Demonic atm Bellefonte, Pa., July 26, 1895. - ~~ Humane Treatment of Horses. Cruelty or Carelessness is Expensive. It pays to treat tarm animals kindly. The steers or hogs dogged around, kicked, and abused generally, do not fatten eo well as those humanely treat- ed ; and the maltreated cow does not give so much milk as the one kindly treated and petted. No farm animal gives a greater or more substantial re- turn for kindness than the horse. The abused horee is never safe. his constant companion, and he may kick or run away atany time. He wears much faster than the animal not kept at a high nervous tension. And es and eores directly reduce his ca- pacity for work. Farm animale are treated much more humanely now than they were fifty years ago. but there is yet much room for improvement. Almost every day I see horses working with galled shoulders or sore backs or sides. These sores make the animal suffer and re- duce his capacity for work. In nine- teen cases out of twenty they would be prevented by a little, very little, intelli- gent care. Such care is profitable in dollars and cents, not to speak ot the higher motive for its exercige. Sometimes galls are the result of ig- norance, not indifference. Two hours ago | saw passing a horse with a very core shoulder. I know his owner and driver well—not a cruel man, but un- intelligent, having a very poor ‘“‘think- er.” 1 called to him and asked him why he drovea horse with such a shoulder. He said he had to use the horse, and had done all he could to get . the shoulder well, and he called my at- tention to the grease he had put on the sore and to the pad—and the pad was placed right on the sore! When I in- quired why the pad was so placed (where it aggravated the evil), [ was told that it was eoft and ought to make the pressure on the sore spot easier. It had not occurred to the driver that the pad so placed really increased the pres- sure on that spot. In ten minutes there was a good pad justabove the sore and another just below it, and none over it; and my friend bad eome instruc- tions about curing galls, which I will repeat. But, first. about a good pad. Ii is not & very thick one—usually half an inch in thickness when the animal is pulling is better than more—but a broad pad ; and itis never stuffed with cotton or wool, which forms into hard lumps in a short time, but with fine timothy hay, which does not form in- to hard fusgpe and which does not loge its elasticity™, A hay pad springs the collar forward“as soon as the draught is removed, resticg and cooling the shoulder. The best pad is made of an old trousers leg, wrapped around the collar, and held in place by the hames. Of course there should be very little hay under the hames.and between the eollar and the neck of the horse. As for those instructions, the first is don't. Don’t put grease of any kind on a gall. [It softens the hide, increas- ing the probability of its being broken and worn off; and if the flesh is ex- pesed, greage keeps it tender and more sengitive while not aiding so much as some other things in healing: The best preventive ot galls, after properly fitting collars, is strong salt water, used ag a bath on the shoulders each even- i 8 use should be begun four ‘weeks before the animals are put in the plow in the epring. I wrapa cloth around one end of a corncob, on which a string will hold it securely in place, on account of the cob being rough. A handful of salt ie thrown in a fruit can kept for the purpose, the cau ic nearly filled with water, stirred with the cob till the salt is dissolved, and then the bath is applied with the cob and cloth. This salt-water bath is also the best cure for galls of which I know. It reduces inflammation and swelling very rapidly. It the ekin is broken, wait till a dry film is formed over the exposed flesh (which will soon form when the pressure of the collar is removed) before applying the bath. Sometimes, but very rarely, a gall turns itd a hard tumor that only the kuife can cure ; but the knife should always be used by a competent veterin- arian. The useof the knife on farm animals is almost a passion with some people, and thie inclination cannot be too strongly condemned. Its gratitica- tion is nearly always unnecessary, not intrequently is very barmful, and is always very painful. sharp knife blade into & gall. relic of barbarism. The best preventive of galls is well- fitted harness. Harness should never be bought when the animal is not at hand to be well fitted. This is true of all parts of the harness, and particular- ly of the collar. There is a great varie- ty in horses’ shoulders as there is in men’s noses, and because a collar fits one horse is no reaton why it should fit another. Before a collar is pur- chased every part of its face should be carefully preseed, that if there are hard lumps in the collar, or if it is harder in places than others, it may be rejected. Very many collars are poor- ly etuffed—one side is harder than the other, or some spots are harder than others. Such a collar will never be eatisfactory to the man having a wise regard for the comfort and usefulness of his horsee. One can fit a collar eomewhat to a shoulder by cutting a slit along the groove in which the hames fit, pulling out some of the stuf- fing, and pounding down the face of the collar with a stick of wood having no sharp corners. A &lit should never be cut in the face of the collar. A sore on the top of the neck may develop into a very eerious thing. Nearly always it is caused by one oi two things—lack of the proper flap of stiff leather under the strape, or im- proper hitching, which mrkes a heavy weight on the horses’ necks. This last It iva Fear is § Don’t stick a’ is to be avoided for the additional rea- son that it adds much to the fatigue of | the team. Farm machinery ie now eo constructed that there will be very little weight on the horses’ neck, if they are properly hitched. If the tongue does not play up and down in the neck yoke ring, one should make an investigation. Home-made imple- ments, particularly rollers and drag, : dre frequently so constructed that there is so much weight on the horses’ necks that their labor is increased one- half. Sometimes only the reconstrue- tion of the implement will remedy this, and sometimes placing the whiffletrees undernesth instead of on top of the tongue, will make the end of the tongue balance as it should. To have the tugs shave the sides of the animal is galling to nervous horses, and can be avoided by using longer whiffletrees. Stiff, hard barness adds not a little to the fatigue of the animal —how much one can get an idea of when he considers how it tires him to wear new stiff shoes in plowing. Oil will make the harness soft and pliable, and at the same time will lengthe its life, I cannottake space to men ‘on other ways in which we may t .at horses more humanely and kindly, jut they can easily be found by the honest, intelligent seeker ; and it is true that it is profitable to the purse, as it should be comforting to the mind, to treat all farm animals with regard to their com. fort.— Country Gentleman. Wages of all Increased. BripceporT, Conn., July 17.—Late Monday afternoon General Manager Blanchard of the Rubber trust visited the plant in Newtown and had a notice posted that beginning yesterday the wages of all the employes would be jn- creased an amount equal to one-half the reduction of 1893. The company pledges itself to a full restoration of wages on the old scale as soon as busi- ness warrants it. This move of the general manager is believed to have been made in anticipation of 8 demand for the restoration of the old rates en- tire. A petition to that effect was then being circulated among the workmen, A maes meeting was held in Costello’s opera house Monday night, and the standing grievance committee of the employes was instructed to demand the old scale of wages. Increase of Wages. The Workers ina Pottstown Steel Plant Get a 20 Per Cent Advance. Porrsrown, Pa., July 17.—The vail- ers at Ellis & Lessig’s iron and steel plant have been notified that on and after Aug. 1 they will receive an. in- crease of 20 8-10 per cent. in wages. On the same date the men employed in the plate mill will be put back to the scale of 1894. which is a decided advance over the present rate. A Good Suggestion. RocHESTER, N. Y.—John Davis of this city, took a severe cold and suffered pa through the back and kidneys. is physician proncunced his case gravel, and failed to help him. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy was recommended, and after taking two bottles he was cured. It has never fail- ed in gravel or urinary troubles. Tin Plate Mill to Start. One Hundred Men to be Given Employment at Cumberland. CuMBERLAND, Md., July 21.—The tin plate mill bere, which has been idle for some time, will start up to-morrow in all its departments. The plant gives employment to about 100 hands. i . Advance in Wages. { FITCHBURG, Maes, July 17.—The operatives of the Beoli and Fitchburg Worsted company’s mills bave receiv- ed the following notice : “On July 29 the schedule of wages 1n this mill will be recondition if business will admit.” The advance will aftect 600 operatives, Hood's pills are purely vegetable, carefully prepared from the best ingre- dients. 25c. Business Notice. —— ee ee—————e ea Children Cry or Pitcher’s Castoria. When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, # Wher she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, che clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Won't Be Taken to Toronto. Holmes to Be Tried in Philadelpdia for the Murer of Pietzel. ! — — 1 PHILADELPHIA, July 17.—Tois af ternoon District Attorney Graham eaid there was little chance of Holmes being taken to Toronto to be tried for the murder of the Pietzel girls. He | has found evidence, he said, which : leads to the conclusion that the body found in the Callowhill street house, this city, was Pietzel’s, and he is now preparing to try Holmes here on the charge of murdering Pietzel. Dectective Grier, who unearthed the bodies of the Pietzel girls in Toronto, is in almost hourly commuuication with the district attorney. Late this afternoon District Attorney Grabam received a telegram from him, dated Toronto, which said : “I am goicg to Detroit to look for Howard Pieizel.” Holmes is believed to bave murdered Howard in that city, and Grier is go- ing there to endeavor to discover the body. Preparing for the Big Fight. Darras, Tex., July 16.—The ad- verse opinion of Attorney General Crane to the legality of the Corbett Fitzsimmons contest created no sur prise at the fight headquarters. It will be claimed that the license law re- quiring the payment of $500 has never been repealed. Manager Dan Stuart is going ahead with his preparations for the fight. To-day the contract for the erection of the great Texas Col- liseum will be let to the lowest respon- sible bidder, and in a few days the ground will be staked and operations begun. ——Read the WaTcEMAN. Books, Magazines Ete. —The Midsummer Holiday number of The Century, the issue for August, will have an article appropriate to the vacation season “Fox-Hunting in Kentucky,” written by John Fox, Jr. Mr. Fox is a member of a well-known Blue-Grass family, and has written several romances of the Kentucky mountains. He not only describes the sport as practiced in his native State, but does so with many touches of character which will be recognized in that region for their local truthfulness. Although fox-hunting had been indulged in for many years, it was somewhere about 1855, says Mr. Fox, that the hunters diseovered that their hounds were chasing scmething they could not catch. A little later a mule-driver came hrough Cumberland Gap with a young hound that he called “Lead.” Old General Maupin bought the dog, and in the first chase he left the pack behind and caught the quarry. The dog was probably stolen, and his pedigree could not be traced, but since then every fox. hound in the State worthy of the name goes back to Lead, and his fame is scarcely less than that of the great sires of the Blue-Grass trotters. —*“Chautauqua: Its Aims and Influence” is the title of an exhaustive article by. Pro- fessor Albert S. Cook, of Yale University, in the August number of Forum. He describes the Chautauqua system of education, explains its aims, and telis of the far-reaching influ- ence it is exerting, not only in the United States, but throughout the world. New Advertisements. JJARM FOR SALE.—A most ex- ceflent farm of 178 acres well located, good buildings, plenty of water. well fenced jad w AL Hien Foo of TRUESS) Sian. can e purchased at a bargain by applying JOHN P. HARRIS 39 46 tf. 1st Nat. Bank Bellefonte. Paints. HE BEST INVESTMENT—in real estate is to keep buildings well painted. Paint protects the house and saves repairs. You sometimes want to sell—many a good house has ‘remained unsold for want of paint. The ruleshould be, though, “the best paint or none.” That means STRICTLY. PURE... ... WHITE LEAD You cannot afford to use cheap paint. To be sure of get- ting Strictly Pure White Lead look at the brand; any of these are fafe: . “ARMSTRONG & McKELVY,” ‘BEYMER-BAUMAN," “DAVIS-CHAMBERS,” “FAHNESTOCK.” . For Corors.—National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are sold in one- pound caps, each can being sufficient to tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead the desired shade; they are if no sense ready-mixed paints, but # combination of perfectly pure colors in the handiest form to tint Strictly Pure White Lead. A good many thousand dollars have been saved property-own- ers by having our book on painting and colorcard. Send us a postal card and get both free. : NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York. Castoria, 38-43-2y Pittsburg Branch, German Natioval Bank Building, Pittsburg. 39-17-1tn r ; 2 mr ———————— a Printing. Printing. 3 INE 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, }PINE 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 Friuting. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. —far THE WATCHMAN OFFICE] Lyon & Co. fe ¥ I I Am, 0 * I Il WORTH LOOKING AT “% 1S Il H x Z 0 Jefe BELLEFONTE, PA., APRIL 23, 1894. OUR UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS IN THE ESTABLISHMENT OF wre FOR GOOD GOODS HAS DETERMINED US IN E STILL KEEPING UP THE SAME SYSTEM OF DOING BUSINESS. LOOK AT THESE PRICES FOR SPRING GOODS. Best Dress Ginghams 5 and .6¢ per yard; Challies 3%c per yard; best Sat. teens 8, 9, 10 and 123c per yard’; best Prints 4, 43 and 5c; all wool Serges, that were 60 now 37c; alljwooliSerges, that were 50 and 60 now 34c* Cash- meres, that were 30 now 19, 20 and 25¢: Illuminated French Suitings— the very handsomest Dress Goode, that ware 75 now 39c ; Muslins 4, 4} and 5¢ per vard. Bleached Table Damask, that was 65 now 25c. Bleached Table Damask, that was $1 now 75c. Same that wae 75 now 50c. ¢ £ 80 ‘¢ 33e #4 #40. * 95 Silk for Waists 20, 30, 37, 40 and 50c ; Embroidery 2,3, 4 and 5c a yard, and up; Bed Ticking for 7c. up; La- dies’ Wraps and Capes $1.24, up; La- dies’ Summer Undershirts 5, 8, 10, 12¢ and up. WINDOW BLINDS, The greatest assortment of Window Blinds—spring rollers, good felt and oil cloth, at the following prices. All complete 14¢, 15, 18, 20, 25 and 30c a window. CARPETS. Rag Carpet, the best stock ever shown in Centre county. Note these prices—18, 20, 22, 24, 25, 27, 28, 30» 34, 373, 40 and 42. : The above are of the newest of pat- terns and best qualities that have ever been shown for the money. SHOES, We are leaders in the sale of Good Shoes at low prices, * A genuine dongola, patent leather toe, in all the lasts, opera toe, square toe, common sense toe, at $1.25, $1.50, 81.75 and $1.90; every pair warranted- You never beard of shoes for these prices warranted, the finest Dongola kid, button and lace boots tor ladies 82.00 and $2.40, of exquisite workman- ship ; opera toe, narrow square toe, patent leather toe, qommon sense toe, —every pair warranted. As fine a stock, es dressy, stylieh. and durable, 0 B&S=Men’e Shirts, 19c., 24c. and 37e. as when gold at $4.00 and £5.00 & pair a year ago. Infant Shoes, real kid 27c. a pair. Girl’s Shoes, 60, 75; 93, 98, $1.00 and $1.20. As good in quality as you buy elsewhere for one-half more. Boys’ Good Dress Shoes 75, 93, 98, 81.00 and $1.25. All good stock and wear like iron. Men’s Dress Shoes 98, $1.00, 81.15, $1.25, £1.45, 1.98, $2.40 and 82.48. See if you can buy them elsewhere for that mcney. CLOTHING. Spring Clothing now ready for you. In Clothing we lead them all in low: ness of prices, in good goods, well made and fit equal to merchant tailor made. Boys’ Suits at 75, 90, £1.00, $1.10, $1.25, $1.50 and $2.00. Boy’s Strictly All-wool Suits, wear and sewing guaranteed, at $2.50, $2.75, $3.00, $3.25, $3.50, $3.75 and[$4.00. ‘Men's Suite at $2.90, £3.00, $3.50. $4.00, £4.25 and $4.50, in Black Cheviot, Mixed Cassimere, etc., all new stock. Men’s Strictly All-wool!Suits, newest patterns, at $4.75, £5.00, $85.25, £5.50, $6.00, £7.00 and £8.00. Men's Fine Dress Suits, in Black Worsted, Clay Worsteds, neat mix- tures, at $7.59, 8.00, 9.00, 9.50, 10.00 and 11.50, ae fine.a- goods, as stylish a cut and a8 well made as you used to pay 15.00 to 20.00 a suit for. We have, beyond doubt, the best wearing Shoe in the world. They are warranted, every pair of them, and we are the Sole Agents for the sale of them in Centre county. You know what they are. They are the DOUGLAS SHOE. If they don’t wear well, bring them back and either get an allowance or get another pair. We have them in Men’s from £1.85 to 4.50 a pair; in Boy's from $1.75 to 2.50 a pair. We have them in Patent Leathers, Rus. | sets, Bluchers, Razor Toe, Needle Toe, Yale Toe, Square Toe, Half Round, or any style you may want. Men's laundried Dress Shirts, 47c. Men's heavy Working pants warranted not to rip, good and strong 50c. and T4c. » Best Table ~Oilcloth at 15¢. a yard. Best Unbleached Muslins, Best Bleached Muslins, 6 ’ 4c., 43c., 5c. a yard. te. and Te a yard. eer N oreeeeneume LYON & CO. BELLEFONTE PA. Saddlery. Fe THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS ONLY. 75 SETS SINGLE HARNESS 75 Ranging in Price from eee OLD PRICES OF— ——HARNESS LEATHER. : After that time Prices will be forced to conform with the unprecedented raise in the cost of Harness Leather. $400.00 WORTH OF FLY-NETS. AT THE OLD PRICE. Persons desiring harness and fiy-nets should buy now before the prices adyance. JAMES SCHOFIELD. BELLEFONTE, PA. 33 37 Illuminating Oil. § ory ACME. TEE BEST BURNING OIL TEAT 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 1s without an equal : AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL We stake our reputation as refiners that IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD Ask ycur dealer for it. Trade supplied by THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station, Bellefonte, Fa. 39 37 ly Miscellaneous Advs. ET AN EDUCATION.—Educa- tion and fortune go hand in hand. Get an education at the Central State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa. First-class accom- modations and low rates. State aid to stu- dents. For illustrated catalogue address JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal. 39-45-1y Lock Haven, Pa EWIS’ 98 PER CENT LYE POWDERED AND PERFUMED (PATENTED The stroegestjand purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine powder and packed in a can with removable lid, the contents are always ready for use. Will make the best per. fumed Hard Boap in 20 minutes without boil- ing. Itisthe best for cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinke, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, ete. PENNA. SALT M'F’G CO. 40 20 6m Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa. UILDER’S SUPPLIES. — Store for building purposes at quarry or de- livered in Bellefonte or ou the line of the Bellefonte Central and Penna. Railroads. Calcined. Plaster, PLASTERING HAIR AND LIME. Paragon Plaster, the best patent plaster yet made. HYDRAI'LIC CEMENT Potomac and Cumberland, Rosendale (Hoff- man Brand] and English Portland, the best standard cements to he had. We warrant every barrel o. Cement we sell to be as repre- sented. McCALMONT & Co., 40-11-61. Bellefonte, Pa, Pn CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENTY Kor 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 catalogug 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 per, 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, 82.50 a year. Sin- le copies, 25 cents. Every number contains autiful plates, in colors, and PAstasianis of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure con- tracts. Address MUNN & CoO. ’ 361 Broadway. 40-3-6m New Cork Fine Job Printing. 0———A SPECIALTY———o¢ AT TWF WATCHMAN o OFFICE, There {a no style of work, from the chespes’ 1 Dodger” to the finest 0—BOOK-WORK ,—c 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 $7.75 up to $10, $15, $20, $25. - “@