Demonic Wada Bellefonte, Pa., July 29, 1892, ma Farm Notes. Raspberries often continue to bear un- til late in the season, especially if the canes have been well manured. The German farmers of Penunsylva- nia have extremely healthy appie trees by washing the bark with lime. According to a current paragraph, “we burn too much carbon in the sys- tem and consume too little building material.” About every farmhouse there should be a nice lawn. The farmer has the opportunity to excel in this sort of or- namentation. Egg plants require careful watching in order to protect them against the po- tato beetles. Give them a dusting with Paris green occasionally. I find that berries picked in the morning after the dew is off and after 4 p. m. keep and ship better than those picked in the heat of the day. One of the greatest troubles of the ordinary farmer is that he depends too largely on the memory alone for all the information he needs in his business. To kill the squash vine borer, make a strong tea of tobacco and to four quarts of it add an ounce of dissolved camphor: Apply a small amount to the roots when the vines begin to run. Gardeners around New York apply 70 or 80 tons ot fresh manure per acre, and three quarters to one ton of mixed commercial fertillizer in addition, and expect about fifty tons of early cab. bage. All along in the journey of butter from the milk pail to the butter tub there ia a chance for it to pick up fla- vors foreign to its own. Ragweed and others that are noxious impart these flavors, while others come from the stables. A heap of stones after lying two or three years will often leave the soil be- neath richer than before. But the greater part of the effect is said to be due to the action of the stones as a mulch allowing the soil beneath to dis- integrate. The “sheepy taste’ of mutton does not come from contact with the wool in skinning or from tardiness in disem- boweling the animal ; it is of far deep- er origin. It comes from. poverty, un- healthy condition, of old age and simi- lar causes. A Connecticut farmer kept an ae- count of the small fruit grown on half an acre of ground and used by his family last year. He figured on the fruit at market rates and found it amounted to $365, or more than $700 per acre. Phylloxera, which has been the pest of French vineyards for many years, is about to be exterminated by the efforts of the Government. That country is striving hard to regain her place as the first vine growing country of the world. Her Commissioners report that over 5,000,000 acres are now in vineyard, a greater number than ever before. Late in the summer, about August or September, lawn grass may be sown in order to secure a thick sward next spring. The seed should consist of several varieties cf grasses, as some kinds may not be adopted to the loca- tion, while others may take full poss esgion, Manure the land well, and ap- ply in the spring an application of wood ashes. Ia consequence of the destruction of canes by the borer, in the Early Wilson blackberry, hundreds of fruit growers were compelled to cut away and burna large portion of their canes this season, which has resulted in the crop being smaller, which is compensated for by the higher prices for blackberries com- pared with former years, the profits be- Ing as large as during previous seasons. Early varieties of apples find quick and ready sale in all the markets. The supply of winter apples being gone, the early supply is looked for by buvers every season. Instead of large orchards of late apples for winler, it is probable that an orchard of early apples would be more profitable. The keeping qual- ities of apples place them far ahead of all other kinds of fruit, as they can be shipped any distance. A practical dairyman gives the fol- lowing ss his method of soiling: At the last cultivation of corn (July) he sows clover and timothy seed in the corn field, which comes up well. About September 20 the corn is off the ground and the clover allowed to grow a month, when the cows are turned in for a few hours in the morning. In the spring there is more early feed before the land is plowed for another crop. Atier the corn is ripe it should be cut without delay. There isa time when corn is in juet the proper condi. tion to cut, in order to secure a good fodder. Leaving it in the field is one method of economizing room in the barn, but the corn fodder is damaged to a certain extent every day that it is exposed to the weather. When the leaves become very dry there is even a loss from the winds blowing portions away. As to whether there isa curcalio- roof plum there is a difference at opin- 1on. Samples of the *Abundance” va. riety this season show the branches well filled with sound plums. They were attacked by the curculio, but it was claimed that the rapid growth made by the fruit, and the hardening of the stones, 86 that the worms could not enter, saved the fruit. The sam- ples showed that while the curculio bad stung the fruit, yet the fruit was sound and free from all blemish except a small scar on the ekin which had healed over. Wage Earning Power. The tariff gives the protected manu- facturers, as at Homestead, a monopoly by excluding competition. Hence the money they make is only limited by their greed and the efficacy of their trade organizations or trusts in regula- ting productions and prices. We heard no newspaper protests trom the Repub- lican side against Mr. Carnegie’s $5,000 a day. That was all right. But a “smart Isaac” on the Pittsburg Gazette complains that “of the 600 members of the Pittsburg bar fully 500 make much less than the O’Donnells at Home- stead.” The reasons probably lie in the fact that the 500 legal limbs, individual- ly or collectively, could not do the work, not having the skill or endurance for exhausting toil of “the O’Donnells at Homestead.” And so of the other classes of employees designated in the Gazetle as receiving less wages than a few picked men at the Carnegie mills. The quick eye; the ready hand, the corded muscle, the experience and the coolness of judgement requisite in facing furnace fires and handling great masses of molten metal, where a single error would involve great loss or destruction of property and possibly of life are the possession of everyone. Such gifts may be compared with those of the leaders of the bar who ask $500 for making a po- lite bow to the judges and saying a few words, and sometimes, when silence ‘is golden, nothing. In the march to in- dustrial victory rare qualities are devel- oped very often in illiterate or uncul- tured men, and they have a big money value in the rivalry of Ey But take the average yearly wages of all the iron and steel workers at Home- stead, including the high priced experts, and the figures will not provoke the envy of the 500 lawyers who make less than “the O’Donnells of Home- stead.’’— Pittsburg Post. ESE ——— Sherbets and Water-Ices. Sherbet in its literal sense means a cool drink. It is of Oriental origin, but in this country it has come to mean a frozen mixture of fruit, or fruit juice, wa- ter and sugar. There is a distinction, however, made between water-ices and sherbet. Sherbet has, in addition to the fruit juice and water, either sugar syrup, white of egg, or gelatine, to give it suf- ficient viscousness to entangle and hold air when beaten in a treezer; so that sherbets, unless colored by the fruit used, will be white and opaque like snow. Water-ices, on the contrary, are made without the white of egg, syrup or gelatine, do not entangle air and are translucent-and what might be called ‘‘watery’’ in appearance. Both sherbets and water-ices are deli- cious when made with fresh, ripe fruits, and both may be enriched by the addi- tion of sweet cream, if desired. The First Brigade Ordered Home. LEABNON, PA, July 19.—The First brigade this morniug was ordered home, The whole brigade broke camp and is on the way to Philadelphia. By two o'clock this afternoon Camp McClelland was deserted and every sol- dier had started for Philadelphia. Quartermaster Townsend presented Mayor Harbeson with some 2500 loaves of bread that remained urneaten by the brigade, and the Mayor . distributed them among the charitble institutions of the city. ART A Pity there 1s not More Like Him. IroNTON, O., July 18.—Wm. A. Strickland, of Athlia, this county, re- tarned his pension check to Waiburn and Crawshaw, attorneys, this city re- questing them to return the check to the government. Strickland claims to have had a divine inspiration from the Lord informing him that the pension money was a curse, and that in future to reject it as blood money, which he now does. IE ST A Chance to Visit Cresson. A Stop-ov- er Allowed on the Pennsylvania « Railroad. All tickets to points west of Cresson as well as all coming east of that point are good to stop off. This stop makes a delightful break in the journey, as few points on the system embrace the attractive features of this crowning point of the Alleghenies. TE ——1It is not her husband’s loneliness that brings a woman back to his waiting arms; it is the fear that he isn’t lonely.— New York Herald. SE ———— ——Warm weather makes a demand upon the vitality which should be pre- pared to meet it. In order to overcome its debilitating effects, take Ayery’s Sarsaparilla. It purifies and invigorates the blood, sharpens the appetite, and make the weak strong. ——More than one thousand men are now at work on the mammoth manufactures building for the World's fair. The total number of workmen at Jackson park now exceed 7,000. Tt will probably be increased to 10,000 or more. ——Hood’s Pills cure Sick Head- ache, SE Druggist. THOMPSON & CO. D R. JAS. A, TH( ALLEGHENY Sr., BELLEFONTE, Pa. ====DEALERS IN==—— PURE { DRUGS, { MEDICINES TOILET { ARTICLES and every thing kept in a first class Drug Store. 8714 6m Business Notices. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. hen she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Cas- toria. 36 14 2y ——— Eminent Facts. The questlon is often asked and scarcely ever answered, why whiskey made now is not as pure and reliable as it was forty years ago. It is nevertheless a fact that it is made purer and better to-day than 'at time. With the im- proved methods fusil oil and other impurities are entirely eliminated. A sworn statement as to the purity age and quality of the whisky sold is furnished by one dealer who advertises full quarts, six year old pure Penn’a Rye, at $1.00 per quart. Duquesne $1.25 per quart. Port, Sherry, Sweet California Wines at 50¢ A complete catalogue and price list of all for- eign and domestic iiquors mailed on applica tion by MAX KLEIN, 82 Federal street, 37-10 1y Allegheny, Pa. New Advertisements. ITCHING CHILDREN 9 NO SLEEP AT NIGHT. NO REST BY DAY. HOW THESE LITTLE ONES HAD TO SUFFER. CUTICURA TOOK ALL OF THIS ITCH OUT OF THEIR SKINS IN SIX WEEKS. LEFT NOT A BLEMISH. My children, nine in number, were all troub- led with an itching of the skin. They could not sleep at night,” and through the day my wife felt ashamed to see the way those’ little ones had to suffer. So we concluded to try Cuticura Remedies, and believe if we had not used your valuable remedies our little family would not have been cured yet. Cuticura Remedies took all of this itch out of their skins inside of six weeks. My wife then bought more, and kept on giving it to the children, and thank God and your valuable Cuticura Remedies, my children have not got a blemish on them ROBERT SHUMAN, President Bricklayers Union No. 18, Elizabeth CZEMA 10 YEARS CURED I purchased and used Cuficura with the most gratifying results. I was troubled with ecze- ma in the form of salt rheum for ten years,and had quite despaired of being cured. Cuticura with the help of the Cuticura Soap and Cuticu- ra Resolvent, has permanently removed my complaint, and left my flesh sound and healthy. JAMES T. WILSON, Manufacturing Chemist, 52 Beekman Street, New York, N.Y. CUTICURA REMEDIES If the thousands of little babies who have been cured of agonizing, itching, burning bleeping, a and blotchy skin and scalp diseases could write, what a host of letters would be received by the proprietors of the Cuticura Remedies. Few can appreciate the agony these little ones suffer, and when these great remedies relieve in a single application the most distressing eczemae and ite ing and burning skin disease, and point to a speedy and permanent cure, it is positively ginhuman not to use them without & moment's delay. Sold everywhere. Price, Curicura 50c.; Soap, 25c.; REsoLveNT, $1.00. Prepared by the Por- TER DRUG AND CHEMICAL CorroraTION, Boston. £3~Send for “ How to Cure Skin Diseases,” 64 pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials. ABY’S Skin and Scalp purified and beautified by Cuticura Soap. Ab- solutely pure. REE FROM RHEUMATISM.— In one minute the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster relieves rheumatic, sciatic, hip, kid- ney, chest, and muscular pains and weak- nesses. Farmer's Supplies. Noory BEND CHILLED PLOWS SPRING TOOTH HARROWS, CORN PLANTERS, GRAIN DRILLS, ASPINWALL POTATO PLANTER PRICES REDUCED. Pennsylvania Spring Hoed Two Horse Cultivator, with two rowed Corn Planter Attachment. PRICES REDUCED. Buggies, Pleasure Carts and Surreys of the finest quality. PRICES REDUCED. CONKLIN WAGONS, CHAMPION WAGONS, FARM CARTS, WHEEL-BARROWS. PRICES REDUCED. Champion Rock Crusher and Champion Road Machines, B ARBED WIRE, both link and hog wire. PRICES REDUCED. CHURNS, WASHING MACHINES, PUMPS, FEED CUTTERS, LAWN MOWERS, FERTILIZERS, FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS. The best Implements for the least money guaranteed. Office and Store in the Hale building. 96 4 McCALMONT & CO. Philadelphia Card. HE pWagD W. MILLER, WITH WOOD, BROWN & CO., Dealers in HOSIERY, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS &C. 429 Market Street: ; PHILADELPHIA, PA. 15 1 Gas Fitting. M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and 4 Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa. Pays perticular attentien to heating buildings by team, copver smithing, rebrons ng gas fix ruest, &c. 20 26 i Sechler & Co. Pure Malt Whisky. Yor SELECTED ===BLENDED TEAS. = ssminseee ] OF 1t is a pretty well settled principal with all ex- pert tea men that the highest perfection in tea can- not be attained from any one kind or variety of tea + plant. But that the best value and choicest Savor can be obtained only by a skillful blending of care- Jully selected high grade goods of different varieties. When teas are perfectly blended the original flav- or of each variety disappears in the blend, and from the combination we get something entirely new and much finer than any of the original flavors. We have a new blend of our own. In the prepa- ration of which we have spent considerable timeand labor and have also had the aid and counsel of sev- eral as good tea men as are to be found in the Unit- ed States. It 1s with entire confidence that we of- Jer the goods for sale and unhesitatingly claim them 0 be very superior both in value and flavor. 4} you want a cup of ROVAL TEA, try our new blended goods. We also carry a full line of Teas, Ovlongs, Ja- pan, Young Hyson, Imperials, Gunpowder, Eng- lish Breakfast, also several grades of blended goods, and can suit the trade on anything in the tea line. You may not be exactly suited on the goods you are using, and we feel confident that you will be able Zo get from us just what you are wanting. We sell Jine teas at very reasonable prices. Try them. We have a clean dry sugar, 8lbs for 3octs. the cheapest sugar ever sold in Bellefonte. Respectfully, SECHLER & CO. 36-45 BELLEFONTE, Pa. Printing. Printing. HWE JOB PRINTING. Fine Job Printing Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job|Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING} Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing, Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. —far THE WATCHMAN OFFICE.}— Oculists and Opticians. a ——— Music Boxes. REE EYE EXAMINATION. ——OQUR~ = SPECIALIST will be in EYE ~——BELLEFONTE,— —WEDNESDAY, AUG. 24,— at the BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, from 8,30 A. IM. to 5 P. M., and will make No CHARGE to examine your eyes. Persons who have headache or whose eyes are causing discomfort should call upon our Specialist, and they will receive intelligent | and skillful attention. NO CHARGE to examine your eyes. Every pair of glasses ordered is guaranteed to be satisfactory. N & CO, Le LATEST INVENTION IN I—SWISS MUSIC BOXES, —1 They are the sweetest, most complete, dur- able, and perfect Musical Boxes made, (warranted in every respect); and any number of tunes can be obtained for them. PAT. IN SWITZERLAND AND THE U. S. We manutacture especially for direct fami- ly trade and we guarantee our instruments far superior to the Music Boxes usually made for the wholesale trade, and sold by general Merchandise, Drygoods or Music Stores. Gem Concert Roller Organs. Lowest prices. Old Music Boxes carefully repaired and im-* proved. H. GAUTSCHI & SONS, Manufacturers, Salesrooms, 1030 Chestnut Street, QUER 1010 Chestnut 8t., Philadelphia, Pa 36 21 1y 36 46. 18m Philadelphia. Press PURE BARLEY MALT WHISKY! DYSPEPSIA, INDIGESTION, -nd all wasting diseases can be ENTIRELY CURED BY IT. Malaria is completely eradicated frem he system by its use. PERRINE’S PURE BARLEY MALT WHISKY revives the energies of those worn with exces. sive bodily or mental effort. It acts as a SAFE GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigo- rous weather. Take of a wineglassful on your arrival home after the labors of the day and the same quantity before your breakfast. Being chami+ cally pure, it commends itself to the medica. profession. i WATCH THE LABEL, Be LY TA ad None genuine unless bearing the signature of the itm on the label. £ ! M. & J. 8. PERRINE, 8136 1y 388N. Third St., Philadelphia. Book Bindery, I Jo reps BOOK BINDERY. [Established 1852.] Haying the latest improved machinery I am repared to 9 BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES of all descriptions, or to rebind eld ‘bopks, Special attention given to the ruling of paper and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS. Orders will be received at this office, or ad- dress F. L RUTTER" Book Binder, Third and Market 8 25 18 Harrisburg, Pa. ——— Saddlery. {J CHOFIELD'S NEW HARNESS HOUSE. We extend a most cordial invitation to our patrons and the public, in general, to witness one of the GRANDEST DISPLAYS OF Light and Heavy Harness ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will be made in the large room, former, y occupied by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has Been added to my factory and will be used exelu- sively for the sale of harness, being the first exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as heretofore the custom has been to sell gods in the room in which they were made. T elegant room has been refitted and furnished with glass cases in which the harness can be nicely displayed and still Bent away from heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in leather. Our factory now occupies a room 16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes -it the largest establishment of its kind outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. Weare prepared to offer better bargains in the future than we have done in the past and we want everyone to see our goods and get prices for when you do this, out of self defense {ou will buy. Our profits are not large, but y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in Bellefonte. We are not indulging in idle philanthropy. It is purely business. We are not making much, but trade is growing and that is what we are interested in now. Profits will take care of themselves. When other houses discharged their work. men during the winter they were all put to work in my factory, nevertheless the bi a houses of this city and county would smile we compared ourselves to them, but we do not mean to be so odious, except to venture the as- section that none of them can sa , 88 We can say “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story. The following are iy constantly on hand. 50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from $8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per 8et825.00 and upwards, 500 HORS COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00 each, over $100.00 worth of HARNESS OILS and AXLE GREASE, $400 worth of Fly Nete sold cheap $150 worth of whips from 15¢ to $3.00 each, Horse Brushes,Cury Combs Lr Chamois, RIDING SADDLES, LADY SIDE SADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ 2 pound. We keep everythingto be found in a FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang- ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two shopsin the same town to catch trade—NO SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prise. Four harness-makers nt steady work this win ter, This is our idea of protection to labor, when other houses discharged their hands, they soon found work with us. JAS. SCHOFIELD, Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa. EA INluminating Oil. 33 37 (rovy ACME. THE BEST BURNING (‘OIL [HAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM. It gives a Brilliant Light. It will not Smoke the Chimney. It will Not Char the Wick. It has a High Fire Test. It does Not Explode. It is without an equal AS A SAFETY Srp OIL. We stake our reputation as refiners that Ee IT I8 THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD. Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by ACME OIL 00., 34 35 1y Williamsport, Pa. For sale a retaillby W. T. TWITMIRE}