Bewooraic tc Bellefonte, Pa., March, 17, 1893. Somer Farm Notes. Stock with inherent good qualities will make money with the same feed and care that scrubs will return a loss. If the borers are to be gotten out of the trees now is the time to get at the work. A sharp knife is all that is re- quired. Always sell from the inferior stock. The best should be retained for breed- ing purposes. No farmer can afford to seli his best. Sow early tomato and cabbage seed in boxes or hotbeds now if you wish to have large plants ready to transplant when the season opens. A ‘balanced’ ration for the animals and for the soil is necessary in order to obtain the best results, One kind of food and one kind of fertilizer will starve both the stock and the soil. 1t is said that if the seeds of apples and pears are placed in a flower pot as 800n as eaten they will produce plants that will attain a s’ze sufficient to per- mit of transplanting them in the fall. Never set out voung fruit trees on a grass sod. If an orchard is contem- lated, let the ground be plowed and ae An orchard requires culti- vation and will not thrive if neglected. A draught of air through the stable during the prevalence of a cold rain will do more harm than when the ven- tilaiors are open on a cold winter day. Dampness is more severely felt than cold. It is claimed by a successful peach grower that the fruit should be go thin- ned out on the tree as to leave six 1nch- es of space between ‘the peaches, and to also thin out some of the branches as well, It will not require more than one hour to become familiar with the in- gredients of solutions tor spraying the trees and vines and it isimportant that every fruit grower should understand all about them, as well as how to use the sprayer. In planning for next season do not risk all on a single crop. Grow sever- eral crops, so that if one fails there will be others to depend upon. The rains and droughts, as well as the insects, often upset some of the apparently surest prospects. Plant the roses where you can easily look after them. The roil should be very rich, and grass and weeds must be kept out oi the soil around them. The best liquid fertilizer for roses is a ta- blespoonful of saltpetre (nitrate of soda) in a two rallon watering-pot of water, applied twice a week. The farmers will soon be as busy as bees preparing for corn. If they be- stowed as much care and labor on some vegetable crops as they do on corn they would perhaps secure larger profits, There are a great any crops to select from, and there is no knowing what can oe done with any of them until they are given a trial. Over in England, when a barrel of apples is sold, the purchaser does not accept the top row of applesas a sam- ple of the whole, but empties the fruit on a platform for inspection. Such a method renders it useless for the farmer to place the best on top, and the result is that the fruit in the bar- rels 1s unitorm throughout. Gooseberries thrive on moist soil, or in the shade of trees, and they may be used in the rows along the borders of walkways, wherethey will take up but litile room. Currants may be placed next the fence, out of the way. They should receive good cultivation with a hoe or spade, however, or the grass will take possession of the ground. Fat in the food is the heat producing substance. Protein supplies the ele: ments that build up the muscles, being nitrogenous, while the carbo-hydrates are sugar, starch, gum, ete.” One pound of fat is estimated to equal two and a halt pounds of carbo hydrates in ‘the production of heat. The ash is composed of the mineral substances that exist after combustion of the whole. The mineral elements that enter into the com position of plants vary accord- ing to the stages of growth of each plant. A month may make a great difierence, As plants approach matur- ity lime and silica increase rapidly, as they stiffen the stalks and form what may be termed the bony structure. Si: lica, which abounds largely in nearly all of the staple crops, is plentiful in the soil, and costs nothing. It possesses no value, At some of the Western dairy schools the students are not only fully instruc ted in all that pertains to butter and cheese making, but they are also re- quired to know the points ofthe breeds. They are taught to judge catile by “scoring them, marking the defects and alloting to each section of the ani- mal the proper points scored. Gradu- ates are experts, and are fitted as teach- ers in dairy schools, or to practice dairying on the farm ia a scientific manner: : There may be some excuse for a farmer not having the best cows, but there is no reason why he should not have the best that he can get according to his means. If farmers will only stop their buying their fresh cows, dis- card the scrub bull, and raise their calves they will make the first step to greater profit. It may take a little more time to raise a'good cow, by the use of improved stock, than tuo buy a poor one already in tull flow, but the difference in profit is so great in that derived frem the good one as to amply repay for all the time lostin raising the calf. A ot i mi Your Husband. 1n the Ladies’ Home Journal for February is an article by Octave Thanet entitled That Man ; Your Husband,” from which we copy the following, hop- ing it will speak to some wife whose heart may be growing sore with the fear that outside attraciions are winning the affections of the well-beloved from her- selt and home : Every bride knows her power ; every wile comes to know her weakness. A good proportion of the heartbreak of ear- ly married lite is due to the ferment of this knowledge. The poor child whose lover gave up his cigars and his club with such angelic meekness, finds thas her husband can smoke like a chimney, and leaves her alone nights in order to spend the evenings with his men friends. She imagines that he cares less for her than he did, which is a mistake, in moat cases, seven out of ten men love their wives better t2an their sweethearts. It is simply that her presence is not the absorbing excitement that it was when love was new. The chances are that the wife is become a dozen times more ne- cessary to he man than ever the sweet- heart couid have been. He would feel her death far more keenly, but he does not need to adjure his heart to “sit still” whenever his tancy summons her image. In short, she 13 become the bread of ex- istence in place of the elixir. Now, most of us who have sense would prefer to be bread rather than elixir, but their is no question that more fuss is made over the elixir. The heart of woman turns with a homesick yearning to the delicate cour- tesy, the tenderness, the thousand en- desrments of that enchanted time when her husband was her lover. How keep bim her lover 7 ATER, Expanding the Vaccination Theory. When Jenner discovered the protec- tive power of vaccination in cases of sn.allpox he seems to have caught the hem of a great scientfiic principle under which were concealed many of the re- sources of nature for healing the mala- dies which nature permits, in order to warn mankind how thoy ought to live. The whole industry ot Pasteur in France of Koch in Germany and of others else- where has been directed to the investi- gation and application of the principle upon which Jenner stumbled when he observed that the dairy maids of England were less exposed to smallpox tnan per- sons who never milked diseased cows. And now we have a Swiss country doc- tor—Viquerat, of Moudon, in the Can- ton Vaud —-who thinks be bas discover- ed a way of curing abscesses and other septic maladies by the use of what he calls J antsieptine, a serosanguinolent lymph, which is produced on abscesses that he has treated with a solution of iodine, Origin of the Greenback. Colonel Edmund Dick Taylor is the man to whom Abraham Lincoln ascribed the origin of the Greenback. He was a Native of Virginia and a cousin of President Zachary Taylor. His father was a captain in the Revolutionary war It was be who urged Abraham Lincoln tostudy law and helped him with mon. ey to buy law books. Young Lincoln made his ho ne with Col. Taylor for sev eral years. Woon Lincoln|hecame Piesi- dent at the une when Ameiican cred- it, was low and soldiers were demanding their pay, hesent for Mr. Taylor as the maa who, to use Mr, Lincoln's own words, “will know what 18 best to do.,’ Mr. Taylor rephed : “Issue Treasury notes on the best bank paper bearing no interest. Declare it a legal tender and pay the soldier and all other cred- itors with this money.” Mr. Cbase thought the experiment hazardous, but finally agreed to it. Tous was accom- plished the greatest blessing the republic could have had at that time. Old-Fashioned Cough Medicine. At this season of the year, when colds and coughs are prevalent, the tollow- ing homemade cough medicine will be found very beneficial for young and old: Take one cup of flaxseed, two ounces of rock candy, two ounces of stick liquo- rice, tour ounces of large ra'sins, Add two quarts of water, boil it down to one quart: Take balf a capful every night with a tablespoontul of lemon juice mixed in it, Avother excellent remedy, which is more quickly prepared, is made by melting a piece of butter the size of a waluut with a tablespoonful of vinegar and a tablespoontul of sugar, Take it as hot as possible and just before going to bed. Older Than St. Augustine. Poor old St. Augustine! ‘She may still lay claim to a genial winter climate and to a beautiful location ; but the duy when she shall gain notoriety and shek- els by claiming to be the oldest town in Uncle Sam’s domain has probably pass- ed. Tucson, Arizona, has come to the front not only with a counter claim, but with the proof of ber greater age—pooof that seems to leave “no hinge nor loop ‘to hang a doubt’ on.” St. Augustine has claimed to have been: founded : by Melendez in 1565 ; but after patiently hunting for it for 300 years Tucson has found in the old church of San’ Xavier del Bac the original eharter issued to the Pueblo of Tucson by Ferdinand and Isabella in 1552. or thirteen years before St. Augustine was first beard of. Truly, there’s luck in odd numbers, even in the dreaded thirteen. nexpected. : Miss Pinkerly : “Why, Mr. Tutter, what are thote little pockets for in the sleeves of your overcoat ?" Tutter : “Don’t you know, really ? Why, they are for a lady to put her hands in. I will show you if you will let me have your hand.” Miss Pinkerly ; “Oh, Mr. Tutter.-- George: ~this is so sudden !" — Sixty-four of the United States Senators are lawyers, one a preacher, and one a journalist. RE LO Te. ——bananns are gradually becoming a popular fruit in Kogland. ENGRAVER—*‘Engraved cards look much better than printed ones. O course they cost a good deal more, but then the plate will last you a life time.” Mrs. Marryem (of Chicago)—*I can have the name on the plate changed, of course ?”’ Engraver—“Oh, no ; you can’t do that.” Mrs. Marryem —¢Never mind, then, I guess I'll bave a dozen cards printed. They’ll last as long as I'll want them.” 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 — A little ill, then a little pill. The ill is one the pill has win. DeWitt's Little Early Eas little pills that cure great ills.— For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store: ——The most costly of the metals is didyn- ium, which sell at $4500 a pound. ~The most Jel iheny haute of our com- munity recoguize in De Witt's Little Early Risers pills of unequaled merit for dyspepsia; headaches and constipation. Yory sisi, per: fect in action.—For sale at C. M. Parrish's Drug Stere. ——The tall hat worn by men first appeared in France nearly five hundred years ago. ——1It is a truth in medicine that the small. est dose that performs a cure is the best. De- Witt's Little Early Risers are the smallest pills, will perform the cure, and are the best. —For saleat C. M, Parrish’s, Drug Store. ——Gold mines aboiit Nevada City are the deepest and richest in the world. : ——Do you lack faith and love health ? Let us establish your faith and restore your health with DeWiit’s Sarsaparilla.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——S8ome Chinese razors are made of horse shoes. ——The breaking up of the winter is the signal for the breaking up of the system, Na- ture is o ening up the pores and throwing otf refuse. DeWitt’s Sarsapariila is of unquestion- able assistance in this operation.—For eale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Ow! have a very acute sense of hearing. ——“There is a salve for every wound.” We refer to DeWiit’s Witch Hazel Salve cures burn , bruises, cuts, indolent sores, as a lueal application in the nostrils it cures cstarrh, and alwavs cures piles.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. —— Glass origi.ally came from India. ——Bad complexion indicates an unhealthy state of the system. DeWitt’'s Little karly Risers are pills that will correct this condition. They act on the liver, they act on the stom- ach, they acu. on the bowels.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. When Doctors All Agree. It is a fact well established, that February and March are the most trying manths to aged or enfeebled persons. Pneumonia, influenza and kindred chest afflictions, are most liable to get in their deadly work. There is but one thing to do, build up and aad fortify the sys- tem with a pure stimulant. Medical men sll over the country agree that Klein's “Silver Age” at 31.50 per quart, and “Daquesne’ at $1.25 per quart, stand without a peer. If you want fine six year old Guckenheimer, Finch, Gibson, Overholt, or Bear Creek, you can have them at $1 00 per quart or six quarts for $5.00. We are recognized headquarters for the choice est brands of Wine, Liquor, Cordials, etc. Goods expressed anywhere. send for com- plete price list: mention this' paper. Max Klein 82 Federal St., Allegheny, Pa. S.Shloss Agent, Williamsport, Pa. New Advertisements. { [menrEd SKIN DISEASE SUFFERED 9 YEARS. SCALP COVERED | WITH A THICK €RUST. USED HUN. DREDS OF M+ DICINES. IMMEDIATE RELIEF AND COMPLETE CURE IN A FEW WE KS BY CUTI- CURA REM ikDIES. When I was a boy of about twelve years of age, living in Europe, I had a very bad skin di-ease for years which doctors eailed Eecze- ma. My scalp was covered with a thick erust. I suffered very much. No doctors eould he'p me. I have been in this country nine years and suftering all the time, I hava used hundreds of medicines. Tread one day in the paper about the Cutlicura Remedies, «ol thought I would try them. Sure enough, after using them only once I felt many per cent better. I thank God that in a few weeks I was perfectly cured a'ter nine years’ suffering. I recommend the Cuticura Remedies as the best in the world. Ali those who suffer with skin diseases should use them. TI will tell every- body how I was cured. FRED SCHEIBEI,. 10) Ludlow 8t., New York City. I used your Cuticura Remedies, for Salt Rhenm, on my face and arm, and in three weeks I was entirely cured. As a bl od purifi- er, I think there is nothing made that can equal your Cuticura Resolvent. I-eannot say too much in praise of vour Cuticura Remedies. D. C. HAMMOND, Huntington, L. I, N. Y. CUTICURA RESOLVENT The new blood and Skin Pur.fier, and greatest of Humor Remedies, cleanses the blood of all impurities and poisonous elements, and thns removes the canse, while Cuticura, the great skin eure, and Cuticura Soap, an exquisite skin beautifier, clear the skin and scalp, and re- store the hair. Sold everywhere. Price, Curicura, 50c ; Soap, 25c.;. Resonyent, $l. Prepared by the Porter DRUG AND CriemicAL Corporation, Bos- ton. Aa~“How to Cure Skin Digeasos,” 64 pages, 50 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free. IMPLES, blackheads, red, rough, chapped, and oily skin cured by Cuti- cura Soap. O RHEUMATIZ ABOUT ME! In one minute the Cutienra-Anti Pain Plaster relieves rheumatic, sciatic, hip kidney, muscular, and chest pains. The first and only instantaneous pain killing strenjsth- ening plaster, 38104tnr Gas Fitting. M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa. Pays perticular attention to heating buildings by steam, copoer smithing, rebronzing gas fix ruest, &e. 20 26 New Advertisements. 37-45-1yr E "BROWN Jr. ® DEALER IN i— FURNITURE } OF { ALL } KINDS—3 OFFERS great inducements tothe Spring Trade in the Furniture line. "He has controll of a special Bedroom suit made to his order which he will sell at a lower price than an all oak chamber suit has ever been sold heretofore in this county. ——CALL AND SEE IT.— AF-All suits shipped direct from the factory. E. BROWN JR, Xos 2 and 6 W. Bishop St. BeLLeronTE, Pa. Liguors. SyUHDT BUILDING.— o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o +||[——WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE——||+~ {——IN THE UNITED STATES,—} 0 ESTABLISHED 1836. 0 ==. 1 w. i SCHMI D Ty\==- | DISTTLL ER's AND oo JOBBER 1—OF—1 FINE—8 —WHISKIES. Telephone No. 666. ete (mene : IMPORTER OF WINES, LIQUORS ANDC CIGARS, No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURQG, PA. —+ Aa~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. Family Trade Supplied. 38-9-1y Printing. Printing. Ha JOB PRINTING. Fine 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. ~fat THE WATCHMAN OFFICE] i : SE . Saddlery. (SCHOFIELD'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 n added to my factory and will be used exelu- sively for the sale of harness, being the first exclusive salesroom ever used in this to ), 88 heretofore the custom has been to sell in the room in which they were made. Thi. ojSRny room has been refitted and furnisheq with glass cases in which the harness can be nicely displayed and still ke away from heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in leather. Our factory now occupies a room Joxdd feet and he store 20x60 added makes {it © largest establishment of its kind outsi of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. i2ide We are prepared to offer better bargains in the future than we have done in the and we want everyone to see our ds get prices for when you do this, out of self de ou will buy. Our profits are not lar: , but y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in Bellefonte, We are not juduiging in die philanthropy. It is purely business. We are not making much, but trade is growing snd that is what we are intorested in now. Profits will take care of themselves. z When other houses discharged their work- men, during She winter they were Bl Bie n my factory, nevertheless t houses of this city'and county would ‘emile 0 we compared ourselves to them, but we do. mot mean to be so odious, except to venture the ag. section that none of them can say, as we ‘can say “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT Wea CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story, The following are kept constantly. on hand. 50 SETS ey cHT HARNESS, prices from .00 and upwards, STOCK "OF HEAVY HARNESS pea ® 1 86t$25,00 and upwards, 500 HORSE COLLARS from: 81,50 to $5 each, over S100 worth of BARES Sh eg . y : $400 worth of Fly Nets sold ches y $150 worth of whips from 15c to $3.00. each, f x Floss BriishesOury LL onges, amois, IDING SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per pound. We keep everything to be found * FIRST CLASS HARN 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 st 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, 33 37 Swvring street, Bellefonte, Pa. INIuminating Oil. {row ACME. THE BEST BURNING OIL THAT 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 FAMILY OIL. We stake our reputation as refiners th IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WOR Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station Bellefonte, Pa. 37 37 1y Oculists and Opticians. BER EYE EXAMINATION. ———QUR~=—— EYE .SPECIALIST will be in —BELLEFONTE,— —WEDNESDAY, MARCH 220d,— at the BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, from 8.30 A. M. 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. Wr & CO, io 1010 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa g Music Boxes. O RPHEA MUSIC BOXES Are the sweetest, most complet tone-sustaining, durable, and perfect Musical Boxes made, and any number of tunes can be obtained tor 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 on- ly 6and 12 dollars, extra Rollers with new tunes can be had at any time for the low price of ouly 25 cents,also Sym- phonions andY|Polyphones at Lowest Prices. Factory Established 1824. OLD 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., 87-16-1y Philade phia, Pa Manufacturered at St. Sroix, Switzerland Established 1824, . x