most highly esteemed. digestive apparatus of the pig is able, syne. Old Jane is yet hale and vigorous, There may be a lew scattered onerbut ,sauce in a bowl and serve as desired. almost equally with the ox, possessing Thooe Avho best know the and tips the beam at about 20 0 they are easily destroyed. Every A bit of natural history: Elves of complex and extended digestive machinery, best Essex think highly of them and fruit grower knows that two.or three bees placed in an orchard will increase .STRAWBERRY JELLY.Mash freshly pounds. He youngest child is now to use the cob as f^ed, would if such specimens as those shown at weeks before the time of gathering the the crop of apples, as the pollen rubbed the mother of children herself. Old gathered strawberries in an earthen seem to indicate that it exerts something New Orleans by Mr Featherston, of mam crop of fruit, fine specimens* are off their bodies on the tree fertalizes Jane was a very valuable negro, when pan with a wooden spoon, squeeze the more than a mere mechanical Canada, are considerably disseminated, constantly blown off by strong winds. thousands of blossoms which mio-ht negroes were negroes, having, during I influence in nutrition. juice through a flannel bag, for every a big boom for that breed in the When the ground lis mulched the majority otherwise be barren. her bondage, presented her owner with quart of juice allow a pou nd and a near future is by no means' an impossibility. Wire Worm, of such specimens are notbruised twin children on fourteen occasions. It is said to cost less ton isadse artichokes half of white sugar, an ounce of isinglass Th idea of goingback to the or injured tor sale. This sav ing alone Western Rural. than any other cropff. there be dissolved in a little water, and According to the statistics of Mr. rearing of white hogs of any breed does 1 consider pays me for the trouble of This pest is a very provoking one, ing no danger from inseots-amd drouth. the juice of four lemons. Put this into Spofford, librarian of congress, there not seem to win friends very rapidly, mulching the orchard. There is only and excites many inquiries. We have Hogs thrive as well on them, as upon ffi- the whitest of porcelain pa ns and are still on the xensio roll somethree one serious drawback to the applicaon and there seems to be no special reasons two or three inquiries now inregaid to corn, and stock hogs better.. Tr a few place over a gentle fire. Skim thoroughly, of mulch, and that is- the- danger thousand survivors of the war of 1812. why it should.Our Country it. It preys upon almost every crop and find out if this is tv:jt. I will not boil a few minutes, and strain "re- of hay or straw getting on. fire when Home. These veterans must be nearly centenarians, that is grown. They do not trouble cost much, and may be,- qjiite an adsvantage peatedly through a jelly bag until it is rendered dry by continual warm and the survival of so many to you. beans, peas and buckwheat, but we do perfectly clear. When nearly cold put weather. not now think ox any other crop that of them gives another proof of thesanative June Management of Chicks. into the moulds. If it is to be used The proverbial benefactor of the hauman they sometimes do not injure. They and conservative results of being Ateut Grafts,, immediately some whole strawberries I think the cause of June chicks dying race makes two bladies of grass resemble a worm and resemble wire, registered on the pension list. may be put in before the jelly hardens. in greater nnmbers than those hatched Peter He.nder.son* inilluatrating how grow where one gre-v*t before, but the hence their name is very appropriate. little the graft is. influeBieed by the earlier is indigestion, and two much Japanese do better tbatufchat. Everybody A Pittsburg Bible peddler has been Remedies, so called, are TO a large degree stock, says that if. w.e- take a.graft"from heat. Indigestion is usually caused by who cuts dowaia:.tjree'in Japan is keeping some statistics, and says: "If Errors of Modern Life. unsatisfactory. Fall plowing, is the sourest required by law to, pliwat two. Out improper food and the improper administration crab apple, and insert in it the man of the house is to be believed in the direction of a remedy, and so is 'One of the most common and injurious a branch of the sweetest apple tree we foresty reformers couldl do no beitei of the right kind of food. in all cases, this country is in a bad frequent harrowing. This gives the can find, the- shoot whieh grows errors of modern life is forcing than that try they ever so hard. Sometimes exposure to the hot rays birds in the fall and spring a chance at way. Out of 1,000 men I have ap from the grab draft will ever remain a upon the little ones the fashions, follies of sun debilitates the chick, consequently them. In England they practice burying proached, only 23 0 signified that they A member of the.. Waucsaw, 111.^Hor- crab, in no way affected by the sweet and extravagances that disgrace the powers of digestion are potatoes early, and marking the owned a Bible, 42 0 said they didn't ticultural Society. Mr. Stewart, says he apple stock on -which it is growing. their elders. We say forcing upon weakened. For these reasons I should place. The grubs collect on them to want any, 15 0 said they didn't have has had an annual' oijop of apptes for The result will toe the same if the operation them, for children of themselves care never feed chicks whole grain of any feed, and can thus be captured and any use for one, 125 ordered me away fifteen successive years, a pjjeasino is reversed, with the sweet apple for none of these things. Their happiness destroyed. Both gas lime and salt are kind until they are three or four weeks fact due in some -measure, he thinks, to without hearing what I had to offer, grafted on. the aour, the individuality used to advantage in Europe, being, is secured by good wholesome old. Until they are that age feed them his management* cultivates so as and 25 of these made some little remark will not be- changed. Or you may placed with the seed at time of planting. bread ma de of Graham flour, with a food, comfortable clothing suited to to ma ke the tses grow rapidly as possible about setting the dog on me, or take a young seedling apple tree, graft Some advise the sowing of buckwheat little corn meal added, soaking the the weather, in which they may romp until of hearing age, after which kicking me into the middle of the another into- it, and then another into the second year after the plowing bread in milk or water. For the first without fear of injury, plenty of sleep he cultivates, little- but keen* the sod the last growth, and so on with many street, or some other little pleasantry under the sod, should the wire few days feed mostly on boiled eggs and abundance of free exercise in open down by muiehingj. successive grafts, rubbing off all the so familiar to a book agent's ear worms be very abundant. The first chopped fine. Almost any of the air. Bu modern fashion gives them shoots that start below, the last graft Seventeen of these tried it on, of which year, one experienced farmer and gardener A New Yerk,or.chardist reports to aa scraps left from the table will be good rich, high-seasoned food, which spoils Mull hold its identity unchanged. Or, about a dozen got left. The other 7 5 says, they seem to prefer the decaying exchange thatjhe- wrapped the trunk ofe for them. Never allow them to run their digestion, dresses them in closefitting, you may set a hundred kinds, of roses either signified their willingness to look grass roots, and buckwheat his apple*trees, with tarred buildine out in the dew or rains. Supply them costly garments, which must be into a bush which has a hundred at the book or their readiness tobuy. seems distasteful or poisonous to paper 32 inches, wide, lapsing severaT with fresh water frequently, and if the branches, of all different coWs, forms ^protected by the sacrifice of joyous them. The same is biat little les3 true, 'How many Bibles did I sell out of the inches, and found it a pwfect protection da ys are very warm keep them in the and odors. Each will hold its own, ixreedom and invigorating exercise, the same writer says, of beans and 1,000?' Oh, about 700, I think." against bt ers. The- tarred p&pH shade as much as possible. After they character for color, form, and fragrance, and even deprives them of sleep peas. rested on the ground, and anthracite are three or four weeks old they can be it crimson, white, pink, or "by late, expensive and hurtful Despite the heroic efforts of the German ashes were-piled around the base i the be fed grains, but it must be cracked. yellow, double or single, or of tea ox Transplant Evergreens in. May. "childrens parties." In one of our students, England still retains tree and against the e%e of the paper. other odor. Cracked corn and wheat will both be Farm and Fireside. *cities, a fashion prevailed a few winters her reputation as the greatest beerdrinking good, but never feed whole until the Numbers of trees with'good} roots May is the best of all months i a ago, of "dolls' weddings," to How to Overcome t*^ Destructive country of the world. Some chicks are two or three months old. and well-planted cfce after removal which to transplant evergreens. Plant Moths. which large numbers of children were recently compiled statistics show that, If this advice is carefully followed not simply from a weakened constitution as soon as the terminal buds at the xinvited with their dolls, and the usual This is one of the greatest vexations while England's 27,000 breweries produce many June chicks need be lost.Rural brought about by poor living. I has ends oi the branches begin to push* IK.- bridal forms and ceremonies preservedan whichcareful housekeepers have-to contend 990,000,000 gallons of beer in a Home. always been understood i*this.country Take a large baft of dirt with each tree so completely did the with, and their- depredations are year, the Germans, with 2,000 fewer that a trans-planted tro is safer if possible, and sow some old sacking not to be remedied' after thsy have follies of fashion pervade these mimic breweries, make 900,00,000 gallons. tor being pruned, but tho,pruninff generally around the roots, in order that they Petroleum Paint. once made inroads, Houses, heated by .assemblies, that the young misses felt consisted of short^w jnjifthe naay be kept moist. furnaces are especially predisposed to Faimers are often advised to make it impossible to attend if their dolls brashes, stroag as we$ ag weak. Bu Never let the roots of the evergreen have moths, ftut every housekeeper a cheap paint by mixing various pigvments The populati on of Melbourne increased 'had to wear the same dresses that had it is now found that the tree should become as dry as those of fruit trees. must he on the watch for them* for with petroleum for pai nt for 18,281 last year, and is now "been used at two previous parties duljfc not be shortendd ir^but merely thinned Wh en the sap dries and forms gum, from the tinje- that the windows begin 322,690. ing the winter! I is indeed full time -out-buiidings out. Ihe wea^eu-branchesshould the evergreens will not grow. to be left open. th trouble heiaa.