Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 19 July 1889 — Page 6

FARM AND HOME.

Small Frnits and Market Gardening. The owners of largo farms, who look down upon berry and truck raising as small business, have not informed themselves as to the amount of capital invested and labor employed in this direction. According* to the last census the value of market garden products nold in 1879 was over $21,000,000, while the orchard products sold or consumed amounted to $50,000,000. Small fruits are possibly embraced in the market garden products. There is scarcely a doubt that were the value of the products of all gardens added to the former the aggregate would equal, if not surpass, the latter. Gardening, then, is no small matter, even when compared with the so-called great industries of the country, and when the thoughtful farmer contrasts the acreage employed in market gardening and the value of its products with general farming and its products he will discover that there is no occasion to spread out over a township or so to make a living and make money too.

To be sure there is something a glut of garden products in the large centres of trade, but there is no general overproduction as with staple farm crops, and since increased production scarcely keeps pace with increased demand there is a wide field for the farmer with limited acres to operate.

From a health standpoint, the consumption of fruits and vegetables should be increased, and pork proportionately discontinued, especially during the summer season and as people will learn by practice that they can do as much labor and have better health by giving pork a less important place in the daily rations the reformation of farmers' bills of fare will be secured. Why should not every family, rich and poor, be supplied with delicious fruits and choice vegetables? Surely not because these can not be produced cheaply and in any quantity required as soon as the demand for them arises. The large profit so often reported from small fruit growing and market gardening is by no means fictitious, and tbe business will bear strong competition and still be more remunerative than general agriculture to the farmer, while society at large would be relieved of terror on account of trichinaa and diseased meat if its diet consisted principally of fruits, cereals and vegetables.

I am aware that in many places a curtailment of the tobacco crop and a widening out into vegetable gardening would not be considered for a moment, because of the belief that there is more money in tobacco. I question this. What tobacco grower has realized $800 to $1,000 per acre, as reported, from cabbages or onions, not to speak of $1,000 to £1,500 from strawberries or celery, or $2,000 to $2,500 from cauliflower? These, of course, are maximum crops with best jirices. Nevertheless, they prove possibilities, and show a wide margin beyond the no profit line. Capital, skill and attention are demanded to insure success in this field, but so are they essential in. any field. And in the coming "readjustment," of which we hear so much, small fruits and vegetables will occupy a Lirger place on our farms and on our tables, to the profit to both the grower and consumer. Practical Farmer.

Tho I'oints of :i Good Butter Uov. A good butter cow should have a long l' ice, wide between the eyes, the eye alert and expressive, and placed a long way below the horns. A cow with eyes near the top of the head does not knuw :.ny moro than a man with eye.i to placed. She should have a lar mu/,/,lc, a slim neck and a yello'.v li.cin, especially inside the ears, the breathing should be regular, the back and abdomen strong, the udder wine where it connects with the body, the teats squarely placed and the tail slirn. Over and above all these points she must have tho dry form. The points at best are only indications. The dairy form is inseparably connected with a good butter cow. The desirable dairy form is always seen in the best types of Jerseys. Guernseys, Ayreshires and llolsteins. Tue best beet form is presented in Shorthorns, Horefords and most of the polled breed... The intelligent dairyman, with a knowledge born of experience, desire and capacity for the business, never lmikej the mistake of choosing his cow with a beef form.

WhiH it is not diilhrult for a dairyman wJTIi a .ye of hi.. business to select :i. cow that will make ten pounds of butter a week, provided always such cow is within the drove or herd he is inspecting, cows that will make fourteen pounds of butter a week are not to be found in the droves that are driven about for sale. Such cows are seldom for sale except at breeders' prices. A novice might by chance select a cow that was making ten pounds of butter a week under the right treatment, vet if he kent her in a cold stable aucT&ave her ice-water to drink and fed her on timothy hay and ground barley and corn-meal, all of which are lacking in protein, the cow would soon run down to three and one-half pounds a week and stay there, or make less. Another man who knew his business might have selected the same cow and kept her in a warm stable, given water, warm ensilage made from sweet corn well matured, two or three pounds of clover hay and a plentiful supply ol

4Hbea bran or middlings, ground oats and peas, or a little oil meal or any pther food containing protein in liberal proportion, and the cow would probably have increased to twelve pounds a week if her limit permitted.—American Agriculturist.

Hogs Versus Cattle.

In relation to the greater value ol hog products, as compared with those from cattle which reach foreign shores, the Field and Farm says:

We of the plain3 country, where the cattle are thought kings, sometimes lose sight of the fact that the hogs in the markets of Europe cut a far greater figure than do our horned brutes. Some of our English contemporaries express astonishment that the various products of swine should be considered of sufficient import mce on this side of the Atlantic to have current prices cabled daily all over Europe, while beef and muttou are hardly mentioned in the same reports.

We will explain the reason for this. It is because we export five, if not ten times the value in pork and lard that we do in beef. We of the United States, and particularly of the Western states of the union, are the only people on the earth who have any considerable hog meat and lard to export. This is made possible by our great corn product, that is entirely American and is scarcely known in Europe.

Then, again, pork is more easily and more generally stored and held than is beef. Beef, even to be used in the armies and navies of the world, must be cooked and packed in cans, while pork is carried and stored like cord wood, and of times ate raw by the soldier when on forced marches. The wealthy of the earth, too, eat ham and bacon constantly, while not one in a million ever tastes of pickled beef. In conclusion, we will say that the cash value of the porkers of the United States in 1838 reached the mammoth sum of $291,307,193. Corn is king in America, and the hog is a power in the commerce of the world.

Karm Notes.

It is discouraging when even a little grain is given a cow in summer at pasture to have her begin to fatten instead of increasing the milk flow. But if the cow be of that kind, tho sooner her owner discovers it the better. If graining fattens her probably she is not worth keeping without the grain. So fatten her as »-apidly as possible, and get abetter cow in her place.

The Shorthorn cattle originated in Durham, England, and it is even yet common in some old-fashioned sections to speak of them as the Durham breed. Of course the original Durhams were not bred up to present standards for beef making, but the characteristic tendencies of a good beef breed were not in the original stock. Good feeding and careful selection of breeding stoik has done the rest.

In very small localities farmers hae been discussing how best to remedy the damage by frost. Some crop3, as beans, tomatoes and melons, or cucumbers, are utterly ruined if touched by light frost and must be replanted. Others jike corn if not more than three or four inches high, and potatoes at almost any size will grow up again if left jilone. Tne root is there and uninjured. The new buds that will put forth will grow rapidly under its stimulus.

Blue grass will bear pasturing lightly earlier than almost any other grass. Its roots lie near the surface, a..id are quickly startled into growth in the spring if the land is rich enough. For this season too they are more easily reached by light showers. Later in the season it may suffer from drought, but hardly moro so than other grasses and clovers that strike into the subsoil and thoroughly exhaust its moisture long before the summer drought has come.

The millet crop should not bo sown until hot weather, but it is well to have it in the ground as early as the latter is well warmed. The earlier it ripens the better weather it is likely to be for cutting it. In September tho days shorten rapidly, and it is this which makes the curing of both millet and fodder corn so difficult. Millet is excellent hay for horses, and none tho worse if it is cut when the seed is in the milk, so that it will ripen from the stalk. Millet seed gi les horses a fine coat, as it is very fattening.

White oats are popular in this country, and bring two to four cents a bushel more than the black. In Europe the black are preferred. There is a great difference in feeding value of oats, not dependent entirely on weight, nor yet on color, but on the character of Ihe hull. Some of the heaviest white oats which bring high prices have a harsh, indigestible hull, which makes them as unfit as barley for feeding whole. The black oats may have more bulk or hull but it is not so harsh. Any way, we have little faith in whole oate as food for work horses. There is too much waste about them. Grind the oats, and then those that weigh heaviest will be the most valuable for feeding*.

The Household,

WHITE CAKE.—Two cups of powdered sugar, one cup of butter, whitas of eight eggs beaten light, one cup of water, three cups of flour well sifted, two teaspoons of baking powder.

CAIVEU SAUCE.—Chop tho capers in ilf and add a .half pint of drawn butter and one tablespoon fill of vine gar,

let it just simmer and serve with boil* ed mutton. GKEEX TOMATO SAUCE.—Cut up a pint of green tomatoes take a tablespoonful of black mustard seed, three tablespooasful of dry mustard, two tablespoonsful each of black pepper, allspice and celery seed, three tablespoonfuls of salt, one quart of chopped onions, one pint of sugar, two and onehalf quarts of vinegar, red pepper to taste beat the spices and boil all together till done.

CHICKEN SOUP. —Save the broth after boiling chickens and to it add a dozen ripo tomatoes peeled and sliced and one onion thinly sliced boil twenty minutes season, add two beaten eggs and serve.

BOILED CODFISH.—Soak in cold water over night in the morning put in a stew pan with a half pint of water and a pint and a half of milk stew slowly, and then add a half cup of milk thickened with Hour season with pepper and butter and serve on toast.

MINCED COD.—Flake cold boiled cod, add one of mashed potatoes, a small lump of butter, oue-half teaspoon of cornstarch and one beaten 3gg heat and serve.

BOILED SALT MACKEREL.—Freshen, wrap in a cloth and simmer fifteen minutes. Remove carefully from the cloth to a dish, with the skin side up. Serve with drawn butter.

The Valley of Shadow. Today the heart of the nation is moved with sympathy for the sufferer® by the gi-eatest calamity that has ever yet visited this country, turning a beautiful valley, the abode of industrious thrift and contentment, into a vast charnel house, a valley of shadow The mind stands appalled at the stupendous ruin wrought, ana the thousands of lives blotted out from tho rccord of the living by that terrible flood which has devastated the Conemaugh region. Earth has had before its Black Fridays, but henceforth Friday May 31, 1889, will figure in American history as the blackest and gloomiest Friday this continent has ever known.

Time will fix the responsibility for this terrible catastrophe where such responsibility rightfully belongs. The present duty is not so much that of dealing with the cause, as with the efTect. The present duty is the sepulture of the dead and the care of the living, and to strengthen the hands of those who have charge of the execution of this duty, money is needed, and is being tnunificiently supplied. Jt needs but the Cry for help from any section of the country to prove the tie of kinship that binds the heart of the people. Sections may antagonize each other in business rivalry, sectional prejudices may erect a barrier to the freest unity of sentiment, but in the face of a calamitous visitation to any particular section all barriers are swept away, and there is no other rivjalry than that of benevolence, a warmhearted competition for the honor of doing most for the afflicted locality. •The sufferers are for the present the nation's wards, and the honor of the country and every sentiment of humanity appeals in their behalf. How well that appeal is being answered the tide of monetary assistance that is setting in toward Johnstown well attests. Boston has always been a prompt and generous city in responding to the needs of every afilictea locality, be it the fever-stricken south, the cyclone or blizzard-swept west, or the cities suffering from earthquake, fire or flood, and that same promptness, that same open-hand benevolence that she has shown so often before, she is showing to-day in behalf of that alley of gloom and shadow, the vJonemaugh region.—American Cultivator.

The Human Family.

The human family living to-daj consists of about 1,450,0 0,000 individuals. In Asia, where man was Jir.planted, there arc now about 800,090,000, on an average 120 to the square mile. In Europe there are 320,000,090, averaging 100 to the square mile. In Africa there are 210,009,000. In America, North and South, there ar# 110,000,000, relatively thinly scattered and recent. In ihe islands, large and small, probably 10,000,000. The ex. tremes of the white and black are "as five to three, the remaining 700,000,000 intermediate brown and tawny. Of the race 500,000,000 are clothed, that is wear garments of some kind and live in houses partly furnished with the appointments of civilization 700,000,000 are semi-clothed, living in huts and caves with no furnshings 250,000,000, are practically naked, having nothing that can be called a home, are barbarious and savage. The range is from the topmost round—the Anglo-Saxon civilization, which is the highest known—down to naked savagery. The portion of the race lying below the line of human condition is at the very least three-fifths of the whole, or 900,000,000.—Exchange.

Money Misplaced.

Mr. Greathead (coal and ice dealer) —"I didn't sell as much coal last winter as usual."

Mrs. Greathead—"Too bad. Your customers must have some money left which you would have had if the weather had been cooler." "Yes, they have, but I shall raise the price of ice and get it away from them before fall."—-New York YVeoUlv.

ITALIANS IN ARGENTINA.

Over a Million Have Settled There In Thirty-Three Years. During the last thirty-five years about 1,500,000 immigrants have reached the Argentine provinces, says the London Spectator. Of these 65. 25 per cent are officially set down as Italians. The figures, however, do not sufficiently indicate their real preponderance. In the first place, a fourth of the total immigrants are not classified except as entering the state by way of Montevideo, where it is very common for transshipments of passengers from Europe to take place. Probably if the Montevideo returns were analyzed the percentage of Italians would work out as not less than 70 per cent of the whole. But there is another and still more, important fact to be borne in mind. The Italians in South America increase with remarkable rapidity, the marriages made between them and the nar.ivcs proving peculiarly fruitful —a circumstance not observed in such a high degree among the other immigrants. In 1885 the Italian chamber of commcrco of Buenos Ayres calculated that the inhabitants of Italian birth and parentage then residing in the republic numbered over I.UOO.OOO. while at the present moment it is estimated that persons in whom Italian blood or Italian race Mlliumce predominates constitute more than half the existing population, now reckoned to be over 3,500,000. Under such circumstances can it be doubted that in a very few years the Italianization of the valley of the Plate will be complete? The only fact that tells against such a supposition is the nevviy-a.donled immigration policy of the Argentine government, which has lately instructed its agents in Europe to do all in their power to attract immigration from among the northern races. The danger of being swamped bv the most vigorous of the Latin peoples is fully realized at Buenos Ayres. and considerable numbers of Belgians, Hollanders, North Germans, and Swedes have already been attracted by almost free passages and generous grants of land. We doubt, however, the continued success of such a policy. Emigration flows with difficulty in new channels.

Trying to Fool a Spid3r. A gentleman was watching some spiders, when it occurred to him to try what effect a tuning fork would have upon them. lie suspected that tney would take it for the buzzing of a fly. He selected a large, ugly spider that had been feasting on flies for two months. The spider was at one edge of its web. Sounding the fork, the man touched a thread at the other side and watched the result. Mr. Spider had the news conveyed to him over his telephone wires, but how was he going to know on which particular wire it was traveling? He ran to the center of the web very quickly and felt jill round until he touched the thread against the other end of which the fork was sounding then, taking another thread along, just as a man would take an extra piece of rope, he ran out to the fork and sprang upon it. Then he retreated a little way and looked at the fork. He was puzzled. He had expected to find a buzzing fly. He got on the fork again and danced with delight. Evidently the sound was music to him.—Toronto Globa-

DR. KILMER'S

Ii®®!

One of every flvo we meet has some form of Heart Disease, and is in constant danger of Apoplexy, Shock or Sudden Death 1

This Kemctiy le^ulatod, relieves, corrects and cures. £0"Prepared at Dr. Kilmer's

Sold by Druggist*.

To Cure Kidney Troubles

Use "Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Kidney Liver and Bladder Cure." It relieves quickly and cures the most chronic and complicated cases. Price 50c and $1.00. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quigley.

I.D.&W.

LAILWAY

FOR

St. Louis, Mo 7.45 Springfield, Ills 10.25 5.55 Jacksonville, Ills 11.36 7.12 Quincy, Ills 10.45 Keotuk, la 11.50 Hannibal, Mo 2.00 a.m. 10.40 Ar. Kansas City, Mo S.20 a.m. 6.30 p.m.

3•wl

CI II TDAIIi Has Parlor Coaches to It III. I linlli Decatur, and Elegant Reclining Chair Cars, free of extra charge, and Palace Buffet Sleeping Cars Decatur to Kansas City, 'lime en route between Indianapolis and Kansas City, only 17% hours.

II

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Guido to Health Seiit FKEE.

Mother, Wife, Daughter. These dull tired looks and unpleasant feelings speak volumes. "Dr. Kilmer's Female Remedy" builds up quickly a run-down constitution and bri ng» back vuthful beauty. Price $1.00. Pamphlet Free. Binghampton, N. Y. Sold recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quigley.

Phllada., w®.

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DR. KLINE'S

NERVEGREAT RESTORER

Is a Marvelous Medicine.

For all Diseaset of the

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This remedy

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t,,e

Spasms being in-

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It is prompt, sure and safe in its action, nearly always and asif by magic, arresting all Fits. Epilepsy, Irritable, Excitable, and Unsteady Nervous Affections by first day's use of the medicine. A trial is conviction. No Jtelicately Organised Nervous System should ever be without it. It-is not an Opiate! Does not contain Narcotic J'oisons, nor does it disagree with the system. For full particulars send for FreeTreatiseto

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«£v

To Cure Heart Disease

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ULJUUi

Morse Sheets keep horses smooth, clean and ready for driving.

4J

The owner of this horse spends ,1 an hour a day cleaning him rather ihan buy a Horse Sheet.

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s/a

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Wakefulness,

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close connection made with all lines for the West and Sorthwest.

close connection made for all points East and Southeast.

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over

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oa

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DR. ELLIOTT'S

FOOD,

A Sure Cure for all Diseases in

HORSES,

Sheep

and Hogs

Arteing from Impurities of the Blood, and from Functional Derangements.

A DEAD SHOT ON VORHS, AMD A CBRTAil PREVENTIOH OF H06 CHOLERA.