Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 21, 1890, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., February 2I, 1890.
Farm Notes.
The cold weather will get around in
time to make the lambs shiver, mind
that. Look out for their comfort and
health. .
Rye is now the most useful plant on
the farm. Itis providing green food
when nothing else can be had for that
purpose.
Manure is most valuable when the
liquids and solids have been saved fo-
gether. Neither is a complete fertili-
zer alone, but together they supply all
the demands of the crops.
Put the young roses, just rooted, into
a cellar or pit, advises Popular Garden
ing, and if started early in the sping in
the house and set out when danger from
frost is over, they will bloom finely the
whole summer.
Chestnuts, walnuts, aimonds, butter-
nuts and pecans can be planted and
grown to advantage as other varieties
of trees that bear such fruits as nuts of
a marketable value, while the wood of
nut trees are of equal value.
The garden is neglected on the farm,
and many do not cultivate a plot for a
garden.” The luxuries of farming can
only be obtained by those farmers who
grow vegetables and fruits as well as
staple crops of grain and grass.
When thumps once make their ap-
pearance reduce the quantity of feed
and give spirits of turpentine,a teaspoon-
ful to a fifty pound pigonce a day in the
glop, until the accompanying cough is
relieved and they show by appearance
general improvement.
Millet makes a good pasture for sheep
when it is about eight inches high. The
flock should be hurdled upon it, per-
mitted to eat off four or five inches and
then moved. The millet will then start
up again. It may be fed off three or
four times in aseason.
One ot the best locations for a garden
is to turn under a clover sod ; now ap-
ply thirty bushels of airslacked lime
per acre(or proportionately), and then
cross-plow the land in the spring. The
ground must be well harrowed and
made fine before planting the seed,how-
ever.
“Feed more oats this vear,” advises
Rural New Yorker. “There isno rea-
son why oats should not be fed with
profit to all kinds of stock, cattle,sheep,
pigs, and poultry. We do not mean
fed exclusively, but fed in combination
with other grains and fodders.”
A correspondent of the Cultivator se-
cured a good sod for the first time in
thirty years on a square acre of sandy
soil by spreading twenty loads of coal
ashes onit,lightly manuringit with barn
yard manure, turning the whole under
and seeding to clover.
When fattening geese,give a mixture
of corn and wheat. They should also
have a cooked mess twice a day, con-
sisting of potatoes, turnips, chopped
clover, cabbage and onions, as green
food is essential. Add a small quanti-
ty of salt, and do not overlook the
water.
There is no advantage in baving a
cow that gives a small quantity of very
rich milk. The cow that yields a pound
of butter and gives a large quantity of
milk to produce it, is more valuable as
a dairy cow than the one giving the
sameamount of butter from one-half the
quantity of milkiproduced by another.
Roots of all kinds are better kept in
a pit than in cellars, where they are ex-
posed to currents of air, says the Ameri
can Cultivator, which recommends, also,
some earth be mixed with them to fill
up the spaces and thus prevent the
evaporation that usually makes them
dry and tasteless before spring.
Professor Maynard states that to de-
tect the presence of round-headed borers
in the wood of apple trees, the rough
bark should be scraped off two or three
days before the examination is made,
when chips thrown out of the holes
will be easily seen. The point of a
knife or a flexible wire will destroy
them.
Winter cows need some ‘succulent
food, and dorn ensilage is the best and
cheapest. Some experiments made at
Houghton farm show that a big ratio of
butter was obtained from milk made
by feeding corn ensilage. Not having
ensilage you can substitute roots.
Wheat bran fed liberally will also help
get the good butter.
Those who make a specialty of grow"
ing early potatoes claim that it is bet-
ter to hand-pick the beetles when they
first appear, inatead of dusting the
young leaves with plaster and paris
green, a process which should be de-
ferred until the necessity arises for so
doing. By going cver the plants daily
the beetles will not have an opportunify
of laying many eggs.
Associations formed for selling the
fruit of certain sections should aim to
extend the markets instead of shipping
the bulk of the produce to the large
cities only. There are a great many
smaller cities and towns that are never
fully supplied with choice fruit, and
there is often a demand which it is dif-
ficult to supply except, by direct ship. |
ment to the point instead of through
other channels:
The rot and mildew in grapes can be
|
| er of the bar.
kept in check by the use of the Bor-'
deaux mixture, as has been demonstra-
ted during the last season. The appli
cation must be made as soon. as the
buds swell. To make the mixture
slake four pounds of lime with sufficient
boiling water for the purpose,and when
cold slowly add (stirring the while)
twenty two gallons of cold water in
which six pounds of sulphateof copper
(bluestone) has heen previously dis
solved. .
The Dog Knew.
There {3 a dog we are acquainted with,
Lion by name, who gives daily proofs
thathe knows what is said to him. A lady
called the other day. During her call
Lion came in, lay down on the par-
lor carpet and shut his eyes. The
conversation went on, and the visitor
said :—
«What a handsome dog you have!”
Lion opened one eye. “Yes,” said
his mistress, “he is a very good dog, and
takes good care of the children.”
Lion opened the other eye and waved
his tail to and fro along the carpet.
“When the baby goes out he always
goes with her, and I feel sure then that
no harm can come to her,” his mistress
went on.
Lion's tail thumped up and down
violently on the carpet.
“And he is so gentle to them all, and
such a playmate and companion that
we would not take a thousand dollars
for him."
Lion’s tail now went up and down, to
and fro, and round and round with great
glee.
“But,” said his mistress, “Lion has
one fault.”
Total quiet of Lion's tail, together
with appearance of great concern on his
face.
«He will come in here with dirty
teet and lie down on tke carpet, when I
have told him time and again that he
mustn’t do it.”
Lion rose with an air of shame, and
slunk out of the room, with his tail
down.— Boston Record.
He Changed His Politics.
At a joint meeting of bankers, law-
vers and newspaper men last evening
ex-Congressman W. D. Hill told the
followlng story :
“Horizontal Bill”? Morrison, who was
strongly in favor ot Douglas for Presi-
dent in 1860, in a stumping campaign
in Illinois, advised the young girls to
ge t their lovers to vote for the Little
Giant, and illustrated his point by
telling them how an Illinois girl had
married a young chap who was a great
Lincoln man, and before the marriage
she had been unable to proselyte him.
They were married and went to Chicago
on their wedding trip. They had re-
tired to their room, and the young hus-
band went down to “take a smoke.”
About 10.30 he retired to his room. but
found the door locked.
“Who is there?’ asked the
wife inside.
“Your husband, dear,”
ply.
“What's your politics 2’? she said.
“JT am a Lincoln man, and don’t you
forget it.”
“Well, no Lincoln man can come in
here.”
The young man retired, went down
stairs and took another smoke and ling-
ered until about 12 o'clock. Going
again to the room, he knocked.
«Who is there ?”’ asked the wife.
In a very stern and defiant tone he
said : “Open that door; I'm your hus-
band.”
«T tell you,'? said the wife from the ‘n-
side, “that no Lincoln man can get in
this room.”
Provoked and mad, the young man
went down stairs again. About 10
o’clock in the morning he ascended the
stairs once more and knocked--this
time very timilly.
“Who's there?’ came ina difiant
tone from the young wife.
The reply was given in a lowered and
muflled voice: “Let me in; Tam John,
yoar husband, and a leetle the best
Douglas man in the State of Illinoy.”
And the door opened as if by the
touch of electricity.
young
was the re-
Crossing the Limbs.
Why It Is Harmless to Men and Not
to Women.
Ladies who sit with their limbs cross-
ed to sew or to read, orto hold the baby,
are not aware that they are inviting
serious physical ailments, but it is true
nevertheless, says the New York Morn-
ing Journal. When a man crosses his
legs he places the ankle of one lirab
across the knee of the other, and rests it
lightly! there. A woman, modest and
restricted in her movements, rests the
entire weight of one limb on the upper
part of the other, and this pressure up-
on the sensitive nerve and cords, if in-
dulged in for continued length of time,
as is often done by ladies who sew or
embroider, will produce disease. Scia-
tica, neuralgia and other serious trou-
bles frequently result from this simple
cause. © The muscles and nerves in the
upper portion of a woman's leg are ex-
tremely sensitive, and much of her
whole physical structure can become de-
ranged if they are overtaxed in the man-
ner referred to
Hitting the Bull’s Eye at Random.
Three years ago a prominent citizen
of this city, and the owner of a block of
buildings on Main street, lost a crowbar,
and upto thismorning never had any trace
of it.” He accidentally stepped into a
business place, and overhearing a con-
versation about a crowbar, it reminded
him of his lost treasure, and for fun he
said to the proprietor: “Uncle—-,I
wish you would send home my crowbar.
Isn’t three years long enough ?”” “Upon
my word and honor,” said the proprie-
tor, “I have put out that crowbar no
less than twenty times to bring home,
and have forgotaen it each time. Here
John, you go up to my house and bring
Mr. F's crowbar home, and don’t let
the grass grow under your feet.,” No
.one has a sufficient vivid imagination to
picture to himself the suprise of the own-
He thinks it was the big-
west hit he ever made in his life.—Dan-
bury News.
Oddities of Etiquette.
In Sweden if you address the poorest
person on the street you must lift your
hat. The same courtesy is insisted upon
if you pass a lady on the stairway. To
enter a reading room or bank with one’s
hat on is regarded as a bad breach of
manners. To place your hand on the
arm of a lady is a grive and objectiona-
ble familiarity. Never touch the per-
son, it is sacr=d; is one of their proverbs.
In Holland a lady is expected to retire
precipitately if she should enter a store
or a restaurant where men are congre-
gated. She waits until they have trans-
acted their business and departed. La-
dies seldom rise in Spain to recieve male
visitors and they rarely accompany him
to the door. For a Spaniard to give a
lady, even his wife, his arm when out
walking is looked upon as a decided vio-
lation of propriety.
In Persia a visitor “sends a notice an
hour or two before calling, and gives a
day’s notice if the visit is one of impor-
tance. He is met with servants before
he reaches the house and other consider-
ations are shown to him according to re-
spective rank. The left,and not the right,
is considered the position of honor. No
Turk will enter a sitting-room with
dirty shoes. The upperclasses wear tight
fitting shoes, with goloshes over them.
The latter, which receive all the dirt
and dust, are left outside the door. The
Turk never washes in dirty water. Wa-
ter is poured over his hands, so that
when polluted it runs away.
In Syria the people never think of ta-
king off their caps or turbans when en-
tering the house or visiting a friend, but
they always leave their shoes at the door.
There are no mats or scrapers outside,
and the floors inside are covered with ex-
pensive rugs, kept very clean in Moslem
houses and used to kneel upo nwhile say-
ing prayers.
The spooks and goblins that delight
To fill with terror all the night;
That stalk abroad in hideous dreams
With whizh dyspepsia’s fancy teems,
Will never trouble with their ills
The man who trusts in Pierce’s Pills.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pel-
lets: vegetable,harmless, painless, sure !
)
He Fled.
“I’m perfectly willing to de any sort
of work, ma’am,” he argued, as she held
the door open. “I don’t ask you to give
me a meal for nothing.”
“You'll earn it, will you?” she asked,
“Certainly I will. All I ask for is the
opportunity.”
‘Are you particularabout the work ?”
“Not in the least. Set me atany
blessed thing.”
«Very well. I've got a hired girl
who has been running the house for a
wezk or so and I haven’t the moral cour
age to discharge her. Come in and work
herout.”
“Let me see her, ma'am. I'llgo to
the back door and size he up.”
He was gone about two minutes and
when he came back he nearly carried
the side gate off 1ts hinges in his hurry
to get through. He didn’t even stop 1n
the front yard, bnt as he kept on he
turned his face to the crack in the door
and said :
“Thank you very kindly, ma’am, but
T guess I ain’t hungry, and can make
these old clothes do me till next spring.”
carriages.
1320s 1 7p
The
BARGAINS
o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o
AND
SPRING WAGONS,
at the old Carriage stand of
oO
McQUISTION & CO.,——
NO. 10 SMITH STREET,
adjoining the freight depot.
We have on hand and for sale the
best assortment of Carriages, Buggies,
and Spring Wagons we have ey
We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic,
and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano
and a bodies, and can give
you a choice of the different patterns of
wheels. Our work is the best made in
this section, made by good workmen
and of good material. e claim to be
the only party manufacturing in town
who ever served an apprenticeship to
the business. Along with that we have
had forty years’ experience in the busi-
ness, which certainly should give us
fhe advantage over inexperienced par-
ies.
Inprice we defy competition, as we
have no Pedlers, Clerks or Rents to
pay. We pay cash for all our goods,
thereby securing them at the lowest
figures and discounts. We are aeter-
mined not to be undersold, either in
our own make or manufactured work
from other places; so give us a call for
Surries, Phaetons, Buggies, Spring
Wagons, Buckboards, or anything else
in our line, and we will accommodate
you.
We are prepared to do all kinds of
0——REPAIRING——o0
on short notice. Painting, Trimming,
Woodwork and Smithing. We guaran-
tee all work to be just as represented,
so give us a call before Purehosing
elsewhere. Don’t miss the place—
alongside of the freight depot.
34 15 S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
Hardware.
Hoa AND STOVES
AT
o——JAS. HARRIS & CO.) S—o0
A
LOWER PRICES THAN EVER.
NOTICE—Thanking our friends for
their liberal patronage, we desire to ex-
press our determination to merit a con-
tinuance of the same, by a low scale of
Jescieiies PRICES IN HARDWARE............
We buy largeiy for cash, and doing our
own work, can afford to sell cheaper
and give our friends the benefit, which
we will always make it a point to do.
—A FIRST-CLASS TIN SHOP—
CONNECTED WITH OUR STORE.
| ALL OTHER THINGS
DESIRABLE IN HARDWARE
FOR THE WANTS AND USE
OF THE PEOPLE, WITH
PRICES MARKED SO THAT
ALL CAN SEE,
0—AT LOWEST PRICES—o
For Everybody.
0—JAS. HARRIS & CO.,—o
22-2 BELLEFONTE, PA.
Wines and Liquors.
o—SCHMIDT
DISTILLER AND JOBBER
OF
FINE 0
a W.8CHUNIDT,
—— ESTABLISHED 1836.
WEISEKIES.
BUILDING—o
ra LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE WINE, LIQUOR AND
CIGAR HOUSE IN THE UNITED SATES.
0 0
Telephone No. 662.
IMPORTER OF
WINES, LIQUORS ANDCIGARS,
No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
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Fine Job Printing.
All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. 3411 1y
Printing. Printing.
] { INE JOB PRINTING.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
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FINE JOB PRINTING -
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~far THE WATCHMAN OFFICE.}—
’
Miscellaneous Advs. Saddlery.
vs YOU
ONE
OF
THEM ?
IN 1890
THE HOME-SEEKER takes 160 free acres
in the famous Milk
River Valley of
Montana, reached
by the Manitoba
Railway.
THE HEALTH-SEEKER takes the Manitoba
to the lakes and
woods of the North-
west, Helena Ho t
Springs and Broad-
water Sanitarium.
THE FORTUNE SEEKER takes the Manitoba
to the glorious op:
portunities of the
four new States.
takes the Manitoba
to the Great Falls
of the Missouri.
takes the Manitoba
through the grand-
est scenery of
America.
THE MANUFACTURER
THE TOURIST
takes the Manitoba
Palace, Dining and
Sleeping Car line to
THE TRAVELER
Minnesota, North
Dakota, ontana
and the Pacific
Coast.
takes the Manitoba
cheap excursions
from St. Paul to
Lake Minnetonka,
the Park Region,
the Great Lakes,
the Rockies, the
National Park, the
Pacific Ocean, Cali-
fornia and Alaska.
THE TEACHER
ANYONE will receive maps,
books and guides
of the regions
reached by The St.
Paul, Minneapolis
& Manitoba Rail-
way, by writing to
P.O 1 Whites G.
P. & T. A, St, Paul,
Minn.
Fine Job Printing.
pure JOB PRINTING
0o———A SPECIALTY——o0
AT THE
WATCHMAN o OFFICE,
There is no style of work, from the cheapest
‘Dodger to the finest
0—BOOK-WORK,—o
but you can get done in the most satisfactory
manner, and at
Prices consistent with the class of work
by calling or communicating with this office.
GOOD RECORD.
“HE OLDEST HARNESS HOUSE
N TOWN.
1,
ears in the same spot—no
change of firm—no fires—no going back,
but continued and steady progress. This
is an advanced age. People demand more
for their money than ever before. We are
up to the times with the largest and best
assortment of everything that is to be
found in a FIRST-CLASS HARNESS
STORE, and we defy competition, either
in quality uantity or prices. 0 SE
ING OUT FOR THE WANT OF TRADE
VO COMPANY— NO PARTNERS — NO
ONE TO DIVIDE PROFITS WITH BUT
MY CUSTOMERS. I am better prepared,
this year, to give you more for your monoy
than ever before. Last year and this year
have found me at times not able to fill m
orders. The above facts are worth consid-
me for they are evidence of merit and
rr ealing. There is nothing so success-
u
Over 18
0—AS SUCCESS—o
and this is what hurts some. See my
large stock of Single and Double Harness,
Whips, Tweed Dusters, Horse Sheets, Col-
lars and Sweat Pads, Riding Saddles,
Ladies’ Side Saddles, very low: Fly-Nets
from $3 a pair and upwards. Axle, Coach
and Harness Oils, Saddlery Hardware and
Harness Leather SOLD AT THE LOW-
EST PRICES to the trade. Harnessmak-
ers in the country will find it to their ad-
vantage to get my prices before purchas-
ing hardware elsewhere. Iam better pre-
pared this year than ever to fill orders
promptly.
: JAS. SCHOFIELD,
Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
Ree
EBSTER
THE BEST INVESTMENT
For the Family,School, or Professional Library.
33 37
Has been for years Standard Authority in
the Government Printing Office and U. S. Su-
preme Court.
It is highly recommended by 38 State Sup’ts
of Schools and the leading College Presidents.
Nearly all the School Books published in this
country are based upon Webster,as attested by
the leading Schools Books Published. *
3000 more Words and nearly 2000 more En-
gravings than any other American Dictionary.
SPECIMEN TESTIMONIALS.
THE NEW YORK WORLD says: Webster
is almost universally conceded to be the best.
THE BOSTON GLOBE says: Webster is
the acknowledged standard in lexicography.
THE BOSTON CONSTITUTION says: Web-
ster has long been the standard authority in
our office.
THE CHICAGO INTER OCEAN says: Web-
od Unabridged has always been the stand-
ard.
THE NEW ORLEANS TIMES DEMOCRAT
says: Websteris standard authority in our
office.
THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE says: It is
recognized as the most useful existing “word-
book” of the English language all over the
world.
Sold by all Booksellers. Pamphlet free.
G. & C. MERRIAM & CO.,
34-49 Pub'rs, Springfield, Mass.
Prospectus 1890.
AVE YOU READ THE P HILA-
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THE NEWS OF THE WORLD. The times
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ut these are for the most part occupied by
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CONTRIBUTORS to the Sunday eddition of
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THE WEEKLY PRESS
For 1890 will be as much better than The
Weekly Press for 188) as we can make it.
With every issue during the new year it
will be
AN EIGHTY-COLUMN PAPER.
Each of the fifty two numbers will contain
ten pages, or eighty columns, with a tol
for the year of 520 pages, or 4160 columns.
Thus, it will be “as big as a book,” as the
saying is.
A PAPER OF QUALITY.
Not only will it be as big as a book, bnt it
will be a paper of quality as well as of
nantity. It will contain the pick of every-
thing good.
A PAPER OF VARIETY.
Thegfidea is that The Weekly Press shall
be both clean and wide awake. It will dis-
cuss all subjects of public interest and ims
portance. The writers on its list include:
Julian Ward Howe, E Lynn Linton, Prof.
N. 8. Shaler, Louis Pasteur, William Black,
Edgar W. Nye, Opie P. Read,.and, indeed,
almost every popular writer of note in this
country and quite a number of distinguish-
ed writers abroad. In fiction, an attraction
of the year will be “ Esther,” by H. Rider
Haggard ; another serial story, already en-
gaged, will be * Come Forth,” by Elizabeth
stuart Phelps.
A FARMER'S PAPER,
The best conducted agricultural page in
America. Illustrations.
A WOMAN'S PAPER.
The “Woman's page” of The Weekly
Press is alone worth the subscription price
Its illustrations are attracting attention
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A CHILDREN’S PAPER.
The special department, for children is now
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Weekly Press, one ye
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35 2 Publishers.
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It is without an equal
ASA SAFETY FAMILY OIL.
We stake our reputation as refiners that
IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD.
Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by
ACME OIL CO,,
34 35 ly, Williamsport, Pa.
For sale at retail by W. T. TWITMIRE
DELPHIA TIMES THIS MORNING ?
TE