Newspapers / The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, … / April 23, 1891, edition 1 / Page 4
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HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. HOW TO FRT 0SI058. '. , . Cut BuifEcient quantity into rings, prinkle these with' flour and fry in plenty of hot lard or dripping; whei, of a nico color remove them with a skimmer or strainer; sprinkle salt over; .These, if properly 'attended to, will bo dry, free from grease and well flavored... New York Tret. ' I.-, i ' EXCELLENT FUlUUTCTtE POLISH. One part! by measure of olive oil and two parts qt vinegar. Shake well to gether and apply with a woolen cloth, after which' take a diy woolen cloth and rub vigorously. A housewife who uses this says it is a first rate, reliable furni--. turc polish ajwajs to be depended upon for giving ('most satisfactory results. Scientific American. WASHINO WASH-SILKS. v TVash silks may be washed successfully, although many dismal failures have made it doubted.' They must not certainly be washed in the tub with other things. ; A strong warm suds made with . any -white soap comes first; the silk must be rubbed very lightly ; hot water, washing powers and alkali soaps are fatal tb the beauty of wash silks.. Thorough rinsing in tepid water, followed by further rinsing in cold water with a little vinegar in it,' makes the wash silks a3 good as new. "With these directions for a laundress, no one. need hesitate to follow where iancy leads' in chosing wash silks for blouses, which will be worn more than ever next summer. Boston Transcript. PRAIRIE PESTS. HUNTING "WOLVES AHI) WI- .Of ES ON WESTERN FJjAINS. A Bounty Paid by TOany Western States for the ScalpSMJf These Animals How They are Hunted Their Traits. " AN EXPERT ON, TEA MAKIXO.. ' A tea expert saya that a pound of tea will furnish 300 cups of liquor if it be made prfyierly, but that the maximum benefits of tho leaf, both in the matter of quality and quantity, are seldom en joyed because of the general ignorance of what appears to be so simple a process as to require no- care, tho method of brewing. He says thn tea leaves should be put into a earthen or agato ware pot "'never use metal) and stand on the back of the stove until thoroughly warmed. Then hissing hot water which ha3 been freshly boiled should be poured in and the pot should be placed at the back of the stove for ten minutes, where it win . keep hot but not boil. At the expira tion of that time the tea will be perfect, i but if it is desired to keep it go the liquor ( must be poured off into another vessel.so as to separate it from the leaves, which after a while would give off an astringent clement. In servingthe cups and tho cream should be warm and the cream should be put into the cups before the tea. The public arc told not to smile at. these simple instructions, but to try them -and' sec if they do not get a new light on tho question tf getting the most out of a cup of tea. Chicago Next.' Baxter's ranch, near Cheyenne, Wy., is where several wolf-hunts ; have re cently been held. The bounty on the scalps has also caused many to trap and poison both wolves and coyotes. From fifteen to thirty men, make a good hunting party to round up the wolves. A day having been set for the chase, the sportsmen scatter out over the rvl.iinu. coveriner sometimes an area of ten miles, for the purpose of driving the wolves toward a common centre. The wolves have their haunts along certain streams, and in this locality the hunt is made. Many of the streams have hardly a shrub or tree along their banks, and the hunters are thus afforded a large open country in which to make the chase. They begin -to ride toward the centre. When a wolf is sigh ted, it is shot by some of the expert marksmen of the plain's, or, to increase the interest in t'hc sport, the hohnds are given an op portunity for a run. Rifles and sbot cuns are the weapons generally- used. J x s 1 . I . I The creat expanse 01 level piain, wnicn ana a is only broken occasionally by $and hills, 3000. gives a fine opportunity for a hunt, and it is a rare instance when f,.wolf makes its escape through the. circle. The wolves, coyotes and swifts all have their dens under ground, and sometimes they succeed in running into these lairs when hard pressed by hunters and hounds. It is fine sport when the ever-narrowing circle has two or more wolves round ed up in an area of about a mile. An attempt of a wolf to escape on one side being frustrated it runs in, the opposite direction, ony to bo headed off by hun ters and dogs. Wolves and dogs are sometimes permitted to fight it out in the center. The wolf is cowardly, but when wounded and at bay will sometimes make a hard fight. Thus the sport continues, ; Too Bapid Eating-. "Have you any idea," remarked the cashier of jone of the largest lunch res taurants in New York to, a Tribune repor- i - ' 1 A 1 S ter, "how t many minuies me ycgo downtown; business man cleyotes to bis midday meal?" 6 "At a venture." answered the repor ter, watching thfc hurried play of knives and forks about ?him, "J. should say m teen minutes." V . lTou set about the time usually esti- mated.Jraturned the cashier, "but m realitv "half that time would be nearer riffht. The average time consumed for lunch hv tho natrons of this establish ment is iust eight minutes. The fact is,' continued the cashier, after the reporter had ventured a forebodipg for NewYork dilation, "'neonle find it such a trifling and unobstrusive matter just to get 4a bite of lunch' that few: realize what a gi gantic1 business it is "merely to supply hunorrv neionle downtown at noon, oe- AGRICULTURAL. XOriCS OF INTEREST RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. j CUCRNS AND CUCBKIXG. . Of all the different kinds of churns in ' use in farmers' hou-es, for a small family dairy, writes Mrs. W. II. Webster, I give the preference to the good old-fashioned " dash churn. It is easily managed in every wayj not hard td work in churn ing, and takes up but very little room. You can easily raise the lid and look in ;to it at any time to see how matters are progressing, the b&Lfler is easily gathered and taken, out when it comes, and the churn is easily cleaned afterwards. In winter the mistake is often made- of keeping the cream so long that it be- comes bitter before it is churneJ. I'likc to have the cream ft little bit sour, and set it in a warm place Jong enough for it . to taste slightly acid before I churn it, but in a cold climato it won't do to keep ' it long enough o sour naturally, unless one is willing to run the risk ot having a bitter taste in the butterl Butter, that comes in a reasonable time will be much better than I that which is churned for hours, as is sometimes the case..,' This delay in coming I believe is f requetly caused by keeping the cream where it is hot and cold by turns, and also keeping it too long.. The churning should be regular not fast, and then slow, and should bo kept up without, long inter missions until it ii done. New York World. : Spring Is Here When nearly every body needs -' medicine to purify the blood and ' tone up the system. . Hood's arilla Sarsaso v 'grows more and more popular every year for it is the best ' Spring IiUHecIicine Should Have it n The flouae. Dropped on Sugar, Children Love lievss Summer Complaints, Cuts, iiruSes like bu&Z THINK OF IT. Is) use over 40 V K ARH In one family. Dr. 1. a Jorwkos Co. It la nlitT rear sinoo I r.t " 5",,,r J"""' ' Aod? "V Jmmkt; tor m2 tfan forinymn I hve uxed tt In my family 1 rwirrt It s. n of toe U-nt and fot famlli renYe&s thaTcan IKA0in.1l "Tl1 ",tcrB.a'..or1 "nL' Tall "o'h. JMiAXJJi. Vrmntn tnd Baptlrt chnrcta, Bangor, Me! .m Haalarb, IMnhhorU,Couirh, Catarrh, Ilruuchiti AMhma, I holra M.irbu, lXarrhusa, Lainenetw, Sorenvn In odr or Limb-., Stiff joints or Ktralna, iil nndiS thl olj Anod.'nr rrttef and roeedy cure. Pamphlet frm Sold Pvrrrwhere. I'rice eta., by mall. bottlpiL aj(ir patd. i lt. JOHNSON A CO- Bobtom, m.. until the wolves are all captured or killed, I have recently made a four weeks' journey over the plains along the Colorado Wyoniing, Nebraska, and Kan sas line, and many an interesting story is told by the frontiersman of the wolves, and how they are captured. The occa sional wolf-hunt is had more for the spoft it affords, yet there are some known as wolf-Jiunters, and follow it as a busi ness. The State bounty, together with the extra paid by some cattle associations, makes the wolf and coyote scalp bounty The coyote Is not a . game animal like the gray wolf, and its capture is not so exciting a sport. . - The prairie wolf of the great Western plains is grayish in color, and is a little smaller than the common wolf. I was shown the fresh hide of a prairie wolf at the County. Treasurer's office at Sterling, Col., that measured six feet from nose to tip of the tail. The small streaks of black along the back give it a crizzly pearance. The jaw is strong and the teeh sharp. The coyote, also known as a praiiqe wolf, is not so large and dan gerous ashejjrajolf of the prairie, and is also called the American jackal and Mexican prairie wolf. The Indian dogs, which so much resemble the wolf, are said to be a cross breed with prairie wolf, coyote, and the dog. Wolves, coyotes and all such animals on ..the plains make their homes under ground. They dig a hole about two feet in diameter and a an angle of forty-five degrees, aud at a depth of from six to ten feet excavate their underground den, where they make their abode after a suc cessful raid for food. In these dens they also breed theijr young in the spring, their litters numbering from four to nine. ' . The prairie wolf shuns the abode of men, unless hunger -forces it to attack stock even near the ranchman's house. But coyotes will come up near the fron tiersman's house and make the night hideous with their yelping noises. They kill 6heep, calves, pigs and poultry. I Coyotes will not only slaughter sheep by the wholesale but will suck their blood,' and have many of the traits of a "sheep killing dog." It is the prarie wolf that preys upon the largest stock on the plains. The largest bull and fleetest horse be come their prey when . maddened by hunger. So great' has been the loss to stock in Texas that the question has been urged in the Legislature to increase the bounty. Some counties in the States on the plains claim that their financial re sources have been gteatly impaired by the payment of scalp bounties for wolves and coyotes.. From Wyoming and Ne braska south to Texas thfe Question of "for" or "against", these f bounties has been agitated in the various Legislatures. The stockmen lose hundreds of thousands of dollars fortunes it might be said in the slaughter of cattle, horses find sheep by these wild animals of the plains, nr.A U 1 L - r. . auw ucutc me uuuuucs in some orates for wolf and coyote scalps, with the hope oi exterminating these pests. ihe prairie wolves do their foraarins in packs. They first run down a horse or steer till, wearied by the chase, the pur sued animal turns at bay upon the howl ing wolves. The horse will kick and also strike at, them with his forefeet. The cattle defend themselves with their, horns. It often happens that the wolves by leaping on cattle will eat .out large pieces of flesh before the final stand and fight is made. r When horses and cattle them, and from the formation of the city none can go-home. 'This establishment feeds 3000 peo ple a day,' 'and the amount of food re quired to care for that patronage lsenorr mous; for.example, 'when we put hash' on the 'specials' enough is made irp ac tually to fill a wasron. We are not the latest lunch room, however. I should say roughly that there were three at least which feed 7000 people a day each, probably eight that care for 4000 each. dozen like ourselves handling Then there are the swarms of smaller' lunchrooms, restaurants, cream eries and dairies, and last of all the cake and pie 3t$nds. Figures can only be ap proximate,1' but you'll be surprised how they mount up. The average dairy feeds 700 people; a day. That is about Z15, 000 people a yar. I estimated some time ago that 11,000 people daily pat tronized the restaurants in Fulton street between Broadway and Nassau street onlv. That is 3.366.000 a year. I have estimated twenty -Ahree establishments in lower NeWiYork as feeding 3000 people and over; their total per day, as sug gested, would be 89,000, or 27,234,000 for the year, pretty fair for twenty-three establishments. Think of what the fig ures are when you add in the small fry FEEDING TURNIPS. Tou cannot feed turnips to milch cows without affecting the flavor of the butter and siviner it a turnipy taste. It will make little or no diflerence wnetner the turnips are fed before or after milking, with or without salt, the scent of the turnips will pass into the milk veins and milk. Furthermore, if turnips, cab bages and similar strong-scented vege tables are cut up and fed to other animals in the same barn or stable where milch cows are standing,' the very air breathed by the milch cows will be laden with the strong odor, and this will taint the milk.- Pure and fresh air is 'just as important as pure and nearly inodorous food foi cows m order that they should give the best quality of milk for butter making. There arc, no doubt, cows which are not so susceptible to the effects of poor and strongly scented food as others, but they are not,, as' a rule, animals that give the richest milk. -American Agriculturist. CURIOUS PACTS. You see thes is only a glimpse, but it is not exaggerated, for you must remember that a good part-of Brooklyn, Jersey, Westchester, Staten Island and our other suburbs sits down to the table with us at ' the mid day; meal." Neio York Tribune. Quail Jtypnotized by a Coyote. "Did you' ever see a coyote hypnotize a bevy of ojuail?" There was a group of us sitting (on the veranda of the old adobe Rio jGrande Hotel in Las Cruces, New Mexico, discussing hypnotism. The speaker, Colonel Lawrence, who Jiiad just propounded the above query, was an olcj tiuier who had ridden Texas bronchos byer. the New Mexico ranges in the early days, and has a record as an Indian fighter , equaling that of Colonel W. H. H. .Llewellyn. None of us had even seen; the festive coyote do tho hyp notizing act. We lighted fresh cigars and struck a listening attitude. "It was several years ago," said Colo nel Lawrence, "while I was prospecting in the) Organ Mountains. I was riding ? leisurely along the foot-hills ope day, when my attention was attracted to the oddest scehe, I think, I ever witnessed".' About lOOi yards ahead of me, directly in the trail,- was a nice bunch of mount ain quail, numbering some 200 or more. It was a glorious shot, but, as usual when one sees a good shot, I did; nod have my gun with me. About twenty, feet from the quail was a hungry looking coyote cropping slowly toward his vic-j tims, with his nose pointed straight out! like a pointer. So slowly did he move, that it was: hardly perceptible. ,: "The birds were running around in a circle and huddling closer, together eacli circuit. As the coyote approached nearJ er, the circle became smaller and sniall- untu tne Dims commeneea lumpins SnOXAD THE BULL- BE PCT TO .WORK. "Put the bull to work." Such is th advice which we find in one of our ex changes. Very good, as far as the theorj goes. But when it comes to the practi cal part, of it we would like to inquire what line of-work the bull can do to ad vantage at this season of the year; It is not time to plow, and if it was the bull would not make a very good team to plow With.. If a harness was mado for him. and a cart, was provided, he might b used for drawing manure to the fields ; but these trappings would cost more than his work would be worth, and the horses or oxen usually employed for the purpose would find their "occupation gone." The same trouble about work-, ing the bull will be found at all seasons' of the year. There is very little work to be done on the ordinary farm which the bull cn do: to advantage. Not only : this, but the bull is an unsafe animal to! handle. He is always treacherous, is liable to be violent, and is never to be! trusted for a moment. It might be goodj for the bull to work, but we believe; that, in the great majority of cases, the! bull would receive a great deal tuore benefit than his owner would obtain from the labor which he performed. Ameri can Dairyman. er, over one another. When the coyote cann to within 'l a few inches the birds h stopped quite still and looked straight a' them for about two minutes, then madi a sudden dive at the bunchi biting oil the heads pf several Of the- birds,devour ing one at each mouthful. It was the oiily case of animal hypnotism! that I evc witnessed, it was very remarkable. We all agreed that it was very remark able. Globe-Democrat. CABBAGE WITHOUT TRANSPLANTING There are two ways of raising cabbage! in the open ground. One is by trans-1 planting plants', the other hy sowing the! seed in the hills or drills just where the cabbage is to be grown. If the plants have been ' started in hotbeds or cold frames for an early crop or are to occupy. land as a second crop, it is necessary that they should be transplanted ; but if it is to be the one crop of the reason on the land it is to occupy, then it is tho , . , Invention of the Camera The camera was invented by an Italiarj named Baptista Porta, though it was no at first used for photographing. It was in reality merely a dark room, into which; tue ngnt was admitted through a little round hole - in one side. The rays of light comifig from objects outside of this room entered it through this aperture j and made a picture on the other side-of the room, glowing in all the beauty and color of nature itself,' but rather indis tinct and. upside down. i This dark room was contrived by Porta' about the 'middle of the sixteenth cen-i tury. He improved it Jater by placing aj glass lens ifa. the apeirature, and outside a mirror which received' the rays of light and reflected them through the lens so that the image upon the opposite wall within was made much brighter, more distinct, and. in a natural or erect posi tion. This wa3 really the first camera obscura, ai invention which is enjoyed to the present day, being situated often upon a hilltop, where a picturesque. country surrounding may be reflected; tnrougn a lens, which is placed in the centre of. flie conical roof. n ro nr. Hav nnd Ynalin . . : 1 . i I . , 1 0 L ""-"o laofc ligut i ig merely a small camera .obscura in its dgiwuau men lunueuiors me WOIV33 oe belief of the farmers in the great cabbage-! raising sections of New England that the best plan is to plant the seed just where the cabbage is to be grown. Experience has taught us that by this plan the piece1 matures more evenly than when the plants are transplanted, while they are certainly as reliable for heading, for TvnAn 1 GO rwr rnnt nf tTift rilnnfa ninlrA TsJ t. - '. marketable heads as I have known in-! stances nothing better can be asked. Those who have been in tho habit o transplanting cauliflowers will fini they 'will do decidedly better when the seeds are planted in the hills where they are to be matured. . A plan now somewhat common among market gardeners is to drill the seed . of cabbage sufficiently thick that by cutting out the extra plants with the hoe the remainder will be left at the distanca suitable. ' This re quires more seed, while it saves a good deal of time and , back-breaking worki The gieat defect in this manner of plantr ing has been that it left the seed toO. thick, much thicker than was necessary for the ends desired. In my planting in the drill we used last season the Mathews seed drill. My foreman made an in genious change in its dropping capacity, which is worth .putting on record. He ' removed the wheel 1 which - has about twelve projections that as it revolves keep the seed agitator in motion, and boring four holes at equal intervals in serted four projections on the opposite side and then set back, in place, but in a reversed position. The result was oni revolution caused the agitator to move four times instead of twelve, and the seed was fed just about as thick ai wanted. Very often a little change 01 improvement can be made in an imple ment by the farmer or gardener using it that will add much to its value. Amert can Agriculturist. The imperial reign of Japan began with Jummu Tenno on April 7,t 660 B. C. i The whole number of horses that have made records of 2 :30 or better is 4646 trotters and 1243 pacers. It is claimed that in almond and. Ma deira nut culture ; tho Pacific Coast bids fair to surpass the world. Glucose is produced in the United States at the rate of 1,000,000 pounds per day, principally in the Western States. Justice is the name of a man who was recently sentenced to eighteen years im prisonment in the Illinois Penitentiary. The St. Gobian Company in France exhibits a plate glass with a surface of 363 square feet probably the largest ever cst. j Dried i toadstools pushed into bleed ing nostrils will stop the hemorrhage. 1hey are also said to make excellent pipelighters. ; A novel written by a Haytian African has made its appearance in Paris, France, and is said to show considerable ability and great originality. " The committee of the Society for the Preservation of the Monument of Ancient Egypt have, undertaken the repair of the great Temple of Karnak. A new . room has been discovered in Wind Cave, near ! the South Dakota Hot Springs, 1600 feet long, sixty-five feel wide and fifty feet high. Twenty-nine copies only of the Guten berg Bible are known to be in existence, seven of which.; one a fragment, are printed i on vellum, and the rest on paper, i ' ' .j ' The Chicago (III.) Auditorium has 4173 seats, but can hold, with addi tional seats on the stage and in the body of the house, fully eight thousand people. s j A fifteen-year-old boy hag just died in Brooklyn of too rapid growth. At the time of his death he was six feet two inches tall, bat did not weigh 100 pounds. . There is nothing which will squelch an oil-fed fire in its incipiency more quickly and effectually than sand and there are no afterclaps in the way of water damage either. A Japanese has ' invented a flying ma chine which it is claimed can be pro pelled at the rate of ten miles an hour. It has six wings like those of a bird, which are moved by a wheel. In England, in ' the seventeenth cen tury, there was a renowned hangman named Derrick, who erected gibbets and attended executions by hanging. Hence a machine,' with ropes for hoisting, took his name. j William F. White, a Pennsylvania countryman living near Lancaster, has a wonderful aptitude for figures. He can multiply sums of five and six figures to- j gether without resort to pencil and paper, carrying all the processes easily in his mind. I Outside of mathematics he is poorly educated., j Many names of j materials in common use have queer origins. . Nickel was first obtained as a metal from Germany over a century ago, bud the ore had been pre viously known to the miners as kuupfer nickel, or Old Nick's copper, because al though it looked J like copper ore they could obtain no copper from it.' A Roman doctor has discovered in many of the &kulls found in Etruscan tombs, as well as in those deposited in various museums, interesting specimens of ancient dentistry work and artificial teeth.!.' Some of these skulls date as far back as the sixth century before Christ, proving that dentistry is not a modern art. . Do&t von trant to nave money, clothes, time, labor, fuel and health? All these can be Bared vnn will tru Ilobhlna'a Electric Bonn. We say "try," knowing if you try It oner, you will always use It. Have your grocer order. Eotpt la crowded with sleasuro tourists from all jarta of the world.- 9100 Reward. SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to care in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity.' Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Care is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de stroying the foundation of the disease, ana giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in aoingus work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. bend for list of testimonials. Address . F. J. Chkmkv Jk CO., Toledo, U. Sold by" Druggists. 75c The Danish Parliament baa refused to pe,r mit cremation in that country. The Ladles Delighted. The pleasant effect' and the perfect safety with which ladies may use the liquid fruit laxative. Syrup of Figs, under all conditions make it their favorite remedy. It Is pleasing to the eve and to the taste, gentle, yet effec tual in acting on the kidneysjiver and bowels. FITS stopped free by Dr. Klot'b Obxax Nkrvb Restorer. No fits after first day's use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, rei Arch Et fniia.. itu Msaey fer Everykedy. r WaIIh asks: Is It a fact that a person can make $30 or (40 a week in the plating busi ness?" Yes, l mate irom o to o a oar, plac ing and selling plated ware; the Lake Llectrlo Oo Englewood, 11L, will give you full instruc tions! Ia this business there is money for everybody. ARjtiDaa. 01 . L m i Dr. Net a Keatrws. Certain Croup Cure, the tested t .tunUna' and practice. Positive, swtft,sure. bold bv druKKlsts or maueu uu reraivi u w i A- f. noxsie. duumu, n. x. Address . Hoisie, Buffalo, N, lets. The Ceavealeaee el tell Traias. The Erie is the only railway running solid trains over its own tracks between ew l otk and Chicago. No change of cars for any class of passengers, ttates tower uian uj uuiu first-class line. TtAArthiunSi Pills act like tmuric on a Weak Stomach. - I I k y u Man of-War Boomerangs. "Few people," says a naval officer, "appreciate the tremendous nature of the blast caused by firing a big gun on board ot a ship. An example of its ef fect was seen in some recent trials in fir ing the sixty-seven ton gun of the battle ship Trafalgar, considered one of the three or four finest vessels in the British navy. The gun was pointed directly ahead, and fired with a charge of 630 pounds of slow-burning powder and a 1250-pound projectile. The blast pro duced by the rush of the powder-gas and the shot was so tremendous that the plates of the forecastle were forced in and the deck beams bent out of shape, while almost every round carried away some fragment of the projecting portions of the ship,, even when the training was to the right or the left. It is estimated that the vessel . would be reduced to something very like a wreck were twenty- five rounds to be fired, either directly ahead or directly astern. This interferes with, or renders impossible, firing when either In flight or chase, and has caused our naval constructors to modify the plans for the projected battleship, as it is not deemed desirable to have them sink from the discharge of their own guns." Neva York Continent. Those who believe that' Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will cure them are more liable to get well than those who don't. ' If you happen to be one of those who don't believe, there's a matter of $500 to help your faith.' It's for you if the mak ers of Dr. Sage's remedy can't cure you, no matter now Daa or of how long standing your catarrh in the head may be. The makers are the World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion of Buffalo, N. Y. They're known to every newspaper publisher and every druggist m tne iana, ana you can eas ily ascertain that their word's as ccood as their bond. Begin right. The first stage is to purify the system. You don t want to build on a wrong foundation, when you re build ing for health. And dont shock the stomach with harsh treatment Use the milder means.' You" wind your watch once e mm m a day. Your liver and Dowels should act as reeularly. If they do not use a key. 1 fie key is Dr. Pierce s Pleasant Pellets. One a dose. Carious Use of Microbes. ; A Norwegian naturalist, Dr. Neilson, states that fishermen in his country have been catching whales with the aid of diseased bacteria for more than five cen turies. Every season whales enter a nar row inlet of the sea near the town of Ber gen and when one is discovered the fish- ermeu go out in boats, drive him further up the narrow bay, and stretch a net across the mouth of the inlet. Their primitive implements are insufficient alone to capture and land the animal imprisoned, which is usually twenty or thirty feet long, and very strong. They accordingly shoot into him- arrows in fected with the poison of some infectious disease apparently sympathetic anthrax and in twenty-four or thirty-six hours he becomes so weakened by the growth of bacilli in the woands that men with harpoons arc able to land him. Trenton AN. J.) American. "Keeping up appeannces" is defined by one authority upon modern manners to mean "a frucal diet in order to give an occasional dinner party." r FfJOLSlOfJ Of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites Of Lime and Soda, There are em(Zsoiw mnd emulaiona, and there it Mill much sMmmetf milk trhieh maaqutra&e a cream. Try mm thru ttrlll tnnntf ttatwfmetmrerm cannot so diagniim their toa liner il mm to wnmlce it palatable to menmitive mtomnehm. Bcott'm Etnttlxionof rVRK NORWEGIAN COD LITER OIL, combined eUh Hypophoo phitem is almost am palatable am milk, t'or thim reamon am trril am for the fact of the stimulating Qualities of the Hypo phosphites, fhysieianm frequently pre scribe if in casern of CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, BttOXCHITIS ami CHRONIC COVailor SEVERE COLO. AU Drufftrists metl it, but be sure you yet me pnniK,ai tnere are poor imitations. 013 "Gierman syrup i We have selected two or Croup, three lines from letters i freshly received from pa rents who have given German Syrup 10 ineir cnuaren in me emergencies of CroupJ You - will credit these, because they come from vgood, sub stantial people, happy m finding what so many families lack a med icine conUiningno evil drug, which mother can administer with con fidence to the little ones in their, most critical hours, safe and sure that it will carry-them through. t Mrs. JAS.W. Kr, 'Daughters' College, Ilarrodsbore.Ky. I have depended upon it in attacks of Croup with my little daugh ter, and find it an in valuable remedy.' Ed. L. Willits, of Alma, Neb. J give it to rav children when troubled with Croup and never saw any preparation act like iu 11 is aimpiy mi raculous, i Fully oae-half of our customers are mothers who use Boschee's Ger man Syrup among their children. A medicine to be successful with tho little folks must be a treatment for the sudden and terrible foes of child hood, whooping: cough, croup, diph theria and the dangerous inflamma tions of delicate throats and lungs. TOBB AS' DERBY CONDITION POWDERS Are Warraited Superior to Any Otters, . OR NO PAY. For the (cure of Distemper, Heares, Hide-bonnd, Worms, Dots, Scnrvj, Loss of Food, etc., in Horses, Worms, Horn Distemper, Black TongueColds, Conghs an Loss of Cnd in cattle. - No one has ever used them but con tinue their Use and recommends them to his friends.! - " come more methodical in their attacks. While some are attracting the attention of the animal in front others are snapping at his sides and hind legs, till finally the Hamstring 13 cut, ana Uien tne fight over. Chicigo Times. is ine patients, "to imagine V PURE PAINT, ftEQUiRES ADDITION OF AN 6QIMLPARTOFOII A.J mm MA.KINO COSTcCfcdlAj SfcO AdVLHTISED IN 7348 PAPERS yu yrtlTf Merchant. I.. Jfc HI. x. y. LADIES! We will pTMnt-jrou a Hold Watch mii-. for l,ni...m.; H """ oo uoiiar lent you itamp tojyretnrn poBtage. f M Coin Ht II0.1.1,, Mawaj PRA7PR AXLE unction BEST IN TFIK WORLD tW Uet the Ornulno. Bold r,TcrjTrherc Lucid Moments of Lunatics. "It is a great mistake," said a well vho makes a specialty known physici of treating ins; mat so-called 'lanatics' ar nwcsMri'w disagreeable, dangeroJs 'or even eccen tric. There are men, insane on one or more points, with whom I pass hours in conversation on agreeable topics, and I am oiten among them when they are talk ing with each other. Some of them urn L fully aware' that their minds are dis eased, and they know they are under treatment just as if they would be if they weru Buuering irom any pnysical ail ment Cne of them said to me : 'I know I am crazy, and,: as I do not believe I will ever be straight in the head, I am content to stay here all my life." An other one gave me a learned account of the symptoms of lunacy, which he said he pos3essea,and which bcaine active while ae wastaifcing. There, are all kinds of iunatics, but there is rarely a case of a nan who is always ravins mad. Even :he violent patients, as a ruler are violent miyat times and 1 can et along with mem in their lucid intervfo A T.rnnn. :ion of them are discharged cured, and rfe never hear- of them after they leave .u asyium. si. Louit Star-Sayings. hp hay reyi warn m ' ine report of the Hlmoia RaH;.,! Commissioners for the last year shows mat tne total rauwav rnitni in . , t - w ciaie lucreaseq over the simplest form, carrying a lens at one end and a groiind glass screen at, the other. It is, however, often much more com plicated ia its construction. Christian Vnion. l J The Kaiser's Assistant. A story circulated at the . time of Emperor William's death is just now again being repeated. The tale had somethingidfamatic . about it and recent events lend to it an air f probability, The old Emperor, on his death-bed, sent 1 - ! 1 ....... ior ms granascn ana explaining to him .FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Avoid extremes of temperature for ashej are an admirable orchard plants. Wood manure. 1 The house slwps of every family art worth saving for fertilizing purposes bj throwing them on the compost heap, j ' Two tab'e spoonfuls of crude carbolic acid to each bucketful of whitewash will make it much more destructive to lied. Blackberries and raspberries should b set in rows six feet apart and the plants two and a half or three feet apart in the row. . . . , .Rhode Island Greening and Baldwin are two varieties of apples that lead in the New York markets and gain good prices. , ' Hens should not -be overfed. Keep them with a sharp appetite, so-that they will take exercise enough to keeji neauny. i It is a mistake to seed a. young: or chard down to grass unless the trees a well established and the soil 13 reason' ably rich. . . j The white or brown Leghorns are a -3 : 1 1 1 uesurdoie oreea wnere eggs are wanted. They are good layers, but not good setters. Jtsones make a srood feed for nnultn 0 4 j occasionally, and cn many farms a good supply "could be readily secured with a little care in picking them up and break ing or grinding them into such condition that the fowls can eat them. Do not calculate, in making the gar den all at once. A good garden should lurnish a supply all through the season: Kale, Kohl, rabi, celery, salsify and cauli 43 ii .3 . . ivmcr nrc ail good crops, DUt not 80 generally raided as they should be. j Sheep raising has to be learned, and it is better to start with a few and carefully study their.habits, read what others have the aimculties of government and the possibility! that 116 ght be Emperor while fctilt a young man. matin him promise to associate his younger brother in the administration of affairs. The young Prince gave the promise, which was exacted perhaps because the. Em peror ioresaw the premature death of 1 . ms son, on oecause he had that idea of parental government which has always ueen so siyong with; the family of the Hohenzollerns. And now. according to the Poll Mall GazeUe, the time has come to redeem the promises The Emperor has sent fdr his younger brother. Prince Henry, of Prussia, and ordered him to I to a P their care, and then when preyious year quit the active service of the navy and prepare himself for more , important and imposing-functions. lie is to take his elder brother's place whenever the Emperor cannot preside in person at state ceremonials or receptions. He is to be a kind jpf Regent or Lord Lieutenant to the Emperor. William H. is fond of voyage and adventure. Like his an cestor, Frederick II., he 'seems never so happy as when ho is away from his own capital, but still in his own dominions. " uiuYo mtcuueu to sriTfl tnn riuma Emperor greater freedom in his state duties, or is it merely obedience, to a 1 olemo prooaisel CMwfo EtraAi, you are sure there is profit to-be made, get more sheep, and with good manage ment you will succeed The stock farmer has the most inde pendent life in the world. His stock and grass grow day and night,' rain pi shine, without a host of hands t& . feed and pay off . He is more independent of tne oad seasons than the erain-Errower. who loses a crop when the season isbadl Irue, there is nothing now to brag of in prices of stock, but still it is better than any other business on the farm, and if we have high-grade stock we "get th top of the markety that pay wedl eyejjia lh AAA utnu. " ' . The Art of Trailing." j 1 It is impossible, to learn the art o! trailing irom dookb, though there are a few general rules which can be observed. For instance, every scout knows that to overtake a party which has perhaps run off some stock provisons must bo taken to last several dayj. That the start must be made slowly and the course followed persistently and at a moderate pace, giv ing the horses the nights to rest in and start at daylight in the mornings. Then when the pursuers come near the pursued it is the scout's business to tell the number and condition of the enemy and how many hours have elapsed since they passed the spot on which you are standing, for it may become necessary ior you to remain concealed until you decide upon the manner of attack, for if the party be made up of Indians they will scatter before you can capture them. Again, any scout can tell whether the trail, be that of a war party or not, be cause no Indians take their families with them on the warpath, hence no lodge poles drag behind the ponies. If there is no trace of these it is safe to consider that a war party is on the rampage some where. It is generally easy to distinguish tho tracic ot an Indian s pony irom mat ot a white's horse, as the former will make .a smaller impression, and will show no im print of a shoe. One of the difficult things to determine is the age 01 the trail, and to do it cor rectly ; requires much practice. If the track is very fresh' it will show moisture where the earth as turned up, which after a few hours becomes dry. Should rain have fallen the . edges will be les clear J and will be washed down some what.! " . : The expert Mexican scout can tell by a glance what tribe of Indians has made a given! trail, its age and every particulai about it as truthfully as though he has himself seen the cavalcade pass. Chi cago Herald. I Tho Cotton' Seed Industry. The enormous development of the cot ton-seed industry in the Southern States has brought millions ot dollars into the pockets of the Southern farmers. For merly the cotton-seed was of . no value except for manure in which use the oil contained in it was of course utterly wasted, being of, no fertilizing value whatever. A crop of 7,000,000 bales of cotton makes 7,000,000 half tons of seed, or 7,000,000,000 pounds of seed, equal to 3,500,000 tons. At $9 per ton, the crop of seed is worth over $30,000,- 000 yearly, but the ultimate value of it is far greater. With twenty-five per cent. of oil from it, the oil is worth about $9, 000,000; the oil cake left is worth $60, 000,000,. and the: hulls left are worth $1,500,000 for feeding. ' Thus the seed of the cotton plant, which heretofore brought nothing to the farmer, is now worth one-fifth of the to tal value of the cotton itself, and is thus equivalent to an addition of 1,500,000 bales to the yield Of lint. This instance shows how agriculture benefits from the development of other industries,- the manufacture of oil from the seed being the starting :-Hint from which the whole value of it is possible to be got out of it. As the cake and the hulls are valuable for feeding, and nearly the whole price of them is returned in the manure made, the Southern faimer may, by giving at tention to this poiat, extract still another contribution from this valuable product, Neio York Timet. Keep Your Bipod Pure. j A small quantity of prevention is worth many pounds of cure. If your blood is in good condition the liability to any disease is much reduced and the ability to resist its wasting influence is tenfold greater: Look then to your blood, by taking Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) every few months. It is harmless in its effects to the most delicate infant, yet it cleanses the blood of all poisons ' and builds up the general health. 1 fQ cured me sound and well of contagious Blood Poison. As VB soon aa I discovered I was afflicted with the disease I commenced taking Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) and in a few weeks I was perma nently cured." Geobox Stewart, Shelby, Ohio. Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. -ELY'S CREAM BALM Clean w NcjuU tarn Wassaaawam- illa.fl 11 T..l.w4l. the Kore, Kestores Taste and Smell, avnd ahfAMRUrai? Gives Awiw into 50c Druggist or by mail. ELY elief at once for Cold In Head. the Kostrilm. It i Quickly Absorbed. M Warren SUM.Y. Ileal I Price 25 Cents Per Box. DEPOT, 40, MURRAY ST., NEW YORK. Sold by all . Druggists, Storekeepers and Saddlers. . tSPGct Pamphlet and read the cer tificates. 1090 paid if not ccnuine. PADWAY'S fl) READY RELIEF. THE CHEAPEST ANI REST MEDI CINE VOll FAMIIiY USE IN THE WOKLI). NEVER FAILS TO RELIEVE PAIN. C'.nrfa nnd PnVAnla ftalrla Pnnirha Sore Throat, Inflammation, Rhcu- RlfiRY KNFF? mutism Voiii-alcla Hprlphi I MUU I LLO Toothache, Asthma, Uiffl- ' ' . cult Breathing-. ; CURES THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty minutes. Not one hour after reading this advertise ment need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. INTERNALLY, a half to a teanpoonf ul In half a tumbler of water will In a few minute cure Cramps. Spasmx, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heart burn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains. 3Uc. 1'er tfotclr. Hold tor Dragglst. are Coining' Money ONE AGEISTT SOLD 1 225 IN IS DAYS in February. Ladies Am as well aa men. Royal Edition of the Peerless Atlas of the World, has lar maps in colors. A ecu rate location of towns.cities.rail roads.etc. Census of IS-.i. Everybody wantstt. ellon sieht. AaentaClenr lOOperet. For terms address HIST, CBD WILL rjEIPilKlCL 927 aaBnat8LPkilaalhn. rs. W.BM&tft3a. SthaJrfZriGb. St. Louis, Mo. Artistlo Xatal WorfceraJrWffj lartai n aa iib.i asra. r..' i i'-'."." ' ' KrrlisBS niry I ftlaiBiJiurT A. WrUa) fat Cl I I II ftavl f rowmvTCLT rkhkdifd. Greoly 1'ant Ntretclier. Adopted by student, at Hnrrsrd. AmlMnt. and otbar UMiecs, also, av professional and kaatnsss sm If ant for ssle In yw town mi4 Aa. to B. J. UBEJU.Y. 714 Washlnctoa Rtmt. Bsstoa. The Czar of Russia suspended Mtt-efcietiQ luw for three years. the Biff WIN Health Helper IE DYE, Edltor,Burralo..V.V tells how. SOc. a year. Bead for sample. Da. FREE DATCIMTC r. a. lriuiann, rssaV IT" ill fl ra vruiisiisa, u.u IdlADUAY'S UU POLLS. An Excellent and Mild Cathartic. Purely vegetable. The safest and best medicine in the world ror the cure ot all disorders of the Liver. Stomach or Bowels. Taken accordimT to directions they wlU restore health and renew vitality. Price, 2Ac a box. Sold by all druggists, or mailed ny .kali wax & CO., w warren street, Jiew xorK, on receipt oi price. Ssau worn dacuma. -wwm- FOR A OXE.DOI.LAIt n I I.I. sent mi by mall we will deliver, free o all charges b any pff)l the United states, au vi tn tollo wla anulrft out lully packei: One two-ounce bottle of Pure VaieUni. :- lOcti One two-ounce Bottle oT Vaseline Poma-ls, 13 -One Jar ot Vaseline Cold Creain, - - - , - li Une Cake of aaelioe uunuhor Ico. - ' uieuueoi aseuno noap, unsomwi. II ' One Cake of VassllneSoap, exquisitely soeate I,-' One two-ounce aottie of White VaneUiK 4 -5 " ! I l-l Or Mr Bownri iirst7'''tfl i ? IVi prim aanxvf. On no monunt ot pcrmi le 1 1 1 it)1 I from yourdruoyist ana VaneUntor prepiriitu there fr .s unless latmled toitu onr name, teoMH wilt tar tainlyreeeiveanimitation whie. Hat liute ornovtlut I'seocsrsaih.nit. Co., 'il Miate St.. N". V. Best Truss Ever Used. will hold tin won case Will hold tlie wont wish com tort. Worn sWoat and day. positively cures rnptnre. ent by mall everywhere. Sead for descriptive catalogo and testimonialt to ti.V. 1 1 ease M far. Ca. 74 t Itroaalvray, New Vera. City. 3 PhOF. LOISETTE'S NEW MEMORY BOOKS. fit! -isms on a wo recent Memory Systems. Ready r nt April llU ' FuU Taoles of Conuuts furwmrdeA n Ij to those wno seul stamped dlrectetl -iiT-kp. . A .so 1-rtwpectus IX)ST KRhE of tue LoisettlaaA i t Aever Furgettlu ;. Addrdsi i Prof. lAJLbfcrTE, zs? Fifti Ave, New Yori. GRATEFULr-COMFORTING. e grebes bburdens.sr6u c&n ,esser) - r5 H"is:a.soli'd coJve ofacourinsoo JfVr . t .-!. La sea rorc.ecn.n purposes-, I EPPSS COGOA What would you give tir a Friend BREAKFAST. "By a thoronsrh faunrlfdni f tlwt nnttiral lawn wuica govera tne operations or digestion and nutri tion, and bv-a careful annllcatlon of the fine tmner- Ues of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Eppe has provided our oreauasi uuxes with a delicately Savoured Dev. rraae wom-q mav save f. manv b-aw ftoctors' nills. tt is by the Judicious tue of such articles of diet that a constitution r-.ay be gradually buUt up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hun- jiwm oi ruoue maiaaies are Boating around us. ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping oar- saw .cu iwuneu wim pure okxki ana a properly nourished frame." Cirii Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold oniy in nau-pouna Una by tJrocers, labelled thus: J A JlrJS Wl-S dc CO., Hom.Bopathlc Cbemtota, who would take halflyotir hard work off your shoulders and do it tcithout a. murmur ? What wouUl you give to find an assistant in uour housework that would keep your I floors and walls clean, and your kitchen bright, (tnd yet never grow ugly over the matter ofltqrd work ? Sapolio is just such a friend and can be bought at all grocers.. SY i DROP T It EATE 1 PUEE. Pealtlvely Cared with Vegetable Kentedle. uave cured thousands of eases. rimnHmti nm. nounced hopeless by best physicians. From tlrstdosi symptom disappear; in ten days at least two-thtrd all symptoms removed. Send for free book testimo nials of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment free vy mail, u you order trial, send tUe. in stamps to na itecommendea dt 1 nysicians. TVt Omfh Ifedieine. Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and aereeable to tho taste. Children take it without objection. By drugrgists. I23 LOll - PATEIMTSS T. I llirna. r'sshlaaten. II. '. 4f ftf t wwwte fra, CHtCHBSTtr8KQUo.RED Cfl08S TDlAVOHO BfiAl "vtukiMtikasB. Tafcaaeetkapktan. -Mmu uu. j ZZZ-. At BrmssfU. mr ssos l V --.. i , ,i . ,m, pswiBssw'.ieaaaassnterfelta. At Bmou. w at si r-rwm rvsTrnajsnw - - 1 - . f kkm In ITtUA. Fs
The Western Sentinel (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 23, 1891, edition 1
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