Newspaper Page Text
AVBlOVLTUBAC.
One Mcrcl of getting this forward
early conaiala In planting or sowing In n
very light and rich but not rankly ma
nured soil, and in a warm situation. A
strip of good soil along the front wall of
a hothouse Is an excellent place to now if
there Is a sufficient depth of soil. The
heat from the wall makes a sensible
for several feet outward. Tho seed
should be sown in drills six inches apart,
and tho yoeng plants should 1* thinned
out ns soon ns thoy can be laid bold of-
flnl, to ono or two Inches asunder, and
the last three to six inches. This is not
chroom, built is enough to
produce nico little compact heads.
When tho plants are growing they should
never be allowed to got dry at the root,
t growth and early heat-
A writer in tho Western Farm Jour
nal recommends Torn smallllowergarden
tile following lists, ns they do not require
treatment, are good sturdy varieties, will
stand neglect yet do well: Asters, hnl-
snmo writ . again sayH: Tho plants I
linvo nam I will aflbrd a profusion of
llowers from Juno till October. l*hlox
will bo the first to blossom, and then
petunias will como on, nml both or the
beauty until hard frosts como. Asters
will be in perfection in August and Hep-
tornber. Calllopsls begins to blossom in
July, and nearly nil the others como on
early In that month. If old dowers are
removed and not nllowod to go to seed
you will have a much grenler profusion
of bloom. If you do not remove faded
dowers, but allow them to period seed,
you will soon seo that your plants nro
losing a largo share of their former glory.
You can’t expecta plant to ripensoed and
ero tho bed is to
i south or south-
nil nrouml on
the inside of the frame, then remove the
frame and dig out a space about eighteen
rest Immediately on tho edgo of tho
Then procure some stable mnnuro,
which ought to bo fresh from the stable,
and place It In a heap, Khalto every
forkful well, mix the long mnnuro with
the short. Now begin to nil tlio pit;
when you have shaken In dung to the
thickness of dve or six inches, bent well
down uml so on till tho mnnuro Is about
nine Inchon from the top of the front of
the box; now see that It Is quite lovel,
and put on tho sash. The beat will be
gin to rise next day, nml on tho hocciikI
dny it will bo ready to receive tho earth,
which should bo drv, not like dust, but
not too wot, and should be rich and
fresh. The bod should bo filled up about
six Inches with It; then put on tho sash
mid let them remain twenty-four hours;
then take them oil' nml stir the earth
well. The onrlh Is to be level, not slop
ing like the glass. The glass is sloping
to meet the sun’s rays, and carry oil' tho
water. The earth which was taken out
of tuo pit should be put around the out-
sido of the frame so that no water will
run into the bed. When ready to sow
the seed, take oir the wish and make
little drills from the back of tho boil to
tho Iruut, drop the seed along tho drills
regularly, covor nil ovor •monthly, write
tho names ol tho seeds and dale of sow
ing on a small pieco of paper put in the
deft of a little stick, and stick it into
tho ground at the end of each drill, and
put on tho wish. The iimin .principle is
to glvo always as much air as the plants
will endure, taking advantage of every
mild dny to remove (lie sash for this pur
pose. If they have not enough air they
will grow up spindling, and will have
small seed leaves, mid indeed, if too
much deprived of air, will die. Let
them grow strong rather than tall; short
stems and broad, dark green seed leaves
are stgim of good plants. Out of a hun
dred failures in hotbed culture, ninety-
imie arise from giving too little air.
" hen it IS necessary to water, do it with
a watering pot that does not pom- out
heavily. Water at sunset ami shut
down the shsIi tight. Should high winds
or n sharp frost set in, protect your beds
With straw or straw mats .—Practical
Since the introduction of the Early
Hose there have been a host of new
seedling potatoes brought out, all highly
lauded as something better than what
we already possessed, which in a fen-
years would almost entirely
in consequence or not poa _
requisite qualities tc meet the
views of cultivators. The Snowflake,
however, is an exception; it has so many
good qualities and traits that it is uni
versally liked wherever known. I be
lieve it to be the coming potato, and will
prove as great a boon to the potato grow
ing and eating public as the Early Rose
has been.
1 have long contended that, in this
toes profitably, and we needed an early
potato that was of good quality, produc
tive, and would keep Inte into tho fob
It
titan the Early
of
fttl, ov,
even with tho
dry and mealy
close together at the foot of tho plants,
which makes easy digging. Tho plants
are vigorous growers ol a light green
color, which, when they get nearly
growth of weeds alter the crop is inode.
I have grown it three years, mid J have
ond growtli anil lie come
,and has always proved uniformly
ingly popular.—J. K. Rield, in Rural
World.
tiik Jt uii.r iuuiNo imr,valo.v.
For farmers and those wl ( o live in lo
ur nine o’clock In tint evening, tho old
notion of early rising is still appropriate.
Hut lie who is kept up till ten or eleven
or twelve o’clock, and then rise nt fivo or
ditty about "early to rise,” is commit
ting a sin against his own soul. Thor®
is not ono man in 10,000 who can nflord
to do without seven or oight hours’ sleep.
All the stud' written about great men
who slept only tlireo or four hours a
night Is apocryphal. Thoy have boon
ally
1; but
yet kept healthy in body nml mind for a
number of years with less than seven
hours’ sloop. If you can get to bed
early, then rise early ; if you cannot get
to boil till into, then rise lute. It may bo
as proper lor one man to riso at eight as It Is
lor another to riso at five. I ,c t the rousing
licll 1m rung at least thirty minutes be
ll jump out of bed
i to the pulses. It
clans say that a
gives irregular i
on the center of the floor at the call ol
their nurses, the thermometer la-low
zero. Give us Unto after you cull us to
roll over, gaze at tho world lull in the
face, uml look before we leap.
.."Isyour master nt borne?’’ snld a
caller to tho servant who canto to the
door. “ No, lie’s out.” " Is your mis
tress In?’’ "No, she’s out." "Very
well; I’ll just stop In nml warm myself
by the fire." "Tho lire’s out,too, IT you
please, sir.”
He who ceases to enjoy his friend's
superiority 1ms censed to love him—
Madame Swelel,me.
They Got MAnniKn.—Tho Quebec
Chronicle publishes the following notice,
which only requires a statement of the
relationship with Ailnm and Eve to
it complete: “Married,on Tlnns-
county Wexford, brother
Captain ltrown, and j
8»
day, the 1st of February, nt Itnthnspcck,
by the ltov. James Reed, rector or Wex
ford, Henry Brown', Esq., ltathjarney,
m of the late
R. N.,to Kate Sophia
laughter of tho late
James Atkins, U. N„ of Ruse
ltock, Wexford, granddaughter of the
late Captain Joseph Gray, of James
town house, county Wexford, and great-
granddaughter of the late Major Crosier,
and grand-nioco of Captain John and
Thomas Fray, of Wexfork nml Wicklow
militia, and of Lieutenant-Colonel l.of-
tus Gray, ritlc brigade, and cousin of
tho Rev. Mlolieal Lloyd Abjoin, of Hal-
lybrood rectory, and of Linglfiold, county
Facts for those who have been iloscil.
drugged, nud quneki-il. Self-help for ivcnk
thousHmls'to those^oot of'hen"!ii!'"The'aew
Health Journal that teaches all, sent free,
i, F.leotrieQuarterly, Cincinnati, l>.
Rheumatism cured nlonceby H
theunuuie Remedy. Send far eirou
Idphenitlne & Bendy, Washington, I), r.
Dukanh’s Rheumatic
Prof. a.c o rftelV'o f *No V \Var re n s,. ,N. Y.Jias
eeeived Iho Celitcnuiiil amt several gold
H-dals,also 112 diplomas for his new process
■ • g eggs and raising nenltry lo
ose manure. This valuable die-
goo $.-,iKI yearly protil Irani III
means of loose
oovery will glvi
lU nsrn's Cocoaine is Hie host and
cheapest hair dressing in tho world.
\n Irishman called nt n drug store to
gel a hotllo of Johnson’s Anodyne l.iuiinent
i-l looses, use
for the Rheumatism: the druggist asked
aim in wliat part of the body it troubled
him most," He me soul,” slid be, •• I have il
in ivory bold nud corner or me.”
For loss of cud, horn ail, rc l water, in
rows loss ,.f appetite, rot, or murrain m
sheep; thick wind, broken wind, and roar-
I obstructions of the kidneys
• Raisa to, (he great
A Positive Cube for Rheumatism—
Puranc’s Rheumatic Remedy. Send forcircu*
lai-to llelpl.eos.ineA. K»„tlv,Washington,D.O
Smoke, Soot ami Coal (.as,
And ail worry with tiers that will not burn
,rni."; 1 nLX;'r„ n xii„"g n,1 ,i:r [ rab e e'l
nil physicians because one failed In
the relief promised? Homo go to
ESSSSBHHH
in no cure for Catarrh. Doen that prove it?
Doe* It not rather prove Hint they have failed
to employ the proper remedy? There arc
thounandi of people in the United .State-
who can make an affidavit that Dr. Saga’*
Catarrh Uemedv nud Dr. riercc’a Golden
month*, and jdecca of bone had
Irrational people nlwaya reject good ad
vice, and in nothing ih their folly more fre-
Forecast, on the other hand, ii a notable
characteristic of the rational, and it in the
exercise of thin finality which we would aug-
Kent to them. Protect the system against
diseases which fasten upon the debilitated,
the nervous and the dyspeptic,by bracing the
effects follow its use, and that it previ
tent fevers, are facte established by in
table evidence. To enjoy the twin blessings
of “a sound mind and a sound body" in all
their plentitudu, try a coarse of this sterling
After an experience of over twenty-
five years, many leading physicians acknowl
edge that the (Irarfenhrry Month all'h Uterine
Cathotcion in tho only known certain remedy
for diseases to which women are subject. The
Vrocfrnbery VrgruMt Pill*, the most pop
remedy of the flay for biliousness, headnvuc,
liver complaint and diseases of digestion. Kol I
by all duggiHts. Hand for alumnae*, firm
berg Co., New York.
For ten centa wo will Bend awie.ntific
hook of one hundred anil sixty choice selec
tions from tho poetical works of Jlyron,
Moore and Hums; also fifty selected
popular songs and writings. The poetry of
these authors is true to nature and the finest
ever written. Desmond A Co., t»lf» Race Ht.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
When you visit or leave New York stop at the
Grand Onion Hotel, opposite Grand Central
depot. 860 elegantly furnished rooms Best
restaurant in the city; prices moderate. Mag-
gage taken to nud from snid depot, free.
Cars and stages pass the hotel for nil parts
of the city.
of honesUrade!" When 'you buy Doolky’h
Ykaht Powders, for sale by ail grocers, you
get perfectly full weight, Just ns marked on
the cans, and beside that an article made of
the very best am! purest material, so that the
strength can always he trusted.
Tin: MA HKICT8.
Lincoln County.
Higliwino*
Cotton—-Ordidary .
Good Ordinary..
Ijow Middling...
Missouri Millet..
Hungar an. „ ^.
1 75
1 75
1 75
LIVE STOCK.
Cattle—Good to extrn$ I 50
Medium butchers.. 8 00
.. 2 50
... 5 75
.. 5 55
Ordinary.
Irish Wbbl. 1 60
101
Huv
Pork ....
fc:
Whisky..
Corn
Oats
Mess Fork.
Lard
Whisky....
t.» no
1 12}
n no
8 00
1 is
$ A 00
8 75
2 00
s no
r> <o
o is
*8 75
1 IS
18
1 10
10}
'I
10}
t or
Th ’*
i'iit.1 arrest tho disease when it in in th,* iiieipi-
ta«u«. U is in.lh ate.l by „ ha. Kin* ...n K h.
Mien’s l.unn l<ats.im to cure nml r
‘Vor s« K e hy nU Medtcino Peslns
POND’S
EXTRACT
STATIOIAIY STEAM ENGINES
AWARDED OHAND PRIZE Of
$200 00 IN GOLD
B -" d
THE LANE & BODLEY.,
John V. Dale «*• Ai/ent. Satihvllle,
RICH v
BEAUTIFUL.
SSSSI
Ai.oatrM T irtho b w t oRLD DEO ,u '" CAT -
or OAR-
,AR? n or
B. K. BLISS & SONS,
Na 5712. 34 Barclay St., New Turk.
ENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
! 7 2 PBR QDARTKB FOR TBS QUARTl ■ S.
j^| ASON & HAMLII
CAB.NET ORGAN, N
FOUR A
great'w
WORLD'S EXPOSITIONS
S a S 0 ’
PHILADELPHIA, 1876.
JfttH
A. BURDETTE SMITH, Edit.,,
*. O. Uox 5055. 15 Ei.t 14th St., N. V. City.
LADIES
Ikwnro of
Imitations.
I'.icru Fomihi Shonltl hare it Hi lift-
THE PRESBYTERIAN,
1MULISHEP WEEK 1. Y.
N „ , -clnK or jgfr'fSSpSS*.
Every family »hnuhl hare
A Preparation '
free from Irritating matter.
BUBNETT’S
COCOAINE.I
igrtff'saS^iat'a
~ h.
HAIR DRESSINq'
CHEAP, SIMPLE,
^rwwiT
All Glas s ntwnuiPoFtcityiN LiHed
lidsInd c\aw|l£dne: piece
FIFTY-TWO
OK THE .MOST PROMINENT
STATESMEN Of the COONTHV
tv I III. WRITE FOR THE
TOLEDO DLADE
r XaMbit's Vaper.)
ELASTIC ^TRUSS
JHE best
I. COUHIRt. 0EST TCtlMs,
hm
■yf-c: Th £
utsi
LOWEST PRICES.
“ ‘ of IhilUliablcDt
IN the
Dn.JLIJQTO;i, tOtTA ^.r"0
UNITED STATLo
CARPET WARP.
To tho Consumer.
■: , ui: , KK.VK^ ,r 'foLV,; ;.':
GEO. W. RUE. Hamilton. 0.
*2*0 izA'vwsasW:
$55S$77 b'lrvHK^v: j
REVqLVER^:;;;^»
S2fiBBMSSSa:-5a
WAMTXBfe-MUVatg
essE
Ass&ssmasim
S5937^ v ^ : :-S*^
FSFSjmSSIS
DO HATCHES. A (Irrat Henutlon. »../».
RANTED,-
Tn*lr«-« H\XTER A n>.. Itniik»n.l7 W»HM..N.
OPIUMSS’J&S
nl.U- IlM.Hk.rM,. I" r.B »l,r.li.qalnor.»lltj L
i;‘iiA"c‘) k .:»;i
WANTEDftiLk'Jfi.^M.SrTaS.S
HUMS
VIOLIN STRINGS ?
. n-i ■*. t Min i, t itinrrh, K'll’lnio, Opium II a In t, Au
&
sa msassm
ODR •■SS3'
PETS.
mwmtBMKrv"
WILLIAM II. WARD.
One Volume *22 rages. Price SI.25.
Sold by Subscription only.
PILES!
Or lltunii V 11« «i’..I Oininu nt t«upo< mmir§ Br«
i,t«. . up- any .a- . f I'll. - Hint ran bo
foillid ill 11." I'nltuil Slat. h. A onmplf t’OX of thru.*
OPIUM
m
\\t HEN » ItlilM. TO ADVEKTlNKRAi
50 cents Jrr:., ,
to subscribe for PER YEAR. Jel , 1877.
THE DINING ROOM MAGAZINE
.THE UNION PUBLISHING CO., P. 0. Box 1037, New York.