f DAIRY AND POULTRY. % INTERESTING chapters for OUR RURAL READERS. Wow SnrrrHfal I'annera Operate Thl® Department of the Farm —A Few Hint* m to the fere of Live Stork •«4 FouHrjr. 'fa; ■» - — . . . . , URKEYS will soon be in order again, and raisers of these birds should be devoting all of the-ir attention to tha work of making them large, fat, plump and juicy in in time for Thanks giving. It should , be retnemoereu, says * writer In the American Cul tivator, that the best turkeys al f] ways bring the greatest profit to the owners, and that In times of a glut s In the market they are usually the ones that work off. while the Inferior birds are left behind. Try to raise fancy turkeys for Thanksgiving, and you will Set your reward. There will be plenty of poor stock from ail parts of the ooun |R' try, and the chances are they will sell cheap. The bronze turkeys usually are me best for raising, as they cnu be made to produce very tender, sweet meat, while their carcasses when properly fattened are very heavy. In fact, they surpass all other breeds, both in weight and hardiness. The young turkeys before this time should lie good-sized birds, and those that have gathered up a liv ing on the farm and In the fields and woods during the summer are In excel lent condition for fattening for the hol idays. As a rule, turkeys can find their living in the woods and fields better ■than chickens, but they should not be kept without grain feed too long. If they have been accustomed to the fat, '0 Juicy worms of summer they are very ready to make a change of diet. But even in the summer time they should be fed night and morning with some IS good food, such as corn or wheat. The fattening period for market should cover several weeks. It is bet ter to give them all they will eat for four weeks than to force them to eat more than they want for two weeks. Give them good food only, for every thing that they eat now goes to make meat, and If such things as onions, bit ter weeds and decayed fruits and vege tables are given to them their meat will have a bad odor and flavor. The food during the fattening period really has much to do in giving the turkeys fine, white, well-flavored meat. Too much exercise Is also bad for them, and they should be shut up most of the time. Avoid anything that will bruise the birds. It they are inclined to be quarrelsome they should be separated. Corn is the great fattening food, and if ' one is so situated that chestnuts are easily obtained, it is well to feed them on these too. They certainly flavor the meat a little and the turkeys are very .fond of them. Plenty of pure water ; and milk help the turkeys at this time. Sweet, rich milk is good for them, and they are very fond of It. Finally the marketing should be done with the same care and Intelligence that the fattening has been performed with. In many cases it pays better to keep the turkeys until after Thanks t.-’ giving, as the market Is good then, and ,. there are fewer birds for sale. Some £ . years the glut around Thanksgiving time is so great that very poor prices an realisod. Rapid Growth Desirable. It is the chick that grows rapidly ,. from the etart which pays. Growth is — Increase of weight, whether the bird Is fat or not, and as the large bird can be made fat. the stse Is an advantage. ' The breed influences rapid growth. It |f la well known that a calf of the Short ; horn breed not only grows more rapid ' ly but aleo largely exceeds In weight a calf that la a scrub, in the same period j:’; of existence. This increase applies to ■' poultry also. A chick of some largo breed will grow rapidly from the start. : and In gaining else it will secure weight also. It Is what the scales show Hr that gives the value. Tho large chick « : may eat mdre food than one that is smaller, but there te a saving of time, f if a chick can be made to reach two <* pounda when three months old, while another attains but a pound and a ' half, it ta equal to a gain of twenty. : flve per cent, equivalent to the weight r* of twenty-flvo more chicks in a hun dred. In hatching early broilers this winter the matter of selecting the large >«. breeds should not be overlooked.—Ex. / Poultry end Aaparagas Beetle. It hns been found that the best rem fi edy for the ravages of the asparagus V beetle is a hen with a brood of young ( chicks. A diligent search Is made for 5''‘. the beetles by them, and Instances are . known in wbich a hen and chicks / saved the bed from destruction. No damage can be done by the hen. and If it is an experiment worthy of a trial. Perhaps it may not be known that a fefv block of turkeys will keep down the tobacco norths In a tobacco field. If a flock is turned in on tho field every t' plant will bo carefully searched, and , not a worm will escape their keen eye. As the turkeys will not harm the to baeco, and can find a full supply of ; ; worms. It is not only an economical mode of raising thorn, but puts them to | | good aervfoe at the same time.—Ex. ——————— '' Pecking the Dairy Ratten > ■ ■ . i- f Packing butter In the summer time v . Is a common plan among most farmers with n few cows. Good butter can be V' packed and kept ta a very cold room until prices begin to advance In the ft)! and winter. Poor butter packed * at this season of tho year will not im PH . •- . .... ,j.i ■ - - - ... ■ . - ■ . prove any by packing. The Boft but ter and the rancid butter will quickly deteriorate in quality and become un fit for use. Those who can not make good butter would do well not to pack U. In order to make butter lor packing the cream* should not be kept more than a day or two. The mistake la made on many farms of churning only once or twice a week, and the cream Is frequently five days old before churned. The finest butter can not be made from cream kept that length of | time. But skillful butter makers have I produced very good butter with cream three days old, and probably the line should be drawn at this. Each day that new cream is put Into the stone pot the whole mass should be stirred evenly, ar.d this will prevent it from settling In layers. First dissolve a piece of saltpetre In water, and mix this with the first cream put into the pot. Then by stir ring up the whole mass each time ad ditional cream is put in the saltpetre goes Into every part of the cream, and helps to preserve it. The stone pot for the cream naturally should be kept in a very cool place, In the Ice box if one keeps ice, or In a cold cellar. The night before churning take it out and stand It in an ordinarily warm room. In the morning get the temperature of the cream down to 58 or 60 degrees. If handled in this way the butter ought to come In summer in five or ten min utes. When the butter is in small granules, draw off the buttermilk. Wash the butter In the churn until the cold water runs oft clear. Work the salt carefully Into the butter, and let It stand until next day. Early In the forenoon of the follow ing day re-work the butter with the hands until the salt Is thoroughly dis solved and every drop of the butter milk Is out of It. A little buttermilk left in the butter will be sufficient to taint the whole pot full, and eventu ally snoli It. A stone crock la the best thing to pack the butter In, ami each churning should be packed firmly Into the pot. Dissolve as much salt as possible in water, and Into this put one-half ounce of saltpetre to each gallon of brine. Boll this until everything Is dissolved. Strain It through a cloth, let It stand tor a few hours, then Bklm oft the scum on top, and pour off the liquid carefully, leaving the sediment at the bottom lp the pall. The brine will then be clear, and Is ready to pour over the butter in the crock. Each time a new quantity of butter Is to be packed, pour off the brine, and put the butter down hard, and then pour brine over again. In this way butter can be kept sweet and clean for a long time.—Ex. American Eggs.—It is strange a coun try like ours, containing ample terri tory and exporting 50-cent wheat, does not produce enough eggs for our home consumption. We should convert our material, wheat and corn, and buy and export the finished product Instead of furnishing other countries the raw raw material, wheat and corn, and buy back the finished product—eggs. Per haps there are enough hens in the United States to produce sufficient eggs for our home consumption. Why did we Import $2,500,000 worth of eggs some years, even under a 5 cents per dozen tariff?—Ex. Indian Cora for Forage.—By reason of its large yield, great feeding value and the many different climates and conditions under which it can be profitably produced, corn has been, and always will be, the favorite en silage crop, as it Is the great roughage crop of tho United States. While all the other forage plants can be made Into ensilage, there is more labor and less profit In the work. It Is an ex cellent feed not only during winter, but in summer, when a season of abundance is often followed by a drouth and the pastures are burned up. —Ex. Cheese Exports.—The cheese export In May was 5.498,077 pounds, valued at $407,106, and In June the quantity was 7,059,469 pounds, worth $547,602. In the corresponding months of 1894 the cheese export was 6,207,651 pounds, valued at $619,598 for May, and In June It was 15,632,647 pounds, valued at $1, 495,848. The cheese export for twelve months, ending June, 1895, was 58,646, 036 pounds, worth $5,332,654. In the corresponding period of 1894 the quan tities were 2,102.644 pounds, valued at $7,016,392. Saved In the Silo.—As to the superior value of silage over dry food, no one can reasonably have a doubt. Beyond the fact that the crop siloed contains its constituents as nature arranged them, and in that condition Is most wholesome, from an economic point of view, there Is no comparison. The more plants are exposed to the air, the greater Is their loss of organic matter, until. In time, they become valueless! All this loss is saved by using the silo —Southern Planter. A Novel Incubator.—Elias Stanton of Kirkland has discovered a novel in cubator in the shape of a manure heap. He heard the peep of the chickens sev eral times without finding the stolen nest. Mrs. Stanton was called to inves tigate and soon solved the mystery. The eggs had been laid In a place where the heat of the manure was sufficient to hfltch several fine motherless chicks. —Utica Herald. Grooming removes dust and secre tions, thereby soothing the animal and enabling the pores of the skin to per form their proper functions. Careful and regular grooming has an impor tant influence on the health of the horse, besides adding greatly to his ap pearance. A Held of rye wheat will be found quite an advantage in furnishing good pasturage to the ewes in the lambing [ season. . .. j FRESCO ENTERTAINMENTS, I They Do Not Co«t Much and Are At tractive Ileran»e Unique. A tree luncheon Is a festivity which has an Arcadian flavor to It, and which depends chiefly for its success upon the village carpenter. The cook is a secondary power. The first re quisite is a large, shapely tree, with branches spreading gracefully at quite a distance from the ground. Midway between the ground and that part of the trunk, where the branches begin to spread, a large platform should be built out, supported at the corners opposite the trees by strong beams. It should be surrounded by a rustic fence having a little wicket gate. From the ground to this gate stairs should lead and the stair-rail should be of the same rustic variety as the fence. This platform is capable of many transformations. A hammock swung In it makes it the cool est of lounging places. The children and their toy3 convert It into an ad mirable summer nursery. Books and a small writing table make it an out : u„or reading room. But It is as a spot | for a lunch party that it is most at ; tractive. Four small tables, arranged so as to allow free passage of the ser vant among them and each seating four, all decorated with outdoor flowers or ferns, make the prettiest possible group. When four times four girls are added, together with dainty viands and a white-capped maid, the effect Is com plete. The woman who lives on a farm where berries are plentiful, can give the most unique berry teas or luncheons. She must provide her guests with pro tecting aprons, heavy fingerless calf ekln gloves, sun bonnets and tin pails. With this complete berrying costume they make a tour of the berry patch, each one being assigned a row which he or she picks bare of all its ripe berries. Then on the piazza the fruit is picked over amid much merriment and finally is served in the big farm-house parlor, with its accompaniments of wafers or sandwiches and iced tea. The woman whose summer estate boasts of a big barn, or who can hire one from one of her native neighbors, need never be at a loss for a picturesque means of en tertainment. Where is the dancing girl whose heart will not bound at the mention of a barn ball? Even the non dancing youth is languidly excited by it. Of course, the barn must be cleared out for the purpose. If rushlights and tallow "dips” are the illuminants so much the better. The floor must be in perfect dancing condition. Great sheaves of wheat or bunches of corn stalks tied together should decorate the corners. The rafters must be hung with last year’s ears of corn, strings of red peppers and other rustic decora tions. If the native fiddlers can he se cured to furnish the dance music the triumph of this bucolic ball is assured. HE FOUND OUT. The Policeman Wai Kind Enough to Give Him a Practical Illustration. "If you don’t object, I’d like to ask you sunthin’,” said an old man with a cane and satchel, as he stopped a police man on Monroe avenue. “Ask your question," was the reply. “I live up in Macomb county, and I have a son Bill who comes here purty often. The last time he was here he come home with his coat ripped up the back and dead broke, and said a police man had given him the collar.” "Well?” “Wall, what did he git?” “He got the collar, probably. Just as he said.” “But what is the collar? That’s what I want to ask.’’ “Why, he was probably half tight and whooping along the street, and an offi cer took him by the collar—this way— and gave him a shake—that way—and rattled his heels together—Just so—and “Say, hold on!” shouted the old man, as he picked up his satchel and cane and worked himself down Into his coat. “What’s the matter?” “I ve found out all I want to know! If Bill got that kind of a collar and was locked up and fined $5 to boot, I’ll go home and raise his wages $4 a month and give him every Saturday for a holi day.”—Free Pres3. Gcncva'ii Great Fountain. The fountain that the municipality or Geneva has recently established at the entrance of the port of that city is , certainly the largest fountain that ex ists upon the Burface of the globe, since it Is no less than 300 feet in height. It may be seen from a great distance in ■ clear weather, detaching itself like a great white sail flapping through the effects of the wind. The city of Geneva possesses a most complete distribution of wat^r under pressure, the motive power for which is obtained from an ar tificial fall established upon the Rhone at the point of the lake. The water for domestic purposes and for the running of certain motors is raised to a height of 215 feet above the level of the lake. For the distribution of motive force it is raised to a height of 460 feet. The reservoir is an open-air one, and is sit uated upon the top of Bessingers, at a distance of throe miles from the turbine building. A very ingenious regulator. Invented by Mr. Turrettini, assures the uniformity of pressure in the piping. The lengh of the first pipe line is about forty miles, and that of the second about sixty. It is with this latter that the fountain conduit is connected. Tte latter is set in play only on Sundays. It is sometimes set in operation also on week days, in the evening. Instead of a single Jet of great height, several are then utilized that do not rise so high. Powerful electric light projec tors, placed in a structure near by, brightly illuminate them with their rays of varied colors, which transform them into a luminous fountain of tht most beautiful aspect GRAND OLD PARTY. LIVING TRUTHS OF THE RE PUBLICAN POLICY. Select loti a from Various 4 Authorities ' Which Serve to Prove the Wisdom of the People In Calling the Party Ba?k to Power, President Cleveland on tlio Main Issue. “The millions of our countrymen who have fought bravely and well for tariff reform should be exhorted to con tinue the struggle, boldly challenging to open warfare and constantly guard ing against treachery and half-hearl edness in their camp. “Tariff reform will not be settled un til it is honestly and fairly settled in the interest and to the benefit of a pa tient and long-suffering people." These bold, brave words were penned by Mr. Cleveland less than eleven months ago. They were thought worthy to be Incorporated in the campaign text book of the Democratic Congressional Committee last fall. What has come over the spirit of Cleveland and his Democracy that they have ceased to “exhort to continue the struggle” and are not “boldly challenging to open warfare?” It can mean nothing more nor less than that, their record of tariff reform and their promises of more of the same kind of reform having been repudiated by the voters, they now de sire to escape the issue of their own and their President’s making. In this re spect they display good political judg ment, and if they were permitted to make the issues which shall be fought out before the people all would be well with them. But the Republican' party and the J people will not permit them to escape from the issue that was so bravely marked by President Cleveland when he told Catchings that their party “should be exhorted to continue the [ struggle, boldly challenging to open warfare.” That the Republicans mean to accept that challenge and wage the great battle of next year on that lino was plainly manifested at the Cleve land convention. Republicans every where are hoisting the banner of the party, which is inscribed “Protection .0 American Industries and American Workingmen,” and in that sign they will conquer. When the President’s declaration of last August is recalled, and then the spectacle is witnessed of he and his party putting forth such tremendous efforts to make the money question the issue to the exclusion of all other ques tions, it must become apparent to think ing men that what they behold Is but a great Democratic conspiracy to aban don “tariff reform” and force a false Issue before the people. Their newspapers, even, appear to be parties to the conspiracy, for they are constantly declaring that the tariff question is settled and woe to the party that attempts to open up that question. They are forever sneering at “McKin leyism,” which they have made a syno nym for protection, in the hope of mak ing it odious before the people. But the more they sneer the stronger the prin ciple becomes with the Republican party and the greater becomes the prob ability that the man whose name has been coined into a synonym for pro tection to American labor and Ameri can industries will be chosen to lead the Republican army to victory next year. The Republican State Central Com mittees of Ohio, Kentucky and other states where elections are to be held this fall could, with great profit to the party, circulate the Catchings letter. The two paragraphs quoted above should be printed in bold-face type. Democrats would not relish having it thrust upon them, but that is only an additional reason why it should bo done.—J. L. K., in the Dayton Daily Journal. Our Tnmine Tariff Policy* The report of the first year’s exports and imports under the Wilson bill is at hand. It is interesting. During the fiscal year of 1894 we imported silk to the value of §16.234,182, and in 1805, the fiscal year ending June 30, to the value of $22.626.C56;that is to say, we paid about §3,400,000 more to foreign silk manufacturers and artisans for the year ending June 30, 1S93, than during the corresponding prior twelve months. We imported cotton gods to the value of $22.34G, 547 in 1S91; and to the value of §33,195,338 in 1S93; this representsj a loss to American industry of about 511,000,000. Our imports of woolen goods were worth §19,391,S50 for the fiscal year of 1894, and §36,542,396 for that of 1895. This represents more than §17,000,000 taken from American and paid to European capitalists and workmen. The list of increased im ports might be extended indefinitely. The shrinkage in American wages and profits must have been immense. The free traders told us that what we lost in wages under a low tariff we should gain in the reduction of prices. The treasvy report Joes not confirm this stateirt^l. It confutes it. A sure test of the prosperity of the Americans is their consmption of the almost neces sary foreign luxuries, tea and sugar. We Import all of our tea and most of our sugar. If the new tariff had brought prosperity it would haife brought in creased imports of tea and sugar. But the imports of sugar exceeded $126,000, 000 in 1894 and fell short of $77,000,000 in 1895. Our tea imporcs were worth $14,000,000 in 1894, and $13,000,000 in 1895. The conclusion is unavoidable; while we are importing, and paying gold for, silks, woolens, and cottons J that we ought to have woven for our- ! selves, we had to stint ourselves on ] sugar and tea. The free traders also told us that what we paid out for imported manu factures would be returned to us for grain, meat, and other products of agri culture. For, said they, the foreigner must eat, and the more American money he gets for his work in Euro pean factories the more American raised food he win be forced to buy. The secretary of the treasury’s report destroys its fiction. In the same year, from June, 1394, to June, 1895, in which we so wonderfully increased our im ports of manufactured goods, we most woefully decreased our exports of farm products. Europe took less of our cheese by about $2,000,000 in the year in i which it increased our purchases of its ! silks by more than $0,000,000. While | we added $11,000,000 to our bill for Eu ropean cotton cloths, Europe cut down i its bill for American lireadstuffs, ex clusive of wheat flour, from $59,407,041 in 1894 to $43,805,GG3 in 1S95, and its bill for wheat flour from $G9,268,829 to $51,651,923 in the same period. There was a shrinkage of about $4, 000,000 in our lard exports, of about $5,000,000 in our seed exports, of nearly $2,000,000 in our butter exports, and so on all along the agricultural line.— Chicago Inter Ocean. Protection the Isauo. Despite all Democratic efforts to be fog the issue, the political battle of 1896 will be in the cause of protection. Complicated questions of currency that cannot be settled by a campaign, but rightly belong to a conference of expert financiers, capable of separating the false from the true, cannot displace the great policy of protection to Amer ican industries. This assertion is purely dispassion ate and logical. Since 1892, the time of the present administration’s rise to power, disaster has involved the entire country, throttling enterprise and stagnating prosperous business ven tures on every hand. A healthy treasury has become an empty one and the national debt has been increased by millions of dollars. Not only this financial distress, but every day adds an appalling quota to a monstrous treasury deficiency. Govern ment receipts lag far behind govern ment expenditures, and revenues have decreased to an alarming extent. Common sense tells the people that the tariff policy of the dominant ad ministration is at the root of all these commercial and industrial woes. Un der protection everything flourished ex ceedingly; under moderate free trade everything has depreciated. — Daily Saratogian, Saratoga, N. Y. Situation of the Tin Plate Trade. The trend of affairs in Wales will probably afford a partial relief to the strained condition in the American tin plate trade, but the greatest relief that can be expected will hardly place the industry here on a proper footing. There is a great difference between the inducements needed to keep in the busi ness a manufacturer who has his trade built up, and his works running on tho most economical basis, and the margin of profit to be secured to a beginner who must build up his trade and spend money in experiments necessary to get the works down to economical and effi cient operation. For this purpose an Increase in the protective tariff is ab solutely necessary. A return to the Mc Kinley duty is not now needed. For the first introduction of the industry into the United States profits had to be assured to pay for costly experiments which have been made, and need not be made again, but a protective duty of 1% cents is really needed to put the in dustry on a fair plane, and it is hoped that proper steps will be taken to do justice to the tin plate industry as soon as the party favoring protective duties again comes into full power.—Tin and Terne. The Benefit of Free Wool. Goods are being brought in here, ac cording to trustworthy testimony, at prices which do not cover more than the cost of yarn out of which they are made. The grossest frauds in under valuation are being perpetrated upon the customs laws, and these goods fraudulently imported are placed in competition with domestic goods and with foreign goods honestly imported. The magnitude of this curse is little appreciated by the' average manufac turer and commission merchant, but it is probable.that the present light weight season will* furnish object les sons which will strike home and open the eyes of those who now see dimly. Already the cry is heard through the goods district that the foreign manu i^g*rer has obtained the goods mar ■Rn special grades of worsteds—it is Wabfcly admitted that the domestic manufacturer has lost the market on worsteds from $1.25 to $1.75.—Textile Manufacturers’ Journal, July 20, 1895. The Free-Traders For~et It. While our free-trade friends are pluming their feathers over what they choose to call an increase in wages, let them bear in mind that it is not an in crease of wages, but a restoration of wages; and there is one point in this connection that should not be over looked, and that is that, in most cases, the restoration has been only partial. In but few cases where the wages of mill hands have been raised are they as I high as they were in 1892. Don’t for | get this.—Gazette, Trenton, N. J., July | [ 16, 1895. I Wanted No Invidious Comparisons. Out' of the neiv members of congress iras. a few years ago. a county judge in ;he state from wliieh lie hails (says the Washington Starl. On one occasion in his court, a lawyer was pleading a case and was making a speech which stirred the jury to its profoundest depths In the course of his peroration, he said: “And, gentlemen of the jury, as I stand at this liar today, in behalf of a pris oner whose health is such that at any moment he may be called before a grea ter judge than the judge of this court, I-” The judge on the bench rapped sharply on the desk, and the lawyer stopped suddenly and looked at him questioningly. “The gentleman,” said the court with dignity, “will please coniine himself to the ease be fore the jury, and not permit himself to indulge in invidious comparisons.” In this Work-a-l)ajr World Brains and nervous systems often give way under the pro sure and anxieties of business. Paresis, wasting of the nervous tissues, a sudden and unforwarned collapse of the mental and physical faculties are daily occurrences, as the columns of the daily press show. Fortify the system when exhausted against, such untoward events with hostotter’s Stomach Bitters, that most helpful medicine of the weak, worn out and infirm. Use it in rheumatism, dyspepsia, constipation and malaria. Bo«»8 In a California Church. Four swarms of liees have taken 'pos session of tlie Methodist church in East San Jose, Cal., and it is estimated that there are at least three hundred pounds of honey deposited between the outer and inner walls of the church. It is proposed to hold a honey carnival in the church and in that way secure enough money to pay for the damage done in securing the honey. It is a Fact That Hood’s Sarsaparilla has an unequalled record of cures, the largest sales in tho ■world, and cures when all others fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. $1; six for $».. Be sure to get Hood’s. LJnnrl’o Dillc acttiarmonlouslywith 1 1UUU a rillO pood's Sarsaparilla. Walter Baker & Go. Limited. 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