Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 14, 1893, Image 3

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    wg,
Denacrai Jalcn
Beiiefonte, Pa., July i4, 1893.
—
Farm Notes.
The person who was never known to
make or sell anything but a fine quality
of butter has no trouble in disposing of
all he can make,
Every farmer's wife or daughter
should establish a reputation as a maker
of fine butter. It will pay. It can all be
sold to home consumers,
The “American Creamery” predicts
that in a short time it will be possible
to send to the grocer for solidified milk,
the same #3 now for condensed.
The farm is one continuous experi-
ment station. A large measure of the
success reached by any farmer is due to
the knowledge gained from this exper-
imentation.
‘We cannot do much toward controll
ing prices of agricultural products.
Consequently we should use every effort
to economize productions, as thereby
we may add to the profits,
Nothing is so good as first quality
wheat for rearing chicks. It has all the
elements of growth in it. And at once
and a half to two cents per pound it is
cheaper than damaged wheat or poor
screenings at only half this price.
Under present conditions of harvest-
ing both wheat and oats, a man that can
put up a compact shock that will stand
and, at the same time, protect the grain
and keep in good condition, is ‘more
needed than any other class of workmen.
Do not keep too much stock,’ as the
size of the farm and its capacity must
be considered. Unless a farm can be
put in condition for keeping stock the
labor will be lost. There must be suffi-
cient shelter, and the winter's supply of
food must be secured.
It is a good thing to know how to
renovate land after it has become run
down. But far better to know how to
preserve its fertility, and so avoid the
slow and laborious methods of renova-
tion. Thesaving of manure, turning
under green crops and rotation are the
means to this very desirable end.
Commercial fertilizers are excellent
in their place, but it is not well to de-
pend upon them wholly for keeping up
the land. They are more valuable for
the garden than elsewhere, but even
there should only be used as a reinforce-
ment for the animal and green manures.
Save and apply these first, then supple-
ment them by buying.
For farm horses in full and regular
labor 12 quarts, half oats and half
cracked corn, will be found none too
much. Hay is the best fed in moderate
quantities. Most farm horses get too
much bay, so their bowels become per-
manently distended, and we call them
‘pot bellied,” Ten pounds per day per
horse is an abundance.
It often happens that the trunks of
fruit trees are injured by single trees
in plowing the orchard. When such an
accident occurs, the tree so injured
should receive immediate treatment. An
application of clay made into a thick
mortar, held in place by a few turns
of burlap sackling or.rags, should be
madeat once. This enables the wound
to heal without serious damage to the
tree. :
Charcoal is one of “he essential sub-
stances for hogs. It absorbs the gases,
and is corrective of many ailments aris-
ing from overheating or from improper
food. It may not be known, however,
that charcoal, when used for swine,
should be freshly burned, or its value
will be lessened. When exposed to the
air for a while it absorbs gases and loses
its virtue as a corrective until fire puri-
fies it, us is the case when it is heated
before being used.
Just how much milk or butter is in-
jured by unclean utensils and imple-
ments cannot be estimated, but that
much of the butter sold in market
would bring higher prices if better care
was given during the process of hand-
ling the milk 15a fact. One point 1s
sometimes overlooked, which is very
important, and that 1s the purity of the
salt used. Any kind of salt will not
answer the purpose, and it should be
weighed before it is worked into the
butter. : :
Those who keep bees should grow a
crop of buckwheat, not only for the
grain, but as fortage for the bees, as
they work industriously on. the flowers
of the buckwheat plant... In the sum-
mer, if the season is dry, bees sometimes .
fail to find sufficient material to work
upon, and buckwheat is'a summer crop
that will prove excellent for the pur-
pose. White clover is an excellent
honey plant also, but the bees cannot
work on red clover, the flowers not, be-
ing adapted to their purpose.
There is more room for increasing our
wool production than for the develop:
went of almost any other branch of our
agriculture. "The United States pro-
dudes now only about four-ninths of the
wool which we consume'so that there is:
a market fora vastly greater quantity
right at our own doors. There is a mar-
ket formore mutton, too; and the best
result in sheep growing is'to be attained
by handling sheep that “will produce a
six-pound fleece’ upon a earcass ' which
will approximate’) 100 ‘pounds and be’
worth six cents'a pound. + Loon
It is a pretiy safe prediction that pork
will rule high for at least another year,
as during the depression in values ho
ers sold . everything off so closely that
they have since Ea it difficult to
stock up again ; and now, as new mar-
kets are opening, there will still be a
shortage, even with the erop.restored;to
its former proportions. e are sorry
for those farmers who: are caught with-
out any stock hogs to begin anew’ with,
but it is a'lesson which they '¢hould not
soon forget. In the long run there are
Jjustias'many “ups” ‘in prices as there
are ‘‘downs”’ and a man should keep in
line all the time so that he can take ad-
vantage of them when they come!
_~ A —————c—— | i
——1f you want ‘printing of any de-
scription the. WATcHMAN office is the
place to have it done.
Volapuk Nearing Its End.
From the London Telegraph.
Many persons will perhaps breathe
a sigh of reliet on hearing that Vola-
puk is doomed in France at least.
Freuch business men will have none ot
it... Its’ most energetic apostle and
propagator has been sent away from!
the Paris headquarters of the Vola-
pukists;-and is now fllling an import-
ant post as professor of German in a
provincial college.
This being the case, the members of
the French association of Volapukists
bave decreed the dissolution of their
society. MNevertheless, they had at
one tim& great hope of success, and
their strange jargon was almost ele:
vated for a while to the ranks of a
fashionable fad.
Lectures in the new langnage, which
was to undo all the damages wrought
by the Babel affair long ago, were at-
tended by numerous students of both
sexes, and small sheets in the strange
compound of tongues were dissemina-
ted every week assong adepts and the
general public. ;
By degrees the craze died out, and
the number of Volopukists in Paris
dwindled to a few entuhsiastic per-
sons full of the sentiments peculiar to
those who cling through thick and
thin to lost causes.
Captains Are Captains.
As a magnificent steamer, the prop-
erty of the Peninsular & Oriental com-
pany, was steaming into Southampton
harbor, ‘a grimy coal-lighter floated im-
mediately in front of it. An officer on
board the vessel, observing this, shouted
“Clear out of the way with that
barge.”
The lighterman, a native of the Emer-
ald isle, shouted in reply: “Are ye the
captain of that vessel 7”
“No,” ans wered the officer.
“Then spake to your aiquals,” said
Pat. “I’m the captain of this.”’—Lon-
don Figaro,
Ex-Lover’s ways.
She (inquiringly) —“Married yet ?”’
He (bitterly) —“No.”
She (bitingly)—‘How surprising !
He (suavely)—“Engaged yet?”
She (delightedly)—¢‘ Yes.”
I'e (revengefully) — ‘How surpris-
ing.” :
——FHthel (rummaging ‘in grandma's
drawer) — “Oh, grandma, what a
curious key this is !”?
Grandma—¢Yes, my dear; that was
your grandfather’s latch-key.”
Ethel —*‘And you keep it in ‘memory
of old days ?”
Grandma—*“No, my dear ; old nights”
.—Truth,
——The fellow who got a pension for
baldness has been found. He fittingly
comes- from the very small State of
Rhode Island, and it turns out that his
hair was lost by a spell of typhoid fever.
1f it kad been shot off in battle, or even
if it had fallen off from fright, he might
have been forgiven.
A Great Hit.
“Razzle. “Jagway went to thé
Fourth of July fancy ball as a toy pis-
tol.
Dazzle.
success ?'’
Razzle. “Yes. So much so that he
didn’t know when he was loaded.
“Was his impersonation a
It Makes a Difference,
X.—Baggs must have a poor memory.
He has been owing me five dollars for a
year.
Y.—On the contrary, I think he has
a good memory. I owe him five dollars
and he asks we for lt every time he sees
me.
——Characteristics of Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla : The largest sale the most merit
the greatest cures. Try it, and realize
its benefits.
New Advertisements.
NI Sonar STORY *
HOW HE SUFFERED FROM ECZEMA.
DOCTORS FAILED. GREW WORSE.
DEATH ONLY RELIEF EXPECTED.
———
I have been troubled ‘with chronic Eczema
on my limbs. The itching was very annoyin
and made me unfit for work. I had trie
many remedies and consulted a good physi-
cian, but received no permanent relief. A
friend told me of the Cuticura Remedies. T
then sent for a copy of your book, more- than a
FoF ago, and now I wish I had the book and
‘begun to use the Cuticura Remedies at once.
But the doctor said the remedies, good In
some eases, would be of no use lo me, and con-
I grew wo
and it.was the only relief I expected. Just
then my wife (I thank God for a good one)
found the book you sent in some out-of-the-way
1 place and read it through. She discharged
Wie attending physician and said we would try
thesis te sus rin I rd
" ' CUTICURA REMEDIES. |
ticura Soap, and a bottle of Cutiucra Resolvent.
1 haga to'use them about She ARGU inst
August, uring anew supply when the first.
was red: Riswnse | I ik now poy and attend to
‘my missionary work. "I am Secretary of the
Sullivan County Bible Society (portrait en-
closed). ‘Fave ‘been engaged in missionary
work 1n the county for eighteen years. To
| recomimend the Cuticura Remedies to suffering
humanity will ‘be’ a part of 'my missionary
work in the future. : i
gt {41 0 Rev. MASONGILLESPIE,
—
Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticuma, 50C.;
50 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free,
“vw chapped, and oily skin eured'by Cuti-
cura Soap, thse eh stp}
i
iu Fix \ ga {
"OW MY BACK ACHES!—
Back Ache. Kidney Pains,
Weakness, Soreness, Lameness, Strains, and
Pain relieved in one minute by the Cuticura
Anti-Pain Plaster. 38-20-4t-n-r
B-“How to Cure Skin Diseases,” 64 Pages, -
{BEST GOODS. - =
IMPLES, blacktehds, red, fough, !
Saw MILLS, ENGINES,
tinued to presaribe, for me for nine months. |.
se. Death would have been a relief
Protured onebox of Outicura, one eake of Ou |
P. 0. Box 11, Mongaup, Sullivan Co, N.Y. |
Soar, 25¢.; ResoLvENT, $1. ' Prepared, by the |;
formes RUG AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Bos-
on 1 SY Me 4 ak
and |
Business Notices.
——All that honesty, experience and skill
can do to produce a perfect pill, has been em-
ployed in making DeWitv’s Little Early Ris-
ers. The result is a specffic for sick head-
ach, biliourness and constipation.—For sale
at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store. .
——The United States have nearly 200 ac-
tive geysers. i
——All the talk in the worl? will not con,
vince you so quickly as one trial of De Witt’s
Witch Hazel Salve for scalds, burns, bruses,
skin affections and piles.—For sale at C. M.
Parrish’s Drug Store. :
——@Glass originally came from India.
——Little vegetable health producers: De
Witt's Little Early Risers cure malarious dis-
orders and regulaie the stomach and bowels,
which prevents headache and dizziness.—For
sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store.
——0Ow] have a very acute sense of hearing.
—If you can afford to be annoyed by sick
headache and constipation, don’t use De Witt’s
Little Early Risers for Jhege little pills will
cure them,—For saleat C, M. Parrish’s Drug
Store.
——Some Chinese razors are made of horse
shoes. i
——O0One word describes it—tperfection.” |
We refer to DeWitt’s Whitch Hazel Salve, *
cures obstinate sores, burns skin diseases and
is a well known cure for piles.—For sale ‘at C.
M. Parrish’s Drug Store.
——Gold mines about Nevada City are the
deepest and richest in the world. '
—Ignorance cf the merits of DeWitt's Lit-
tle Early Risers is a-misfortune. These little
pills regulate the liver, cure headache, dys--
pepsia, bald breath, constipation and billicns-
ness.— For sale at C. M. Parrish’s Drug Store.
——The tall hat worn by men first appeared
in France nearly five hundred years ago.
——=De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve cures piles.
——De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve cures burns,
—~De Witt,s Witch Hazel Salve cures sores,
— De Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve cures ulcers
—Fore sale at C. M: Parrish’s Drug Store,
a)
New Advertisements.
IMPROVED VARIABLE FRICTION FEED.
Send for Catalogue and special prices.
A. B. FARQUHAR co,
38-19-3m ork, Pa
GENTS WANTED.—To canvass
; for the sale of our Home-Grown
ursery stock, NEW PROFIT SHARING
SYSTEM. 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,
RE YOU GOOD AT PUZZLES?
The genius who invented the “Fifteen”
Puzzle, This in Clover” and many.others has
invented a brand new one, which is going to
be the greatest on record. There is fun, in-
struction and entertainment in it. The old and
learned will find as much mystery in it as the
young and unsophisticated. This great puzzle
is the property of the New York Press Club,
for whom it was invented by Samuel Loyd
the great puzzlist to be sold for the benefit of
the movement to erect a great home for news-
aper workers in New York. Generous friends
have 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.
JT ARRIVED.
"A complete line of Ladies
Union Suits
FROM 50 CENTS UP
A beautiful assortment of
trimming furs. Childrens
coats from $1.25 up.
LADIES WOOL HOSE
at 18 cents, better ones for
more money.
ALWAYS PLENTY OF BARGAINS AT
CASH BAZAAR,
No. 9, Spring Street,
3743 1y
! ellefonte, Pa. :
Sewing! Machine.
VV HEELER & WILSQN. "0h,
$1 i
td wit d
DUPLEX / .
i 9
CT AA
DUPLEX
Xa1dnd
Say, what does that figure mean’
As it stands there all alone? eo re
| "Tis the name of a Sewing Machine,
The best that over was known.
"will sew with never whitch,
The ‘handsomest ever seen, y
With LOCK or with RUNNING stitch—
The WHEELER & WILSON machine.
i
T i 4 OEP)
f cid gear
HL rode 10 stds { {
AGENT] WANTED.
NY so fsf otis if
Bend fora Catalogue.
WHEELER & WILSON Mfg. Co., ‘
- - BEST TERMS. |
1312 Chestnut 8t.,. |,
38131y PHILA DELPRTA, PA.
New Advertisements,
E BROWN J ”
°
DEALER IN
¢— 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 willsell at a lower price than an
all oak chamber suit has ever been sold heretofore in
this county.
—CALL AND SEE IT.—
A-All suits shipped direct from the factory.
E. BROWN JR.
Nos 2aund 6 W. Bishop St.
BELLEFONTE, Pa.
37-45-1yr
Liquors.
{QCHMIDT BUILDING.—
© FINE—8—WHISKIES.
Ag-All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. 4
o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLE TE~0
~4||——WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE——[}+
RR THE UNITED STATES,~—}
0 ESTABLISHED 1836.
zg, oh Wo pS OHM ID,
0
DISTILLER o AND o JOBBER
1—-OF—t “Hh Si
a Telephone No. 666.
emimeteet (J eememes : .
ahi IMPORTER OF H }
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
: ' No. 95 and ‘97 Fifth. Avenue,
Sha PITTSBURG, PA.
rf ra ee
Saddlery. a
Wy 38 vow hid
fe
wet
CHOFIELD’S NEW
: "HARNESS HOUSE.
+ 1 mn re fle
We extend a most cordial invitation to uso
‘| patrons and the public, in general, to witness
‘| men during ‘the winter the
G06 OTIS erroneous
GRANDEST DISPLAY, OF
Light and Heavy Harness
ever put on the Belléfonte market, which will
be made in the large room, formerly occupied
by Harper Bros., on Spring street. Yt ‘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, as
heretofore the custom has been to sell goods
in the room in which they were made. Thi.
scm wv vl
.elegant room has been refitted and furnished
with glass cases ih which the harness csn be
nicely aisplayed and still kept away from
heat aud dust, the enemies of long wear in
lestiner... Qur factory ‘now occupies a
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 defense
in will buy. Our profits are not large, but
y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in
Bellefonte. We are noi indnlging in idle
philanthropy. It is purely business. We are
not making much, but ‘trady is growing and
that is what we are intrested in now. Profits
will take care of themselves. :
When other houses discharged their work-
were all ge to
work in my factory, nevertheless the ®
houses of this city and county would smile if
‘| we compared ourselves to them, but we do not
Family Trade Supplied. . IFO 5 Baile] 38-9-9m
ek ere —— EE —————————————————————————————— |}
‘Printing. | Printing. a
{INE JOB PRINTING. | oles Lan edn didn oD
Fine Job Printing | ; Job Printing, i]
Fine Job Printing. i Jul : i Eine Joh Bristing, 4 2
Fine Job Printing. ra. Fine Job Printing. press
; Ar y Fine Job Printing. hl } Fine JobiPrinting. | ; ; : : :
501 vd Pine gomBHatiagd oun | Piso Job Ptating. : | :
; Ho Fine Job Printing au "Fine Job Prati. gif brows : .
Fine Job Printing. FinelJob Printing, + 1... ,o
Fine Job Printing. | Bine dob Printings. il
: Piso ob Printing. a ) oh Fini dob Printing | fas ol
Tere ‘Fine Job Printing. Pa . i vu out Fins Jo Peliag.’ ao | ,
; Fine JobiPriating, a “Fine JobiPrinkte ia ;
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262429
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|. 1. Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing. ., |
it OG Ve NAT
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~[{AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE}—
Fine Job Printing.
Oi
{ Or
| Solicited hind satisfaction Eh:
i
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 CENT THAT WE
CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story,
The following are kept constantly on hand.
hE
! .00 and upwards,
STOCK “OF HEAVY HARNESS
5et $25.00 and upwards, 500 HO: }
COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00
each, over $100.00 ‘worth of
HARNESS OILS and
AXLE GREASE,
$400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap
$150 worth of whips, .: +.
from'15¢ ‘to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Combs
Sponge Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as Zoe er
pound, © Fear ying be found & a
IRST 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 prices
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,
Svring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
33 37
INIuminating Oil.
(RCWN 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 :
~ Music Boxes.
()FrHES MUSICZBOXES | .
Are’ the sweetest, most’ complet
tone-sustaining, “durable, fand" perfect
Musical Boxes made, and: anynumber
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 canbe iguaranteed ‘to:
wear well without Gautscih’s patented , .
Safety Tune Change and Parachute. ‘
"Manufacturers Headquarters for Gem =
and Concert Roller! Organs; pricesions
+ Jy.6 and 12 dollars, extra Rollers with
pew tunes can|be 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; 10w: prices. | New Cylinders
with any kind of tunes made to order,
friigitl o GAUTSOHT & 8083 rods
has 5701690. Chamtput Bi
sr461y adelphis, Pa
ft dataport 8roix, fwieriand i
‘ Fstablished 18! - i
cevngad 0 NIMs. 8 orion
R74 0P. ML ew en reg
l 7 * OLDEST.AND BEST.
[esrapiasuen, 1 1823 i)
: Jv P] M. jstheibest Whisinin theimatks: ods
‘et for Fam se an edical Purposes. .
dood: i yeats Y,.
It his now:s Te taki grgeatly :
an mproved, w e.. On wis
old Whiley i Pot’ Buipasead anything! ©
{in the market.’ In ghse of la gsiibin P, b
invaluable. The 5 year-old is % and
"the Tyear:old! $1.25: per quart. “Orders ' by:
«| mail will receive prompt attention,
All,
goods securely and neatly packed in ‘plain’ M,
cases and sent C, O. D.: s, by, Mail
FE
"we {
Sendifor Prite List. oo 0 iva bli
: as
f sayunk Are ‘
38-23-3m 1 Oppoeite Monroe St., P hiladelphia.f
HAS EES ITER
|... Gas Fitting.
8B
| WA GALBRATIH, Plumber and
Belle Pa
H
| “Gas and Steam’ Fitter,
Pays perti ti
ERS an Sy eh -
ruest, &c. 880