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Jl) F OK SALE—Pare Cyprian Queens. Address J. B. JOHNSON, Laurel, Franklin county, Ind. ' FOR BALE—Gold Dust seed wheat, send 6 cent«, in Btamps for^mple. B. G.CRIST, New Mar*ett ID-Hana. FOR SALE-Cotswt Id buck Iambs aU from tmpor- ed stock at |16 a piece. JAMES M. MARLOW, Adams, Ind. FOR BALE—One Messenger Bullion. 50 thoroughbred Poland China pigs. Address HAWLBY BROS., Ebenceer, Preble Co., Ohio. FOR SALE—Two flne Prland China boars; best Butler eornty strains. Write for description and price, WM. WII_SON, Box 29, Robinson. 111. FOR SALE—Cotswold buck lambs, good ones, from my Darnell buck. Come and see them, or write to J. L. BRENTON, Petersburg, Pike county, Ind. FOR SALE—A fine farm of 139 acres in Hendricks Co., Ind. For particulars addrfss ALEXANDER CLARK, Center Valley, Hendricks Co., Ind. eow FORBALE—A few first class show pigs both sex. Poland China eet of Governor 2nd and young Gold Dust and Black Victor. Address A. W. ROKB, Muiifie, Jnd. FOR SALE—Pedigreed Short Horn cattle and Poland China hogs, over 15 years a breeder. Please state about what vou want and address L. H.AIK MAN. Rat 21. Dana. Vermillion Co.,Ind ~ii>u-K »aLK-Shepherd Pups—Bred from English Jt? shepherd dog and Scotch Collie slut. Biddie.tl. e mother of these pups,bad charge at one time of-fO gppen. Pr.<v\*in. A LFVEP LODKR, LewisvilJe.Ind. lii^-1* &.<*-___.t>_—* mm—b"_- acres, Jour miles northwest Jj of the city. Well improved. Will sell a part, or all of lt, very cheap. Apply to E. CHURCHILL, on the premise*. P. O. address, 417 Indiana avenue, Indianapolis, Ind. FOR SALE—First-class saw and planing mill; good condition; in Western Indiana, adjoining railroad depot. Half cash, balance in deferred paymen t Will take a gocd farm In wholeorpartpayment. Bee or address JOHN T. CAMPBELL, Bureau of Statistics. Indianapolis, for further particulars. FOR HALE—Farms, Farms I—In Howard, Miami. Tipton, Cass and Clinton counties. Also No.l stock farms in White, Jasper and Pulaski counties. This is the richest farming country in Indiana. We are glad to show lands to all seeking homes or profitable Investments, STUART A HOSS, Kokomo, Indiana. . FOR RALE—Seeds—Farmers buy your Timothy, Clover, Blue-grass, and all other seeds, direct from us aad save from 25 cents to tl on each bushel. ' Write for our prices, and ■ name how much seed you will.want. We can Bupply In any amount. A sample will be sent when requested. Seed Store, 79 East Market street, Indianapolis, Indiana. J. F. MEN- DKNHALL&CO. FOR SALE—Good farm in Parke ccuntyof 113 acres, lasting water.large frame bouse and barn; orchard of all kinds of fruit; churches and schools near; farm located one mile from Bloomingdale. Also a farm of 120 acres M mile from Sand Creekcoal f;ood works: house and barn; well Improved; a four oot undeveloped coal vein. For particulars, call on, or addr&s W. H. McCOBD, Blocmingdale,Ind., or J. C. MANN, Judson, Ind. F OR BALE-GRASS FARMS. 240 acres, stock farm, excellent orchards and buildings, about 2>£ miles south of Monrovia, Morgan oounty. Price, |20 per acre. 240 acres rongh grass land, good orchard and small boose, about iii miles southeast ol Monrovia, Morgan county. Price, }10 per acre. 24) acres, 3 miles west of Greencastle, Putnam connty. Price, *15 per acre. 160 acres, 7 mites west of Greencastle, honse, about half plowed. Price, J15 per acre. 168 acres, about 2 miles east of Eminence, Morgan eounty, about half plowed, remainder good timber. Price |18 per acre. IM acres, in southeast corner of Parke connty, two miles north of Lena; said to be good cotl land, 60 acres cleared; small buildings. Price, |10 per acre. 155 acres in Morgan county, about 5 miles north of Martinsville; half plowed; comfortable buildings. Price. J2,0OO. 1,548 acres prairie, in Newton county, 6 miles from railroad; 5C0 acres plowed; excellent buildings. Price {25 per acre. 200 acre stock farm, good dwelling, about 2H miles southeast of Eminence, Morgan county. Price, |17 per acre. Th. Be farms are in the best blue-grass region of Indiana, are well watered, have sufficient timber, and eminently suited for sheep or cattle. They are in healthy, well settled neigborhoods, convenient to railroad, church, school and market and market fa- cilitles. They are worth much more than above prices, but being taken on foreclosure by corporations desirous to close out this class of assets, are offered at cost, on payments of one-fourth cash and remainder in ten annual payment-Lto run at 6 per cent. Interest, payable half yearly. These are the lowest - prices. Bo other property will be taken in exchange. FRANCIS SMITH <__ CO, Indianapolis, Ind. MISCELLANEOUS-. FOR SALE OR TRADE—We have a Gaar vibrator thresher only used one season and in good order. We will sell at a bargain or exchange for a good driving horse or a saddle horse. Address ROBINSON & CO., Richmond, Ind. SHUT ON TRIAL.—Our Cattle Pump waters all kinds of stock perfectly witvout attention, hand, or wind. Simple, durable, and cheap. Equals any windmill. Send for circular. Agents wanted. E. B. TAYLOR dt CO., Indianapolis, Ind. VETERINARY INFIRMARY—Dr.Navin,V.S.. has secured as partner, Dr. M. J. Treacy, Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons.Lon- don, England, and Fellow of the Royal Veterinary Medical Society, Edinburg, Scotland,; surgeon of ten years professional experience. Hospital and offlce, 31 Kentuckv avenue. Telephone connection. Horses, cattle and dogs scientifically treated. Residence: 76 North Mississippi street. %xm moth. An old English work printed long ago stated in so many words, that the hogs of Yorkshire, had been improved by crosses upon the hogs of Berkshire, so that it seems that Yorkshires are really part Berkshire. -a The rock on which so many improvers and breeders of fine stock get stranded is their failure to cull out enough of both males and females of all breeds and send them to the shambles, keeping only the best for breeding purposes. v'G. N. Dykeman, Shippensburg, Pa., has sold Lena's Dyke 6010, a fine young Jersey • bull to Mr. A. M. Carr, Salem Ohio. Also Standpoint 5th to J. T. & W. Shields, Beams Station, Tenn, and Jananscheck 14759 to Paul Sgobel, Hyde Park, N. Y. The sale of Jersey cattle by Kellog? A Co., New York, resulted in fair prices. Thirty-three head sold for $7,655, an aver- 'age of $232. The following were the bes t prices, with the names of the buyers: Lady La Grise 3 years, $625, James Mona- han, New Jersey; Lady Rose, 3 years, $610, F. C. Havemeyer, New York; William the Conqueror, 2 years, $600, A. B. Colgrove, Middlotown, Conn.; Lady Gipsy, 3 years, $525, William Watson, Westchester Co., N. Y. Where They Come From. The Arabs and Barbs. Only the horse is entitled to the name thoroughbred. We have an interesting account of the Arab and Birb horse from an intelligent contribution to the London Live Stock Journal, as follows: I mention the fact that, before the Crimean war, a Barb, the property of .Major (now Lieutenant) General Sir Charles Staveley, over the Calpee course at Gibraltar, had, so far aB the top-watch and weight-tests are concerned, eclipsed the best performances of the crack Arabs of Cairo, Calcutta and Bombay. It is true that the Barb excels the Arab in knee- action ; but because the former may be able to move in something like Park form, it is absurd to rate his blood as the inferior of the two. As in the case of the American trotter, which is clearly traced back to the prepotency of the ungainly imported gray thoroughbred English horse Messenger, a son of Lord Grosvenor's stringhalted Mambrino, so in that of the. Barb and his full brother the,Arab, climatic influence, different soil, and different treatment have been at work, and have left their impress. We mnst not forget that Morocco is fanned by the cooling invigorating breezes of the Atlantic as of the Mediterranean, and that the fierce withering sirocco reaches it tamed by the lofty snow-clad Atlas. There are choice specimens of the Barb! to be found, worthy to mate with the purest Sugliawiah Jedran ever foaled. As a rule, his forehand far excels that of the Arabian; but he lacks the beautiful well-turned Orlando quarter. In power of endurance I am inclined to yield him the palm. Abd-el-Kader, a native of the plain of Ghris, in the province of Oran, Algiers, bordering en Morocco, who wrote so brilliantly on the Arab horse, must have had the Barb in his mind's eye. It is true tbat, at the age of nineteen, ha visited Bagdad, after having performed the Haj, and that he died at Damascus. The famous black charger which, at the head of his 15,000 cavalry, he used to handle with such extraordinary skill, sometimes causing it to spring with all fours in the air, and sometimes making it walk for some yards on its hind legs, was a present to him from his friend and companion-in-arms, Muley Abd-er-Jtahman, Sultan of Morocco. No circus horse this, but one that, had he been but a hand or so higher, would have carried the best mounted squadron leader the Household Brigade ever boasted; one closely answering the spirited picture drawn by Virgil: Light on his airy crest his slender head; H is body short; his loins luxuriant spread; Muscle on muscle knots his brawny breast. Ko fear alarms him, nor vain shouts molest. " O'er his right shoulder, floating fnll and fair, Sweeps his thick mane, and spreads thepompbf hair; Swift works his donble Bpine; and earth around Rings to his solid hoof, that wears tbe ground. Ban Salem, the Emir's lieutenant, and all his sheikhs were magnificently mounted. The Rev. J. P. Mahaffy of the Dublin University propounds a theory that all facts are in "favor of the development of the horse from the rhinoceros and the tapir! This I must leave to the evolutionists to work out. It was an Egyptian animal when Egyptian civilization outshone all others. We know that Jacob bartered corn against the horses of Pharaoh, and that a long array of chariots and horses followed the patriarch in funeral procession. The Arab has it that God made the horse out of the south wind, and binding '•fortune on his name," reposing "riches in his loins," and marking him "with the sign of glory and happiness," thus commended him to Adam, "Thou has chosen thy glory and the glory of thy sons; while they exist my blessing shall be with them, because I have not created anything that can be more dear to Me than man and the horse." There is a tradition of the elders, however, antecedent to the days of the prophet, that the Queen of Sheba brought the progenitors of the Arab steed with her as gifts to Solomon, and that Ethiopia was their home. Her "black but comely" Majesty can, therefore, lay claim to having founded that equine line from which sprang Bend- Or and Robert the Devil. . Whence this Ethiopian strain came from originally I know not, but if before this date it had not reached the Mediterranean littoral or the North African coasts of the Atlantic, we know that in A. D. 641, in the caliphate of Osman, son-in-law of the prophet Akbah-ben-Nefa, with the sword in one hand and the Koran in the other, having already conquered Egypt, swept like an armed torrent westward, and that the boundless prospect of the ocean alone stayed his victorious career. Riding his Arab into the Atlaiitic waves, Akbah was This department Is edited by Db. Jonh N. Navin, Veterinary Surgeon, anthor of Nairn's Explanatory Stock Doctor. Rnlesl to be observed by thofie expecting correct an swers: 1. State the rate of pulse. C , 2. The breathing. 8. The standing attitude. 4. Appearance oO-Alr. 5. If cough, and;.secretions from (noee, whether (lands between the Jaws can3>e felt, and how near he bone. 6. If breathing la rapid, accompanied by rattle or rushing sonnd, no time mnst be lost In blistering throat, and using tincture ot aconite root and tincture of belladonna 20 drops on toagne alternately every two honrs, for time la too short for an answer. Parties requiring answers by mall mnst Inclose fl for advice, otherwise reply will appear In next Issue. HILLSDALE COLLEGE, HILLSDALE, MICHIGAN. fonnd lamentii.g that he could go no farther "to preach the unity of God." This Mahomedan invader doubtless brought with his lances the picked horses and mares—the Arab rides a mare in preference to a stallion—of his native land, and in no stinted numbers; so, from that date, if not before, was- firmly established the Arabian or Morocco, or, in other nomenclature, the Barb. «• Mohamed Ali and his warlike adopted son Ibraheem Pasha were both admirers of the Arab horse, and lost no opportunity of filling their stables, by fair means or foul, with the best blood of the Anezeh tribes. The late Khedive, with such a master of the horse as Mr. Frederick Smart, was not likely to own or to make a gift of a horse not having the bluest of bood in his veins. His agents ransacked every corner of Mesopotamia and Nejd for the best that influence or money could command; and, undoubtedly, they procured for their master the creme de la creme. To detect a fresh strain of Arab blood in any horse in the streets of London is as easy as to point outa foreigner—a German-bred one for instance—from an English horse. But to select a really high caste Arab from amongst a large number, as seen in the Bombay dealers' stables, of all sorts of the same country, is work for a keen and well-educated eye." As in the case of our own thoroughbreds, whose pedigrees we always can reliably get at, the best bred animals do not invariably show the most quality. Take, as examples, the enormous fiddle-headed Margrave, and the sterling but carty Caller Oa. Who, seeing the great coarse Charles XII, and dapper little Euclid together at Doncaster, would have allowed, but for the stud book, that they claimed equal birth, and that in point of excellence there was hardly a pound between them? So with Arabs, some of the best, as proved by their repeated public performances, show in contour and symmetry the least of tho characteristics of their race. Take Copenhagen, who died, I believe in Mr. Caledon Alexander's stables at Newmarket, a horse of great merit. Hajee, who having made a clean sweep of our Indian courses, went to China, and there picked up all the good things the Celestials had to offer, was more like a Persian from the Gulf than a pure-bred. Manhaga, Alepoo, an enormous grey, the cock of the walk at Calcutta years ago, looked as if he could claim relationship with Mr. Merry's Chanticleer, and Star of India had all the points of an ..undersized thorough-bred of the Petrarch type. Child of the Islands was a.very common-looking customer, but, as the saying is, "bad to beat." The most critical judge would have passed over these and many others I could mention as being of impure blood. .There ia a tribe, the Benl-Sukker, to be found roaming about the region of the Dead sea, and in their tents are horsea standing frdm 15 to even 16 hands high. The other Bedaween term these " Majar (Hungarian,) but Mejnoon, said in the desert to have been the best horse ever foaled, was, on dit, stolen from this tribe. Who, accustomed to Arabians, would have ever passed H. R. H. the Prince of Wales' Alep as being anything but a cocktail? That animal,-as laying claim to any pretensions, was the very worst of his race my eye ever rested on, and, but that he could perform in his class over hurdles, must have been the most unsatisfactory mount ever John Jones donned silk outside of. Because an Arab can "bend the knee and go," he should not reproachfnlly— where there can be no reproach—be dubbed mutinies, and in that long and arduous dhour after Tantia Topee. In" the hands of Hiram Woodruff he could have trotted under "the thirties." MIXED BREEDS OF FIOS. Col. Curtis contributes to the Rural New Yorker the following note on mixed breeds of. pigs: "An English writer tells the truth whin he says that we might as well admit first as last that all breeds of pigs have been more or less mixed and crossed in their formation. This is a candid admission and aocords with my own ideas, and affords a natural solution of the discrepancies and peculiarities which are so often manifested in the breeds of pigs which are classed as thoroughbred. I have all along suspected that breeders in Great Britain had a knack of improving their pigs by infusing into them, as they term it, "dashes" of new blood. In no other way can breeders maintain strength of constitution and keep up the stamina of their pigs. -Pigs are different from all other stock in regard to in-breeding. Two or three ib-crosses destroy the character of the stock and cause the offspring to be weakly and often to be deformed. On these accounts it is never safe to make more than two in-crosses in breeding pigs. The effect on cattle and sheep is not so marked, and there is abundant evidence that these kinds of stock have been improved by in-breeding fer successive generations. ' The rule, however, will not apply to horses or to poultry of any kind, because with these weakness and deformities are sure to follow the breeding of blood relations. The late Harkness sale of Jersey cattle at Philadelphia was a good one. The average f6r cows was $457 58; for calves, $187 05. The highest price paid was $1,350 for a Coomassie heifer, 2 years old, and the premium calf, two months old, brought $700. The principal purchasers were: A. B. Darling of New York, $4,190; John H. Small of York, Pa., $3,095; H. D. Justi, Wallingford, Delaware Co., $2,465, and Paul Sgobel of New York, $1,485. At the sale of Guernsey cattle, the following day, July 20th, competition was brisk, and thirty-two cows brought $11,370, an average of $355 31 per head. There is a real basis for the high prices of pedigree stock, whether sheep, caws, or horses. It may seem absurd to pay $200 for a ram that weighs little more than 100 pounds"; 'but if the progeny of this ram will shear eight or ten pounds of wool while common sheep average five or six pounds, with the same cost of keeping, the use of the pedigree sheep as a breeder will pay heavy interest on much more than his increased price. It is not every farmer who can breed fancy stock with profit, but there is none who can not improve his herds by the best male parentage.—Chicago Tribune. »_. ,— Mns. Ann Newton, Pontiac, Mich., lately sold to Mr. W. H. Clapham, .Maple Wood stock farm, Attica, Ind., one of her imported Shropshiredown bucks - for $225. This is said to be one of the best of his race in this country. Mr. C. also purchased at the same time eleven ewe lambs of the same strain, which are very fine. peras to correct its putresence." Are yon not a trifle too sweeping? Iron is one of the constituents of the blood and essential to health, and copperas is the most convenient form in which it can be administered to domestic animals. , Farmers should know that it is very useful in all cases of anaemia, and onr stock, like ourselves, become anaemic in this malarious climate. Salt is not more necessary. The two should be pulverized together, one part to twenty, and given to horses, cattle, sheep and hogs every week during the summer. Copperas is even a specific for chicken cholera. Try it. Agricola. » • ■ Great Central Truth in Breeding. In the opeiations of nature, whether in ani mal or vegetable life, the law of heredity and variation is everywhere visible and indisputable in its control. The law of gravitation is certainly more demonstrable, as a question of physics, but it is no more certain and no more universal than the law of heredity. If we plant two apple seeds, one from a sour and the other from a sweet apple, we can. as certainly know that the fruit from one will be sour and the frnit from the other will be sweet, as we can know that the apples will obey the law of gravitation, and, in due time, fall to the ground. There is no difference in the certainty of the two laws, but it requires years to demonstrate the former, while the latter can be demonstrated in a second of time. If we couple two purely bred Merino sheep together, we know we will get a lamb with all the Merino characteristics of both its parents, which is simply the law of heredity, but it may be better than either of its parents, and here comes in that -phase of the law of heredity which we call variation. The lamb will be a pure Merino without being the exact reproduction of the parenta or either of them. Th en comes in the intelligent beeder's art in determining the qualities of the lamb. If better than the parents it must be preserved to breed from, and if worse, it must be rejected. Many thoughtless breeders deplore that phase of the law we here designate as "variation," but we look upon tt as one of the wisest provisions of nature, and no difference how many thousands of generations we may breed purely and in certain lines, the last generation will still show variation. If it were not for this law of variation all improvement and progress would be impossible, and our domestic animals to-day, would be identical with their ancestors when they came down from Ararat.with Noah.—Wallace's Monthly. Note the advertisement of the Central Kentucky Sheep-Breeding Co., Lexington, Ky., on August 17th. A select lot are to be sold. Hogs and Iron. Editors Indiana Farmer: In the Farmer of July 15th, in answer a Barb. I owned a very high-caste bay to D. Y. N., you say "hogs should not be charger, which carried me through the 1 fed on putrid flesh that would require cop- Hillsdale College. Herewith we present an illustration of this excellent educational institution which is located In the beautiful city of Hillsdale, Mich. The college, which was established a quarter of a centuryago,form- erly, consisted of one large building which was destroyed by fire. This was soqae years ago replaced by the handsome group shown in the engraving. While the various sources of instruction are thorough and complete, the expense of attending this school is very moderate; and this fact of first-class educational facilities at low rates is well worthy of consideration. To those desiring a commercial college course, the writer particularly desires to recommend the Commercial Department of Hillsdale College. With an acquaintance among the various leading commercial colleges of the country, and a practical experience as a student at Hillsdale, we unhesitatingly recommend the superior instruction to be obtained at this institution. Attention is drawn to the advertise ment now running in this paper. Use Snuff. One of my pigs cannot breathe right, she runs at the nose at times as if she had taken cold, and breathes very hard, something as if she bad a stoppage in her nose, causing a big movement in her flank, at times cannot notice very much wrong; has a ring in her nose, but all of the rest have also. E. M. J. Give him snuff with one-fourth ground hellebore mixed in. Will Have to Give Symptoms. I have a horse that is slip shouldered, did not notice anything wrong until Saturday evening, June 24. Have been working him to the reaper some, but not steady enough to cause any hurt. Is there any cure for it? If so, what shall I do for him? A. M. A. You are mot certain that your horse's shoulder is luxated or not. You should give symptoms and let our veterinarian say what the trouble is. t Blister Him. I have a pony that can't drink water to do any good, and can't say how long he has been in this fix, as I have owned him but thirty days. He only takes three or four swallows at a time, and it seems to hurt him to swallow it, and sometimes it will run out at his nostrils; he swallows food without any trouble; he is all right every other way, eats hearty and is in good fix, and his hair looks well. J. L. W. Your pony that'cannot drink water and can Bwallow food has either a chronic affection of his glottis or the exciting type. In either case blister the throat from side to tide up toward the ears on the paroted glands and down between the jaws on the submaxillary^nee daily; if not chronioit may cure the other. Bone Spavin. I have a horse that has bone spavin which I treated as recommended in the Farmer, namely, with fly blister twice daily, till well blistered, then once daily for ten days; is a month since first application, and the horse is very lame on first going-out or after standing awhile and starting up again; horee is in excellent condition otherwise. I uso him but very little. I would be pleased If Dr. Navin would tell me if lameness can be stopped; if so, what would be the remedy. J. B. A. I am determined to not answer letters not accompanied by $l,except through the Farmer. Just treat your horse as I have directed in the Farmer. If he is a young horse and not affected too long he will get well, otherwise doiibtful. Neglected Case. I have a sucking colt tbat got its right front ankle joint spralced about a month ago. I have been doctoring with several remedies and have removed nearly all lameness, but the joint appears to be calloused, and is one-third larger than the other. I also have a horse that some people say Is "thick winded;" ho makes a noise in his nostrils, especially noticeable when he is in a gallop; dots not hurt him from work, or does not pant or appear to be short winded in the leatt. O. P. P. I am afraid you waited too long with your colt; blistering is all that can be done for him now. Seeblister in Farmer. Your horse is not what is really known as thick winded, or broken winded, he is affected with some one of the following: He is a whistler, a roarer, a piper, etc., any of which do not affect his usefulness, except being offensive. Use Arnica and Iodine. What ails my mare? About four weeks ago she became very lame; at first I thought she had run a snag in her hock- joint, the hide was broken in and it looked as if there had been something run in there, but it has healed up and is sore and lame yet. It is swollen from the hoof to the knee. What will cure small lumps on a horse's Bhoulder about the size ef a walnut? They get sore when worked and get well when not worked very hard, but come back again if pulled a little too hard. S. R. O. If there is an enlargement anywhere on your horse's limb caased by a hurt and it is inflamed, apply tincture of arnica and cold water several times daily until the inflammation subsides, then if any enlargement is left blister. See blister in Farmer. The small tumors on horses' shoulders are caused by pressure of collar. Paint with iodine once or twice daily for a week, and give rest. If they suppurate, let the pus out with a knife. vi -SfU^J mm
Object Description
Title | Indiana farmer, 1882, v. 17, no. 32 (Aug. 5) |
Purdue Identification Number | INFA1732 |
Date of Original | 1882 |
Subjects (LCSH) |
Agriculture Farm management Horticulture Agricultural machinery |
Subjects (NALT) |
agriculture farm management horticulture agricultural machinery and equipment |
Genre | Periodical |
Call Number of Original | 630.5 In2 |
Location of Original | Hicks Repository |
Coverage | United States - Indiana |
Type | text |
Format | JP2 |
Language | eng |
Collection Title | Indiana Farmer |
Rights Statement | Content in the Indiana Farmer Collection is in the public domain (published before 1923) or lacks a known copyright holder. Digital images in the collection may be used for educational, non-commercial, or not-for-profit purposes. |
Repository | Purdue University Libraries |
Date Digitized | 2010-10-08 |
Digitization Information | Original scanned at 300 ppi on a Bookeye 3 scanner using internal software. Display images generated in CONTENTdm as JP2000s; file format for archival copy is uncompressed TIF format. |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Subjects (LCSH) |
Agriculture Farm management Horticulture Agricultural machinery |
Subjects (NALT) |
agriculture farm management horticulture agricultural machinery and equipment |
Genre | Periodical |
Call Number of Original | 630.5 In2 |
Location of Original | Hicks Repository |
Coverage | Indiana |
Type | text |
Format | JP2 |
Language | eng |
Collection Title | Indiana Farmer |
Rights Statement | Content in the Indiana Farmer Collection is in the public domain (published before 1923) or lacks a known copyright holder. Digital images in the collection may be used for educational, non-commercial, or non-for-profit purposes. |
Repository | Purdue University Libraries |
Digitization Information | Orignal scanned at 300 ppi on a Bookeye 3 scanner using internal software. Display images generated in CONTENTdm as JP2000s; file format for archival copy is uncompressed TIF format. |
Transcript |
Jl)
F
OK SALE—Pare Cyprian Queens. Address J. B.
JOHNSON, Laurel, Franklin county, Ind.
'
FOR BALE—Gold Dust seed wheat, send 6 cent«,
in Btamps for^mple. B. G.CRIST, New Mar*ett
ID-Hana.
FOR SALE-Cotswt Id buck Iambs aU from tmpor-
ed stock at |16 a piece. JAMES M. MARLOW,
Adams, Ind.
FOR BALE—One Messenger Bullion. 50 thoroughbred Poland China pigs. Address HAWLBY
BROS., Ebenceer, Preble Co., Ohio.
FOR SALE—Two flne Prland China boars; best
Butler eornty strains. Write for description and
price, WM. WII_SON, Box 29, Robinson. 111.
FOR SALE—Cotswold buck lambs, good ones, from
my Darnell buck. Come and see them, or write
to J. L. BRENTON, Petersburg, Pike county, Ind.
FOR SALE—A fine farm of 139 acres in Hendricks
Co., Ind. For particulars addrfss ALEXANDER CLARK, Center Valley, Hendricks Co., Ind.
eow
FORBALE—A few first class show pigs both sex.
Poland China eet of Governor 2nd and young
Gold Dust and Black Victor. Address A. W. ROKB,
Muiifie, Jnd.
FOR SALE—Pedigreed Short Horn cattle and Poland China hogs, over 15 years a breeder. Please
state about what vou want and address L. H.AIK
MAN. Rat 21. Dana. Vermillion Co.,Ind
~ii>u-K »aLK-Shepherd Pups—Bred from English
Jt? shepherd dog and Scotch Collie slut. Biddie.tl. e
mother of these pups,bad charge at one time of-fO
gppen. Pr. |
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