The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26

^IPMCATtON. i«¥* Iff n r. BBS, itrwPksiBmtturi^a^ nphutieally fo ^ w. For o»e reason m®rlike separation .'ation, it induces a toff, as of one party 'Other; and again > fiudi tiling as a :dge on the p a rt of tlie other, and un, n nnd women are v win he parts of ach more or less o are. edncjttis^ ,in broadly educated, my kind of schools m from the other r |L % IfiinroFnii >Stil*1HMiairi iyinff . . ____ _ s.s belongs to worn* ivomcn, andbnowl- irrior class belongs e,v are men. f t is which should gov- in which there are iters, and there is lortlon of the hu- be isolated during W * « girts fa^uja^ljprprizes. f h e ia re , tel- |i |s |) J d I f trying - 1 vimpresstpn upon from them admira- the women who are morally, mentally those which have co-education. The is been in talcing d hand, and since ink,and investigate ' have made noble 1 their own behalf, manity in general, ame stimulus,Jfor i conditions f6r ac- , and they ’will be i to make^the most for themselves, the itor,—Reported try »=fo r Women. London -women is f.. business as con- e o f ’city ccmfctova- ;es, balconies and' dHpcrsonnlly sup- o rd e rs, employing Egging. Once a wly gardeners will tite conservatpHes. rooms, elto and People wishing to homes leavcf tlwir rge of the ladies. vah icollfcge tis to raent, so popular is g tsmoogv-aVomen, l .occupy asoparato a . the days' to theoret- t o Tit. ■ , E,R^AQ€|fJS»; ■vonien studying in i tif this ’ country. • twenty-five years e in t^e fand,was nber sot women on ics atlrt this yea r 13 seted in l l differ- J « e of these the themselves school­ ed Chieagdhaa giv- a rt scholarship for nveited diy the dt- ititntc sad tu*ed to dents through a a t the local Qa rt *•* >ozrEB,_ the'nep’ly- Jorosfs; iff a phyai- a physician, ighe for the position, aer, who resigned pmmt of ill health, ifllce of first rice ra is making rapid gher examinations ten to WOfcea, but for women, which or ^twoago, is be* cdcial lasUtntfon, r wpwea t o teach w. raduate offW bn to «* beehbetin^ as m M o th e r gnul- 2 is also taking the to wohienV ttiedi- 5 h«Wproflmsfofiat 1 intends to eptcr ttfii dfttsttmei ximttMAittu, a rwomao, whovfas recently passed a tm> .m iSSrsidan *»**d oow bg the firstwornan «)*», soperititlrtd- tininiotf echoed for Jfredfc prominence «*e rM w i^M th « « t inT rimm a s r TEMPEBANGg; NQTB&, THt t e fu T i ju i. u c . * wind beautiful ryet Wiieu ground in tli# mill, Anilbaketl with uMll Dike it as welt as a pie.. Do you? - ■.; ■ . .■ ■ it •* v .j> But oh, what’mUerub’e Htuffi f - W When passed through the stiU Anil I'ushionad to kllL yd never a drop of It touch. Would yout Behold the barley, all gold and bright! When fed to the hogs, Or oven the dogs, . They fatten, but never get tight, Doyou? ■ ■ Buts "HIMTorWhy/fogg WXIQ I;Sid uchaBBron. render respectable a saloon, nor give msy ftatliorif^ for gllow ingthl* dsroo* aliztn»insttt\t|.ion to cQnlinuarto'.fanM hipmamity f ' Had_ W-e i-1n this ^ | y 'untd geffCtatio i, no lh lng ' more intoxicating than such wine os they made in Pales­ tine in the days of Christ, th e evils of the drink habit would bo infinitely leas ttmnitlojjr atoipgijw! .There canlie ndvaHa argument drawn from the Scriptures to support either drunkenness or the occupation of mak­ ing men drunkards; and the la tte r is the mission of/.thu.f&lapn, ..ft is the school whereM . men are .tratnadto -Miit debusing vice. The question of its sup­ pression I b not so much a religious ono as it is one of morals and economies. gatearoft Thef,'1"*1 sis Knit l i n e Ibarleyi Snot be |ntly wit ,be a |ion; toy Ck in gave: th a t Tgoliordmade them, all for nourishing food ' But not fanhQ.poJsons that ciiuko men to die. ^-Dr. B. T, Cassa), la Union Signal. ,t any spirit man, ,tuple itt’O? lof othjjh'd ilun ru meat 6UTTA PaROHA IN DEMANQ. fit* ^rogtw»a p i jciaet&oity! ,tofMri»a J t' » ^ | g 4* r*» l ie WtrketV j » f The projectors of ■ the Guatemalan1 and Pacific cables are said to he con­ fronted with a serious problem as to Insulation. What they are to use to cover tbeit foOffOsubpmrine wires is al­ most as iniportknt» question as were the original preliminary grants, They want gutta percho, because that is the material always used in long-distance submarine " insulation, and because .there is no other substance tliat has yet been found to take its place. But the supply is so limited that an attempt to buy such a quantity as they will need e froi%,; to a po^ four or f . nrscox ine wonarous wonts ;^ b & 5 W $ ks A BIBLtCAL ARGUMENT. . Holt Bcfoiilew of tho Bum Power Con­ tort Scripture to Help Their Cause. . ft has M e aigtBwhffcsfof-' thoae^AvRW cupporfcfoau defend the rum power and the saloon, to say that if-the use of intoxicants had been considered sinful, it ,.j^ ulA, lp.vft.. been prohibited in exprcsxSte^mmm^lhjl.'' Scriptures. They point thut the denunciations of| against those who abuse in tox ican ts; that woes are denounced upon drunk­ ards, hut nothing is* said About- thosef 'trho^fiSe wirfl4 aisovpotnt rnt" Cana of (Jalilee, the fi st f th d rk of ChrjsCi w winatsfor thq claim that it the use of wine were wrong.He certainly would not have ex­ ercised Hismiraculous power to furnish it. Again, they point to the historic fact that wine in all those countries .was thenn commonhgiy.erag^'end ifci.s jtp" Argument by saying that because one man cannot control his appetite and becomes a drunkard, i t does not follow that all other men, especially those who do possess this power of self-con­ trol, sLuiUbedepcLyed of the privilege of drinking in moderation. This sounds well, but i|k does not bear qlbsg .analy.gi% - I t wc^iild be . a fairly g^od^a^hmihtiaf|the intoxicants of HiljH|a| fiai® |f’e r« |tl|| »fMfs as thok# we hafelnMv| n q | flieir |#ekeAofe The. snchmtl lfticw rteither toil a rt of brew­ ing or of distilling; they knew nothing of alcohol; it had never been separated from tlie wine to;;whick it" wa$r yw»* dnCedby fermenwttpn. There prolm- bly was not|* wine'^produced' in F*1ei£ tine, or in any of the .warm countries of the ancient world, which contained over twelvp.per cent, of alcoiml, mad.it is more fjhah^'probfiblo*; th a t'^ ie imual proportioriwas bu t flto o r six p&Fcfent, Tliey hid* ^th id itrj[^:..,the, fiatuxi. of wliisky or brandy, or any other dis­ tilled liquors, in those daya Thenfgpment- htqr btoli. madff, and i t has ihnlih’pvobdblUty; tha t id 'th e hot summers of Palestine—and the grape ripens there during very wand’ weather—to express the juice and at­ tempt to-ferment it it would pass a t once fromtlie alcoholic ’fd ;tho : acetic stage, of fcrinentatlpp; witli the result of prd* ilditivw* iHhfdiHil V rt# alAftllhl *red thatbf brother to oifend, Xwill eat no meat"— that is, if anything, eyeh innocenco it- i.elf, were a stumbling-block to aa- km - eial and economic question, there ib no doubt that the abolition of the saloon THE FARMINGWORLD. I »N!W?r 3 r^ i cmgKCT- \ SPLENDID SECOND CROP. A* i»n Autumn B|Mad Vo p thp r Variety O mii Equal Endive. . W« cannot easily have too much; of reallygood salad itfitterluL 'While’ilref! might extend five, if^own pf «o^i9|E lettuce very considerably'by successive plapting, ahd perhaps hy shading dtir-' ing the summer heat,' or by the selec­ tion of semj-Shridy locations, yet ft is trqo;thf)i thabpt seasonis Toledo Blade. up drink during: vfhegar; instead 'o f alcohoL Hence] itTis pibiV-bld after the . grapeljnice. !was'i OxpiVshed it was' bolted, nnd then inclosed in skins or eartlien jars, and the ahr Stint but; by which means it was preserved/ ftWCct. Such wine would probably ferment but t cry slowly^ and U the boiling vterq continued to the point of a sirup, this of itself would prevent fermentation, and the, sirUp would h ive to be diluted witl. Water before the prone»a co'dld' begin. A- -i *1i . % -■ i • ,» I t is undoubtedly true th a t in the ancient world: wine was fermented, and possessed - intoxicating qualities when drank to excess. This needs no argument, for the Bible is full of refer­ ence to drunkenness and drunkard*. The evidence th a t Bible winee wijire never intoxicating i* very weak, aad wilt not stand the teat of thorough ex­ amination; though we believe it to he a fact that the great bulk of the wine consumed ordinarily Was a sweet grape juice, preserved by boiling, with per- hapsa very ambit p e t cent, of alcohol* and which Would require the drinking of immense quantities within a abort time to produce intoxication. The difficulty with those who argue as quoted above is th a t Uhey aafttme ' that the conditions existing h i th a t day regarding intoxieahts warn practical­ ly the a s now. We have shown that there were neither* malt nor dis­ tilled liquors a t th a t time; drunken­ ness was by fto means the prevailing vice it is to-day; in fact-, It ia aafa to say that drunkeanesa was very rare then as compared with the present lime.. The prtly safe way of judging is to take the tenor of the teachings of the Bible, apply it topresent conditions, and ate what would have been the judgment of tbe inspired penmen,on modern alcoholism. No argument can be valid th a t as- safnes the atattta ip- prevail­ ing a t the time the Blble was written. Kven if tiie drinking of ^he *mHd'Wines, the larger proportion Of which were, certainly Uon-intoxleatiibg* ifimrinittod by the inspired writew[, -tw it ;»o »e««s givefr the m n e tio k v t their an- tbarSfy. to th*' «Maki4igfff • whklqr. bwndy. Ijeer mm tfc* toxlcatlng drinks of mbdem tia»«* which were then unknowns; no r do*« i t ho ~— build he i^W jes oB: a her loverwvilp iMgivilS her sake the husband ia not lively to ^ t o . , ,, sOtr/toWnship, Perry-eouhty? had;, em*! brdees Uhbut sOventy-tWo squbre inileS in its limits, and there is only one WitWh, % bqttUTi flarjes Where,Avhi*ky,cattbe^purphased. T hk women’s temperance committee of the world’s auxiliary congress. Miss France8B^f'^illafdrteha|rman^'’nmnbi:; ., twenty inembSrs^ a if weir-known \V. C. ^ T. U, workers. The advisory council connected wilh this committee qontains :'ab^t c^-pver a, hundyed|iaih|^ ^ p|b<^* inent women Who are belie vers in total* abstinence from all parts of tlie world. ; jTiifconfricence q fth e six North Ikn^ don branches of the British Women's Temperance association sent the fbl- towing .resolution-to. William E, Glad­ stone: “That as the sale of intoxicating liquors by grocers has resulted in a great^mcrehse of drunkenness .amohjg; •women; tibia ^meeting i^pdctifuTJlyxiills the; attention Of Rt-'lHbn^W. B. Glad-; atohe,' M.;P., jto this faqh apcteojTicstly' entreats :the right honorable‘gentle-" man to take the necessary steps to se­ cure the repeal of the grocers’ license actjpf 1860.|^J. «.• • fSd, PaTKICk* J * v?have faken the teetotal pledgb, h i^e ye?’’ 'sa id ono Irishman to another. “Indade and I have,” replied Patrick, “and glad in- dadq am I th a t I’ve ,taken .jt.” “But,”, Bdid .the other, “didn’t Pau l tell Tim-’ qftiy'fo take $ litt|e wine fot( his stoih* toh,V*|ake anAf,Jtis often infirmities?’’, asked the dram drinker. “Faith, and if he did, whut’s that to do with me? My ;Timothy, wi>d lhaven ’t got any stomach'ache';'*and since -£ left off whisky I bavcn’t got ,w-hatdo lAvant .wine Bcligious Herald. Tun editor .of .tho Bluffton (Ind.) Bugle has Uvoting reaped' that'is hard to beat. He wns tiyenty-one Octpbe^ •IS, 1830, and has vote<t every presiden­ tial election*: since. ” H is candidates latinu price me mi _ _ general. Just os platinum has almost become the king of metals, so gutta percha lias become the king of Insu- feitor^jii It was very cheap a ' few years ago, but the demand has sent it up to one dollar and seventy- five cents a pound now, with a constant "JK3t •the use of caoutchouc to insulate their •wires, and the rubber market, in conse- pence,, lias, been ,expecting a boom. i^'Vfo’i^ i^w h ile Para rubber insi^toltr'matoriai under or- nnryych!cu|its|apq|s, it cannot with- ?*ft^Sd %he 'fbrceB‘that attack it a t the bed' of the ocean, nnd i t is extremely improbable that the projectors pf a great cahle*Wllllfly Sn^^bbholabptoto A l . i . J A ' t i 1. . . h.Aillil Oil "i’v.- flow Till* Jnwet Flay* Havoo In SM f barer Fiaatatlna*. The, raspberiy probably suffer* more fropt theatfaek of thia insect than any other. Every {jttto white w« reoalve caneSi from various, persons asking for the cause of injury. This injury 'can be veryeasily detected from outside ap­ pearances and when, the pane Is spUt open it looks very much like the one in tiie figure. ' ■The snowy .tjrper; cricket {(Ecentho* alveus) is the one that does tlie harm. iNp doubt all have eeetr th is’' white Anot fa- vpfahle' •f'o <l‘hei lettuce; ~and in moji| cases it will bo simpler and f i *j * safer to rely on v JR H ’5 plants fqe, ialad , .meterlal thatare *** well snlteci to the atmoSpbCrift' c o n d i t i o n s as A , o x dwarf fonjid 1 indm-jjdp diiKEN._ ( .summer .and, pi- tumn.' Sometimea we wonder why en­ dive," ^ h id h . sthud#; foremost among these opr nntiumn saied pients,: i% pot ^iaore appreciated by tlie "average home ^i^dencr, It really makes *a line and Wholesome salad, au<t wlien ' well- blanched it hiis' a^iiiiTd' nutty flavo’r ' cricket and heard ijts^ehirp among' iho ' that to ibxecedingly .gratRydpgrtoour -*-11— *- ----- taste. .. . :j .. ■’> ■. ,r J ... ’ 1 ; Seed may be sown’in. June or July, and -trilHsplanted into rich, well pre­ pared soil, having rows about twelve 'h ‘ T! i »1 ‘ ’i a? •"id ’’’.lii * a, CEcaatiiy* alveus natpralstee; ,1>,BpotltM.pf ‘ " odaiashowing eggs. - • experiments 'with'"it as Wodld volved in a trans-ocean line. r ,B |lfta, ?fhich is neither gpttj* percbnn nor imbber,'5bn t posse«glngrmany of th e . properties any infirmities; for?’’—Hartford quantities, gum on the banks of the Orinoco which .makesnn immlnth'g material almost.as- |g o ^ l' iidi ;’g^Ba ^a^itllB'ijapt found in commerce. ' -■ ' ’*** Gutta percha which thus bids fair to b* a mpre important article in the mar­ ket than ever before, comes to us through England from the Malay pen­ insula, lndia,.fthd China. Jgutto, qr, as. it is variously written, gutah, gatta, gittah, gotta, is the Malayan term to r gum, and percha is the name of the, tree. The trees attain a hcight.bf from sixty to eighty feet, with a diameter' of from two to four fee t The wood is soft, fibrous, spongy, and of p palp color, marked with black Hues, thes* being the reservoir* ,of gu tta percha. The gutta, as i t flows from, the tree,ria of a grayish hue, although the market product becomes almost black in its preparatory processes. , The collection of gutta perchh genet:' ally takes piAce directly after the rainy season, as in the dxyjsehson the gutta docs not flow so rCadily. ’ Tbe yield of a well-grown time of the best variety id .from two to tfiree pounds. The natives extract the gum by cutting down the itree a t a'height of fourteen, or sixteen feet above the ground. Narrow strips of •bark arc then removed and are beaten, by the 'natives to accel­ erate ihe flow of milk or 'gu t­ ta,. which / is received into hol­ low bamboos or in holes scraped in the ground. The next i?tcp in the process Is boiling. This is conducted in a “kwuli,” or pan of iron, in which lime M S O u t e r AH.U.S, wm iuu ,-i“1“ ~ ir . « - l ^ gum. When sufllclontlyboiled the gu t­ ta is pressed into molds. On arriving a t the port of shipment the gutta, before exportation, under­ goes examination nnd classification into parcels, according to its quality. Neur­ one years old he bids fair to vote for a '? tl?« w,holt U<ll,,on “ foWmore presidential chndidates yCt, t “gtend, whence it reaches the United _ u t . „*.A States in small quanl Wirt, William Hemy Harrison, James G. Illrneyk'Martin Van Buren, John P. Hale, JohnG . IVernttit. Abraham Lin­ coln, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford 11, Hayes, James A. Garfield, John P. St. John,Clinton B. Fisk. Although eighty- s l antities and generally of the poorest Variety. Four-fifths of the entire product is used in making cables, and nine-tenths of it is handled In England, That which is exported to this country is* oftentimes only the refuse from the British shops, boiled over and remolded. The constant diminution in the sup­ ply of gutta percha was explained by an importer in this way: If a Malay or as h e iff t o pood health- apd with cap­ itally preserved faculties.' This he a t­ tributes to his total abstinence life,— Union Signal. A lcohol In France, Late'returns Issued by the ministry of fibance, indicate, th a t the consump­ tion of alcohol in France, which was larger in 1S80than ever i t was before, continues to increase, the tax upon a lc o h o l last yeaf having produced £H,-J Chinese wishes to plant pepper or any- 101 483. or nearly a million more than s thing else, he burns a portion of the i they should not beallonednfrecrange, n ,i;,i flip » m - nrevious. This is eouiv-1 forest, and when he has raised two or 1a t th e same time theywillnot hear of 37,;’,'J5,000 three crops he clears a new portion, }close confinement asweltas other 3 ^ ,* rfs KNDIVK11WAHFGREEXCDRX.EIl. 'oir fifteen*inches apart, and pMntsie* to twelve incites upart-in the rows, ’If planted too eax-ly it is liable to run up .to seed. When large enough for -blaUchingj in September, oq October, tiie leaves of each plant are .gathered up and tied around their middle' with string or matting. In about three weeks they ,>vill be-blanched enough for use. We have blauehed them in .less time, and very beautifully, by putting a large A . ■ WHITE RATAVIAS. - * bottomless flower-pot over each plant. The sort most'commonly grown in this country is tiie Pwarf Green Curled, shown in left figure of illustra­ tion. The single leaf also belongs to that variety. The- figure «t the right represents the broad-leaved White Ba­ tavian. Of course this vegetable can bo and is grown as a second crop, after peas, radishes, early cabbage, early 'beets, beans, etc.—l’opnlar Gardening. POULTRY PICKINGS. batched early and will begin laying Pi'r.i.K’rs that are are kept’ growing early. . TiiK young poulfry should have a good range as soon as their growth will permit S ome ventilation is necessary, but in giving it good care must be taken to avoid direct draughts. BCMDun foot is nearly always caused by having tlie roosts too high. The best remedy is to lower the roosts nnd Use vaseline, I f well fed from the start ducks ought to be ready for market a t ten weeks old, and at that age should aver­ age five pounds. . As the weather gets warmer more care is necessary to pick up the eggs regularly; a day or two under a hen in hot weather will spoil eggs. A vakd is best for turkeys. While ■lent to a consumption gallons of alcohol, and thare wa* an increase of consumption In every de­ portment, excepting the Haute* Pyrenees. The returns show that the consumption of spirituous liquors has very much Increased in feU the large Thus finely-wooded spots become de- J fowls, nuded of trees and covered with rank ! P eafowls usually lay in June. towns, ydrying in different sections {that in districts where percha trees once from one and a half to three gallons abounded only one or two can now be per headof the populati n* France is ' — A ................... ..* a,M,Tns grass, rendering them unfit for further t Though-not generally used, they make cultivation. Again, to obtain the gum ! * Tcr>’ acceptable table foivL Their the trees are cut dorm, none are plant- \ noise is objectionable, but they are very ,ed to take tlieir places, and the result is j ornamental. IxccuATOtt ehlekens arc far less fia- tde to be infested with lice than those .foliage in th,c fall, raj it is.quite qom^ mona't that season- ^ The crickets be­ come full'grownUt this time and i t is then; that the female, in order tq propa­ gate her kind, instinctively becomes an enemy to the raspberry producer. With a long .ovipositor which she know* how to use, fin incisionhalf way through the: cane iff made and- in this ' is placed .a yellowish white egg about qne-eighth of . an inch long. Then. ' others are placed by the side of this till there are often fifteen oF more in a row as seenin thfe figure. The wood dies around the punctures and the cane ofteu dies above the wound, or is weakened enough to break off. I t may survive the winter and not break till soma windy day when the foliage has'issued, but a cane badly, punctured is almost worthless. ' Strange as it may seem, the cricket feeds on the raspberry a t no time in its life. When the eggs hatch in early summer, the young crickets leave the canes and live upon plant lice a t first and later upon ripe fruits and succulent foods. The eggs are’' probably placed inside tbe canes for better protection from the depredations of predacions and parasitic insects that would other­ wise devour them. ; Every cane that contains the eggs of this cricket should be cu to ff below'the wound and burned. If care is taken in doing this, the crickets for this year will nearly all bo destroyed while y e t ’ in the egg state and the caneff rih'xt fall will life nearly exempt from such at- ’ tuck.—Gr, C. Davis, in Far m. Field and Stockman. ________ CORN ROOT APHIS, Method* Suggested for Succe»sfal!jr Over­ com ing it . I’rof. S. A. Forbes says: Along list of observations in the field in early spring unite in showing that the com root aphis takes its start only infields where it occurred the year before, and that such fields arc, as a rale, more likely to suffer severely from the attack. Tho early evolution of a partly winged brood provides, however, for .so gen­ eral a dispersal that the expedient of rotation of crops can have only a sec­ ondary value. Again, the fact that tho plant-louse eggs iiatcli, as a rule, somo days in advance of the. growth of tho corn in the fields "(usually a week or more before com planting), and tha t in the meantime the lice are dependent on young weeds in tho earth, gave the hint for some starvation experiments tried in two successive years. From these wc learned that young lice just hatched will perish wltb.H five -days if deprived of food, whether attended by ants or not. It seems possible, conse­ quently, that their numbers might bo greatly diminished in early spring by such a thorough stirring of the soil, with disk harrows or other similar apparatus, as would keep down the sprouting herbage in the tornfleld. Any treatment of the field the preceding sum­ mer or fall which should diminish the number of seeds of pigeon grass or Kmartweed maturing in t i e com would diminish likewise the chances o f sur* j viral of young root lice the following | year, lam told that these conditions are agriculturally manageable, and I have arranged for field experiments to j test these methods. a wine country, and tills exhibit is not encouraging for dvocates of the “wiue cure” for intemperance.—National TemporaWKJ.Advocate. r... XtM irfvi*»*iw. The continually increasing produc­ tion and consumption of intoxicants, beyond the relative increase of popula­ tion, may well make the friends of tem­ perance" thouglitfnl concerning the present «Uid futurff of the temperanoo ttsforfii. Thff brewers and the native- win*, maker* both rejoice to hnweated production of beer and wine, and in good market* for their wares as well While this condition continues temper- mem a n i women must be on the W to i a i# f e 0 ^ h to e e tin g s , the pledge, literature and other aganck* do their ttttenmwt to <Ute*fntoato y a t man* Widely an* muse. a i»«d«H jr temperi mkm »tro th am o t« lh « P « ^ - rW ,lU<»w“ Temperance Advocate. found. writer in an eastern- paper says that in twenty years ovcl ainety thousand piculs (of 1 4 pounds each) of gutta percha were exported from Sarawak alone and that this meant the death of a t least three million trees.— N. Y. Times, „ —George W. Childs, of Philadelphia, has among his treasures the little green harp' which belonged to TomMoore and which he carried into hundreds of Irish homes; the massive Silver vase presented to lleflfy Clay when lie was a t tiie height of popularity by the Whig ladies o f Tennessee; .Washington's champagne glass; cups, saucers and glasses which came from Louis Napo­ leon, tiie late Emperor William, the late Emperor Maximilian and the ex* emperor of Brazil; a miniature ship, formerly the property of President An­ drew Jnckaoh, and ih* silver waiter presented to Gem Jackson after his v ia tory by the citizen* of New Orteen*. hatched under a heti if proper care is taken to keep them clean a t the start. —St. Louis Republic. The Care o f Young Turkey*. Young turkeys are difficult to raise. My plan is to leave the young almost entirely to the care o f ' the mother. When the young are hatched, i ti s well to put them for a time into a lo t where they cad be watched for a few days. I t is a good plat} to let them run a t large, in the day lime, but a t night they should bfe sheltered. Keep salt away from the young, as a few grains will kill any turkey. Turkeys cannot be raised successfully by a hen, as they walk too fast for the young. A turkey will nut walk 10rods the first few days after the young are hatched, while a hen would tvalk th a t distance the first half hofir. Bast year 1 raised *1 tu r ­ key* by on* mother bird. One of toy turkeys laid about 100 eggs liu t *tun- mar.—Farcu and Horn*. l i a r to Produce (ioail Cheese, A large amount of acid and moisture in tbe .card a t any stage causes the cheese to be leaky, crumbly and mealy, A small amount of acid with an ordi­ nary amount of moisture causes a corky* open cheese with a smooth tex­ ture, and it goes off-flavor veiy shortly, Milk should keep sweet three hours a t a temperature of 84degrees. When the curd will draw out bn“*a hot iron one- sixteenth of fin inch, i t Is ready to have the whey-drawn off, ' The acid should be developed after this r t a tempera­ ture of 03 to OSdegrees for four hours, after which it Should bo cooled to IS de­ grees, preparatory to salting and the press. The amount of acidity th ru de­ veloped overcomes putrefaction, and preserves the flavor and quality of tha cheese. Wc must make our chelae a* perfect in ati its stages as possible, and | make it so it Will retain its good qnali* , tics and reach the Consumer in the beat Jpossible condition—Gobkuua'a Rural I I

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