“o 0 HID EAE wi -", m ———_————————————————————————————— EE EC, — ™ ™ ™ Saddlery. Demaeatic Wat Bellefonte, Pa., May 26, 1893. Farm Notes. Dig around the peach trees and search for the borers. The use of kainit and soapsuds around the trunks will assist in destroying insects that affect the TOO!8. There is a tendency to plant too ‘many acres. More acres sown 10 grass, and fewer and better cultivated acres of corn would frequently be better for many farmers. Tomato vines may be supported with stakes or by trellises, which prevent the fruit from rotting by permitting a free circulation or air, as well as keep- ing the fruit on the ground. The small Henderson bush Lima bean is early, and very prolific. Though not as large as the standard kinds, it can always be depended upon for a crop when the other varieties fail. Experiments with scarlet clover, in New Jersey, have not been very fa- vorable, and those who have tested it on sandy soil are ot the opinion that the scarlet fever is not all that is claim- ed for it. Lima beans, string beans, squashes and cucumbers may be planted, and they should grow rapidly, as the ground is warm. To have them early apply well-rotted manure, and use it plenti- fully. Crops do not grow the entire year, but the live stock can be made to grow from one year to another. The food should be produced for winter use, and in quantity to permit of keeping as many animals as possible. Put the hotbeds to use in some man- ner after the early plants have been taken out. It is just the place for cucumbers. Throw a pile of brush on each side of the hotbed and the vines will cover the support thus given. Chicks that are hatched during this month will come too late to be sold as broilers, but they will sell readily as roasters late in the season. Capouns and broilers are now bringing high prices, the demand being larger than the supply. Millet is a summer crop, and can be grown as easily as aoy other, as it matures quickly. Itis much more nu- tritious than some grasses that are cured for hay, and if cut before the seed heads form it is an excellent food for both cattle and horses. Watermelons and cantaloupes should be planted now, as the ground is warm and the liability of frost perhaps over. Use plenty of manure in the hills and also broadcast a fertilizer of equal parts of potash, superphosphate and nitrate of soda on the ground, harrowing it in- to the soil. Sage is a profitable crop. For mar- ket purposes it is grown from seed, the plants being set out on the ground that has been occupied by peas or some early crop, so as to secure a late crop from the land. The rows are 20 inches apart, the plants being 12 inches apart in the row. Late in the fall the crop is Anrvesied, tied up in bunches and sold. A farmer cannot control the market prices, but he can greatly lessen the cost of production, It is extravagant to neglect a crop after it is planted, and it is unwise to allow the ground to bear two crops at the same time, as happens when the weeds and grass make a start and interfere with the plants that should have full possession of the soil. Nitrate of soda is excellent for bring’ ing the grass out green upon the lawn. After the lawn has been mowed, and just before arain, an application of 50 pounds of nitrate of soda, finely ground, will prove excellent. Recent trials with nitrate of soda on grass show that for every 50 pounds used upon grass lan’ there was a gain in grass equal to $5 per acre. An Indiana cow, on a test of seven days, gave 248 pounds and 2 ounces of milk (about 120 quarts,) and made 22 pounds and six ounces of butter, the butter being salted one ounce to the pound and worked dry. The cow was a Jersey, and her tood consisted, for the week, of 84 pounds bran, 50 pounds corn meal, 50 pounds ground oate, 12 pounds linseed meal and 240 pounds ensilage. Kainit is one of the best substances that can be used in the manure heap, or in privies, as it is not only an excel- lent potash fertilizer, and comparative: ly cheap, but it also chemically com: bines with other substances, and arrests the escape of ammonia. It should be scattered over the heap from time to time, as fresh manure .s added, or the heap may be worked over and the kainit added by being mixed with the substance heap. When the soil is stirred after a rain, and made fine and loose, evaporation of the moisture from below is prevent ed. During a time of drought no bet- ter way to mitigate its effects can be resorted than that of loosening the top soil to the depth of one or two inches. The loose dirt serves as a covering, which protects the roots from the effects of the drying air and also assists in re: taining a supply of needed moisture, The citrous tri-foliate (three leaved Japan orange) is pronounced by Pro- fessor Massey, of the Virginia Experi: ment Station, as being superior to the osage orange for a hedge plant, and that its roots do not feed over a large area of ground, as is the case wilh nearly all of the hedge plants now in use. It is scarce, as the plants are but recently introduced from Japan, but no doubt the demand will induce seeds. men to give it more attention. [It is propagated from cuttings. — Very rapid progress is being made in the studios of The Columbian Celebration Company on the prepara- tion of the scenery for ‘The World Finder,” which is to be given in ‘The Chicago Spectatorium.” This building which contains the various studios, oc- cupies 400,000 square feet of ground and is 80 feet in height. Within this build- ing the reproduction of Columbus’ cara- vels in beiny carried to completion ; here, t00, is tie miniature forest which was imported from Jamaica, W. I. and here also a faithful copy of the famous monastery of La Rabida. In this building are also being made the cos- tumes for the production and here are being prepared all the especial proper- ties to be used. I ——— Now Try THis.—It will cost you nothing and will surely do’you good, if you have a Cough, Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest or Lungs, Dr | King’s New Discovery for Consump- tion, Coughs and Colds is guaranteed to give relief, or money will be paid back. Sufterers from La Grippe found it just the thing and under its use had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try a sample bottla at our expense and learn for your- self just how good a thing it is. Trial bottles free at Parrish’s Drug Store. Large size 50c. and $1,00. CE RE— —. First Boy—Who cut y’r hair— y’r mother ? Seccnd boy—Naw. Yeh don’t think I'd let me mother cut me hair, do yeh ? She’d butcher it. Who did it ? Cut it meself. A EC SSCS. ——There is nothing I have ever used for muscular rheumatism that gives me as much relief as Chamberlain’s Pain Balm does. I have been using it for about two years—four bottles in all—as occasion required and always keep a bottle of it in my home. I believe I know a good thing when I get hold of it, and Pain Balm is the best liniment I haveever met with. W. B. Denny, dairyman, New Lexington, Ohio, 50 cent bottles for sale by F. Potts Green. * Minnie—Capt- Forster has never paid me any attention before, but he danced with me four times last night. Maud--Oh, well, it was a charity ball you remember.—Judge. ———— ——1T have been a great sufferer from dry catarrh for many years, and I tried many remedies, but none did me so much benefit as Ely’s Cream Balm. It completely cured me. M. J. Lally, 39 Woodward Ave., Boston Highlands, Mass. Lulu Japonica--Why did Ethel and George elope ? Charity Ball--Her father gave them what the wedding would have cost, to bogin housekeeping with.— Puck. ——“So you have named the baby ‘Obadiah T.” What does the ‘T” stand for 7” “Oh, that means Temporarily—until he gets his Uncle Obadiah’s money, you know.” ——1In all cases, where a mild effec- tive aperient is needed, Ayer’s Pills are the best. They improve the appetite, restore healthy action, promote digestion and regulate every function. No pill is in greater demand, or more highly re- commend by the profession. ——Limewsater may be beneficial for poor digestion, or licorice drops, ora third of a teaspoonful of baking soda in half a glass of kot water, flavored with tincture of cinnamon. ——That cure of Geo. W. Turner of Galway, N. Y., of scrofula, by Hood’s Sarsaparilla, was one of the most re- markable on record. New Advertisements. 0 FFENSIVE ECZEMA. S FFERED TERRIBLY. DOCTORS AND MEDICINES USELESS. CURED IN FOUR WEEKS BY CUTICURA. { have a boy, fifteen year old, born in Fish- kill, portrait enclosed, who had the eczema so offensive that I could not stay in the room with him. The poor boy suffered terribly. His feet were terribly sore, he could not wear any shces, and had therefore to stay at home from school. When he put on a pair of dry stock- ings in the morning.they would,in one hour be saturated with moisture and very offensive even in the coldest weather, The disease be- gan to spread over his body, especially his hands and fingers. The thumbs on both his hands became stiff and as useless as two with- ered sticks of wood. It would be useless tor me to try to tell the suffering this boy endur- ed. Itook him to two different doctors, both gave him lots of medicine, but all to no use. He grew worse. I therefore despaired of ever having him cured. One day I saw the great benefits promised to those who would use Cu- ticura Remedies. 1 wentrightaway to thedru store and bought them. I must confess I ha but little faith in them. However I used them according to directions, and to day I say truth- fully to all the world, if you wish to publish it, that my son is entirely cured, thank God ana thank the discoverers of Cuticura Remedies. They cured him in four weeks as sound as a gold dollar. CUTICURA RESOLVENT The new Blood and Skin Purifier, internally and Caticura, the great Skin Cure, and Cuti- cura Soap, the exquisite Skin Beautifier, ex- jerually, {nstantly relieve and speedily cure every disease and humor of the skin, scalp, and blood, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, from the pimples to scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price, Curicura, 50c¢ ; Soap, 25c.; Resorvent, §l. Prepared by the Poriex DruG AND CiEMICAL CORPORATION, Bos- on, £g~“How to Cure Skin Diseasas,” 61 pages, 50 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free. Prue, blackheads, red, rough, chapped, and oily skin cured by Cuti- cura Soap. i USCULAR STRAINS and pains, back ache, weak kidneys, rhenma. ism, and chest pains relieved in one minu te by the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. The first and only instantaneous pain-killing plaster. 38-184t nr Gas Fitting. ATM. GALBRAITH, Plumber and Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa. Pays perticular attention to heating buildings by steam, copver smithing, rebronzing gas fix | ruest, &c. 20 26 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 alittle pill. The ill is one the pill has won. DeWitt’s Little Early the 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 intelligent people of our com- munity recognize in De Witt's Little Early | Risers pills of unequaled merit for dyspepsia; | headaches and constipation. Very small, per- fect in action.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s | Drug Store. i — 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 sale at C. M. Parrish’s. Drug Store. ——Gold mines about 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 De Witt's Sarsaparilla.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Some Chinese razors are made of horse shoes. ——The breaking up of the winter is the signal for the breaking up ot the system, Na- ture is ooening ip the pores and throwing off refuse. DeWitt’s Sarsapariila is of unquestion- able assistance in this operation.—For gale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——0Owl have a very acute sense of hearing. ——Piles of people have piles, but De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve will cure them.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——The United States have nearly 200 ac- tive geysers. ——%There is a salve for every wound.” We refer to DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve, cures burns, bruises, cuts, indolent sores, as a local application in the nostrils it cures catarrh, and always cures piles—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. ——Glass originally came from India. ——Bad complexion indicates an unhealthy state of the system. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are pills that will correct this condition. They act on the liver, they act on the stom- ach, they act on the bowe s.—For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. New Advertisements. SAW MILLS, ENGINES, IMPROVED VARIABLE FRICTION FEED. Send for Catalogue and special prices. A. B. FARQUHAR CO, 38-19-3m York, Pa GENTS WANTED.—To canvass for the sale of our Home-Grown Nursery stock, NEW PROFIT SHARING SYS'1 EM. Salary and expenses paid. Established 1846. One of the Largest, Old- est Established, and Best Known Nurseries in the United States W. & T.SMITH CO. The Geneva Nursery, 8-19-3m Geneva, N.Y. RE YOU GOOD AT PUZZLES? The genius who invented the “Fiftesn” Puzzle, “Pigs in Clover” and many others has invented a brand new one, which is going to be the greateston record. There is fun, in- struction and entertainment in it. The old and learned will find as much mystery in it as the oung and unsophisticated. This great puzzle is the property of the New York Press Club, for whom it was inveuted by Samuel Loyd, the great puzzlist to be sold for the benefit of the movement to erect a great home for news- foper workers in New York. Generous friends ave given $25,000 in prizes for the successful puzzle solvers. TEN CENTS sent to ‘PRESS CLUB BUILDING AND CHARITY FUMD,” Temple Court, New York city will get you the new mystery by return mail. 38 20 2m. Sewing Machine. Jy HEELED & WILSON. Pedi meen § DUPLEX | Me > |= af oe 9 : | 4. F HH DUPLEX Say, what does that figure mean, As it stands there all alone? Tis the name of a Sewing Machine, The best that ever was known. "Twill sew with never a hitch, The handsomest ever seen, With LOCK or with RUNNING stitch— The WHEELER & WILSON machine. o}——T[o —AGENTS WANTED. .—— BEST GOODS. ~ - ~ = BEST TERMS. Send for a Catalogue. WHEELER & WILSON Mfg. Co. 1312 Chestnut St., 38-12-1y PHILADELPHIA, PA. New Advertisements. E BROWN Jr. ° DEALER IN 3— FURNITURE } OF }{ ALL § KINDS— OFFERS great inducements to the Spring Trade in the Furniture line. He has controll of a special Bedroom suit made to his order which he will sell at a lower price than an all oak chamber suit has ever been sold heretofore in this county. ——CALL AND SEE IT.— AFAll suits shipped direct from the factory. E. BROWN JR. Mos 2 and 6 W. Bishop St. BELLEFONTE, PA. 37-45-1yr Liquors. CHMIDT BUILDING.— o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o .+||——WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE———I||+ {—IN THE UNI TED STATES,—1 ESTABLISHED 1836.———o0 W.$SCHMIDT== oO DISTILLER o AND o JOBBER 5 1—OF—1 FINE— 8 —WHISKIES. denser () rene Telephone No. 666. IMPORTER OF WINES, LIQUORSANDC CIGARS, No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURG, PA. pent Aa~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. Family Trade Supplied. 338-9-9m ms Printing. Printing. ye JOB PRINTING. Fine Job Printing Joh 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 Jobs 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]{— 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 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 exclu- sively for the sale of harness, being the first exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, 8s heretofore the custom has been to sell goods in the room in which they were made. L elegans room has been refitted and furnished with glass cases in which the harness can be nicely aisplayed and still kept away from heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in leginer. Our factory now occupies a room 16x74 teet and the store 20x60 added makes it the largest establishment of its kind outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. We are 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 defensa io will buy. Our profits are not large, but y selling lots of goods we can afford tolive in . We are not- indulging in idle We are Bellefonte. philanthropy. It is purely business. not making much, but trads is growing and that is what we are intrested 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 big (?) houses of this city and county would smile if we compared ourselyes to them, but we do not mean to be so odious, except to venture the as- section that none of them can say,as we can say “NO ONE OWES US A CEN THAT WE CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story, The following are kept constantly on hand. 50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices: from $8.00 to $15.00 and pi LARGE STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per set $25.00 and Towa 500 HORSE COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00 each, over $100.00 worth of HARNESS OILS and AXLE GREASE, $400 worth of Fly Nefs sold cheap $150 worth of whips from 15¢ to $3.00 each, Horse Brushes,Cury Combs Sponges, Chamois, RIDING: 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 kee Saints be found in a FIRST CLASS HARN 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 prices Four harness-makers at 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 Soring street, Bellefonte, Pa. IMuminating Oil. Crews 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 crass Oculists and Opticians. yr EYE EXAMINATION. ———QURm == EYE SPECIALIST will be in ——BELLEFONTE,— —SATURDAY, MAY 27th,— 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. ‘ i NO CHARGE to examine your eyes. Every pair of glasses ordered is guaranteed tc be, satisfactory. ! ‘ ! QUERN% CO, io 1010 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa 36 2 Music Boxes. RPHEA MUSIC BOXES Are the sweetest, most complet tone-sustaining, durable, Jand perfect Musical Boxes made, and any number of tunes can be obtained for them, De- lightful family, wedding, anniversary, 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 pew tunes canjbe had at any time for the low price of ouly 25 cents,also Sym- phonions and (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 8t., 37-46-1y Philadelphia, Pa Manufacturered at St. Sroix, Switzerland Established 1824.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers