New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892
February 5, 1890 · Page 6 of 8
OCR Text
iriMjfH %n«- FARM KW HOUSEHOLD. I especially liable if given too concentrated by adding a teaspoonful of glg&Srine E a he Trai to S a food. 7 ,V^V« to a gill of glue. I can also "be used 011*43! Regular Hours for Feeding. for fastening labels on tin. he following to is to of a Geran Th advantage of good feeding depends Information for the Agriculturist and the Buckets and all wooden pails not in much on regularity. If supplies railroad a an lives in use, as well as washtubs, should be Housekeeper, Brief and Timely. are furnished at irregular hours, not turned bottom side up, to prevent is city: he a in on which he as only are animals kept uneasy, but leaking. a in eharicedt be after dark, Every Farm Should Have its Grapes—Early their digestion is injured and they cannot prevent baby's flannels from a as a ad neglected to fill it fc Potatoes are Much to be De3ired—Plants thrive. Her is the great advantage shrinking, wash them in cold soapsuds. oil he a in he rear end of he for Honey—A Cheap and Pretty Hamper. of herbivorous animals over those prevent them from growing hard in coach he concluded at if he of carnivorous habit. Flesh-eaters with, frequent washings, after the flannels a in a to be a Early-bearing Grapes. are entirely clean, rinse in water gorge themselves when they capture Grape vines of two, three or more he of oil be a in which there is a little soap. their prey, and then suffer from years old are often bought with the S a a he a until their next capture. This keeps Bore a hole through the top of *a idea that they will come earlier into a out a places broom-handle, tie a string in it, hang them always thin in flesh, as they have hearing tnan those younger and of the broom up when not in use, and it inside he coach in he to be to hunt well. pioderate size. There are so many will last twice as long as when allowed he a train as side /7' branches, each with several buds capable Poultry Pickings. to rest upon the floor. After sweeping tracked allow a fast a in a of producing a shoot forth coming dip your broom in hot soapsuds, shake If you cannot procure meat for your a in he switch a fellow year, that the planter supposes well and hang up to dry. fowis, buy them some cotton-seed meal. a an noticed at there were no himself to have a sure thing on grapes If fed daily, one pint to a mess of soft W we wish to extract juices from if he can make the vine live. Bu lights in he rear end of he a anything we put it in cold water, and food for 200 hens is sufficient Milk is with a top disproportioned in size to in a he said "Wher are let it gradually reach the boiling point also an excellent substitute for meat, the root, as such a vine is sure to be. "Oh I a so when we wish the viands to retain the result is always most unsatisfactory. and, in fact, is considered preferable their juices, and use the water only as as I we needs Each bud will start, it is true by some pultry keepers. N matter a medium for cooking them, tn opposite if we a a in in a but the sap divided among so many how well balanced their ration may course must be pursued. S a shoots gives each only a feeble growth. be, change it often. A variety of food Her are two things to remember If there are blossom germs Hidden in gives zest to the appetite and stimulates when cooking either veal or pork: the budi,, they will blast either before There was a man in our town and he was digestion. they should be cooked so thoroughly wondrous wise. He jumped into a bramble or after blossoming, and produce no that the lean part will be white and bash and scratched out both his eyeB. And A poultry yard can properly be the fruit In fact, and old, overgrown when he saw his eyeB were out, with all his firm, and they should never be boiled dumping ground for a great deal of vine will not so soon into bearing, might and main, he* bought a bottle ot Salvation unless first well salted. W it pork vegetable rubbish, to give the occupants thus treated, as will the smallest yearling Oil and rubbed them in again. there should be served some "kind of exercise in scratching sind to vine from which only one shoot is The freight rates on our trunk lines have farinaceous yegetable, like rice, potatoes convert the rubbish into manure or allowed to push the first year, and been advanced, bnt this will have no effect or hominy. mulch. A ton of weeds, straw, leaves, which is cut back to one or at most on the price of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, which salt or bog hay, sea-weed or cornstalks Lemon juice squeezed upon your is sold at the old price of 25 cents a bottle. two buds the second season. Thus will soon be scratched fine in a populous spots of iron rust, with salt plentifully concentrated, the sap makes a strong THE HEAVY END OF JL HATCH. poultry-yard. he weather assists, sprinkled 'over it, will probably re cane, capable of supporting two or At a meeting of the colliers owners of Great of course. all traces of the unsightly spots Britan it was decided that in view of the combinations three clusters of grapes, and the year "Mary," said Parmer Flint, at the breakfast-table, as he asked for a I N corn that is quite immature is on your white dress. Bu if would of the men to coerce employers It after becoming the trunk, from which Cup of I've made a discovery." wholesome and excellent for fattening cover the nails in your closet with is necessary that tOemine owners also shonld large numbers of shoots, each with form a federation to protect their own interests. "Well Cyrus, you're about the last one suspect of such a in poultry. he notion that it produces little muslin bags, or pieces of glove its burden of clusters, a be borne. bowel disease or cholera is only a notion kid (old glove-fingers are as good as A vine thus treated is much less liable r, I at the heavy end of a match is its light end." responded moldy, green corn is no doubt anything), you will probably never to disease than one neglected in pruning. Cyrus, with a grin that would have adorned a skull. unwholesome we were speaking of again experience this difficulty. Do your clothes last as they used to? If Trying to grow too many bunches Mary looked disgusted, but with an air of triumph quickly retorted not, you must be using a soap or washing sound, new corn. prevent oilcloth, patent leather is a frequent cause of mildew, and co y» top, Cyrus. I was made by Dr. E Pierce, and is called powder that rots them. Try the good oldfashioned Th housewife who makes a practice and similar materials from sticking ^Golden Medical Discovery.' I drives away blotches and pimples, purifies he even if this is not the case, the Dobbins' Electric Soap, perfectly of giving fowls a mixed me&s of together when rolled, purchase a few pure to-day as 1865. blood, tones up the system, and makes one feel brand-new. Why it cured bunches are small, and weight of fruit warm mash and vegetables with scraps sheets of paraffine-impregnated or Cousin Ben had consumption, and was almost reduced to a skeleton. less than it would be with closer pruning m» of meat and crumbs of bread will otherwise prepared paper, and roll the Before his wife began to use it, she was a pale, sickly thing, but look at &*?* and fewer bunches. A daring and mysterious abduction of a quickly discover that it is superior to material. This will prevent sticking. rosy-cheeked and healthy, and weighs one hundred and sixty-five pounds. a child took place from the St. Louis Children's an exclusive diet of grain for poultry. Cyrus, is a discovery that's worth mentioning." It will also prevent the fading of the Free hospital. The child abducted was Roy Points on Early Potatoes. colors or gloss by keeping out air and Th farmers wife was right, for the Golden Medical Discovery»i in fact Cheap Hoofing. Bryant aged six years, and his father and Ground for early potatoes should be moisture the evaporation of the oil is the only medicine for purifying the blood and curing all manner of pimples. two women figured in the abduction. Several thicknesses of stout paper or a loose light soil that will dry out early likewise prevented to a great extent. blotches, eruptions, and other Skin and Scalp diseases, Scrofulous Sores a roof boards overlaid with burlap and in the spring, and if proteced from the bwellmgs, and kindred ailments, possessed of such positive curative proDerties Soft water should be used in cooking this coated with coal tar, makes a cold west winds by woods or a hill it is ALLEN'S IRON TONIC BITTERS GIVE tone and as to warrant its manufacturers in selling it, as they are doing, vegetables, and the only way city folfcs strength to the whole system. All genuine serviceable roofing for sheds and an advantage. Th ground should be gists, under a positive guarantee that it will either benefit or cure in bear the signature of J. P. Allen, Druggist, can soften water is to add a little salt other buildings where cheapness is desirable. case, or money paid for it will be refunded. It also cures Bronchial, Throa well matured with fine barn-yard ma St. Paul, Hum. to it. Si or eight potatoes will need Th tar will need renewing and Iiung diseases. E Consumption (whic is Lung-scrofula) vields to nure and plowed in the fall. Plo a vm a teaspoonful of salt to the water turnips its marvelous curative properties, if taken in time and given a fair trial. every year or two, but it does not not over five inches deep. A soon in and parsnips require about the J. B. Armstrong, cashier of the Summer A a ^, it S of Blood, Shortness of Breath, BronchStla. cost much. If filled with gravel it will the spring as the ground is dry same, that is, a teaspoonful of salt to a County bank at Conway Spring, Kan was Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an efficient remedy. be all the more durable. enough harrow well and plow again. quart of water. If any sku should probably fatally injured by a mob of farmers Don't be fooled into taking something else, said to be "just as good at This time seven or eight inches deep. and labors who had bills against asngar mill happen to rise to the surface when the Milk as Pood. the dealer may make a larger profit. There's nothing at all like the is You now have the manure where it with which Armstrong was connected. vegetables are boiling, it must be care» No merely young people, but those ery." I contains no alcohol to inebriate no syrup or sugar to derange will do the most good—also fine ground fully skimmed off. MB who work either with mind or tion: as peculiar in its curative effects as in its composition. It's a concentrated in the bottom. Harrow thoroughly Beware of imitatiosn—'-Tansill's Punch body, are better for living largely on a vegetable extract. Dos small and pleasant to the taste. Equally good or again, and you have a perfect seed '*'$ diet of milk. I is particularly favorable Misconceptions. a 1 a TY™'* E N S A E I A I A *3 bed, fine in the bottom as well as on This is a spray the Bird clung to, for those who make great mental Patrck Gibbons, the politician and witness top. If the ground is left until spring Making it blossom with pleasure, in the Cronin trial, who was shot by Police exertion. Gladstone in England uses it can be treated the same. Th advantage Ca ptain Schuettler in a saloon brawl in Chicago, J£re the high tree-top she sprung to, O ATAR a great doal of milk daily, and finds in fall in is, you can died from his wounds. Fit for her nest and her treasure. his health better sustained than by work earlier in the spring. W the Oh, what a hope beyond measure taking more of his nourishment in the ground is ready, open good deep furrows, Was the poor spray's which the flying feet ACOTJGH.COLD, OR SORE THROAT, should not shape of bread and meat. hung to— three feet, six inches apart. Fiv be neglected. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL, TROCHES So to be singled out, built in, and sung to I no matter of how long standing, is pes--. are a simple remedy, and give prompt relief. inches is deep enough for early potatoes. A Fuldmg Hamper. manently cured by DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY. 60 cents, by druggists. 25cts. a box This is the heart the Queen leant on. Th hamper, illustrated here, is particularly Thrilled in a minute erratic, calculated to Ere the true bosom she bent on, Plants for Honey. The grand jury of St. Louis has returned fill a long-felt want in Meet for love's regal dalmatic The idea of planting for honey has an indictment against William Gartenbach, r~$r bed-rooms, whose size Oh, what a fancy ecstatic charging him with accepting a bribe while a been gaining ground in this country, Was the poor heart's ere the wanderer *8 ^im^te^- It made member of the house of delegates. and quite a number of bee-keepers went on— A of dark walnut or stained Love to be saved for it, proffered to, spent now sow aisike clover, buckwheat, 9 wooden stacks and on! sweet clover, and Chapman honey lined with prerty creton. —Robert Browning. plant for their bees to feed on. Eve Thi lining can be the government has taken up the fastened into the basket "Do I Look Like Lady!" question, and sent out a great many or hamper by means of When btfby was sick, we gave her Castoria, About thirty years ago a young girl pounds of seeds of honey plants, and buttons, as to be easily in a western city was iv charge of When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. the inference is that the* bee-keepers removed, when soiled. a Sunday school class of rough boys, When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria, will plant for honey in the future more he framework of the usually known as "river rats," who than thev have in the past. Bu planting basket can be made attractive When she had children,she gave themCastoria. had never been in any school house by decorating for honey alone will not pay, in before. Whe she entered the room with brass or nickel up my estimation, but when clover or she found lounging on the desks holsterer's tacks. W plants sown can be used for hay or empty the gathering and benches, wearing their hats, some other purpose, there is indirectly string of the lining can puffing vile cigars, a defiant leer on a double profit obtained. Th average be draw and the framework every face. The greeted her with a cotony of bees forage over thousands Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sculley were ai rested folded, as shown loud laugh, and one of them ex at Oneida, N. Y. charged with the murder of of acres of land in search of their in our second illustration. claimed: William Rhinhart, the sixty-nine-year-old father sweets, and the bee keeper could not PISO'S I makes a very of Mrs. Sculley. REMEDY FOR CATABRii.—Best. Easiest to use. calculate on more than ten pounds of "Well, sis, you goin' to teach us? pretty and convenient Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For honey per acre from honey-producing She stood silent until the laugh Cold in the Head it has no equal. on S Cured receptacle and can always be kept plants. This would not pay any one was over, and then said, quietly: To THE EDITOR —Please inform your read handy. "Do I look like a lady?" for the trouble, unless only such plants ers that I have a positive remedy for the •\*»':JA\." 'ly^i^l^F^ rX'f l^i' were grown that could be utilized for A astonished stare was the only reply above named disease. By its timely use fM which they gave. thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently other purposes. It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the cured. I shall be glad to send two "Because," she continued gently, nostrils. Price, 60c. Sold by drugKists or senttoymall. bottles of my remedy FREE to any of your Pea Vine or Large Clover. "gentlemen, when a iady enters the Address, E. T. HAZELTINK, Warren, Pa. readers who have consumption if they will FOL' a crop to pasture, to rot on he room, take off their hats and throw send me express and post-office address. Respectfully, land or to plow under for manure, the away their cigars." T. A SLOCUM, M. C, 181 Pearl I prescribe MX& folly endorse street, New York. Big AS the only pea-vine clover is superior to the Th lowest American secretly be specific forthe certaincure lieves himself to be a gentleman, and medium or small variety. But it makes THE of this disease. O.H.INGKAHAM.M D., in a moment every hat was off and the a very coarse hay which can hardly After 22 Years, Amsterdam, J£. Y. lads were ranged in orderly attention. be cured without heating or getting We bare sold Big loi are those put up by So remarkable was the success of ca many years, and it has wet before it is drawn in. us kept, eiven the best of eatitfaction. cured a man of chronic this girl in managing and influencing D.M.FERRY&CO.' cattle and sheep reject the butts much a in from sonstroke, men of the roughest sort that she made D.R.DYCHB*CO as tney do the coarse butts of corn Who are thelargest Seedsmen in the wodd,^ Cbicafo. III which took the it tfee work of her life, says the Youth's stalks. Considering the extra trouble ftl.OO. Sold by Druggist* D. M. FERRY & Co's form of chronic Companion. Sh established clean S££DDescriptive Illustrated, AHNUAt and Priced there is in curing the large variety, O I HEADACHE, and respectible boarding-houses for All Styles WEtJL DKHX8, the smaller is preferable for hay. In sailors and boatmen, and reading a 1 ^~KM Hydraulic and Jetting-, and fact, it will probably give more feed which was completely cured as follows: coffee-rooms for laborers, and. founded for 1890 will be mailed FREE to all ap- 1 Supplies and Wind Mills in»first and second crop than the large phcaots, and to last season's customers. an Order of Honor, the members of Paragon, Ind., July 80,1888. manufactured by F. C. It is better than erer. Every penor kind. Owin to its stronger growth which strove to live sober christia I suffered with pains in my headfromsun'' Mfg. Co., Cbica*o,roi. using Garden, FUwtr *r Field the pea vino is less liable to winterkill lives themselves and to help their fellows Farm Motes. stroke 22 years. T&ey were cured by St Jacobs Seeds shouldsend for it. Address Address D.M.PERRY A CO. than the common variety of clover. to do (the same. Oil and have remained so four years. 4 Of all grains oats stand first as the particulars DETROIT, MICH. best for purposes of feeding. A SAMUEL SHIPLOK.^4 and Cata'loer, Making Pork Too Pat. A Sharp Lunatic. Calves should have water, and young IJUR E FITS! General Th evil of over-fattening pork is Here is an amusing story, showing pigs should also be well supplied. AT DMJGGIST3 AND DEALERS. Ag*ts less common than it used to be. the aptness with which a lunatic will THE CHARLES A. V06ELER CO.. Baltimore. MH Milk is a substitute for water. for Dak. reasons have combined to make lean turn an argument. A inspect or visitin and Minn., One anode of disposing of surplus GRATUITOUS ADVICE. meat more popular. Th doctors ls«jrcur»Ido»otB»e«n merely to atop the asylum at P. was requested by O E S &ORDWAY S PAUUMlNN. foWheal atus and sayetna then I hir doenotmesreturn them a merely acaliL.stop to Ym fbasBi poultry is to cap "it. This country taught that it was more healthful a/ud This species offadvice Is not always acceptable, radiealeui^^Ibanina^thediseaMofFn'SL BPH the medical superintendent to be very produces us quantities of nouitry, KP8Y or FALLLSG 8IOKRE88 a life-looc rta». bat In many Instances much benefit nutritious than the fat, and about the careful to address a certain patient as BALDNESS positively prevented and warrant myremedytoour* theworstoases, and «re should be able to export a -would be derived wore it acted upon. N othersh&re failedisnoreason for not now same time the use of other oils deeneaaed section of tbe country isexempt from disease. cured by using NOBALD, the newly *4Your Imperial Majesty," the poor portion. Sendatonce for a treatiseand the price ef lard so that excessive to know the beat means of combatting this discovered remedy. $1. per bottle. Sent 6fiMinftahnto»£6dy7 GfroTSSreeTand an immaginin himself to be Julius ostO»assu...y! common enemy, with the least Injury to onr Th oest of a farm is not the heaviest fat pork was neither profitable na !7 lL 0 ^P.f*? l* ^H!5^» A ^w»B«M»T,«UC^183Peiurl8t.M Csesar and becoming furious if he did pocket* and tastes, it certainly a great advantage. dress, Th. W. Zeil, Druggist. 100E. MarketSt expense to the beginner. he needed. Theehange in ways of feedin We muet expect Torpid iJver.ConSMted Jndunapolis, IndVAgentswanted. -»k&£vt $*• dot areceive what he considered proper outlay for horses, cattle, machinery, Spleen, Vitiated Bile and Inactive has also had something to dn» witHi respect Th inspector was careful to owels, and allyrudent persons wQI supply utensils and extra labor the first year making pork aaore wholesome. Corn NORTHERN BROWY themselves with'Tutt's Pills, which stimalate S 1 1 1 1 Missonra XJTD KJJJSAS follow instructions, and all went well. mm FABKEB will be sent on trial four months to is often snore than the cost of the the U*er, relieve the engorged Spleen, is-no longer the exclusive food ««ren I W *?F adores* In United States, Canadas or On a subsequent visit he again addressthe SEEDS/PLAHTSK, farm. determine a healthy flow of BOe, thus regulating ^sWlV Mexico, for ten cents in stiver or stamps. for fattening. li'he best practice a the bowels and causing all unhealthy Address "M- & a- FAXMXK." BOX B. KansasCity. Ho. patient the same title. Look o«e the ".vegetable seeds that is to feed the cations that will make secretion* kopas*off in a natural manner. —«t most productive productive and and yield yield largest largest crops.eer "Wha do you mean?" was the reply "An ounce of preventive is worth. pound are stored away, ffihey should be kept CpCC Beautiful —""nlcatalogue catalogu with W0 hogs gi-ow and fceep thrifty from *h $75.00to$25000Lr„S!S£ with N O fun •'doa talk nonsense. I' Pluto.-71 of cure." advised and use I mailed to any address noon to any address upon appiJeasJcsa, 4ry, and as mice may destroy time it is born wstil it is killed. Tine/re 8 packets choice flower seeds, 10'eentsT "Oh!'** said the inspector. I begyour Pansits, Tutf Liver Pills, Balsams,Aston,SweetPeas,Phloxes,PI he seeds «fcould be 'protected by suspending Persons preferred who can furnish a horse and imay.be exceptions to this in animals C^% A ^S a. specialty. pardon, but I thought were give their whole time to the business Spore moment* the .bags or tbjr inclosiag them for breeders but all others should may be profitably employed also A. few narUtasaJI iT.rAfnvmrn* Julius Caesar last year." "Well, In. a tin box vaaiic'e8intownsandcities.B.F JOHNSOtfACO Price, 25c. Office,39 & 41 Park Place. ILY. 3)e fat enough fkar ,use from the tiaaae replied (the lunatic: "s I was, but 1009 Main St., Richmond, Va. I ^W Whitemasfe should be used in .order «they are the right size for roasting. that was by another SEEDS to render the stables (Cheerful. A the liberal use of milk, oatmeal S S fA^^Tv\^. stable is more comfortable than &<dark and ,peac growth is promoted, along UOHNASALZER ^|Se«*ea Dinners Costing a Cent. one, and as tfee lime partially serves IFOR MA. S S &.HQ W S A A W M^GtTfVfcVvX with at a£l times encnagh fat to make The maaag dinners for poor children 5&J to disinfect the building uts appieation delicious pork, far ihatfcer than that slflbis itty a trifle re economically in Edinburgh should be frequent madje by starving he animal while than «is where. In Edinourg \yoaupg, and over-feeding with corn as Busies may be maSe*' for^goveratftg it is found possible to supply for a. E a W a S E«he,y he civil a including the dairy work, but (there can be AO St by her us fire. become older. v#sf half penny & wholesome meal of vege rule made for feeding the in re of a in participa S he as he flagship he sotradromv. table broth and bread. Scotch chifdren gard to quantity of food. E a cow he decision to sell he on in a of he at a a a at further up he river andf* thrive on the various savory thick will a her special demands, and trader he a on prohibiting he tles, a he a I Barley for Hog Fattening. received he surrender of a soups of many ingredients for which they be complied with. it a on a S Philip, repair at will re he low price of Barley this yFar* a Natchez A Fisher* the cuisine of the country is celebrated, Mulch around the jroung trees as he fight in Mobil a a he Cornpecially that which is ligafc weight an a fixed percentage he ex led he first line of vessels in th© and unfortunately soup of a soon as the .ground is frozen. Thi will a of Fisher AII off color, has induced many farmers pens in ones will second a successful a a a ho* kind, clear or thick, is rarely prepared prevent the ground from thawing too an feed it to their hogs. It makes a in the home of the English poor. Solid I a he as conspicu he earlier a ad a strike from a a register a histori early in the spring, thus delaying the Arm, sweet pork with more lean it meat, bread and potatoes form the us for close it he a me smaller craft. a little flow of sap, thereby lessening the liability »tte|an when corn is fed. I England staple diet. I too many cases in N he he fate of a a A he at Mississippi river fiarht a a in he it from which she of injury from late frosts. factlfuse barley is a staple pig feed. I England bones are only regarded as relic of he war a he as a by he Confederate to ok her a he an Hints to .Housekeepers better if mixed with peas and the useful to the rag and bone man in he still re a a ad a a a escaped her career under a a as hei* NEap ground together. he husks of Leather, paper or wood may be firmfastened Scotland such waste is, rare ~evea a a a remain.-~XefW. it injury, a a a a in S he a a line record I barley help to prevent clogging of to metal by a cement made among the poorest 1 l% he barbott from stomach, to which pigg are