Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 25, 1893. Farm Notes. The waste occurring from fodder that is left standing in the fields is equal to an equivalent waste of hay, as it could take the place of hay. If it isto be used as food it should be kept bright and clean, and every portion may be utilized if it is passed through a cutter. As soon as the winds, frosts and rains of winter come the fodder shocks are turned over to cattle to pick, the result being that only a portion of the fodder is used and a large proportion is trampled. It is as important to pro- vide a shed for corn fodder and straw as for hay. There is greater bulk in the fodder, which is an obstacle, but there is no reason why this may not be overcome by cutting up the todder and storing it in bins, as is done with ensil- age, or cutting it during the early por- tion of winter, before the winds strip the stalks of its leaves. In fact, any method but that of leaving the fodder in the fields, as is practiced by many farmers, will be an improvement. A trip along the line of any railroad in winter shows hundreds of shocks of corn fodder going to waste. Straw will aleo be serviceable as food if cut up and made palatable, with an addi- tion of ground grain, as well as being more serviceable as bedding it passed through a cutter. THE WASTE OF STRAW AND FODDER. Experiments made at the stations demonstrate that farmers do not ap- preciate the value of fodder, and that they could save a large proportion of their hay by making use of both fodder and straw as food for stock. Horses that have been given no hay, and which were kept on cut fodder, have come out in the spring in excellent condition for work, the only addition to the fodder being a small allowance of grain. Steers that were fed on a mixed ration of fodder and straw, which was first cut with a fodder cat- ter, and the mixed ration sprinkled with ground grain, have fattened and greatly increased in weight, the cost be- ing less than when hay was allowed, owing to the greater value of the hay. Every pound of bay or fodder that can be utilized as food takes the place of something more valuable, and this is equivalent to an increased value of the articles used. Ihe practice of using straw for bedding the animals only are not wise. By the use of a fodder cut- ter the straw may be made palatable, and the waste portions, or that which is damaged, will answer for use in the stalls. ? VALUE OF CORN FODDER. The value of straw and fodder is more generally overlooked than that of any other crop. With the prospect of a short hay crop in Europe and a possible demand for a supply from this country, the straw and fodder that will be stacked this fall possesses a greater value than for several years. The far- mers waste an enormous quantity of their fodder by leaving it in the fields during the winter. They take extra pains to cure their fodder, and the shocks are carefully made, but after that the winds and rains have full sweep until spring. Straw is stacked carelessly during the hurry of thresh- ing and left to become injured when but a few hours of extra work would enable the farmer to cap the stacks properly and have the straw bright and clear for winter feeding. In arranging a poultry house the roosts may be omitted altogether, or should be very low. High roosts compel the fowls to jump off atthe rigk of injury, and at night, when get- ting on the roosts the heavy fowls are sometimes crowded off. High roosts are unnecessary, and as roosts provide harboring places for lice they may be dispensed with and the fowls provided with straw, which should be cleaned away every day or.two. When a cow or steer refuses food there is a loss which will required quite a time to regain. It is much more difficult to get a cow back to her quantity of milk than to keep her there. By feeding the animals a variety of food they will be so liable to loss of appetite, and during the warm days green food is more important than grain. Stacking the hay hurriedly does not pay. Each stack should be carefully topped to shed water. It is also of importance to so stack the straw as to have it clean aud bright instead of damp or musty. At this season of the year much loss occurs from careless: ness or lack of experience in stacking. If it can be done all hay should be under shelter. A Suffolk ewe was shown at the Royal show the past season which had five living lambs at her side 12 weeks old, all her own, and having had no other nourishment than that supplied by the dam. Reduce the winter stock of poultry as much as possible to layers. These will pay their way and leave you a profit, whatever the cost ot feed may be. Get all other stock ready for an early market. Every precaution should be used .at this season of the year to guard against fire. Accumulations of waste, greagy rags, or of any material that may cause spontaneous combustion, should not be allowed. The results of experiments made in detasseling corn do not seem to justity a farmer wasting much time in that way. He can employ himself more profitably. Professor Henry shows by experi- ment that it costs $2,61 to produce 100 pounds of grain with lamps, and $3,03 to produce the same gain with pigs of about the same age. London’s Great Buried Station. The most remarkable piece of under- ground London will ere long be found beneath the most crowded of all spots in the city. We refer to the large space in front and about the Mansion House, including in this the wide entrances to Queen Victoria street and Mansion House place, together with the corners of Prince street, Lombard street, King William street and Corn- bill, and the paved open ground with the trees in wooden boxes, and the statue of Wellington, in front of the western portico of the Royal Ex- change. Here will shortly be commenced a vast excavation of oval form to make way for a great underground electric railway station, an extensive and complex system of underground ways, lighted and all hours, for the use both of railway passengers and pedestrians, and a still more elaborate system of what are called ‘pipe subways,” destined to receive our extensive and over-growing lines of gas and water mains, pneumatic tubes, electric wires and like services. There was a time when the engineers of the Central London railway, which is to run from this congested spot right away west to Shepherd’s Bush, thought it possible to coax the directors of the Bank of England into yielding a little space, for a consideration, out of the somewhat extravagant slice of our crowded city that their establishment which has swallowed more than an en- tire parish, now enjoys. But, as with M. Jules Favre on a memorable histori- cal occasion, their reply was, “Not an inch of territory.” The city authori: ties on the other hand, recognizing the paramount and increasing importance of rapid communication between the city and suburbs, have extended to the scheme a helping hand, only stipulat- ing for certain things which they have judged it right to secure in the interests of the public.—ZLondon Nems. An Emperor at the Plow. In order to emphasize the importance of the cultivation of the soil and to ‘encourage his subjects to follow agricul- tural pursuits, the Emperor of China sometimes performs certain rites at the “Emperor's Field” and goes through the form of plowing and other work of the husbandman. One day recently the Emperor set out at daybreak from his palace, with a numerous and magnifi- cent train of courtiers and others. Before breakfast the Emperor arrived at the shrines of deity presiding over agriculture, and his majesty stopped to offer up his thanksgiving and sacrifices. After changing his dress, the morning’ repast was served, at the end of which the Emperor proceeded to the field, at the four corners of which were erected four pavilions, where the seeds of wheat and other cereals were placed. In the center were numbers of mag- nificently attired courtiers, each holding aloft a many-colored flag, while on the side of the passage were scores of aged and white-haired farmers, each having in his hand some agricultural implement. Placing his left hand on the plow and holding the whip in his right hand the Emperor began the ceremony of the occasion. By prear- rangement the officers did their allotted share, some wielding the agricultural implements, while others scattered seeds out of the baskets as if sowing, while the Emperor was busied with the plow, which was hitched to a caparisoned bullock draped in yellow and led by two of the Emperor's body guards. On the Emperor finishing his round at the plow the three princes were ordered to go through the per- formance, and after them nine hich courtiers had their turn.—Pall Mall Budget. : Hardships of Life in the Polar Region. The whole region is one of severe cold, and the sea is frozen for the greater part of the year, land and water becoming almost indistinguishable, but for the incessant movement and drift of the sea ice, says McClue's Magazine. In summer the sea ice breaks up into floes which may drift away by the wind against the shores of continents or islands, leaving lanes of open water which a shift of wind may change and close in an hour. Icebergs launched from the glaciers of the land also drift with the tide, current and wind through the more or less open water. Possibly at some times the pack may open and a clear waterway run through to the pole, and old whalers tell of many a year, when they believed that a few days’ steaming would carry them tothe end ofthe world, if they could have seized the opportunity. At other times routs traversed in safety time after time may be effectively closed for years, and all advance barred. Food in the form of seals or walrus in the open water, reindeer, musk ox, polar bears or birds on the land, may often be procured, but these sources cannot be relied upon. Advance north- ward may be made by water in a ship, or by dog-sledge, or on foot, over the frozen snow or ice. Each method has great drawbacks. Advance by sea is stopped when the young ice forms in autumn, and land advance is hampered by the long Arctic night which enforces months of inac- tion, more trying to health and spirits than the severest exertion. A Kindness, “I did your book a good turn in last week’s paper,’ said the critic to the author. : “Indeed ?" said the author, “Yes,” returned. the critic. “I didn’t mention it.)'— Puck. ——“Well, Willie, how did you like it ?’’ asked the fond mamma when her angel child returned from his first day at the public sehool. “Bully I" ejaculated the cherub with a new light in his eyes; “but, say, ma, don’t call me ‘ Willie; my name’s Bill.” 7 LA GrippE.—During the prevalence of the Grippe the past season it was a noticeable fact that those who depended upon Dr. King’s New Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery, but escaped all of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedy seems to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid cures not only in cases of La Grippe, but in all Diseases ot Throat, Chest and Lungs, and has cured cases of Asthma and Hay Fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced. It won’t disappoint. Free trial Bottles at Parrish’s Drug Store. ——The watering-place girl says that when the ‘squeeze’ is over in Wall street she hopes it will come her way. WeLL KNxowN IN TeExas—Mr. J. C. Boswell, one of the best known and most respected citizens of Brownwood, Texas, suffered with diarrhea for a long time and tried many different remedies without benefit, until Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy was used ; that relieved him at once. F. Potts Green. A man never discovers how hard his lot really is until he tries to put a spade into it and make a garden. ——When weak, weary and worn out, Hood’s Sarsaparilla is just the med- icine to restore your strength and give you a good appetite. Sure Cure for Diptheria. G. 8. Clements, of Centre Hall, Pa., puts up a medicine that is a sure cure for Diptheria, and for sore throat it has no equal. 38-28-3m* Pennsylvania Exhibits at the World's Fair. Are ahead of them all, chief among them is the display of pure liquors manufactured in the state. It is conceded that no rye whiskies made inthe world can, equal those made in Pennsylvania, more especially Silver Age, Duquesne or Bear Creek. These three brands head the list of pure Ryes, and sre so well known that every reputable dealer sells them. North, East, South and West they Jead all others, because they are pure ; because they are reliable,and because they are stimulants that strengthen and invigorate. They are sold at prices within the reach of all, and are sold upon their merits for purity and strength. Silver Age, $1,50 ; Duquesne, $1,25; Bear Creek, $1.00, full standard quarts. Ask your dealer for them ; Insist on having them, and if you cannot be supplied, send to Max Klein, Allegheny, Pa. Price list of all liquors sent on application. All goods packed neatly and securely. Max Klein, Allegheny, Pa. 38- 23-1y, New Advertisements. TCHING AND BURNING. SURES ALL OVER HER BODY. SUFFER- ING ENDLESS. DOCTOR USE- LESS. CURED IN 4 WEEKS BY CUTICURA. Your most valuable Cuticura Remedies have done my little girl so much good that I feel like saying this for the benefit of those who are troubled with skin diseases. She was troubled with itching, burning sores. When I took her to the doctor the first time, he called it the Italian itch, and said he would cure her in two weeks. When the two weeks were up, he called it eczema, and in that time she was worse than before. He doctored her for three months, and she was so bad that wedid not know what to do. He did not do her any good. I saw the advertisement of Cuticura Remedies in the paper, and I s¢aid to my wife, “I am going to try them.” Mind what I say, she was so thick with sores that we had to soak her clothes to take them off. Itch! there was no end to it. She had it all over her body, back, legs, arms, in between her fingers. She did not have it on her head. But after taking your Cutieura Remedies for two weeks the itch stop- ped, and in four weeks the sores were all gone. I enclose her portrait. 1 an; more than pleased with your Cuticura Remedies, as they speedily cured my daughter, and it anybody asks me about your remedies, I will uphold them wherever 1 go. CHARLES M. GRONEL, Conshohocken, Montgomery County, Pa. WHY SUFFER ONE MOMENT From torturing and disfiguring skin diseases, when a single application of the Cuticura Rem- edies will, in the great majority of cases, affcrd instani relief in the most agonizing of itching, burning. scaly, crusted, pimply, and blotchy skin, scalp and blood diseases, with loss of hair, and point to a speedy, permanent, and economical cure. Sold everywhere. Price, Curicura, 50¢.; Soar, 25c.; ResoLvent, $1. Prepared by the Dorees Dru AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Bos- on. Aa“How to Cure Skin Diseases,” 61 pages, 50 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free. ABY’S, Skin and Scalp purified and beautified by Cuticura Soap. Ab- solutely pure. AINS AND WEAKNESS. — of females instantly relieved by that new, elegant, and infallible Antidote to Pain Inflammation, and weakness, the Cuticura Furniture, &c. Saddlery. this county. 37-45-1yr E BROWN Jr. ° DEALER IN 3— FURNITURE } OF } ALL { KINDS—3} 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 ——CALL AND SEE IT.— Rar-All suits shipped direct from the factory. E. BROWN JR. Nos 2 and 6 W. Bishop St. BeLLEFONTE, PA. Liguors. Sy CaNIDE BUILDING.— o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o ~+]]|——WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE——]||+ {—IN THE UNITED STATES,—} 0 ESTABLISHED 1836. —=mr. § W. J SCHMIDT, 0 DISTILLER o AND o JOBBER FINE— 8 —WHISKIES. Telephone No. 666. IMPORTER OF WINES, LIQUORSANDC CIGARS, . No. 95 and>97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURG, PA. Ba~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. PUPLEX 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]—{o ——AGENTS WANTED.—— BEST GOODS. - = ~ - BEST TERMS. Sond for a Catalogue. ! WHEELER & WILSON Mfg. Co., 1312 Chestnut St., 88-12-1y PHILADELPHIA, PA. Anti-Pain Plaster. 38-30 4t n. I. Family Trade Supplied. Sewing Machine. Printing. Printing. Nyy neers & WILSON. * re JOB PRINTING. 11d Fine Job Printing Job Printing. DUPLEX Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. ™ o Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. MA eo = J Fine Job Printing. Fine Job}Printing. fe 9 = : = = Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing. 2 M 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. —[AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE{— J CHOPIELDS NEW HARNESS HOUSE, We extend a most cordial invitation to uo 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 wiil 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, as heretofore the custom has been to sell goods in the room in which they were made. This elegant 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 lesiner. 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. 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 Jou will buy. Our profits are not large, but y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in Bellefonte. We are nol 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. 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 ourselves 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 CENT THAT WE CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story. The following are kept constantly on hand. 50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, Yee from $8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per set $25.00 and pans, 500 HORSE 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, 3 Horse Braghescuy Sombs onges, amois, ING SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25c per ound. We keep everythingto be found in a TRST CLASS ARNESS STORE—no chang- Ing, oyer Zo ysars indie sate room No two sin the same town to cal trade—NO SELLING OUT for the want of trade or pricet- Four harness-makers at steady work this win- ter, This is our idea of protection to labor, when other houses discharged their hande, they soon found work with us. JAS. SCHOFIELD, 33 37 Svring street, Bellefonte, Pa. msn INIuminating @il. (oovn 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. rome, 87 37 ly 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 jcan be guaranteed to wear well without Gautscih’s patented Safety Tune Change and Parachute. Manufacturers Headquarters for Gem and Concert Roller Organs; prices ons ly 6 and 12 dollars, extra Rollers with new tunes can|be had at any time for the low price of ouly 25 cents,also Sym- phonions and Polyphones at Lowest Prices. FactoryjEstablished 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., 37-46.1y Philadelphia, Pa Manufacturered at St. Sroix, Switzerland Established 1824. mC “Whisky. XY. P.M. OLDEST AND BEST. [ESTABLISHED IN 1823.] Y. P. M. is the best Whisky in the mark- et for Family Use and Medical Purposes. Y, It has now stood the test of nearly 80 years and has improved with age. Our 7 year old Whisky is not surpassed by anything inthe market. In case of weak lungs itis P, invaluable. The 5 yearold is $1 and the 7year-old $1.25 per quart. Orders by maii will receive prompt attention. Ail goods securely and neatly packed in plain M, cases and sent C. O. D. Orders by Mail solicited and satisfaction guaranteed. Send for Frice List. ALEXANDER YOUNG COMPANY, Limited, 700 2 Passayunk Ave., 38-23-am Oppoeite Monroe St., Philadelphia, ESTER Gas Fitting. (TM. GALBRAITH, Plumber and Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Ps. Pays perticular attention to heatin, buildings by steam, copver smithing, rebronzing gas fiz. ruest, &e. 20 28