a Dewsreaic Wale Bellefonte, Pa., July 27, 1894. Farm Notes. —Air-slaked lime may be used freely on all land that is plowed. Its effect will be noticed for several years after its use. --A calf well started on milk, and fed judiciously with grain and skim milk all summer, will be worth more at six months than one not so well fed within twelve. —Tomato vines should be staked in order to keep the fruit off the ground, thus not only avoiding the liability of rot, but also to allow the fruit to ripen 800Der. —Turnips may be sown, and they should be on rich land. The first prep- aration of the soil saves much labor if done thoroughly eo as to destroy all weeds. —It 18 predicted that the price of corn will, in a few years,average higher than that of wheat, and that as corn is gradually coming into use in Europe, the demand will be very large. —Buckwheat seed may be sown this month for a green, manurial crop. It grows on very light soils, and kills out weeds. The bees also work on the blos- soms in collecting honey. —Italian bees are said to be more energetic in resisting the attacks of the bee moth than are the common black bees. As a rule, moth invasion means a weak, queenless colony and neglect. —A writer expresses the opinion that it is often the case that theflavor in the milk which is attributed to the eating of some kind of weed in the pastures is really due to uncleanliness in some particular. —The only sure method of eradicat- ing purslane is to get it up by the roots and allow no portion of the plant to re- main in the ground. It is very difficult to destroy, and half-way measures will result simply in lost time. —The most successful dairymen are most careful as to the condition in which the young animals are tc be kept which are to be used in the dairy when they become old enough for be- ing thus used, says a Canadian dairy- man. ---Sell your cows if you will not pro- cure a good thermometer,a trustworthy tester, and if you are not willing to echool your intelligence to the utmost within your power. There is no profit 2 unecientific work in this progressive ay. —-While the raising of the stock will enrich our soil and ‘renew its produc- tiveness, it will market the farm pro- ducts better than to ship the feed away. While grain growing is yearly becoming more unprofitable, our hope is in stock breeding. —The dry weather has no doubt de- stroyed the late peas in some localities, but the rows may be utilized for late cabbage. Where the rows have been heavily manured for the peas it will now be well rotted and force the cab- bage to grow off rapidly. ---Do not count that man foolish who harrows his 10 acre field 10 days be- fore he sows his wheat. This fine, pulyerization not only fits the soil for the best work, but it brings up the moisture in a dry time and gives a bar- dened bed underneath, which will just be the condition desired. —Late cabbage should be set out by the first of August, if possible. Unless a rain comes soon the process of water ing the plants when they are put out must be resorted to, as it will not be ad- visable to defer transplanting too late, Early cabbage should be kept clean and the ground loose. —Coarse ground bone on the orchard land will show good effects for many years, as the particles of bone will be given off gradually each year,and there will be less liability of loss of phos- phoric acid from leaching. Potash is also excellent on orchards, ashes be- ing very suitable. ---A young plant must have its pro- per food and drink, the same as a young animal. The fine, white roots are the feeding mouths. They suck and grow with good care ; they starve and die with neglect. The more mel- low the soil the more available the food, and the better within reach. Manure ie fertility ; that is, food. —Farming should not be confined to grass, grain and potatoes. Fruit brings good prices when other crops may be low. Apples havebeen very high in price for three years past, and the prospects are that the supply will fall far short of the demand this year. A plot of land devoted to an apple orchard should prove a profitable in- vestment for the future. —During this season the weather has been too dry for the lawns, and un- less facilities for applying water to the grass are withinreach the lawn will be dried up. Rake it over, so as to re- move all dead material, and when there is a plentiful supply of rain apply 20 pounds of nitrate of soda to one-fourth of an acre. Dissolve the nitrate in water of sufficient quantity to give every por- tion of the ground a sprinkling. —Lack of knowledge of the char- acteristics of the breeds has caused many failures. The country is full of farmers who have used the Jersey breed to improve their herds with the view of increasing the flow of milk, and this mistake has occurred with those who make a specialty of shipping milk to the cities, As the Jersey is not noted for large yields of milk many of those who made the experiments became dis- satiefied and refased to further improve. Before using a breed the farmer should determine for what purpose he intends to use it, and should therefore aim to secure the breed most suitable for his object. Hold Them Responsible. There should be some way of com- pelling the leaders in a strike—the men who urge it and order it—to ans- wer to public opinion, for their share of responsibility for the deeds of vio- lence done by their dupes. They should not be permitted to let loose the elements of disorder and carelessness and take refuge from the consequences behind the claim that they have ‘“‘nev- er manifested any inclinination to en- courage lawlessness,” That is the phrase in which the Chicago Z%mes, the organ of the strikers, echoes the defence made by smooth Mr. Debs. It cannot be said with truth that the leaders do not encourage lawlessness. They have the power to stop it any moment. They did stop it at Ham- mond, when threatened by Governor Matthews by the state troops. They give it their sanction, first by ordering a strike which they knew could have no chance of even temporary success without it, and second by refusing to exercise their power to prevent it. If they have lost this power of control, they are culpable for turning loose up- on the community influences which they well knew from experience wonld lead inevitably to lawlessness. Their followers understand what the leaders expect of them—that they must know their cue, aud when they get it must proceed to tie up the railroads, and tie them up tight, peaceably if possible, but by lawless force if necessary, and without requiring from their leaders such definite instructions and open sanction as would cause the removal ot those high-salaried autocrats from their comfortable hotels to close barred prisons. The dupe breaks the law, but the leader encourages him, orders him, in the way of doing it, and promises mon- ey for his defence. The meshes of the law should be close enough and strong enough to catch the real criminal. Debs is too smart a man not to know that his talk of a peaceable strike is non- sense, and that a peaceable strike, of the magnitude and character of the one he ordered, is an impossibility under present labor conditions. The men whose autocratic orders im- pose such loss and suffering upon the public are not responsible in the civil Courts for the damage they inflict. A judgment for damages against them would be worthless. When they have wrung enough out of their dupes to make them pecuniarily responsible they cease to be violent agitators and become advccates of conservative methods. Meantime, they should be made to ans- wer to the criminal laws for the vio- lence committed under their orders. As the heads of an organization which obeys orders implicitly, they issue com- mands that practically usurp the right of the Federal Government to regulate commerce. Their irresponsible reign should be brought to an end. On To London. That is Now the Cry of American Music Stus dents. As London is the Mecca of all Ameri- can travellers in their journeyings across the Continent, so it is also of ar- tists of every kind from all parts of the world, writes Norman Stuart to the “Sunday Journal.” . This is the time of the year when the hotels are full to overflowing. Then the boarding house mistress charges an extra price for her rooms, and gives poorer food and service in return therefor. The three promi- nent hotels, the Grand, the Victoria and the Metropole, all within a stone’s throw of each other in Northumberland Avenue, have not had a room vacant for several weeks, and have been com- pelled to turn people away daily. These hotels, with the American news- paper exchanges and Low’s exchange, all in the vicinity of Charing Cross, are the particular rendezvous of Americans. This is also the harvest time of the London music teachers. It is the vaca- tion time in Amercia, and hither come artists of all grades, professional and amateur, to hear the operas, the various concerts, take a few lessons with some of the more noted instructors, and re- turn home with what they are pleased to call European’ training. Signor Vanuncinni, of Florence, Italy, has al- ready come to London, where each summer he gathers in the ducats from bis admirers. Henschel is through with his orchestral labors in Scotland, and has his share of pupils from Ameri- ca and elsewhere. Randebegger, Shakespeare, Walker, Holland and a host of lesser lights are busy late into the Summer, and the various schools and academies do not close until late in July. Important to Contractors. The Supreme Court Declares an Act of Assem- bly Unconstitutional. Prior to 1891 the supreme court held that if a principal contractor agreed with the owner that no mechanic’s lien should be filed of record for any work done or material furnished in and about the construction of the building that then, and in that case a sub-contractor, or one furnishing material under an independent contract with the principal contractor was bound to take notice of the terms of the contract between the owner and original contractor, and was, thereby , precluded from filling a lien for any work done or material farnished by him in the construction of the build- ing. To the legislature of 1891 this was deemed by a hardship, and as a remedy they provided by act of assembly, ap- proved June 8, 1891, that the right of sub-contractors to file liens should in no way be effected by an agreement made by the original contractor or the owner, unless the same was agreed to in writing by the sub-contractor. The constitutionality of this act has been frequently questioned in the lower courts of this state, in many of which it was denied. And now we have an au- thoritative expression from the supreme court, which in the case of John T. Waters vs, Ann T. Wolfe, recently handed down, sustained the prevailing opinion of the lower courts by declaring the act of assembly squarely unconstitu- tional, The Mosquito Coast. The international complications at Bluefields make of especial interest just now a paper by Dr. R. N. Keely in the Popular Science Monthly. Dr. Keely in the beginning says it is quite possible that on a little reflection we may con- clude the fussy little republic of Nicara- gua is as essentially an integral part of the United States asif it lay between Chicago and Denver. The proposition will be startling to some minds until it is remembered that through Nicaragua the new American ship canal is to pass which gives us a waterway to the Paci- fic. Nicaragua is in a continual fer- ment, The Mosquito coast along her borders has long been watched with covetous eye by the English. Once let the English take possession of the Mos- quito coast, the next step will be the absorption of the Nicaragua and inter- oceanic ship canal also. That is the possibility to which Dr. Keely points. A protectorate of the United States for Nicaragua has already been suggested. The Mosquito coast, or Indian reser- vation, is a strip of land 200 miles long, 40 miles wide, running along the coast of the Carribbean sea in the southeast portion of Nicaragua. If you draws line from Indianapolis due south, it will touch the western boundary of the Mos- quito Indian reservation. The capitol of the Mosquito county is the town of Bluefields, formerly written Blewfields. It is the only seaport the reservation has a little wooden village. It would not have been even that if American money and enterprise had not built it up. It is incidental to the growth of the great banana industry, at which some of our fellow citizens are doing well, bless them | The other industry of Mosquitoland is the cutting and ship- ping of mahogany timber, of which vast quantities are tound. The natives are Indians of various tribes. Those in the interior are of comparatively pure blood. Thosealong the coast are a mixture of Indian and negro, with a dash of white contributed by traders and the jolly old pirates of the Spanish main. It rains nine months in‘ the year in Mosquito land. Still ~~ white people who are theredo well financially. The soil is of extraordinary fertility which is one reason why the Mosquitoes are no further advanced in civilization. Life is too easy. Nicaragua exercises a protectorate over the Mosquitoes and would like to exercise something more. — Altoona Mirror. Various Materials for Road Building. Funace slag has been used on com- mon roads in Trumbull county, O., as long ago as 1854. This material may be used to some advantage if the supply is not remote, but it lacks in wearing quality, though doing fairly well while it lasts. Probably any furnace man can explain the great differences in this cinder product, some being hard and du- rable while much that is produced in re- cent years crumbles merely from weath- er action, so pulverizing as to form a soil that invites the humbler forms of vegetation. It is only a stone that does not readily yield to wheel grinding or frost action that is at all worthy to en- ter into road construction. The ton- nage to be handled is too immense to make short-lived material practicable. Common sandstone has no qualities that render it fit for highway purposes. Common river or drift gravel is good, when hauling is not too far, and sand on clay roads cuts the adhesiveness of the sticky material and prevents the form- ing of ruts. Roads on sand or gravel are never in a channeled condition, but wheeling is nevertheless heavy in dry sand. A sand road is best when wet. In the vicinity of Fort Wayne, Ind., considerable has been done in making roads with gravel from the beds of the St. Mary and St. Joseph rivers. But the annual wear is about 20 per cent of the material, so that a road is practical- ly rebuilt about every five years. The wheels soon grind up a dust on the sur- face, which both wind and heavy rains carry away. This action is repeated many times through the summer season, when the loss is much greater than dur- iug the winter. It isa fact, however, that the gravels of those rivers is of a poor quality, as the soil tormations they are not of a good character for good road material from its pebbles. It is not necessary to mention wood as a road material, as neither the plank roads nor the Nicholson, or, so far as the writer is aware, any other wooden road isa real success as a road. There are counties in Western Ohio where lime- stone roads are common, and they are fine roads, but they occurin very exten- give formations, much of the stone forming road surface in a state of nature. Use of Swearing. Does it Supply the Wants of a Defective Vocabu- lary ? According to the headmaster of Den- stone College, the so-called ‘‘use’” of swearing is to ‘supply the wants of a defective vocabulary.” At public schools, he says, ‘swearing is only found among the biggest louts,”” who have no command of incisive language without resorting to set phrases. This is certainly not always the case. “Ifit be urged,” he adds, ‘‘that sometimes men of ordinary common sense do swear, it is not from any difficulty to shake off the habit, but prabably because they consider that Beelzebub, in the sense they mean tc invoke him, is as harm- less as Sardanapalus would bo as a sub- stitute.” Swearing among boys, the headmas- ter of Bradfield says, frequently takes the form of mere garnish to conversa- tion, and often disappears with years and increased education—its use, in fact, ‘merely acting as stuffing in the chinks of the mind.” Dr. Parker holds that there is no substitute’ for swearing, which he supposes, means the use of bad language. “It is vulgar, indecent, foolish and pestilent. It adds no strength, no dignity, no true force to speech. It is no use attacking ‘swear- ing.” Attack the swearer ; make him a clean-mouthed man ; and to make him clean-mouthed he must be made clean- hearted. Speech should be pure, beau- tiful, musical, sympathetic. The swear- er isakin toa mad dog.— Westminster Gazette. ——Subscribe for the Warcaman, . Peanut Cultivation. There is a new industry now being introduced in the State of Washington which might be successfully initiated in our own State, viz : The cultivation of the peanut. From experiments in Germany it has been ascertained than the peanut contains more nutritive ma- terial than any other form of food, more than milk butter, eggs, lard, or bacon, beef etc. The American peanut con- tains 42 per cent of oil. The Germans express this and sell it at about sixty cents a gallon. Itissweet and nutri- tious and much better forsalads than the cottonseed oil which we import from Italy under the name of oliveoil. Af- ter expressing the oil the Gerrans pre- are four forms of food from the peanut. lour, which contains the husk, ete. ; grits, similar to our preparation of corn, plain biscuits and a diabetic biscuit which, being free from sugar, is used in cases of diabetes.— Dr. John Morris in Baltimore News. *Your MONEY or YOUR LIFE !"”— Such a demand, at the mouth of a ‘‘six- shooter,” sets a man thinking pretty live- ly! With a little more thinking, there would be less suffering. Think of the terrible results of neg- lected consumption ! which might easily be averted by the time use of Nature's Great Specific, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery. Consumption, which is Lung-scrofula is a constitutional disease, requires just such a thorough and effectual constitu- tional remedy !| Taken in time, before the lung-tissues are wasted, it is guaran- teed a radical cure | Equally certain in all scrofulous affections and blood dis- orders. Large bottles, one dollar, of any druggist. ——Joaquin Miller’s growing on his California ranch a mile of roses. He believes families live too close together : therefore, in place of building one large house, he has erected four small ones—one for his mother, one for his brothers, one for his swn use and the fourth for his guests. ——W. H. Nelson, who is in the drug business at Kingville, Mo., has so much confidence in Chamberlain’s Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy that he warrants every bottle and offers to re- fund the money to any customer who is not satisfied after using it. Mr. Nelson takes no risk in doing this because the Remedy is a certain cure for the diseases for which its intended and he knows it. It is forsale by, F. P. Green. ——1If you want printing of any de scripton the WATCHMAN office is the place to have it done. Business Notice. Children Cry or Pitcher’s Castoria. 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 Castoria, 38-43-2y Medical. Saddlery. IN FuBALolA ATTACKS THE EYES MAKES THE LIGHT UNBEARABLE. PERMANENTLY CURED BY USING AYER'S PILLS “My husband was subject to severe attacks of neuralgia which caused him great pain and suffering. The pains were principally about his eyes, and he often had to remain in a darken- ed room, not being able to stand the light. Ayers Pills being recommended, he tried them, using one before each meal. They very soon afforded re- lief, followed by perma- nent cure. Iam a strong believer in the efficacy of Ayer’s Pills, and would not be without them for ten times their cost.”—Mrs. M. E. DEBAT, Liberty, Tex. “I have used Ayer’s Pills in my family for forty years, and regard them as the very best.—Uncle MArTIN HANcock, Lake City, Fla. AYERS PILLS Admitted for Exhibition AT THE WORLD'S FAIR. 30-16-1¢ New Advertisements. az EYE SPECIALIST H. E. HERMAN, & CO., Limited. Formerly with QUEEN & Co., OF PHILADELPHIA. AT W. T. ACHENBACH, JEWELER, BELLEFONTE, SATURDAY, AUG. 4th, From 8:30 a. m., to 5:30 p. m. There is no safer, surer, or cheaper method of obtaining proper relief for overstrained and defective eyesight, headache, and so forth, than to consult this specialist. The happy re- sults from correctly fitted glasses are a grate- ful surprise to persons who have not before known the real progteo themselves in wearing good glasses. No charge to examine Mo] eyes, All glasses are guaranteed by H. E. erman. 38-49-1y Buggies, Carts Etc. UGGIES CARTS & HARNESS AT HALF PRICE. $90 Top Buggy.......337] We Cut the PRICES ) Pa |and outsell all competi- Road on......525/toIs. $16 Road Cart. .... Gis Buy of factory and Buggy Harness....$3.85(save middleman’s pro- $10 Buggy “.......84.75/5¢ $30 Team “....... $12.50 Morgan Saddle....$1.65 Catalogue Free. U.S. BUGGY & CART CO: 38-30-1y 2 to 12 Lawrence St., Cincinnatti, 0, Printing. Printing. For JOB PRINTING, ' Fine Job Printing 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. 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 JobPrinting. ~[AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE]- {J CHOFIELD'S NEW HARNESS HOSUE — 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, former y 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 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 displayed and still kept away from heat and dust, the enemies o long wear in leather. Our factory now occupies a room 16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes it the largest establishment of its kind outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. Weare prepared to offer better in the future than we have done in En 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 I e, but y selling lots of goods we can afford to live in Bellefonte. We are noi 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 bi, ® 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 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. ion tn Sh ani REGS, prices from .00 and upwards STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per 8et$25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE COLLARS from $1,650 to $5 each, over $100.00 worth o HARNESS OILS and AXLE GREASE, $400 worth of Fly Nets sold $150 worth of whips from 15¢ to $3.00 each, 1g Horse Brushes : £omba nges, amois, DING SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per und. We keep everything to be found £2 a TRST CLASS HARN. STORE—no chang- ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two Shore in the same town to catch trade—N® 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. AS. SCHOFIELD, Soring street, Bellefonte, I’a. pa ——— Kluminating Oil. cheap 33 37 CrovN 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 WORLD. Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station Bellefonte, Pa. ra, 3737 1y Miscellaneous Advs. WHAT CAN'T PULL OUT? WHY THE LL Torserivens a es sere i od 0 Bow on the JAS. BOSS FILLED weeses —— WATCH CASES, made by the KEYSTONE WATCH CASE COM- PANY, Philadelphia. It protects the Watch from the pick-pocket, and prevents it from dropping. Can only be had with cases stamped with this trademark Sold, without extra charge for this bow (ring), through: Watch dealers only. Ask your jeweler for pamphlet, 39-27-4¢ — or send to makers. Fine Job Printing. Bx: JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY——o0 AT THE WATCHMAN o OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapest Dodger” to the finest 0—-BOOK-WORK,—o but you can get done in the most satisfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office.