Demorralit Wacom Bellefonte, Pa., March 22, 1895. Farm Notes. —Peas have already been planted in some sections of the country around Philadelphia for an early supply. —Now is the time, before the plants begin to start off, to apply potash and superphosphate to the strawberry plants. The nitrates can go ona little later. —A crop of early peas may be got- ten out of the way in time to allow of a later crop of the same kind, or the peas may be followed by cabbage. po- tatoes, turnips or beans. —The best way to dispose of coal ashes is to use them on the walkways and paths. They soon make a hard surface. For filling up of holes on the road they are excellent, and it will pay to collect them for such use. —1In all Michiganit is found that pasturing off the first growth of red clover, is the best preparation for a crop of seed. It is pastured off close until the 10th or 15th of June and then allowed to produce a crop of seed. —If the lawn is thin give it an appli- cation of wood ashes and finely-ground bone. Seed it with blue grass and white clover, or try the lawn grass mixtures. About the middle of April give an application of nitrate of soda or sulphate of ammonia. —In the central lattitudes the crape myrtle, one of the most beautiful of late summer blooming shrubs, is quite hardy. What this and many other partly tender plants require is protec- tion for a year or two in winter until they become large; afterward they need no protection. —Do not turn the stock on the pas- ture too soon. Give the grass an op- portunity to get a start and make growth. The feet of the animals do damage, and sheep graze very close to the ground. The pasture will be more serviceable by allowing the grass an opportunity to grow. —The late-flowering wild azalea, taken from the woods in spring, prun- ed in and well mulched for the summer flourishes well in any good garden sit- uation. It blooms in June and July, and is the most sweet-scented of them all. The blossoms are white, and stay out in their beauty a long time. —Mixed food always gives better re- sults than a single diet. Corn is the staple food for nearly all classes of stock, but corn is deficient in lime, and is not suitable for growing stock unless fed in connection with some other kinds of foods. Mixed food affords a variety, and is consequently more highly relished. —Seed should be covered. It is true that clover seed, sown on the surface of the ground, grows and makes a good stand sometimes, but it is safe to claim that the large portion of the seed never germinates and is lost. If grass seed is to be sown on lawns the surface should be scratched with a harrow, seeded and rolled. —Rye and crimson clover are said to be crops that require no land if they are turned under the soil, because they are seeded in the fall, remain on the ground during the winter, and are out of the way in time for planting the spring crops, occupying the land at a season of the year when nothing else . can be grown upon it. —All plants require food and drink. If either is lacking the plant will not thrive. Poor land cannot produce good crops, because it cannot provide sufficient food. Weeds require water, and if not kept down they take from the crop, during seasons when moisture is not abundant, the water 80 necessary for the success of the crop. —The wheat field should be rolled after a heavy frost, so as to press the plants into the soil if they have been thrown up. Where a field is some- what damp from insufficient drainage, and heavy frosts occur, the plants are liable to be thrown up until their roots are exposed. The roller should be put on the field as soon as the condition of the soil will permit. —Mix the horse manure and cattle manure in the same heap, and use a liberal supply of muck, dry dirt, litter, or marl to absorb the liquids. Should the heap begin to heat spread it out, throw water or urine on it, and more absorbent material and heap it again. This creates work, but it will make the manure more valuable than if it receives no care. —March and April are excellent months for the sows to farrow. If the young pigs are kept in a warm place, 80 a8 not to allow them to be chilled, they will grow very rapidly by the time they are weaned and have warm weather before them. The spring pigs that are carefully attendsd to, so as to start off well, will be nearly as large at the end of the year as the pigs that are farrowed in the tall, —Cut back the rose bushes so as to get more new wood. They can stand considerable ehortening and will be bevefitted thereby. Rose bushes will not thrive on grass plots. They must be on rich land and kept clean of grass and weeds, while the =o0il should be loosened slightly on the surtace occa- sionally. They ghould not be cultivat- ed too much. Simply keep the ground clean. —Get the new strawberry land in condition. New beds should have the plants in position before April 15, if possible, so as to give thew the spring in which to get a start and become well established before the dry season sets in. A week or two is quite an ad- vantage with strawberries, After plowing the land and harrowing it well, apply wood ashes and ground bone, and then harrow it again before putting out the new plants, RI TTI BR in It Was Butter. Chemical Analysis of the Alleged Butterine Awarded Prizes at the State Dairymen’s Asso- ciation, Held at Meadville Recently, Shows That It was Butter. At the Twenty-first Annual Meeting of the Pennsylvania State Dairymen’s Association held in Meadville, Feb. 6, 7 and 8, 1895, the undersigned were ap- pointed a commtttee to judge the butter on exhibition and award the prizes of- fered by the Association. In the two classes, viz., the one pound package and the five pound package, there were twenty-three entries including one entry in each class made by Mr. A. J. Palm, editor of the Meadville Messenger in the names of A. P. White and W. R. Fisk, of Sheakleyville, Pa., and S. H. Dunn, of Hadley, Pa., whom Mr. Palm claim- ed to be representing. After the committee had examined the exhibits with reference to flavor, texture, color and salt, in the form and manner customary in such cases, and reported its score, and after the samples had been removed by the exhibitors and the Association had adjourned, statement was made public through the medium of the daily press that the pack- ages entered as butter by Mr. Palm, in the name of these local da‘ry men, were butterine, procured from Chicago for exhibition as butter. The committee had awarded second prize in the one pound class and third prize in the five pound class to these packages. At the suggestion of the Committee, George H. St. John, Sec- retary of the Association, procured from Mr. Palm a sample of the packages whose genuineness was questioned, and this sample was sent to The Pennsyl- vania State College Agricultural Ex- periment Station by express, under seal, for chemical analysis. Relating to this sample, Mr. Palm wrote Professor H. J. Waters, under date of February 15, as follows : “Professor St. John asked me for a sample to send you and I took a part of the roll on which a premium was award- ed. If he sends you the sample I gave him, and I have no fears that he will not, you will have no difficulty in de- ciding by a chemical test that it is but- terine. I have both original packages with the marks of the instrument in get- ting a sample, so there is no chance for any final difference of opinion on the question as to what it 1s. [Signed] “A, J. PATm.” The affidavit of George H. St. John, hereto attached, to theeffect that he per- sonally delivered the sample furnished him by Mr. Palm to the Wells Fargo Express Company to be forwarded un- der seal to Professor Waters, leaves no possible doubt as to the identity and correctness of the sample received by the Experiment Station. This sample was delivered to Dr. William Frear, Chemist of the State Board of Agricul- ture and of the Experiment Station, with the seal unbroken, as witnessed by his affidavit herewith presented. A careful chemical analysis was made under the personal supervision of Dr. Frear, and the result as compared with the accepted standard composition of pure butter, butterine and oleomar- garine, is shown in the table : Equivalent Curd Melting Point Deg. Centigrade Saponification Volatile Fatty Acids Pure Butter |29,35 |236,5-260 7|15,0 36-4] 19-478 Mepdvilie or 0 9 ample 34,1 (256, y Butterine 34,40 [274,200 |0,4-8,6 (74.1,82 Olectndiger 34,40 [274,200 [0,7 62 ne It will be seen that the sample in question, known as the Meadville sam- ple, agrees in composition with butter and differs essentially from either but- terine or oleomargarine. The most distinctive and infallible test for artificial butter and adulterations is the content of volatile fatty acids, which, while varying widely in pure butter when made from individual cows or under special conditions of feed, ete., appears to be fairly constant for the pure commercial product made under average conditions. The range under these circumstances may, perhaps, be safely placed at from 20 to 28. Tt will be seen that the Meadville sample oc- cupies an intermediate position, stand- ing at 25.6, while commercial butterine has a maximum content of only 8.6 and oleomargarine, 7 The next most decisive test is the saponification equivalent, which has a range in pure butter of 236.7 to 260.7. The Meadville sample is within the range, standing at 256.7, and is too low for either of the artificial materials, which stand at from 274-290. In melting point and per cent. of curd, the analyzed sample is clearly within the limit of pure butter, al- though, since the introduction of cotton- seed meal and other new dairy feeds, the Experiment Station tests have shown that the melting point of herd butter 1s not infrequently raised to 40 degrees. This is not, therefore, so conclusive & test for artificial butters as it was for-, merly thought to be. It is evident from these resuits that the manufacturers of butterine from whom the packages were obtained by Myr. Palm for exhibition, furnished but- ter instead of butterine as charged. Signed, JouN C. McCLINTOCK, A.L. WaLses, H.J. WATERS. Affidavit of George H. St. John, relat- ing to the correctness and genuine- ness of the sample sent for analysis. 1, George H. St. John, Secretary of the Pennsylvania State Dairymen’s Association, hereby certify that on the thirteenth day of February, 1895, I pro- cured from A. J. Palm, of Meadvilie, Pennsylvania, a sample of the material entered by him in the name of S. H. Dunn for exhibition as butterat the annual meeting of the said Dairyman’s Association at Meadville, Pennsyl- vania, held on the sixth, seventh and eighth days of February of the year written above. 1 further affirm and swear that the same sample secured from A. J. Palm, was by me personally sealed and deliv- ered to the Wells-Fargo Express Com- pany at their office in Meadville, ad- dressed and consigned to H. J. Waters, | State College, Pennsylvania, and to my best knowledge and belief said sample the | was duly forwarded by said express company. [Signed, ] GEorGE H. St. JOHN. Subscribed and sworn before me this fourth day of March A. D,, 1895. Mires W.,TATE, Notary Public, Meadville, Pa. [sEAL] Affidavit of Dr. Wm. Frear relating to the Composition of the sample ana- lyzed. I, William Frear, Chemist of The Pennsylvania State College Agricul tural Experiment Station, certify that 1 received a sealed express package mark- ed “from G. H. St. John, Meadville, Pennsylvania,” containing a substance resembling butter, which I personally opened and prepared. I further certify that the usual and customary chemical analysis of the same was conducted under my personal supervision, and that the complete and full results of such analysis are; Melt- ing point, 34.1 degrees centigrade ; saponification equivalent. 256.7; vola- tile fatty acids, 25.6 ce. ; curd., 9 per cent. [Signed, ] WiLLiAM FREAR. Subscribed and sworn before me this first day of March A. D., 1895. ALBERT Hoy, J. P. State College, Pa. A Kindly Warning. A little girl in this city, in saying her prayers the other night, was told to pray for her father and mother, who are both very ill and for one of the servants who had lost her husband. She did as instructed, and concluded her petition with these words: “And now, O God, take good care of yourself, because if anything should happen to you we would ali go to pieces. Amen.” —— Astronomers say that on Good Friday next, April 12, the heavenly bodies which gravitate round the sun will be in exactly the same position they occupied in the firmament the day Christ died on the cross. It will be the first time such a thing has occurred since that great day, just 1,862 years ago. That was the thirty-third year of the Christian era, which dates from the birth of Jesus Christ. At 11:20 p. m., on April 11, New York time, the moon will pass before Virginis (Spica), and hide that constellation for over an hour. 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 A Small Youth’s Retort. The pompous schoolmaster some- times finds himself in a position which 1s not entirely to his taste. A great Eoglish wit, Mark Lemon, once wrote a book in which he told of a chubby- faced little urchin who passed his con- ceited instructor upon the street with- out bowing. The schoolmaster stop- ped and frowned. “What has become of your manners sir 2’ he roared. “It seems to me that you are better fed than taught.” ! “Yes, sir,” replied the little boy. “That's because you teaches me ; but I feeds myself, sir.” . ——Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy gives the best satisfaction of any cough medicine I handle, and as a seller leads all other preparations in this market. I recommend it because it isthe best med- icine I ever handled for coughs, colds and croup. A. W. Baldridge, Millers- ville, Ill. For sale by F. P. Green. Medical. ASTHMA, DISTRESSING COUGH, SORE JOINTS AND MUSCLES. DESPAIRED OF RELIEF. CURED BY AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL “Some time since, I had a severe at- tack of asthma, accompanied with a distressing cough and a general sore- ness of the joints and muscles. I con- sulted physicians and tried various remedies, but without gettihg any re- lief, until I despaired of ever being well again. Finally, I took Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and in a very short time, was entirely cured. I can, there- fore, cordially and confldently com- mend this medicine to all.””—J. Ros- ELLs, Nictoria, Texas. “My wife had a very troublesome cough. She used Ayer’s Cherry Pecto- ral and procured immediatejrelief.”’— G. H. Roperick, Humphreys, Ga. AYER'S CHERRY PECTORAL The only Cure Admitted Castoria. 38-43-2y WORLD'S FAIR Chicago, 1893. Why not get the i ? 39-17-1 Printing. 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 3 ob 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 Printiny. Fine Job Printing Fine Job Printing. Fine Joh Printing. Fine Job Printing. —fAT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE]- Sechler & Co. Saddlery. QECHLER & CO.——* GROCERS—BUSH HOUSE BLOCK. ——HEAD QUARTERS FOR— FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, SPICES AND FRUITS IN TEAS we have Oolongs, Gun-Pow- der, Imperial, Young Hyson, Japan English Breakfast, and our Fine Blend- ed Tea is something that will please any one who appreciates a cup of Royal Tea. IN SPICES, Cinnamon, Cloves, Al spice, Nutmeg, Mace, Ginger, Cayennt Pepper, Mustard all strictly pure goods, IN COFFEES AND CHOCCLATE, Mocha—genuine, Java—Old Govern ment, Rio— Finest Brazilian. All ex- cellent quality and always fresh roasted. Baker's Premium Chocolate and Break- fast Cocoa, Van Houten's Cocoa, Wil- bur’s Chocolate, ‘and German Sweet Chocolate. IN COOKING EXTRACTS we keep a line of Joseph Burnett & Co's, (Bos- ton) goods, they are the finest we can find, also a line of Knight's extracts. BEANS, California Limas, New York ae and Pea Beans, dried Green eas. RICE New Crop Carolina Head Rice. DOMESTIC CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES, ToMATOES Cottage, Home and Worthington Brands —CoRrN Persian and Mountain Brands, —CorN Granules, Lima Beans and Succotash, Dew Drop brand. GREEN Pras, Early Junes, Scottish chief and Cecelia brands. PiNe APPLE sliced and grated, Strawberries and White Cher- ries, Dew Drop brand. Boston Baked Beans. CALIFORNIA CANNED FRUITS, Yellow Crawford, Lemon Cling, and White Heath Peaches, White. Cherria and Apricots. IMPORTED VEGETABLES AN1 FRUITS, French Peas and Mush- rooms, Preserved Cherries, Straw- berries, Brandy Cherries and Crosse Blackwell's Jams all in glass. MISCELLANEOUS, Pure Maple Syrup, Honey strained and in combs, Plum Pudding, Armour’s Corned Beef Potted Tongue and Ham, Condensed milk, Dunham's Shred Cocoa nut. Rich Mild Cream Cheese, Small Family Cheese, Bradford County Dairy But- ter. Buckwheat Flour, Corn Flour, Gluten Flour, Vienna Flour. Fine Confectioners and Cut Loaf Sucars Extra Fine New Crop New Or .eans Syrups, Pure White Sugar Table Syrup, Pure Cider Vinegar. NUTS, Princess Paper Shell, Califor nia and Bordan Almonds, Assorted Nuts, English Walnuts, Pecans extra large, Cream Nuts, Fresh Roasted Peanuts, Cocoa Nuts extra quality. IN CONFECTIONARY, we haw Fine Mixtures, Cream Chocolates Roast Almonds, Cream Dates, Ros and Vanilla, Jordon Almonds, Frencl Glace Fruits, Fine Chocolate Caramels Chocolate Marsh Mallows, Cocoa Nw bon bons, Chocolate Madridos, Lozenges, Clear Toys, and a large assortment of fine ns in this line all carefully se- lected. FRANQOO AMERICAN SOUPS, French Bouillon, Consomme, Ox Tail, Mock Turtle, Mulligatawny, and Terrapin. OLIVE OIL, S. Rea. § Cos} Pint, Pints and Quarts. The finest ana- lysis in the World pronounces it pure. PICKLES IN GLASS, Crasse ¢§ Blackwell's Chow Chow, Gherkins, Mixed, White Onions, Cauliflower, Picalilli, and Walnuts. CEREAL GOODS. Oat Meal, Rolled Oat, Cracked Wheat, Pearl Barley, Breakfast and Dinner Hominy, Ma- carom and Vermacceli. MEATS. Fine Sugar Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon and Dried Beef, White Rose Lard. GREEN FRUITS, Florida Oranges, Messina Lemons, White Almeria Grapes, Catawba Grapes, and Jersey Cranberries. . CURED FRUITS. Evaporated Cali- Jornia Pared and unpared Peaches, and Apricots. RAISINS, Imperial Cluster, Fine Lay- ers, Ondaras, Valencias, Sultana and California Seedless and Loose Mu» catels. FISH. New Mackerel very fine, Qodfish boneless and evaporated, SALMO Magnolia, Astoria and Glacier brand Hoeg’s Spiced Salmon, Shrimps, Leb sters, Crab Meats and Spiced Oysters Sardines, French s, and 3s Boneless. SECHLER & CO. 38-1 BELLEFONTE, Pa. SCHOFIELD NEW HARNESS HOUSE 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, 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 aud dust, the enemies of 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. 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 Jon will buy. Our profits are not large, 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. Profits 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 4) houses of this city’ and county would smile it 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, Sra from $8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per 8et$25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,006 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 Sponges, Chamois, RIDING SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per pound. We keep everythingto be found in a FIRST CLASS HARN STORE—no chang- ing, or years in she same room. No two ops 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 hands, they soon found work with us. JAS. SCHOFIELD, 33 37 Soring street, Bellefonte, Pa, Illuminating Oil. {own 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 that IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD Ask your dealer for it. Trade suppliea by THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station, Bellefonte, Pa. 89 37 1y Miscellaneo 8 Advs. PArEns, CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS. CAN I''OBTAIN A PATENT? For a prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to Munn & Co., who have had nearly fifty years’ experience in the patent business. Communications strictly confidential. A hand- book of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Munn & Co., receive special notice in the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public without cost to the inventor. This splendid paper; issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has y far the largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. $3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Sin- gle copies, 25 cents. Everv number contains beautiful plates, in colors, and Photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure con- tracts. Address MUNN & CO., 361 Broadway. 40-3-6m New York, Fine Job Printing. re JOB PRINTING 0———A SPECIALTY——¢ AT THE WATCBMAN o OFFICE There is no style of work, from the chenpes Dodger” to the finest 0—BOOK-WORK.-¢ but you can get done in the most satistacior manner, and at Prices consistent with the class nt work by calling or communicating with this othe. |