FARM AND GARDEN. A Cow With a Cough A cough may be caused by indigestion, and this is probably the cause when otherwise a cow appears to be in good health. Overfeeding will cause difficulty in breathing by adding too much fat to the heart. Give the cow a dose of epsom salts (one pound) dissolved rn warm thin linseed tea, about a quart; and stop feeding grains for a few days. Mash the bran and add a pound of linseed meal to it for a few days and gradually return to the former feeding. Brewer's grains should not be fed when warm or sour. Jfeu) York Times. Feeding Meat to Fowls. Too much meat, either ground or fre?h, is injurious, as it causes bowel disease. It may be fed three times a week, if the dried, ground meat be used, and twice a week if fresh butcher's meat is given. One pound of fre-h meat, chopped, is ahout the proper quantity for fifteen aens, and half a pound of the ground meat answers for a meal, mixed with other food, for the same number, If preferred, the ground meat may be given twice a week and the fresh meat once. Ground fish is also excellent, and makes a cheap and good egg food, if given with ground grain. Farm and fir aide. the supplies may not fail to as. end freelj to the leaves, these should be allowed to form anywhere on the stem, the lowei down and nearer covering and shading it the better. A strip of cloth or papei wrapped 3; : irally round the stem frorr the lowest leaves to the ground will help to keep the vessels of the stem from con tracting by parching sun or wind, aud, in the case of trees liable to be infested by borers will serve a most useful pur pose in repelling the parent beetle. ThL' early planting is favored much by having the holes dug during or before winter, and the finer mold for filling rendered all the liner and dryer by being heaped up and exposed fully to the frost. The trees arc always best obtained in the fall and kept in a cool cellar with the roots covered well with sand or fine earth, 01 some sheltered place in a dry bank out of door, safe from mice and rabbits. A wrapping of the stem of each will secure this, and the wrapping will then be ready in place for summer use as above. N. w York Tribune. ! Soft-Soap on the Farm. An abundance of what is called ''soft- Grafting Wax. There has been a good many inquiries in rogardng how to make grafting wax. There are many variations in the quantity of the ingredients used by dillerent graft ers, the essential requisite being to form a composition that is soft and pliable enough to be freely applied, and yet not melt or run in the hot sun. The follow ing ingredients and directions are given in Thomas's American Fruit Culturi&t: Melt together three parts of resin, three of beeswax and two of taliow. A cheaper composition, but more liable to adhere to the hands, is made of four parts of resin, two of tallow and one of beeswax, orae grafters use linseed oil instead of tullow, in equal parts. The wax may be applied directly to the graft, or it may be spread when softened by sufficient warmth on what is termed "grafting paper" cut into strips, and wound around the graft when inserted. Agricultural lievitw. Individuality of Horses. The individuality of horses varies as much as that of men. Everyone has a different mental as well as physical make up. borne horses seem to possess sense, are quick to understand and obey the least sign, motion or word of their mas ter; others are not ii aptly termed "lunk heads," always awKward, lumbering about, difficult to teach, and never make anything in a horse-ological sense. It may be true that these traits in a horse are sometimes due to the habits of his driver or owner, and that the horse him self may not be so mu h to blame for his ignorance, but however much he is ex cused on this score, there is a surprising difference in these mental qualities of horses. Between a nervous, sensitive and intelligent horse and his considerate owner how larire a union of fellowship and sympathy exist. In the stable, on the road, if overtaken by an accident, the cool, sensitive man is sure to have a quick sympathy for his horse. He trusts his master as his master trusts him. If the master is quiet the horse will be equally so, knowing everything is sale; if the man blusters, or becomes anxious, or exhibits fear, the horse knows it at once, and becomes restive likewise. At w i ork II raid. Manure Your Lawn. If neglected last fall, it is not yet too late to recuperate impoverished lawns. A thin sprinkling of manure, placed on the grass and raked oil' just as it begins to grow lively, will be found to put new heart into the grass. Tiie fact of fre quent cutting of the grass and carting away the clippings, which should al ways be done, will in time impoverish the richest soil. The addition of a coat ing of manure in the winter or spring keeps ail supplied again. Almost any soil, as that of the common garden, that can be spared, or that from below where a compost heap has been laid, or the cleaning out of ditches by the roadside, that is part decayed vegetable m;ittjr, is a splendid thing to spread on the lawn. Any of the latter class is excellent for such lawns as have dead spots in the grass. In this case, if the whole is left until frost is gone out of the ground, then spread on, raked in, sown with grass seed on the bare spots, and well rolled after, the lawn will very often be as good as when first laid down. Nothing is more attractive around the dwelling, whether the castle or cot tage, than a nice green sward of grass. It is cool and pleasant to the eye in the hottest weather, and in the most scorch ing sunshine, and all can enjoy it, who do not live in the pent up streets of solid brick and mortar. Have a grass plat around your dwelling. Prairie Farmer. soap" may be had at the store or from the wagon of the venders. Real soft soap is made, not bought. It is made from the refuse fat of the kitchen. Every economical housekeeper has aer pot for "soap grease" which, instead of trading it off with the soap man for soap, often of a poor grade, she makes into soft-soap. The other ingredient necessary is lye, made from the ashes of hard wood. A substitute for lye may be made with the potash of commerce dissolved in water. This solution is used in the same manner as the lye, being mixed with the fat, hot or cold, according the method adopted in the family. Soap made in this manner is always soft, a brownish, thick, viscid, somewhat jelly-like soft-solid, which by no amount of standing will ever bee ome hard. Potash and soda both combine with fat to make soap; potash or lye, which is the same, always makes a soft soap, while soda in the form of salsoda, or soda ash, always makes a hard soap, but soda or potaah soap may be con verted intD hard soap by adding to it common salt, whi h supplies soda. What is generally sold as "soft soap" is simply common white hard soap, to which so much water has been added that it no longer retains its form, but becomes a semi-solid mass. If one purchases a quart of this stuff, he buys at leat three half pints of water; we are therefore justified in call ing the stuff a "fraud." Besides it is greatly inferior in strength for all the purposes for which it may be used, espe cially in horticulture, to the home-made soft-soap we have described. If one has an old orchard, the trunks and larger branches covered with loose bark, on which mosses, lie hens and still lower forms of vegetation find a foot-hold, and which afford a resting and hiding place for numerous injurious insects in various states of development, the first thing to be done is to scrape off all the loose scales of bark. Use a moderately dull hoe a sharp one might injure the bark; one with a short handle will allow the lower branches to be reached. Use the home-made soft-soap, dilute it with hot water, stir it well until it is thin enough to apply with a small white-wash brush or a large paint brush. Put plenty of it on the trunks and the larger branches. One should endeavor to apply the soap very early in spring, so that it may not dry up at once, but be gradually washed off by the rains that usually occur at this season. When the trees have had a thorough washing the bark will present a beautifully smooth appearance that will amply repay one for the trouble. For removing the green growth on the outside of flower pots, this soap is ex cellent: it has also been recommended as a vehicle to apply kerosene for aphides or plant lice and other insects. One pint of soft-soap is mixed with half a pint of kerosene. Mix thoroughly, add to seven or eight gallon of water, and apply with a syringe. This has been found destructive to the chinch bug. American A gr icu Uur it. THE LABOE WOULD. About 3000 iron cars are in use. Western stove foundries are nearly all on full time. A new forty mile ore road is to be built in Michigan. JThere are two hundred gold beaters in Tv York. Ix the South all the coke ovens are running double time. There is a general depression in labor con ditions abroad. A lady in Belfast, Me., is learning the machinist's trade. Mix-kapolis, Minn., has 2000 men who are looking for work. Montana coal miners show an out crop twenty-two feet thick. New Bedford, Mass.. is to have a mill for weaving laney cashmeres. A thousand dock workers at Marseilles, France, have gone on strike. The Gadsden, (Ala.) car works have an or der for TOO cars for one road. A good many costly hotels are being built of concrete and artificial stone. Starvation wages and idle workmen is the story that comes from Berlin. A bed plate weighing thirty-three tons was recently cast at Steelton, Penn. In the neglected mining district of Zacalparn Mexico, labor is paid 614 per month. Wages are being reduced in New England woolen mills and new mills are starting up. In Baltimore 5000 women and girls get the average weekly wages of -3 for making overalls. Points for Tree Planters. Next to having healthy, thrifty young bees, not overgrown and not spoiled by wyitig or freezing, early planting is of first importance for all sons of decidu ous trees, so that all wounds may callous over before the season for visible growth. Kext secure healthy, lull-size leaves capable of maintaining growth. This is helped by pruning the top well, re moving all side-branches and even short ening the main stem if needful to re duce the number of growing points (buds'. When these are few they can he adequately supplied by the weakened roots, and the leaves will then be fully developed and filled out to full size. To ; assure that they continue to be supplied throughout the growing season, the loots that are to supply them should be I secured from dryness before hot weather j V a wide and liberal mulch of any sort vegetable waste, And io oraer that 1 Farm and Garden Notes. Look out for lice on poultry, cattle and hogs. Inspect drain outlets and clear out obstructed ones. A fiock of poultry on a farm is indis pensable to the setting of a good table. See that the pigs have plenty of water to drink, even if they are fed on slops. If you have plenty of wood ashes you will not be compelled to buy fertilizers rich in potash. Cows that are to have calves in the spring should not be fed meal now, but bulky, juicy food. Stock by this time are becoming tired of winter's restraint and vermin will badly worry them now. Spending the crops before they are made is working to disadvantage ; so far as possible, pay as you go. In saving seed make it an item to se lect that which has ripened first; witfi corn this is very important. The old method of mixing up a dough of cornmeal with cold water foi chicks won't make them grow. A fruit grower affirms that in the cul tivation of peaches stable manure pro duces too much growth of wood. Aside from the home consumption of egs, a small flock of poultry, when properly handled, may be made profita ble. Hens should lay from this date until warm weather without ceasing, and will, if the conditions are anythng like fa vorable. The proper time to water horses is just before they eat, not afterward. Watering after eating is the cause of more deaths of horses by colic than any other cause. Use good common horse sense in feeding and watering and care for your stock. good leather be nailed or till are A Vienna man is making from red beechwoed. It can sewed. Patterson, (N. J.) silk weavers work 9 o'clock at night, and new silk mills starting. Delaware River shipbuilders have con tracts enough on hand to keep them busy for two years. The New York Progressive Musical Union has taken steps toward getting up a national organization. The 10.000 washerwomen of Paris have formed a union. They will demand seventy five cents per day. In Australia 870, 4?S workmen, employed in 71,570 shops and mills, have their lives in sured against accidents. Nashua (N. H.) tool makers have had to reduce wages five to thirty -five per cent, to meet Western competition. Building in the City of Mexico is said to be so active that some of the work has to be suspended for want of bricklayers. The strike outbreak in Germany is so general that it would appeal to be an organ ized co-operation of the trade centers. The Standard Oil Company think they now have a process to turn lime into gas. and have just bought up 40,000 acres of territory. Postmaster-General Wanamaker is the pioneer in Philadelphia in employing col ored people for responsible positions in his business. A Union of Manchester (England) Tailor esses has been formed. Miss Harkness stated that there were 25,000 tailoresses in London, working sixteen hours a day, at two cents an horn, when they can get work. Albert Raymond, a Jersey City (N. J.) painter, is out with an offer to paint 100 6 to 8 inch letters, six colors to a letter, against any man, the painting to be dotte on glass, in water colors. He has a 6. 22 record for the job. NEWSY GLEANINGS. Russia has 138 vessels. An ice trust is the latest. Florida has fresh pineapples. Profound peace reigns in Samoa. In America there are 500,000 Jews. Louisville is to have natural gaa Frogs' legs cost fifty cents a pound. Boston eats fifty tons of candy a day. Chicago receipts of hogs are increasing. The United States has ninety-eight vessels. European crop prospects continue favor able. The number of priests in this country ia 8118. Murders are decidedly on the increase in Paris. In Germany there are one million surplus women. A foreign steel rail syndicate is being formed. A strong current of emigration to Chile is noted. In all there are 7000 miles of pipe lines in the world. Louisiana strawberries are in the New York market. Cincinnati is paving its streets with Georgia granite. The zouave uniform is to be abandoned in the French arniy. The brewery combination in this country has not succeeded. Maud S., queen of the trotting turf , is now fifteen years of age. The annual production of mineral oil ii 2000 million gallons. The Hessian fly is destroying the wheat crop in central Illinois. Gas wells are being struck along the Rocky Mountains' slope. No Russian liable to military service permitted to leave that country now. Florida has sent 2,000,000 young orange trees to California since last September. The Indiana Legislature refuses to allow aatural gas to be piped out of the State. An Australian experiment of shipping oranges to London proved very successful. There will be about ninety vacancies this year at the United States Naval Academy. During the last seven years Atlanta, Ga., has put nearly $1,000,000 in her streets and sewers. The Spiritualists of Boston recently cele brated the forty-first anniversary of modern spiritualism. Nearly two hundred thousand barrels of apples are lying unsold in the northern part of Newr York. Alabama got the first Postmaster ap pointed in the Southern States under the new administration. Trotting begins to be recognized in Eng land. A track for it is to be established just out of Liverpool. A newspaper trust is being organized in England. Newspaper men are ordering sup plies from abroad. The Chinese are getting ready to build 650 miles of railroad. 571 locomotives, 150 coaches and 650 cars. All American make. A meat syndicate, to be known as the American Meat Company, has been organ ized in Philadelphia with a capital of $J5,-000,000. MIRACULOUS RESTuKJL That dainty tely tripping by. How fight her step, how brijjut her eye. How fresh her cheek with healthful glow. Like roses that in Maytime blow' And yet few weeks have passed away Since she was fading, day by day. The doctor's skill could naught avail; Weaker she gTew, and thin and pale. At last, whiie in a hopeV M fn One day she said. "There is a nai I've often seen a remedy Perhaps 'twill help: 1 can but try." And so, according to direction. She took T)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. And every baleful symptom lied. And she was raised as from the dead. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the world-famed, Invigorating tonic and nervine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to 'woman's delicate organization. It is purely vegetable and perfectly harmless in any condition of the system. It is the only medicine for the dis tressing weaknesses and derangements peculiar to women, sold by drugista, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years. Copyright, 18S8, by World's Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors." Dr. Pierce's Pellets, or Anti-bilious Granules, are Laxative or Cathartic, according to size of dose. Mv little hov. 5 vears old w. sidf with a disease for which doctors had no name. The nails came off his fing ers, and the fingers came off to the middle joint. For 3 years he suffered dreadfully; is now getting well, and I am satisfied Swift's Specific is ths chief cause of his improvement. -John Deihi,. Jan. 12, 1889. Peru, Ind. BMW Eggs . POISONED BY A CALF My little boy broke out with sores and ulcers, the result of the saliva of a calf coming in con tact with a cut finger. Tbe ulcers were deep and pain ful and showed no inclination to heal. I gave him Swift's Specific, and he is now well. Feb. 15, '80. John F. Heard, Auburn, Ala. Send forbooks on Blood Poisons & Skin Dise.es, free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Giu Matrimonial Paper. IG Pages Richly f ltustd. Erery anmbtr contains aeariy 300 mdwj tbementi of ladles asd geatleraea mating correspond for fna or mairiinoay. Sauif',',, copy, : silver). Addrets. HEART AND HAND, Chicago, DL Laxgre Bosk, Richly Illustrated. Free with every ordsr. ill Dl HaAS fi AM K? g -will thf work of the iWi W ww Bw r PENXM YLVA N I A Lawn I ower or Continental lja n 3I we r. Lloyd & Scppl.ee Hardware Co., Philadelphia. Pa JONES HE PAYS THE FREtCHT. 5 Thu agou Scnles, Irt a LevOrs Steel beafing-w, Brajo Tare iit-aii: aad Beam Bo fqr S60. Everr si 7 Scale. Fur free pri.eIat m ntiou this parxr and arldrea JONES OF BINGHAMT0N, BINGHAMTOS, N. V. ASTHMA CURED GStrrma.il AatbrnaCnre nerer.atijtoe"iT m- mediate relief m Uie worut case, .insures a in fart-1 able sleep; effect cmreii where ail otners fall a trial convince tht most tkrpt teal. Price 00c. and I KX.OO.oSPnircstaornvuiail. Hainrl FRKJCl forstanip. IaTk SCHIt F.M A N . HL Paul, Minn I CONSUMPTION ! have a positive remt-dr for tho above dUea . by lt thou.sandF of cais of the worst kind and f lou;r nftintllac have been cured. So rtronjr is my fajth in It lflcacy thai I vhi; send two bottles free, together with a valuable treatise on this disease to anv sufferer. ii ve Express aad P. O. address. T. A. SLOC'CM. M. C, 11 PearlSC, N. T DO YOU SEE THIS. fE guarantee no other LAWN MOWER I WANT to hear onlu irum sensible men -a.A wotneu I that are tired ol boom, dertptite. -Von -Satirical adver tisements, offenus much for nothing That ute willing to do eturv, honejtt work for abrrai nav i?i: ; coa uw,. Addreai FRANKLIN PUTNAM, 43 Canal St.. N T. DET ECTiVES Wanted la every County. Shrewd men to act under instruction la our Secret Service. Experience not necessary. Particulars fre?. graanan DetectiTe Bcrcan Co.ii Arc&is.Cigciagat;.?, who have twerl Piso's Cure for Conrumptinn ay it is BEST OF ALL. Sold everywhere. 25c. FLORIDA! Free Information. For map. State bulletin, pamphlet and Sample Weekly, "South Florida Progress," send 6c. postage. "Florida Facts," 14 pagr?s. 50c ; 240 p.. cloth. 1 . In valuable. O. M. elites BY. Frank ii n St.. N. "i MIICT II AVE Aarents AT ONCE. Sample Sash mUdl IIMWC locktrt-eby mail for 2c stamp Immense. Unrival-d. Only good one ever invent ed. Beats weights. Sales uuparale led. !S1 M tt day. Write quick. Brohard& Cm., Clarksburg. W. a. to 9S a day. Samples worth $1.50 FREE Lines not under the horse's feet. Write Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holley. Midi. Blair's Piiis.' Great English Gout ar.i Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Box, a4i round 14 Pill. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS 213 C20:3 DUMOJTI 32airS. Or!gial, bnt, graalae U 1 rehfcu.'- mil tor air rvr il. iDiamocd Brand, I" red m i talltc lioxe'. trxlt a WWM DIM no Ibon. At Drucslal. Accept no other. ill pilla iu iat- board box'. 5,10k wrai pr. arr daefer u counterfeit. BaM 4c. (MUM tor pwrtiLMlar as4 "Kellef for Ladle, UUtr. br return Bail 10,000 teat lonlalatrorn IA9IES "hohae LMd them am rair. Chichester t hemieal Co.. Madison Sq..Phila.,l. 1 J A S5 gents wanted, $1 an hour. 60 new articles. Catl'true i and samp les free. C. E. Marshall. Lockpoxt.N Y. Free Masnnarv. Sit-ns firing and Morgan's fate by mai. on receipt . Peoples Pub. Co., :t. Paul, Minn. Secrets i Vl TO b DaTB.I Bfgnir.tw not W KgSf usm smear. Eg Vrd enlj by tie i Walla m KmImI Ba MBC ClltmaU.IML II EESW Ohio. awW. T r A mmBBm ar t V I prescribe and Tally done Big ii as tbe oaly specific for the certain cars of this (liftease. H. lN'.r.A H KM U D . Amsterdam, N. T. We have sold Bif O for ananv years, and It has rlTen tbe best of satla- factlon. D. R. DYCHF4CO.. Chicaga, I1J. SI. 00. Sold by Lruig.stje lioney in Chickens. MONEY I CHICKENS IF YOU KNOW HOW To keep them, bnt it is wrong to let the poor things Suffer and Die of the va rious Maladies which afflict them when in a majority of cases a Cure could have been effected had the owner possessed a little knowl edge, such as can be pro cured from the ONE HUNDRED PAGE BGOK We offer, embracing the PRACTICAL EXPERIENCES Of a man who devoted 2fi rear of his life to CONDI CTING A POULTRY YARD AS A BUSINESS, not a a pas time. As tbe living of him self and family depended on It, he gave the ub)ect mch attention as only need of bread will com mand, and the rea't waa a grand eucci-'-p. after he had spent much money and lost hundreds of aiuable chick ens in ezperimentbig. What he learned in all these yean is embodied in this book, which we send postpaid for 25 cents in -lamps. It teaches you how to Detect and Care' Diseases, how to Feed for Eggs and also for Fattening, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes and everything, indeed, too should know on this subject. BOOK PUB HOUSE. 184 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. SLICKER Tie FT5H BEAK u SLirrCEa if varraetad watrsreer, ace vtll kee yea dry ta tie harden etora. Tbe lew POMMEL BLICKXKIa a perfect r a cm:, a4 fSSJBfll i eatlreaadeUe. Bevare ef lalutieaa. Kaaa ca a:a vitkaat ta "PlaS Bread" traee-asara. iiiestrated nasJaSJM free. JL Ttwtr, Baataa, fie Best Coat.