. wf AAO SERIE i aT ——————. ’ Denna Bellefonte, Pa., Sep. 22, 1893. Farm Notes. —Do not begin to feed your new corn until the stock of old corn is ex- hausted. Let it dry. —The small, unsalable potatoes may be boiled and fed to calves, or they may be utilized for poultry. —Working over the manure in the heap is a practice that should be made general on all farme. The manure requires overhauling and such work pays. —The use of kerosene on animals, in order to destroy lice, is a severe method, as it is irritating to the skin. The proper mode isto mix one part kerosene with four parts of linseed or any cheap oil. —Mowing is difficult or easy, ac- cording to the smoothness of the land. When the land is well worked over with a harrow when seeding the mow- ing will be facilitated when the graes crop is harvested. When the timeof growing an animal is reduced the cost is reduced also. The breed that will grow rapidly and save a month or a year, compared with other stock, is so much ahead and the profits will be correspondingly larger. —Heaves in horses is caused gener- ally by dusty hay. As a precaution the hay may be well shaken and moistened before it is placed in the rack, and the rack should be on the floor rather than above the head of the horse. —Somebody had to plant trees for the present generation, and it must be done for the next. If the prospect of a crop is remote there is at least some- thing gained at present in the increased value of the farm that contains a young and growing orchard. —When good cream is added to that which has been kept on hand a long time, in order to accumulate enough for a churning, the result is that a lot of good cream is injured by the mixing. This happens frequently where only one cow is "kept. The “best butter is made from fresh cream. —Experiments made this season demonstrate that half a potato is the proper size for seed. There is but lit- tle difference in_ yield from a whole potato and a half potato, but the latter gives far better results than emaller pieces of seed or when the potato is cut into several pieces. —Such crops as corn fodder and ensilage are not classed among those that are marketable, but they can be cheaply produced and sold in the shape of milk. The profit from a croplargely depends upon the uses to which it is put, and the accomplishment of the object sought when growing it. , —This month will witness the ripen- ing of millions of weed seeds. Take the scythe and cut down all weeds while they are green, and before the seeds mature. - The mower can be used on the fields, but there are many places where the work must be done by hand. It is very important to doit now. —The first beginning in teaching the boy to prefer farming is to get him interested. Give him a few bantam fowls, and allow him to manage the flock and have the proceeds. He will be pleased with them as pets, and as he becomes larger he will gradually take an interest in- other stock, espe cially if be is permitted to grow the food for his pets. on a small plot of ground. : —Skim milk as food for young stock differs from whole milk only in its proportion of fat. The nitrogen and mineral matter remains. Milk is skimmed in order to remove the fat (cream), and when fed to pigsor calves it should have some substance added to it which restores the fat, and for this purpose linseed meal has been used satisfactorily, and when the skim milk is fed it should be lukewarm, or about the temperature of milk when it has just been drawn from the udder. —The keeping of apples during the winter largely depends on the mode of handling them when they are harvest- ed. Apples that have fallen to the ground have become bruised to some extent, and will sooner or later begin to decay. Such applesshonld be made into cider, for vinegar, without delay. Apples that are to be stored should be picked from the tree and handled care- fully, so as not to permit of theelightest injury to a single one, it being well known that where one rotten appleisin the barrel the others are liable to rot sooner than if all are sound. —Tt is claimed that the corn-fodder from one acre of land contains twice as much digestible matter as two tons of hay, which gives it a value nearly, it not quite, equal to hay, and it is rich in the carbo hydrates, or heat-produc- ing elements. ‘I'he above applies to the fodder from whicha crop of ears has been taken, When it is consider. ed that corn gives two crops in one ear—ears and fodder—and that a arger crop of fodder may be grown when the land is seeded and cultivated for that purpose, corn may ‘be rightly considered the king of all crops. Farmers have made the mistake. of estimating the value of the crop only by the quantity of grain produced, as the fodder is not marketable, but since it has been demonstrated that no por- tion of the plant is lacking as food, the fodder can take the place of hay and thus perform the same service as may be expected from hay. The ob- ject of the experiments is to convince farmers that corn fodder should no longer be left in the fieldato be wasted, butis a valuable food, and the plant one of the most complete in its food materials that can be grown. : i Behind the Scenes. You are Mistaken in Thinking an Actress’ Life is All a Bed of Roses. The famous Peg Woffington once said : “To amuse the public, what a sad vocation for one who thinks.” The public sees only the glitter and glamour of the exterior ; the life seems easy and luxurious The dramatic star is dressed in gorgeous attire, bedecked with jewels of rare value, and mado love to by the handsomest of “juvenile leads.” The matinee girl in the front row would for- sake all her loved ones at home to play maid even to such a queen, but could she read the heart and heed the warning of the painted woman before her, her imaginary castle of luxurious ease would crumble, to be crushed by her dainty feet in her eagerness to gain the shelter of her own peaceful home, full of delicate refinement and tender, moth- erly love. I venture to say there is not an actress on the boards to-day (with few exceptions) who would not exchange her successful stage life for the quiet of a happy home and simple living. Does a public think of the physical, mental and moral labor a woman has to undergo to be successful? She is beau- tiful, talented, ambitious; she knows the stage is the one vocation in which she is best qualified to gain her liveli- hood—others are dependent upon her. She must do what she can and make the most she cap ; but oh! the reality, the hardships, the privations, the insulls and the final downfall morally to gain the plaudits of a fickle public, loud in their fulsome praise during her brilliant meteoric youth, and forgetting her bur- ial place after death. How many men and women, think you, in that admiring audience would jend their aid and sympathy 1n distress? The flavor of the stage is conducive to loudness. A mania for eccentric dress- ing, faddish walk, a self-conscious toss of the head denote the life. Even prudish Mrs. Kendal has a self- assertible, independent manner that shows her knocks against the rough edges of the world hurt no more and she 1s able to stand her ground with the rest of them. YetI know this gentle mother would much rather forsake to- day all the glamours of stage life to set- tle down a quiet matron in the bosou of her lovely family if she thought she had made sufficient of this world’s good’s to leave them comfortable for life. The gayety charmer, the opera bouf- fist, the nimble chorus girl, may adore the life, but not the earnest, honest, sin- cere, thinking actress, who knows its heartaches, temptations, and jealousies, who may come out unscathed, but after a struggle. A LAE A Tory View. It Is That Gladstone Will Never Win in Great Britain Again. Lonpox, Sept. 10.—The Standard says that everything points to a disso- lution of Parliament next year. Mr. Gladstone, it says, deludes himself if he thinks the constituencies will have by then forgotten his Irish policy. The second home rule bill is worse than the first, and we cannot possibly have a third. The paper predicts that under the circumstances Mr. Gladstone can never obtain a majority in Great Britain again. The Pittsburg Pension Office. PITTSBURG, Pa. September I11.— Captain George W. Skinner, having re- ceived his commission and filed his bond, took charge of the office at this place this morning. He will make no change in the clerical force of the of- fice until after the October payments have been made and all settlements in connection therewith closed. A num- ber of skillful and experienced clerks will be retained for an indefinite peri- od. One Advantage of Being Sick. Mr. Timmins—You’re not looking as happy over your recovery as you ought to look. Miss Mardygrah—Well, you see, I had seven callers when I was sick and now I have hardly one.—Chicago Re- cord. : fc ——————————————— Promptly Punished. Starter—I met a man this morning who said I looked like you. Smartley —Tell me who he is and I'll go and knock him down. Starter—I did that myself. — Judge. A Wrong Supposition. «So Mr. Henpeck has run off and lett his wife.” “I don’t blame him. I guess he got tired of being bossed.” «It can’t be that. He ran off with the cook.” — Life. The Bliss of Ignorance. “Why are the heads of the figures in the fashion-plates always turned as if they were looking back?’ ‘So they cannot see what guys they are.’'— Truth. ‘ L_Lu«Aren’t you glad you have alit- tle ‘brother to play with, Tom ?” in- quired a neighbor, referring to the fort- night-old Snow baby. “Play with ?”’ echoed Tom, scornful- ly. “Why he can’t even wash his own face |''— Youth's Companion. ames —— ——Nothing,”” smd Colonel Forney: tdries up a woman’s tears so quickly as a kiss.” Ladies who are about to weep should call at this office. Consultaticn with the ‘devil’ free:—Carroliown News. ECR TERA —_Tt is recognized ctistom nowadays for a girl to buy a pair of sleeves and get the rest of the garment with what money she has left.-—Osceola Courier. BE atimtainispmm————— — The milk of cows is not consider- ed good for food by the Siamese. used. Cattle are raised for beef. EE ertas BIELITTTPO® —— Joseph Ruby, of Columbia, Pa., | suffered from birth with scrofula humor, till he was perfectly cured by Hood's Sarzaparilla. Stories of Great Luck. Captain Ben Ferguson, collector on the ferryboat Hite, is always reminis- cent. The other day the captain said to me. “You seldom hear of a man making $90,000 in one night in these days, but I know of such an instance. Mr. Coleman, who ran a foundry on Washington street. near Brook, did 1t. To me he exhibited no delight whatever. His words were Captain, I made $90,- 000 last night; went to bed early and slept soundly. You know the price of iron went up, and fortunately I had enough on hand, which I had purchased ata low figure, to net me a fortune.” As Captain Ferguson concluded the story he told another of how Dennis Long made $200.000 because the price of ron dropped out of sight. - It was just at a time when Mr. Long had failed in business and told Captain Ferguson that he was $400,000 in debt. “Well,” said the captain, ‘Dennis Long went up to Indianapolis to bid on the construction of the city water- works. There was but one other bidder, tract. Not long after iron began fluct- uating, and Long's estimate having The | milk in the cocoanut, however, is much : advance still more in price, it already being high at the time, he of course found that as it decreased he was reap- ing a golden harvest. Well, iron went down and down, When it stopped, it was worth hardly anything. Mr. Long, as I said, made $200,000 by this, and he’s been making money ever since.” — Louisville Courier-Journal. 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* k Hard Times Past. The country probably never before experi: ericed 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 ouslity has been steadily increasing instead of ecreasing. So it is with the rye whiskies bottled by Max Klein, The public know that the Silver Age, Duquesne and 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, 81.25 and $1.00 per quari respectively. Sold by S. Shloss, Williamsport, Pa. 88-32-1y New Advertisements. RAZED WITH ECZEMA ON' FACE AND HEAD FOUR YEARS. DOCTORS AND SPECIALIST OF LIT- TLE BENEFIT. : ; TRIES CUTICURA. ONE SET PRODUCES WONDERFUL CHANGE. COMPLETE- LY CURED IN TWO MONTHS. I have suffered with Eczema (Salt Rheum), for about tour years, all over my face, prinei- pally on my forehead, it being go bad that it made me half crazy attimes. I tried about half a dozen doctors, among whom was a Specialist on skin diseases, but he, like all the others, only gave me temporary relief. ' I then concluded to try your Cuticura Remedies after being advised todo so by a great num- ber of my friends. After using one set I could see a great change for the better, and afier using three sets I found ‘myself completely cured. I feel myself cured as I have not seen a particle of its return. GOE. A. LOWE, 907 Market St., Philadelphia, Pa. I had been suffering’ with Erysipelas for several years. It would appear during August aud September of the Summer season. My face became very sore and my eyes were af- fected seriously. I used two bottles of Cuti- cura Resolvent, one box of the Cuticura, and can safely say Iam cured. : Miss M. M. HIGH, 35 S. 3d 8t., Readidg, Pa. CUTICURA RESOLVENT. The new blood and Skin TF urifier, and greatest of Humor Remedies, cleanses the blood of all impurities, while Cuticura, the great skin cure and Cuticura Soap, an exquisite skin beauti- fier, clear the skin and scalp, and restore the hair. Thus the Cuticura Remedies cure every species of itching, burning, scalp, pimply, and blotchy skin, scalp, and blood diseases, from piinbles to scrofula, from infancy to age, when the best physicians fail. Sold everywhere, Price, Curicurs, 50¢.; Soap, 25c.; Resorvent, $1. Prepared by the Porras Dru AND CuemicaL CorPORATION, Bos- on. B=“How to Cure Skin Diseases,” 64 pages, 50 illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free. OVELIEST, Whitest, Clearest Skin and Softest Hands produced by Cuticura Soap. EAXK, PAINFUL KIDNEYS, With their weary, dull aching, life- less, all-gone sensation, relieved in one min- ute by the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster, the only pain-killing plaster. 38-37-6t nr - Sewing Machine. VY HEELEE & WILSON, Libor fen DUPLEX 9 DUPLEX Xaa14nd 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 hiteh, The handsomest ever seen, ‘With LOCK or with RUNNING stitch— The WHEELER & WILSON machine. o]—TIo —AGENTS WANTED. — BEST GOODS. - - - - BEST TERMS. Send for a Catalogue. WHEELER & WILSON Mfg. Co., 1312 Chestnut St., 38-12-1y PHILADELPHIA, PA. and Mr. Long was awarded the con- ; been made cn the basis that iron would | Furniture, &c. © Saddlery. to his order 37-45-1yr E,, BROWN Jr Sar DEALER IN 3— FURNITURE } OF § ALL { KINDS—% OFFERS great inducements tothe Spring Trade in the Furniture line. He has controll of a special Bedroom suit made 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.— Aa~All suits shipped direct from the factory. E. BROWN JR. Nos 2 and 6 W. Bishop St. : BELLEFONTE, PA. . Ee ————— : Liquors. | JCHMIDT BUILDING.— o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o {——IN THE UNITED STATES, —} WINES, 0——— ESTABLISHED 1836,——0 —=—Gci W. 1 SCHMIDT, == DISTILLER o AND o JOBBER EBERT 1—OF—1 FINE--§ .-WHISKIES. Telephone No. 666, IMPORTER OF LIQUORSANDC CIGARS, "No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURG, PA.’ op > Bar~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention. —+|——WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE———|}+ —fAT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE{— Family Trade Supplied... 38-9-9m Printing. Printing. Fue JOB' PRINTING. Fine Job Printing : Job Printing. Fine J ob Priatiss, Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine JobjPrinting. Fine Job Printing: i Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. _ Fine Job Printing. FinelJob Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING} Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing. : Fire Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine J bPrinting; Fine J ob Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine JoulPrining. Fine Job; Printing. cy Fine Job Printing ’ Fine Job Printing. | Fine Job Printing. Fine JobPrinting. RJ CHOPIELDS NEW HARNESS HOUSE. We extend a most cordial invitation to ar 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 occupied by Harper Bros., on Spring street. 1t 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 csn be nicely aisplayed and still kept away from heat aud 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 ou will buy. Our profits are not large, 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 are not making much, but trade is growing and that is what we are interested in now. Profits will take care of themselves. When other houses discharged their work- men during the winter they were all put work in my factory, nevertheless the ig ®) 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, Tons from .00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per set$25.00 and ig 500 HORSE COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00 each, over $100.00 worth of HARNESS OILS and 4 AXLE GREASE, $400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap $150 worth of whips from 15¢ to $3.00 each, s Horse Brita uy nbs nges, amois, ING SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per ound. We Josh everything to be found = TRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang- ing, over 20 years in the same room.. No: two shops in 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 hande, they soon found work with us. JAS. SCHOFIELD, Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa, 33 37 Illuminating Oil, (CiRewy 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 I ; Farmer's Supplies. youth BEND CHILLED PLOWS SPRING TOOTH HARROWS, CORN PLANTERS, GRAIN DRILLS, ASPINWALL F