The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
THEFARMINGWORLD, * •rite*: l*uf. .. _ S j ^ e e S Z M R R S e L ^ I*attempt decomposing the bones with aatphurlo sold, u , thst chemical is too fonyarous to handle lor thst purpose, fits makingof “superphosphate” should to left to fertilizer manufacturer*, merer, in his “Agriculture,” gives the following; gngelhardt procured 4,000pounds of tones, 4,000 pounds of wood ashes, 000 soundsof quick-llrae end 4 . £ water. He dug s coupleti v ttgnoi two feet .deep end lln q d jJ S e if^ tosrdo, snd having sJake4i* ' 1’ ,ife' .. apart of the water, mub 4 $ry product with the ashes, Into one «(the trenches-he put half the bones mlxturoptUme .a n <M m ,^ iig eifcO:jbe weMhfe^ar • forial. -■Tbe'mtxtuto <waa leffrtjO itself; withoccasional moistenings, until the tone*'bid'V?,fame ao-soft thi*t they couldhe rubbed down between the fin'’ gets Three thousand six hundred pounds of water wore used in this trench, besides that employed for slab* lag the lime. When the contents of the first trench bad become soft they were spread, layer by layer, In thre' sehauf trench with the remaining $,000 pound* pi fresh bane%hnd the wbple waa'Well worked together -Und -then .left to’ fer ment untti~-the bones were softened. The mass was then shoveled out and joined with 4,000pounds of dry loam or .peat to make It manageable, i Hones are. sometimes softenedby plac ing wood ashes find bones in alternate layers, about six inches of veach, .and ' laturating with yater. Sucha fertilizer a* this will have a high value.—Breed-' er’a gazette. " . Tomatoes for Cow*. We had over a thousand bushels of -tomatoes lashfall, says A. Holland in Rural Canadian,n»dthe,market,‘was so glutted*that wecould not* seJLipne-tbird of them. We commenced feeding them to the, cowi and found that they ate themgreedily, and improved in milk ing.' After'my experience last season I determined to plant each., year my tomatoes in a.f(eld into which., I can tarnmy eows ln the fall* end will have' the satisfaction of knowing that no tomatoes,' green or ripe, will be lost. After the first frost last fall we pulled our tomato vines and collected them, with the green tomatoes adhering to them, into piles, where they remained lor a couple of weeks before we could let the cows into the field. By that time we found that a, largo percentage of the green tomatoes ,had ripened and the tomatoleave* had outed. The cows could not ’ be kept away from these tomato pHes. They' rOoted them over with their noses and horns and cleaned np every thing but the bare vines, and at nights as long as the tomatoef lasted they would come into fheburn pain fully full, and their udders distended jjdth millc. X leave It to scientists to say whether the mUkrproduclng ele ment was in the tomato itself or .whether It supplanted some other feed to make a. well-balanced milk ration. Of course i t would not pay to raise tomstoes as feed, lor cows, hut market gardeners need not allow their surplus tomatoes to go to waste while they have cows to feed. , * . u Pay* to *wu Appi* Fomaofl. ' Thera are about fifteen pounds of pomacenearly free from older to each bushel of fifty pounds of apple when ptaaae&in the power presses of. to-day andunder the cloth and rack system. 5oW if this pomaco can he utilized seder the silo system, wa hare with us a valuable artldo of feed, ana it cer tainly can and will be worth more pound for pound thanhny roots, uUleee ft be cerrota, and I’m not sure but it Wouldeqnat them. I tried it last winter la asmall way and in a temporary silo made upon my barn floor, feedingmy horseesome and my.whole Itopk of out- ticalio,myoowabavlnga ration ofabout a peckeach aad making butter all the fine and with ho ill effect# whatever. Applepomace is also a good feed for stareswine and 1 think the time Is not hr distantWhen the pomace from the eidermill will all he utilised for feed- iag porpooc*. Ho mot for one moment think that-1 advocate the making of elderott purpose toMud the pomace, as uur temperance Mends can make good ateof theft apples for feeding purposes withoutgrinding, bateau notkeepthem Solong and must also feed more Bpar- iayly.'--If,artt*and Homs. ■ • ge teak JtoooouricoUy. * * A handy Milking stool is made of four pieoes of board, to which legs are attached as shown in the pagraving. the front legs are shorter than the star, making the platform on which the; pail staads a little eloping This turns rimpail toward the cow. This stool mou1 tiuqo h ids sumtitf# iwtHfft* ■ pail out of any filth. And, he- freea the ground, let* milk is m ties side*, Cswu stand y if they know thseeis an mat - their feet. They tan*ste.—ffam m»4Rent*. ti.-. **nmwf#aw* , Humpy Jaw (Actlnomycoria) u caused by a vegetable parasitic garde or fungus Which is taken in throaShTiha o th, and enters the jaw through *on*e dees: the circulation, rled back into tb,. tacking the root o f ______„ ____ m_„„ of the throat, or gets into the blood and locates in another part of the body. When it localizes itself, in a j j i * around the ja out,and if the ■ w p r e e l n o effects from trlwiaff)rugani l ______ and is thriftyTor aconsiderablelengths, time afterwards, it may be safely re garded as being extirpated, But when ‘ ~ bonmand keeps 1ncreas- “becomesetn*’ . — -teles* for any fh o® beWstroyed, It is,' . - ---- ._ien there is any discharge frqm abcesses; and to prevent Its spread fake no affected animal into a ^eHhesd ,aud in j^sei,1of an outbreak MbVe the*giaa<fli1a'r ■r swellings”fromthb fiipphrate in* spotaand brealr, t^tewte,! and continue to run, oftentimesAs long as the animal lives, sowing the germs:' about to he picked up by other# and' thuscause tho disease to ho developed. —Orange JuddFarmior. - K*«pb«rr(M Wad Ul»ckberne», .The rOhlo Experiment Statioimews- ppper,'bulletin says: Of raspberries nearly tb® same Varieties stand at the head of the list as bold that’position five years aga Of the tyack caps tho best are Tyler, Ohio, Hllbprn' and Gregg, given In. the' order of. eariijnisss. The Palmer is much like tho Tyler, perhaps being an improvemient in vigor and productiveness* The best of the red'^soyts are Marlboro, (Shaffer, Rqli- ance fihd Cuthhert. The beat’ for home usd of the whole list is the Shaffer. A Variety called the Muskiegum resem bles the Shaffer and is superior to it for. market purposes, being firmer, but is no better for. home. Neither the Reli ance nor Cuthhert succeed In jail locali ties, but, where they are at borne are very* profitable. -The Cuthhert is the latest of 'the reds and the Turher .tho earliest of thppo named. Thbmpson’a Haply Pride, a variety npt fully tested, is very early and quite promising. Tho best blackberries ire Snyder,* Taylor, Aghwan, AncientBritdn and Erie, Sny der and Ancient Briton are thehardiest,, hence the most reliable of those named. Taylor and Erie are larger but less hardy., Agawan is the sweetest one .on the list; some cslt it insipid, while many prefer it to other kinds. ■ * • ■' ';TrainfejtMora**. There is a difference in horses of course, One may be high-strung and the other not; one may be vetylntelH- gent and the other very stupid; one may be very nervous and the other the re verse. A ll horses can not be . handled and trained with -the same ease. But there is a great difference in men who handle horses, and that differenco is a much more prolific caused tho dlffor- ence-in the adaptability of horses for thqir work than any thing else. The effect of the difference in drivers upon the bone, is often shown in cities. One man will take » young horse fresh' from the country, wild and wholly unused to tho city and Its noises and sights. He is a level-hosded, cool, patient man, and in a marvelously abort period he will have that horse careless of almost any thing that may happen In the streets fromthepassageof a railroad trainto tho explosion of A.flrecracksr. Anotherman Would take that same hone and under hia training it would never bo perfectly safe to drive. In the one case the man waa well trained; In the other he was, not Neither our animals nor our chil dren will be much different from our selves as a rale.—Western Rural, . S»r« ta W*r*rs. Ho not hunt for boron at si], says the N. E. Homestead, but just doctor them a little. Make a mixture of about one quart o f wood ashes to a pail Of Water, and stir it WelL Next make a ridge of earth around the tree s few Inches from it, and high enough so when you pour your mixture Into the circle it will fun into the holes and kUl the worms. I t is sure death to them, and cotta less than one cent a tfee. I bays used It for yean. Bays the writer, with perfect suooeas. You may have to do irtwlce the fint year, but after that a very, little care w ill keep your trees free from them. I f you have no wood Athea, use- a thin white-wash of lime in its place. I f you have A large number of tree*, voe can use strips Of zinc or sheMfeon Shout four or fivs iuebes wide ana long enough lo put shout the tree in place of the circle of earth. ' « VtatarpvosfMack Osvsrs. Having mentioned stack coven. I ap pend a receipt for making an inexpen sive waterprosf oevhr or stacking cloth, which was given » ♦ by tb* late Hr. Joseph Teat, formerly president of the Illinois Dairymen's Association, and mV many yean president of the Elgin (111.) Board of Trade. I think Dr. Tefft was also the fint importerof Holsteincattle near Xlgim “You use this mixture*” Mid he, ‘^and1will warrant the cloth (goodootton sheeting) to hold water like a pall.” Make a strong solution Of ' " ■radaallyin " ‘time and < _______ water-proof % Ogden, MW l , v*ri7,iwa ”A half boUl* of gear In v a lu a b le ' ----- t , « . Jacob* imeofibtu- ______ and zheu* ,maUo*w4Unz.ofthe pane*. Itu ilbeunlvM 3.U.U . 1 mPORIAKLlEWjySCBVERy. it flusUy,havewed 8 t> Jacob* Oil Jbr aen- and lbuod tt a flqUAibJMrisIlva. I T H A S N Q I Q I . AUTOMATIC), rOUTAXU ---TtOhMIgt. i Xx**.l eon11 ’• I . otrlo^~ n^elatSoap 1 Enrluh rrAa. 4 m* lMrtkMroaSwr7*T7 SM Broadwar. MBW TOBX OIXT. .k5hil_ -JflO. J1S.MO. bbm aadwmlndMap i _____ _ •ad WUSTiIWO propwtiM« rwIHVSHTOU. ««■**«• ffSj FORWA m T o M m CRESEBKOUGH IlK O F IC Tm G CO., 24 State Street* NSW YORK. »iw ««»H in »a i*i * » * a IXI.Y S 3 Q*Ve 8 K rmt r.i « Ouj^hherdtridsfornomfnj Thehouse oughh to b e cle&nec S^wlbh Sap o li o.Trya^cowkeinyour nexMiouse^ctefihnindAndbe convinced ^ 'V ' * + -V '’k' (t - ktf fi , *.,»*•* 4 6 N O I L & N G E of m no ■ m a n ,” .an d ig n o ra n c © ia n o e x c u s e f a r m d ir t y h o t fs e o r g r e a e y k i t c h e n . , p e t t ie r ‘ C le an t h e m in t h e o ld w a y th a n n o t a t a i l ; b u t t h e m o d e rn a n d s e n s ib le w a y i s t o u s e S A R O L I O o n p a in t, o n f lo o r s , oh; w in d o w s , on p o t s and . p an s . an d e v e n o n s ta tu a r y . - T o b e ig n o r a n t o f t h e u s e s o f S A P O L l O i s t o b e b e h in d th ^ a g e . : **•!«> ■ ->wrsM . -... vowriUd tfeeirUr«sa^tbel^i^thdai theirfc thrirj «n i--- --- . .., ___ _ . Clrtgo’AEood, BjrvDrugrfstt a ri* tuwiMAmnurovD » a 5e«oisQp, w o O M ik l AlXCOHiTKO*. it C<)nC»b.er,BuL ivi uvNWmirgNiinHV A happlsrsfits Yo*€ ^ & 1 i coUVi?.r?SS YE S ! $100 W IL L to* CJnclnn.tl, OMcttin L*ft- v ' mjiw ' bh *:;!wr‘ b utstinvirnf«s>s* m }0 cUr./MSheu»w*jd *IC«teB. u »l fcx(-u,Itlon. A genllemna iacm- ployed e»pec).ny (o *eck notltloa* (Or wortliy popft*. Bfm) for opin* ANDWHISKEYHdllTt GlfftEn uAT tlOXX WfTK’ OCTMIX, Book of PM- tlculftre SKNTFJltE. B. M. WOOIXKY. M.U, i . u o n ., c&n wwuk*ua«. r aucoMafuii, iHtoasouTEa claii f j s f f i w s Cfttl ar-xmBnutterwnMfUMme- .noRRia, ■ ‘ >n,».C. CLAIMS. . S, PneleB P. niro].iiuji,.tty *ia». FpRSALE,Ei^tyAcresIWIfl} tioo. a.n,cR*tXK a «o. arunmijiMfWSaia,ta "A rN :ic -E r ThottMmd* XUXlTUCn ..uodwab* xew xutw. Writ* lacteHtWy tot smunca » r eppttc*. iWMUntMtad 1312 ■nmcir'in n u s TWaJVVEirriSKMa flea ** ' '**•*• tM |MM S * aiV Uiin it lj. ttli s? I K i n g ' s W r it t e n a n o E d it e d b y M r s . M a r g a r e t B o t t o m e , , President o f the Order* A N EW DEPARTMENT IN THE . l A D I E S H O A E L l n i m M i l I “ talks1* rimilsr ta Eatkriv iWrotadtothebmtiotcransof tU Cntarof tSs” Ktafi*» D*nghWr^’, »nd efririklnf . iatarcri tomty “ King?*Daughter" intheland, ft wiU** WrittensndeditedW Mrt, M »rg«« Bottome, the founder *nd Pre*id**t of the Order,whoin th» depmunent,will giveeachmouth iwhich the mids i-"——butt winter in the drswlng-moa* of the best New York Muse*. Taa departmentwinch is read evdrymonthby thousandso f glrlswho buy the J ournal for k * th is fea tu re alone. Every point in a girl’s life f s here treated i what is best forher to T " . ™ , wearj fiiostbeeoming manners in society; behapidf,' all told in s dbatty mannerby one o fthe brighte# writer* in the land. ‘ ^ * ‘ ' CONTENTS FpX THIS DEPARTMENT IK T H * OCTOSfcR ISSUB: HOW TO if iA R N TO TAl*K W E L L ; A M ISTAKE TOO HAK 8 U HOW TO B E PRETTY TH IS FAL t*: SAYING “ GOOD MORNING j” MANNERS W H EN AT OHD E C tt; HY . OIRLS* MOTHERS. J & o A i i a 1 mail tha Journal fromadw.ldJanwMy *, idfia-ritat to,A * W a jf* of thto f m A O F U f t O eJ O IlU iP yp y u, aad a l'U L ft YEAS ffom Jansmy >•*» toJunumy *st, Hri*. Also, out '" ' hUduuatade-piriN^^ qjaatratm iutiKm aandartto^andhi^i^^^Ne^toumrit Iu«teu«tioiM,,*l»yMra,A. R. RAMSEY) atooKsnainglon ArtDHigiie,byJANBS.CLARK,ofLowSsw. 1 jn'rjffflif'tfttrrr ' CURTIS EUB tltR IN u CUMEANY, PUfad^pMs, IN. f f „ y fri ft a ft ^ m ' CURTIS EUBtltRI u CO EAWY, BWluisfpWs, IN. ^ ffiNtWWWWtiIWbS' j -W*.,
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