Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 15, 1893, Image 4

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    OR CRE
Bellefonte, Pa., Sep. 15, 1893.
Farm Notes.
A little paint on the buildings adds
greatly to the appearance, preserves
the wood, and gives an additional val-
ue to the whole farm.
Extend the first milking period of
the heifer as far as possible, as the
first season will largely afiect her fu-
ture usefulness as a milker.
The farmers who complain that
sheep do not pay are wool growers.
When the farmer makes a specialty of
mutton sheep they always give good
returns.
It costs something to grind the corn
for hogs, but if the corn is soaked be-
fore feeding it will be more highly rel-
ished by hogs, and be in the best con-
dition for them.
Regarding the poisoning of fruit by
spraying with arsenical compounds it
is estimated that a man must eat sey-
eral barrels of apples at one time in or-
der to get a fatal dose.
Salt is beneficial to animals in many
ways. It is destructive to some forms
of parasites, and, when sulphur is giv-
en occasionally with salt, worms in
the intestines may be prevented or de-
stroyed.
The cow that receives the same al-
lowance of food daily may be better
than is known. There isno such thing
ag an allowance of food for a productive
cow. She should have as much as
she can eat at every meal.
In storing away onions for winter,
spread them in thin layers, first allow-
ing them to become thoroughly dry
after harvesting. Do not disturb them
afterward. If onions should become
frozen during the winter they will be
but httle damaged if left undisturbed.
When a hog is compelled to eat a
portion of his food in the shape of filth
he will not increase as rapidly as when
fed on clean and wholesome food.
Many supposed outbreaks of hog chol-
era may be traced to overfeeding on
corn exclusively and lack of cleanli-
ness.
Select the best ears of corn for seed.
Do not remove the husks if it can be
avoided, but fasten the ears together
in bunches and hang up in a dry place
80 as to protect from mice. Dampness
is injurious to seed corn, and the ears
saved for seed should be thoroughly
dry before using.
Fruit that is shipped to market in
barrels, crates or large, boxes may be
made to give a larger profit if shipped
in neat baskets or small boxes instead,
and the cost of the baskets will be but
a small sum compared with the in-
creased prices secured by the more at-
tractive appearance of the fruit,
Public tastes bring out the actual
work of a cow. Among the Jerseys at
the World's Fair is ‘Little Goldie,”
who is claimed to have made 34
pounds 8% ounces of butter at home,
but the best she can do at Chicago is
14 pounds in one week. The test at
Chicago is playing havoc with private
records.
Formerly there was no mode of har-
vesting corn but to cut down the stalks
by hand, but the corn harvester has
come to stay and is saving labor, But
little work is now necessary in growing
a crop of corn that cannot be done
with horse power and at buts small
outlay for labor compared with the
work of former years.
The winters in this climate are mild
at certain times, and stock can then
find exercise, but some preparation
should be made, to protect during se-
vere weather. An open shed is an ex-
cellent place for stock, as it affords
plenty of fresh air without exposure to
winds and raios, and costs but little.
This is the season for building.
Turnips, parsnips, carrots and beets
may be stored in pits outside of the
barn, or in mounds. One of the meth-
ods that has been tried with success, is
to store them in bins, using dry sand
to fill in between them. This method
permits of using them at any time,
while, if they are stored in pits, they
may be sealed up by the frost.
Clover hay, if cut fine, and scalded
or steamed, is relished by all classes of
stock, poultry included, and is the
cheapest and best ot all foods, espec-
ially if fed io connection with ground
grain. Iu greatly supplies the place of
green food, and is invigorating if
fed warm oun a cold day. Retain your
hay for winter use instead of selling it.
Farming is a business which de-
pends on many little details and condi.
tions affecting each farm. The frost
may appear on a plot of land, while
but a hundred feet away its effects, if
any, may not be noticed. One plot
will be more difficult to work than an-
other adjoining it, and the exposure of
the land to the sun, its drainage, its
nearness to timber, the texture of the
€oil, the kinds of crops previously
grown, and other matters make a farm
entirely different from the next, each
farmer being govenred by circumstan-
ces affecting his farm only,
The usual mode of storing cahbages
for winter is to bury them, beads down
and roots up. A better method is to
place them close together in a furrow,
roots down, then throwing the dirt to
them and adding another layer of dirt
until a compact bed of cabbage is made
Now cover with straw or hay and
place cornstalks on the hay. When
wanted for use remove a portion of the
hay, cut oft the heads desired and
leave thestalks. In the spring remove
the hay and the cabbage stalks will
produce early sprouts, or “green.” All
that is necessary is to keep the cab
bages from thawing too euddenly. If
buried heads down they soon begin to
rot alter the frost is gone and the
raing come in the spring.
Hard on Poor Kansas.
A long-legged man in a black sombre-
ro leaned upon the railing in the Kan-
sas State Building and gazed intently
on the exhibit of staffed animals. Af-
ter he had made a most thorough inspec-
tion of the beasts he turned to a Chica-
go Herald man at his side and said :
“1 was brought up in the West and
know Kansas from the river to the Col-
orado line and I will tell you stranger,
that there never was a polar bear in the
State. Why, a polar bear would dry
up there in two weeks. And then look
at that mink! Never was a mink in
Kansas. Why, do you know, stranger,
a mink would roll up and die in that
‘country before it had time to gnaw a
bole in the ground. And then look at
that Rocky Mountain goat! Just look
at that goat! Why, stranger, there
isn’t a mountain in Kansas that’s bigger
than a sunken grave. And will you
look at that? What do you think of it ?
Here these people Lave got an alligator
in their exhibit and I suppose they
| think people believe they have such
things in Kansas. I will tell vou that fcr
a prohibition State Kansas has less water
than the rotunda of hades. Why, that
alligator never saw Kansas. I'll tell
you, stranger, that this exhibit would be
more representative of the animal life of
the State if they mounted a few of those
red-legged grasshoppers, a hat full of
Kansas locusts and some of those flat-
backed, square-shouldered green bugs
that bite a fellow’s neck at night. These
things, barring high five and cut-throat
seven-up, are the game of Kansas. A
polar bear in Kansa-? Why, man, the
stomach ot that State would turn at the
sight of a black frost.”
Buttermilk’s Many Virtues,
Concerning the medical value of
buttermilk, the Medical ‘Adviser says
that it is of so much worth that it has
gained a distinct place in matera medica,
and is lergely prescribed by the best
physicians for chest and lung ailments
and in most forms of kidney troubles.
An exclusive buttermilk diet has seemed
to bring about a cure in many cases
of Bright's disease. A constant and
proper use of it will greatly reduce, and
sometimes cure, the cravings for
alcoholic liquors with which many
persons are afflicted. The cravings may
be satisfied and the system benefited.
Buttermilk alone will often remedy
acidity of the stomach. The lactic acid
needed in many cases is supplied by it
much more than by any other drink or
food. Itis said to alleviate the depres-
sion about the heart thatso many old
people suffer from, and it should be
constantly drunk by them. It is also
to a certain extent a stimulant for the
entire system, just what the aged
needed.
ET ———————
The Editor Lacked Enterprise.
“Want a scoop ?”’ inquired the blear-
eyed man who had zigzagged into the
city editor’s room.
“What kind ?” said'the city editor.
“Suicide.”
“Whose ?”’
“Nev’ mind. Reg’ler sensational!
suicide. All th’ facts. Clean scoop.
Nobody knots blame thing ’bout i% yet.
‘Want it 7”
“I think not.”
“All right,” rejoined the visitor, zig-
uagging toward the door. “I’m goin’
to kill myself in ’gzackly two hours.
For four beers, pay’blein advance, I
would ’a give your paper the p’ticulars
and told you where th’ reporter ’d find
me after the job was done. I’ll go and
give it to some other paper and you can
go to thunder.”
And he went swiftly, gramblingly
and protanely down the winding stair-
way four steps at a jump.-- Chicago Trib-
une. :
A Generous Suggestion.
‘Where is old Dawson this morning?’
asked the railway president, noticing
the absence of the veteran book-keeper.
“Home, sick,” said the vice presideut.
“Poor old fellow | TI don’t believe he’ll
ever get over this attack.”
“That's too bad,” sighed the president.
“He has been a very valuable man to
us, Dawson has. He’s been with us
ft venty years, and I don’t believe he’s
missed a day.”
“‘That’s so,” said the vice president.
“He has literally worn himself out in
our service. If he dies, I think the road
ought to do something for his widow.’
“Sodo I,” said the vice president,
“unless, perhaps—er—"’
“Well ? Goon. What?”
“We might give her a pass over our
road to the World’s Fair.”
When You Sign Your Name.
A signature should always be legibly
written—a fact that is frequently ignor-
ed by persons who write the body of the
letter quite plainly. From long habit
the name is bastily slurred over in a
way to puzzle even decipherers of blind
handwritting, = The signature of one’s
name has the force of vouching for or
verifying what precedes it and for this
reason, if no other, it should be an act
of importance and care. Nothing is
regarded with more contempt than an
anonymous letter, showing, as it does,
that somebody is ashamed or afraid to
be known as its author, and though
probably never intended that way, an
illegibly rigned epistle has much the
same effect.
——A fool is sure to tell who he is by
the questions he askes.—Ram’s Horn.
~— Statistics show that in courting
the young man is most likely to lose his
self-control when he's just holding his
own.— Flnladelphia Times.
——Kate—“Do you prefer the sea-
shore or the mountains ?”’ Nana—*The
seashore, by all means ; one is always
sure of seeing so many heavy swells I”’—
Brooklyn Eagle.
— “Why did everbody laugh so
long over that story of old Boreby’s ?
It wasn’t a bit funny.” “They were
afraid he would tell another if they
kept quiet.” — Vogue.
—I can’t use this poem, You've
written bouse as though it would rhyme
with cyclone.” Mr, Hustler—“Well
You gee I wrote this out west and there
they do go together often.” -— Inter
Ocean.
Has Its Good Points.
In some villages in Japan robbers are
tried and convicted by ballot. When-
ever a robbery is committed the ruler of
the hamlet summons the entire male
population and requests them to write
on a slip of paper the name of the per-
son they suspect as having committed
the crime. The one receiving the lar-
gest number of ballots is declared duly
“elected,” and is accordingly hung.
This system, like all others, has its pe-
culiar advantages. It insures the pun-
ishment of somebody for every crime
committed, whereas under the system in
vogue in most civilized countries in nine
cases out of ten no punishment is inflic-
ted on anybody for the crime. Of course
they may not *‘elect” the guilty person,
but dispose of some other character
‘equally bad. There is much in the sys-
tem to commend it to other nations.
More Cheering News.
AxpErsoN, Ind., Sept. 6.—The
Pensylvania Glass works, with 110
employes, resumed the manufacture of
bottles to-day.
A Deadly Ynsult.
Regzie—I see you are wather gone on
Miss Bullion, old cbap. Do you in-
tend to press your suit ?
Algy—Pwess me suit ? Why, what
do you take me for ; a blawsted tailaw ?
(Weeps with = emotion). — Brooklyn
Lift.
——The first bread was made by the
Greeks ; the first windmills by the
Saracens,
STEEL ————
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*
Hard Times Past,
The country probably never before experi-
enced such a hard panic with so little general
effect on business, and the country has never
been in as good condition as it is to day. The
demand for articles of known puriety and
quality has been steadily increasing instead of
ecreasing. So jt is with the rye whiskies
bottled by Max Klein. The public know that
the Silver Age, Duguesneand Bear Creek ryes
are the finest in the country. They know
that doctors recommend them that as a stimu-
lant they are unsurpassed, They are for sale
by all first-class hotels and dealers at $1.50,
$1.25 and $1.00 per quart respectively. Sold by
8. Shloss, Williamsport, Pa. 58-32-1y
; New Advertisements.
Aon MASS SORES
80 PAINFUL NO REST AT NIGHT. DOC.
TOR NO HELP. CURE SPEEDY AND
COMPLETE BY CUTICURA.
Late in the fall of 1890 I was afflicted with
salt rheum or eczema. My face, head, and
neck were almost a complete mass of sores
and some other parts of my body were afflicted
I had been letting it run, thinking it was
nothing but a simple skin disease and it would
cure itself, but I soon found out my mistake,
for the sores became so painful I coula not
rest at night. I called a physician and began
to take his medicine, but it did not help me in
the least. A friend of mine prevailed on me
to try your Cuticura Remedies, which I did
using the Cuticura and Cuticura Soap exter-
nally, and the OQuticura Resolvent internally,
and from the start it began to help me, the
sores began to heal up and disappear and my
health became better, ny appetite keener,
and I began to gain in flesh, and I think I am
now completely cured. My skin is as smooth
and as fine as it ever was. 1 send you my. por
trait. I heartily recommend your Cuticura
Remedies to all those afflicted “with skin or
blood diseases, for I am positive they will cure
them.
E. A. HOLMES,
East Aurora, N.Y., Breaker and Trainer of Colts
CUTICURA RESOLVENT.
The new Blood and Skin Purifier, and purest
and best of Humor Remedies, cleanses the
blood of all impurities and poisonous elements
and thus removes the cause, while Cuticura
the great Skin Cure, and Cuticura Soap, an
exquisite Skin Purifier and Beautifier, clear
the skin of every trace of disease. Hence the
Cuticura Remedies cure every disease and hu-
mor of the skin, scalp, and blood, with loss of
hair, from pimples to scrofula, from infancy to
age, whether simple, serofulous, or hereditary,
Feo all other methods and best physicians
ail.
Sold everywhere.. Price, Curicura, 50c.;
Soar, 25c.; Resonvent, $1. Prepared by the
Pomen DRruG AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Bos-
on.
A3~“How to Cure Skin Diseases,” 64 pages,
50 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free.
ABY'S, Skin and Scalp purified
and beautified by Cuticura Soap. Ab-
solutely pure.
EAK, PAINFUL BACK, Kid-
ney and Uterine Pains and Weak-
nesses relieved in one minute by the Cuticu-
ra Anti-Pain Plaster, the only instantaneous
Furniture, &c.
Saddlery.
EE BROWN Jr.
°
DEALER IN
OFFERS
all oak chamber suit has ever been
this county.
A£=All suits shipped direct from
37-45-1yr
¢— FURNITURE { OF { ALL § KINDS—3}
great inducements to the Spring Trade in the Furniture
line. He has controll of a spe¢ial Bedroom suit made
to his order which he will sell at a lower price than an
——CALL AND SEE IT.—
E. BROWN JR.
Nos 2 and 6 W. Bishop St.
BeLLeronTE, Pa.
sold heretofore in
the factory.
Liquors.
= Ep —————————————————————— EE
SJCHMIDE BUILDING.—
o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLET E—o
~+{-———WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE——|}+
{——IN THE UNITED STATES,—}
0
ESTABLISHED 1836.
0
DISTILLER o AND
o JOBBER
{—0F—
FINE—3 —WHISKIES,
me (J rmrmmn
Telephone No. 666,
IMPORTER OF
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue,
PITTSBURG, PA.
nef mmm seme
&a~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention.
Send for a Catalogue.
WHEELER & WILSON Mfg. Co.,
1212 Chestnut
[9
38-12-1y PHILADELPHIA, PA.
pain-killing plaster. 38-34-4t-nr Family Trade Supplied.” 38-9-9m
m— - wr TEE
Sewing Machine. Printing. Printing.
LL ¥ & WILSON, ye JOB PRINTING.
i i 4 : Fine Job Printing Job Printing.
DUPLEX Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
MH Ssill Fine Job Printing, Fine Job Printing.
= rd, Fine Job Printing, Fine JobjPriniing.
gt wl) oii hoy :
5 br Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing.
5 M ‘Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
DUPLEX
Fine Job Printing. Fine|Job Printing.
Say, what does that figure mean \ :
As it stands there all alone ? FINE JOB PRINTING}
"Tis the name of a Sewing Machine, FINE JOB PRINTING}
The best that ever was known.
"Twill sew with never a hitch, Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing.
The handsomest ever seen, Fine Job Hog, Fine Job ill,
With LOCK or with RUNNING stitch—
The WHEELER & WILSON machine, Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
L
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
o]—J[o ;
Fine Job|Printing. Fine Job;Printing.
——AGENTS WANTED.——
Fine Job Printing Fine Job Printing.
BEST GOODS. - - - = BEST TERMS.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing,
—FAT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE|—
AJ CHOFTELDS NEW
HARNESS HOUSE.
We extend a most cordial invitation to mr
patrons and the public, in general, to witnes
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 ibn
by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has been
added to my factory and will be used exelu-
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
28ant 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
leetner. Our factory now occupies a room
ioe Jest snd tie Sore 20x60 added makes it
© largest. establishment of its kind outside
of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. tel
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
Ix 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 sare
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 bi )
houses of this cityand 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 sa’ , 88 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, ives from
$8.00 to $15.00 and Ppa LARGE
STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per
set $25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE
COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00
each, over $100.00 worth o
HARNESS OILS and
AXLE GREASE,
$400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap
$150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
3 Horse Brushes Cary Sia
nges amois, ° G
SADDLES, LADY SIDE SADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ er
pound. We Joep everything to be found 2
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang-
ing, over 20years in the same room. No two
shopsin the same town to catch trade—NO
SELLING OUT for tte wantof trade or rices-
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,
Svring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
ma—]
33 37
Iuminating Oil.
Cleawn ACME,
THE BEST
BURNING OIL
THAT CAN BE MADE
FROM PETROLEUM.
—
. It gives® 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.
¢ Ps
3
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
Farmer's Supplies.
ours BEND CHILLED PLOWS
SPRING TOOTH HARROWS,
CORN PLANTERS,
GRAIN DRILLS,
ASPINWALL FCZA4zi0 PLANTER
PRICES REDUCED.
Pennsylvania Spring Hoed Two Horse
Cultivator, with two rowed
Corn Planter Attachment.
PRICES REDUCED. 5
Buggies, Pleasure Carts 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,
JARBED 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.
Office and Store in the Hale building.
$6 4 McCALMON & CO.
Gas Fitting.
M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and
Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pe.
Pays perticular attention to heatin, buildings
by steam, copver smithing, rebrons gas Axe
ruest, &c.