Berar atcan Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 27, 1893. mmm——— Farm Notes. An old carpet thrown over the bee- hives, when the thermometer falls far below tne usual temperature, will serve to prevent the loss of some of the bees, where the hives are placed in the cel lar. Hogs can live in filth, and eat and drink filth—‘ a while. Bat the chances are that they will not live so long, and they certainly will not profit the owner at all under such condi tions. When the thermometer zero at night the cold may be mitgated tosome extent by giving double the quantity of straw or litter as bedding. Itis along the floor that the cold draughts come. Recent developments in dairy sci- ence make it one of the most promis- ing branches of our agriculture. We should have dairy schools now as we have farmers’ institutes—everywhere, and well supported. The heavy covering of snow is a great protection to treesand small fruits, ‘exposure to severe cold rendering them liable to the danger of being winter kiiled. The snow keeps them warm, and serves as a mulch. I have never found a more proft- able winter ration for an average cow than 50 pounds of good ensilage, 6 pounds of fine middlings, and what clover hay they will consume at noon. I favor the changing of the grain some- what to give variety—John Gould. The markets for farm products are as changable as any other, and the de- mands and preferences of the customers must be at all time considered, Cer- tain kinds of produce sell better dur- ing some periods than at others, and better prices may be obtained by watch- ing the markets. Turkeys should have a covered shed. If permitted to roost on the tree limbs at this season they are liable to lose the use of their feet by freezing. If they persist in going on the trees, they must be caught and confined in the shed for a few days. The shed should be provided with high roosts. Next season try the experiment of watering one row of strawberries, Use plenty of fertilizer and cultivate well: It will cost but little to experiment with one row. Keep ar account of the number of quarts of berries obtained, cost of all expenses, and then compare the result with a row not so treated. Pear trees often grow too rapidly and make too much wood upon good soll to be first-rate bearer. A plowing around them, which is but one system of root pruning, and application of wood ashes or of muriate of potash around each tree may make ihe growin slower and more hardy, and produce a good crop of fruit. The time has passed when an orchard can be planted by laying off the rows and setting young trees in holes on god land. Fruit growers have learned bv experience that the best way to begin an orchard is to plow the and harrow it well, so as to get it in as good condition as for a crop. The orchard is then to be cultivated and kept clean. In the country schools botany should be taught by devoting an hour or two each week in the growing seasons to excursions in the fields and woods, plants being selected, described and classified. By this mode of teaching it will create an interest on the part of the children. A flower garden in con- nection with the school, will also be an advantage. The largest yield of milk and the heaviest product of butter were made in this country, which demonstrate that we have passed beyond the Euro- peans in the quality of our cattle. Over 10,000 quarts of milk, and over 1000 pounds of butter are the records of American cows for one year. Tue cattle of this country, as a class, are al- 80 improving in every respect. Water in the cellar occurs after heavy snows begin to melt. Sometimes it is the surface water that finds its way into the cellar. The only prevention is to shovel the snow away from the house and to make drains wherever the water will flow, in order to prevent the backing up ofthe water when it is held in a dam by slueli.. The best time to removethe snow is before a thaw comes, Because the frosts seal up the liquids, and destroys all odors, it is no evidence that filth does not exist. The relief is but temporary. Cleanliness is essen- tial, and all manure must be removed from the stalls, while the lig- uids should flow away freely, before they become ice. The proper arrange- ment of the stalls will greatly lessen the labor of keeping the stock clean at this season. Whenever you have a piece of land that you cannot cultivate put it down to grass. Too much land is sometimes a drawback, but the best mode of keep- ing the land in condition, if you can only cultivate a portion of it. is to seed the remainder down to grass. If the grass crop is light plow under that which has grown and seed it again, Once a sod is obtained the land will be- gin to recuperate. The complaint that nearly all the farms are mortgaged may be true, but euch a fact is evidence that the farm is considered good security, ard enables them to secare a loan, All branches of business are similarly effected, the credit system being universal. The merchant borrows money to engage in’ bnsiness, and must ‘also give security for ite payment. The farmer is en- gaged in business, and uses the same methods, and incurs the same rigks, to which others are subject. is below. A MirLvioNn FRrienNDs.--A friend in need isa friend indeed, and not less than one million people bave found just such a friend in Dr. King’s New Dis- covery for Consumption, Coughs, and Colds,—If you bave never used this Great Cough Medicine, one trial will convince you that it has wonderful cur- ative powers in all diseases of Throat, Chest ar.d Lungs. Each bottle is guar- anteed to do all that is claimed or money will be refunded. Trial bottles free at Parrish’s Drug stora. Large bottles &0c. and $1.00. ——Prince Bismarck says that all he now cares for is to remain at home with his family. He dislikes travel and has a dread of the unfamiliar beds and lack of home comforts to be found in hotel life. ——1I was so much troubled with ca- tarrh it seriously affected my voice. One bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm did the work. My vcice is fully restored.--B. F. Liepsner, A. M. Pastor of the Olivet Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Pa. Business Notices, Children Cry for Pitcher’s Ca toria. When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Cas- toria. 36 14 2y ——Sweet breath, sweet stomach, sweet tem- er, all result from the use of De Witt’s Little rly Risers, the famous little pills.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——The wind from ‘the North blows sharp and keen, and bad effects of colds are seen. One Minute Cough Cure so safe and sure, will quickly perform a wondrous cure.—For sale at C. M.Parrish’s Drug Store. —Small in size, great in results: De Witt’s Little Early Risers. Best pills for Con- stipation, best for Sick Headache, best for Sour Stomach. They never gripe —For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Piles of people hae piles, but De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve will cure them.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Success in everything depends largely upon good health. De Witt’s Little Early Ris- ersare little health producing pills. See the point? Then take an “Early R ser.”—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Nothing so distressing as a hacking Cough. Nothing so foolish as to suffer from it Notaing so dangerous if allowed to continue One Minute Cough Cure give immediate re- lief.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. —For instance, Mrs. Chas. Rogers, of Bay City, Mich., accidentally spilled sealding water over herlittle boy She promptly ap- plied De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve, giving in- stant relief, It’s a wonderfuliy good salve for burns, bruises, sores, and a sure cure for piles. —For sale by C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. _——H>adache is the direct result of indiges- tion and stomach disorders. Remedy these by using De Witt’s Little Early Kisers, and your headache disappears. The favorite little pills everywhere.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. 37-44 1y The Use and Abuse of Whiskey. This subject could be dwelt upon to a con- siderable length, and yet much would remain untold, but all agree that the use, the proper use of pure rye whiskey ix an absolute neces- sity, especially so now, when nature insists upon being stimulated. All regular physi- cians prescribe rye whiskey, and justly claim that Klein’s Silver Age and Duquesne Whisk ies are most reliable. They do this not only because they have tried them but because the leading hospitals use them—find them the best stimulants in the world. Silver Age sells for $1.50 and Duquesne for §1.25 per full quart For sale by all dealers and druggists. Ask for them to send to 8S. Shloss, Williamsp-rt, Pa New Advertisements. EGISTER'’S NOTICE.—The fol- lowing accounts have been examined, Po and filed of record in the Register’s of- ce forthe inspection of heirs and legatees, creditors and all others in anywise interested and will be presented to the Orphans’ Court o Centre county on Wednesday, the Ist day of February, A. D., 1893, for allowance and con- firmation. 1. First and final account of Henry W. Shade administrator of &ec., of Christina Shade late of Miles T'wp. deceased. 2. The first and final account of W. H. Col- dren administrator of &e., of John Coldren late of Gregg township deceased. 3. The first and final account of Thomas C- Houtz administrator of &c., of Christina Houtz late of Coliege township deceased. 4. Final account of P. F. Bottorf and J. B. Ardas filed by P. F. Bottorf executors of Sam- uel Hess late of Ferguson township deceased. £. Thefirstand final account of W. Li. Hicks administrator of &c., of Martin Vail late of Snow Shoe township deceased. 6. The26th final account of Danial Rhoads surviving trustee under the last will and testa- ment of Wm. A. Thomas late of Bellefonte bor- ough deceased. 7. The account of J H. Reifsnyder adminis: trator of &c., of Magdalena Miller late of Mill- heim borough deceased. 8. The account of J. H. Reifsnyder exeeun- tor of &e , of Annie E. Roush late of Millheim borough deceased. 38-1-2t. JOHN A, RUPP, Register. OURT PROCLAMATION. — / Whereas the Honorable A.O. Furst, Pres ident Judee of the Court of Common Pleas of the 49th Judicial District, consisting of the coun: ties of Centre and JIdnihzaon and the Honor able Thomas M. Riley and Honorable Corlis Faulkner, Associate Judges in Centre eounty, having issued their precept, bearing date the 6th ‘day ofJaonuary to me directed, for holding a Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the Peace in Bellefonte, for the county of Centreand to commence on the 4th Monday of Jan. being the 23rd day of Jan. 1893, and to continue two weeks, notice is hereby given to the Coroner, Justices of the Peace, Aldermen and Constables of said county of Centre, that they be then and there in their proper per aons, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of the 23rd, with their records, inquisitions, examinations, and their own remembrances, to do those things which to their office appertains to be done, and those who are bound in recogni- zances to prosecute against the prisoners that are or shall be in the jail of Centre county, be shen and there to prosecute against them as thall be just. k ! Given under my hand, at Bellefonte, the 5th day of January, in the year of our Lord, 1893, and the one hundred and fourteenth year of the independence of the United 8 ites. WM. A. ISHLER Sheriff. 38 1.4t. . —_———i Gas Fitting. M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa. Pays perticular attention to’ heating buildings ! by steam, copner smithing, rebronzing gas fix 20 28 ruest, &e. New Advertisements. Fauble’s Clothing House. Saddlery. this county. 37-45-1yr E BROWN Jr. ° DEALER IN ¢— FURNITURE { OF } ALL { KINDS— OFFERS great inducements to the Spring Trade in the Furniture line. He has controll of a special Bedroom suit made to his order which he willsell at a lower price than an all oak chamber suit has ever been sold heretofore in ——CALL AND SEE IT.— Ba-All suits shipped direct from the factory. Nos 2 and 6 W. Bishop St. E. BROWN JR. BeLLeronTE, Pa. Liquors. SJOHMIDT BUILDING.— 0 ESTABLISHED 1836. —eg WL SCHMIDT mm o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o ~+|——WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE——oIJ+~ {—IN THE UNITED STATES,—} 0 DISTILLER o AND o JOBBER FINE—§ —WHISKIES. — 1—O0F—¢ Telephone No. 666. eee (Jeet IMPORTER OF WINES, LIQUORSANDCIGARS, No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURG, PA. — AF~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. 37-28-6m Farmer’s Supplies. New Advertisements. SOUTH BEND CHILLED PLOWS SPRING TOOTH HARROWS, CORN PLANTERS, GRAIN DRILLS, ASPINWALL F2Z419 PLANTER PRICES REDUCED. Pennsylvania Spring Hoed Two Horse Cultivator, with two rowed Corn Planter Attachment. PRICES REDUCED. Buggies, Pleasure Caris 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, BARBED 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. ern Office and Store in the Hale building. $6 4 McCALMONT & CO. Le SUN. During 1803 The Sun will be of surpassing excellence and will print more news and more pure literature than ever before in its history. THE SUNDAY SUN is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world. | Price 5 cents a co By mail, $2 a yea Daily, by mail... geese a yeal Daily and Sunday, by mail,................. $8 a year Address THE SUN, 38-2-8m New York. 1 000 FREE SCHOLARSHIPS, ivou CAN HAVE] THE Seesesgenpnreniantsianine {COSMOPOLITAN { MAGAZINE esresranansnientannienns gh rrancessenarnae sans PR seasasenses $ PAY YOUR SCHOOL OR COLLEGE EXPENSES. At leading Colleges of the country—YaleyVas- ‘sar, Harvard, Ann Arbor, Wellesley, Universi} ty of Chicago, Georgetown ; the great schools of Art, Medicine, Music, the leading Convents, ‘the schools of Science or Agricultura 0—ALL ARE OPEN TO YOU.—o The Cosmopolitan Magazine will signalize | its first edition of 150,000 copies ‘for: January | 1882, sent out from its own printing-house and bindery, by offering One Thousand Scholar ships at the leading colleges and schools o i the conntrv in consideration of work which any ambitious young boy or girl can readily do, | —=work at once honorable and easy of accomplish- ment. IF YOU WISH TO EDUCATE YOURSELF—tO lave your tuition, board, Todging and washing paid at any leading school or college without put- ting the expense upon your parents, and sole- | lv through your efforts—send for a pamphlet | giving full particulars to THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE, Broadway’ 5¢ch Ave, and 256th 8t, 38 4 4t New York, given this line a great deal SOME NEW THINGS, We have just received a big lot of new children’s suits and overcoats. Among these goods you will find some of the most desirable styles and the best of wearers that the market affords. We have of care and attention. We have gone to great trouble and expense to show you a line of children’s clothing that will compare favorably with any seen in the largest cities, They are the pro- duct of the largest manufac- tories and for fit, style and workmanship they cannot be surpassed. We would be pleased to have. you call even if you are not immediately in need of anything in our line, It is well, you know, to look out for the future FAUBLES, Brockerhoff House Block. 38-1 QUHOFIELD'S NEW , HARNESS HOUSE. We extend a most cordial invitation to our patrons and the public, in general, to witness one of the GRANDEST DISPLAY OF Light and Heavy Harness ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will be made in the large room, formerly occupied by Harper Bros,, on Spring street. It has been added to my factory and will be used execlu- sively for the sale of harness, being the first exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as heretofore the custom has been to sell goods in the room in which they were made. Thi. elegant room has been refitted and furnished with glass cases in which the harness cen be nicely displayed and still kept away from heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in leather. Our factory now occupies a room 1oazs fest aud she Store 20x60 added makes # gest establishment of its kind o of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. Sills Weare prepared to offer better bar the future than we have done in the Cig ra we want everyone to see our goods and get prices for when you do this, out of self defense Jou will buy. Our profits are not lar, e, 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 intsrested in now. fits 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 (1 houses of this city'and county would smile H Wwe 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 , 8S We can 8 ‘NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story. The following are kert constant 50 SETS OF LIGHT 5 ARNESS, Ls pl : 3; and upwards, L STOCK "OF HEAVY HARNESS mo™ 8et$25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE OLaRg Tom $1.50 to $5,00 each, over $100.00 HARNESS worth of GREASE $400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap $150 worth of whips from 15¢ to $3.00 each, Horse Breshesiury, £3mbs nges, amois, RIDING DDLES, LADY SIDE SADDLES P; nee Dusters; prices, Saddler: -hardware oT x ne for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per pound. We kee SIS yLiing io be found or FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang- ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two shops in the same town to catch trade—NQ SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prices. Four harness-makers ut steady work this win- a 35 our igs oF grotesion to labor, ouses discharge i they soon found work with ro their Tanga) JAS. SCHOFIELD, Svring street, Bellefonte, Pa. 8 SA 33 37 INluminating Oil. (rom ACME. THE BEST BURNING OIL THAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM, It gives a Brilliant Light. It will not Smoke the 'himney. It will Not Char the Wick. It has a High Fire Test. It does Not Explode. It is without an equal AS A 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 THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station, Bellefonte, Pa. 37 37 1y Oculists and Opticians. REE EYE EXAMINATION. QU Rm EYE SPECIALIST will be in —BELLEFONTE,— —WEDNESDAY, FEB. 8th,— at the BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, from 8.30 A. M. to 5 P. M., and will make wo 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. UEEN & CO, 1010 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa Music Boxes. RPHEA MUSIC BOXES Are the sweetest, most complet tone-sustaining, durable, [and perfect Musical Boxes made, and any number of tunes can be obtained for them, De- lightful family, wedding, auniversary, and holiday gift. Buy direct of the makers, the oldest, most reliable, and responsible firm. Inspect'n invited. No Music Box can be guaranteed to wear well without Gautscih’s patented Safety Tune Change and Parachute. Manufacturers Headquarters for Gem and Concert Roller Organs; prices one ly 6and 12 dollars, extra Rollers with new tunes can be had at any time for the low price of only 25 cents,also Sym= phonions and Polyphones at Lowest Prices. Factory Established 1824. MUSIC BOXES CAREFULLY RE- PAIRED AND IMPROVED and at low prices. New Cylinders with any kind of tunes made to order. GAUTSCHI & SONS, 1030. Chestnut St., 37-161 Philade phia, Pa Manufacturered at St. Sroix, Switzerland OLD Established '824.