& #3 Pemorraiic atin Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 4, 1895. Farm Notes. —1It is never too late to kill the weeds. They are producing seed at this time and every one that is destroy- ed means the destruction of hundreds in the spring. —As the late summer is the season for budding, many a good-for-nothing fruit tree may be transformed into something worth having by the process of budding. —The fairs are good places to root out prejudice and long, deep-set ideas. The wise farmer realizes that he can not afford to miss a good thing so he attends the fairs. —Do not burn brush during a dry period. The risk to the farm build. ings is greater than the advantages to be gained. Many large fires are start- ed by burning brush. —The hens that have moulted are the best for winter laying. Do not * sell off the old hens that have done good service, as they will continue to exceed the average number of eggs un- til aged. —~ —Clean off the asparagus bed before the seeds are fully matured, if possible, then spread manure over the bed. Use as much as may be prefer: red, as the result next epring depends on the fertility of the plot. —The hedge may be trimmed in the fall. This work is often postponed un- til epring and until rather late in the geason, or perhaps not done at all if crops require attention. The surest plan is to do the trimming in the fall. —The peach crop brought better prices this season than for many years, although the crop was not short. The good prices were due to the large pro- portion taken by canners, and also to better facilities for distributing the crop. —Now is the time to clean the wells while the water is low. On some farms the well is never cleaned, yet it is one of the most important duties that can be performed, as the health of the family and of the stock depends upon pure water. —Although the admonition to dairy men to get rid of the scrub cow is very frequently given, yet she can be seen on many of the farms operated by ex- perienced dairymen, but she costs an enormous sum every season to those who still believe in her. —If the young trees that were set out appear to be injured by dry weath- er it will pay to pour water around them even if it must be hauled at ex- tra cost. Give them an opportunity to stand until the rains come and they will need but little care this year. —Subsoiling to the depth of 16 to 18 inches allows the snows and rains of winter and spring to soak into the soil, instead of running away. As soils can take up from 30 to 50 per cent. of their weight in water, a large amount is stored for the use of plants in dry weather. —An excellent fertilizer for grape vines is to break bones into pieces and mix them with unleached wood ashes, keeping the mixture damp with soap- suds. Dig around the vines and use the mixture liberally. The bones alone, buried around the vines, are ex- cellent. —Whether the raising of horses be- comes profitable or not, the horses most serviceable to the farmer are those he raises on the farm, provided he breeds for the kind he prefers. Disposition, constitution, capacity and perfection in any degree can be best secured by breeding for those qualities. —Those who keep but one cow and save the cream until a sufficiency has accumulated for churning, will not suceeed in making choice butter, as it is a mistake to mix the old and new cream. This is a fact that is frequent- ly overlooked, and has been the cause of more failures than anything else. —There will be buta few choice lots of large sweet potatoes grown in this region, owing to the extremely dry sea- son, but the quality will perhaps be better and prices high. The general - yield is far below the average, and those who have been so fortunate as to have fair crops will find a ready mar- ket without the necessity of storing them for winter. —When a cow is dry she should not receive heavy rations of grain. Hay and fodder, with a small proportion of bran, is better than concentrated food, as such cows are non-producers, and if fed too heavily will become. fat, a condition which is not very favora- ble at the calving period, milk fever often resulting when the cow is too fat from overfeeding. —The most useless stock that can be kept during the winter is a Jot of cockerels, They simpiy use food and take up the room required in the poul- try honse by hens and pullets. They seldom bring over six cents a pound in market when matured and should be sold when they weigh five pounds’ per pair, at which age they bring the best prices. —The majority of farmers prefer to use manure and seldom resort to the use of fertilizers, They cannot pro- duce sufficient manure for a large farm and manure one field a year. The plan is excellent, but they lose time by not using fertilizers on those fields where no manure has beed shplied. Manure is recommended by all experienced far- mers and experimenters, but it is a scarce article compared with the area of land to be covered, unless there is a number of animals kept on the farm. Fertilizers can be profitably applied with or without munure, and will more than pay for their cost. Overdone. Does it strike the average man that everything in this age is overdone— severely overdone ? If we begin with newspapers we find this to be remark- ably the case. Our blanket sheets are a monstrocity that have come into ex- istence within a few years under the high pressure system on which we do everything. They are not properly newspapers, with a terse, readable con- densation of the news, but great vol- umes of details of politics, love and crime, so watered as to be almost with- out point. Take up a country news- paper, whether published at the coun- try town or a cross roads, and every event is spun out and watered to the extent that makes the narration of the event almost ridiculous. As part of the same system of overdoing what- ever a newspaper takes up, the sim- plest happening is introduced with great head lines, and stretched out un- til so thin it will hardly bold together. Nowadays the value of an article is estimated by its length, and few, if any of our modern writers imitate the terse style of Addison and his com- peers, when much in little, was the rule. In public speaking he is considered the most eloquent man, who rants and talks the loudest; and the smarter if he indulge in expressions his audience do not comprehend or understand. This overdoing runs through the whole routine of life. We find in it the style of living by people living beyond their means ; it creeps in to dress, many men and women putting all they earn, or nearly so, on their back, to appear well to the pnblic eye ; young men and young women especial- ly, often offending at the expense of good taste, to say nothing of the purse. This is a fast age in every sense, and nothing like it has been seen since our ancestors peopled these western shores. Go into our large cities where the ex: tent to which life is overdone will strike every one at a glance; where wealth is rolled up by the million ; the dwellings are palaces. more befitting the nabobs we read of in the fabled stories of the East than for the homes of citizens of a Republic ; the inmates are arrayed in silks and satins and fine linens and fare sumptously every day. The vulgar display of wealth we see on every hand is one of the most disgust- ing features of the age we live in and does a vast deal to repress what is really good. Not only does this sys- tem of overdoing things on land, but is found on the sea. Men keep their yachts, great steamers, fitted up like floating palaces, aod in them they sail to the ends of the earth to find some: thing new to cater to their tastes, the ordinary and sensible enjoyments of life having palled on their sensual palates. Even the governments of the world are greatly overdoing things in building navies, Their ships are huge leviathans with the solidity of land fortifications, as a rule too unwieldy and difficult to handle, when much lighter vessels, armed with far-reach- ing guns, would be more destructive to an enemy’s commerce. The overdoing process has reached our public schools, and leads to cramming the pupil’s heads with a smattering of many branches, and a critical knowledged of none. We doubt if pupils who now leave our schools are as equipped to work their way in life as were their grandfathers, who graduated on Com- Iy’s Spelling Book and Grammar, Pike's Arithmetic, Mensuration, the English Reader and Gummere’s Sur- veying. The children of this age leave school grounded in ologies, but defi- cient in practical education. ~ But a change will come ; there will be a reaction, for there is too much good sense in the” American people not to correct an evil when they see it. The only question is will they see it in time to save the body politic and society. It was the overdoing procees that paved the way for Rome's downfall. ——Considerable interest centres on the fast runs being made on American and British railways. Some record breaking speed is being made. A New York Central train recently ran from New York to Buffalo, a distance of 436} miles, in 414} minutes. The Lon- don and Northwestern Railway ran a train from Euston station, London to Aberdeen, Scotland, a distance of 540 miles, in 510 minutes. The Empire State express from New York to Buffalo travels 440 mriles daily on a schedule of 8 hours and 40 min- utes. The London and Northwestern railway runs a train daily from London to Perth, 450 miles, on the same time schedule as the Empire State express. The Great Northern railway runs a train from London to Dundee, 452 miles, on a schedule of 8 hours, 47 min- utes. These three trains are the fastest regular passenger trains in the world. ——Another short cranberry harvest is the wail from the swamps of New Jersey and it will be unfortunate if true. A good crop covers about a million bushels, but last year only 410,000 bush- els reached the market and 640,000 is the estimate for this year. Of this ag- gregate the Cats Cod country furnishes two-thirds. be Western sections where cranberry bogs prevail generally meet the home demand and do not draw on the East. There is money in cran- berry bogs when prices run at $2 and $3 a bushel, as they did last year, winding up as high as $4 and $5 when the fruit became scarce. But figures will not run that high this year. ——A leiter to the Chicago Record from Shanghai, China, dated August 27, says that 400 deaths a day from cholera are reported in the native city of Shanghai, and since August 1 eight- teen foreigners have died of the disease. ‘We have already published some intel- ligence from Japan concerning the ravages of the same disease among those islands. ——Sandstone— Weren't you dancing with Miss Calloway last night ? Fiddleback--Yes. How did you know ? “I saw her going into a chiropodist’s ¢ . this morning.” Denver Under Its September Snow. Hardly any comparison would be too wild to use in describing the foliage littered city as it looked yesterday morning. Not a street where trees grew but was strewn with green sprays torn branches, and in many instances balf grown trees, snapped off almost at their base. On Capitol Hill, Highlands and the other wooded districts the dam- age to shade trees is comparatively ir- reparable, for it will be years before some of the ruined trees can be replaced in the stature and beauty it held before the lead-like cope of snow bore them to the ground or totally disfigured them. Where the trees were tall and the tops had snapped off, a very fantastic effect was produced. Glancing along one of the streets or avenues where this had occurred, the dismantled trees looked like a double row of over polite courtiers caught in the act of bowing to each other. Nearly always the foliage drooped outward, with the branches that had been topmost before the snow weighted them down touching the mud or snow on the ground. Evergreens and cottonwoods pulled through the night in better shape than all others, although plenty of tough cot- tonwoods were shorn of their gnarled wiry boughs, and in some cases big trees were riven into two or more sec- tions, as though lightning had blasted them. In private grounds the most costly and beautiful shade trees were the first to go down. There was no wind to speak of .at the trees simply split and splintere.. under the weight of their snowy coats.— Denver Times. A Jealous Girl's Shot. WasHINGTON, C. H., O., Sept. 29.— Lida Hargrave, of this place, shot and badly wounded Daisy Redman, of Col- umbus, here late last night. Miss Red- man and Miss Hargrave attended a fes- tival last evening. A young man, who ‘had heen paying attentions to Miss Har- grave, started to accompany Miss Red- man home. This aroused the jealously of Miss Hargrave. She procured a re- volver, followed the couple, and shot Miss Redman in the shoulder. The girl was arrested late at night at her home. Christian Barbarism. The offering of prizes of agricultural fairs for the yokes of oxen drawing the heaviest loads, with the accompanying whipping, yelling and strain on the unfortunate animals, is almost as bar- barous as the Spanish and Mexican bullfights, and ought to be denounced by every humane man, whether he claims to be a Christian or npot.— Our Dumb Animals. ——Grace Greenwood, who, fifty years ago, was the popular editor and proprietor of & magazine, is living in Washington, where she continues to write and give public readings. Her bouse is a social center in the Capital City, and she holds annual receptions at her home which are ranked among the important society events of the sea- son. Her pen name of Grace Green- wood seems to have been a happily des- criptive selection, though she is less widely known as the wife of the pub- lisher, Lippincott. —— According to the will of the late H. O. Houghton, his interest in the publishing house of Houghton, Mifflin & Co. isto continue, and each of his children is to share alike in the profits ; $10,000 is given in trust to each of his three daughters, the earnings of which they are to devote to the benefit of the ‘‘worthy poor’’ of Cambridge. At their death their descendants are to carry on the work forever. The remainder ot his property is equally divided among his children. ——The Pittsburg Press Cadets, a military company for boys, organized by Mr. Thomas J. Keenan, Jr., of the Pittsburg Press, will visit the Cotton State and International Exposition on Pennsylvania Day. They will be en- tertained in Atlanta by the Hibernian Rifles, one of the crack military organi- zations of the city, and will be review- ed by Governor Hastings ot Pennsyl- vania, at the front of the building of that State on the grounds. ——Says Governor Evans, of South Carolina, says he :***God Almighty nev- er intended that the blackbird or the crow should ever soar up to the moun- tain top where the white eagle alone builds her nest and rears her brood.” Nature never intended the brow that is fitted for cap and bells should wear a Gubernatorial hat, but somehow or other things don’t go according to brain under the palmettos. ——XKlizabeth Cady Stanton objects to the title ‘old maid’’ baing longer ap- plied to an elderly unmarried woman. In these days ot the’'new” woman she holds the title unproper. ‘* She wants an unmarried woman to be called a ‘‘bach- Nae and not 8 woman bachelor at at. The Tallest Structures, A Water Works Tower in Cleveland Taller Than the Washington Monument. The tallest chimney was built at Port Dundas, Glasgow, Scotland, 1857 to 1859, for F. Townsend. Itis the high. est chimney in the world (454 feet), and one of the loftiest masonry struct- ures in existence. It is, independent of its size, one of the best specimens of substantial, well-made brick work in existence. In Europe there are only two church steeples that exceed this structure in height—namely, that of the Cologne Cathedral (510 feet), and that of the Strasburg Cathedral (468 feet). The great Pyramid of Gizeh was origi- nally 480 feet, although not so high at present. The United States outtops them all with its Washington Monu- ment, 550 feet high, and the tower of the Philadelphia Public Buildings, which is 537 feet high. The Eiffel Tower, at Paris, France, surpasses’ all other terrestrial metal structures with its altitude of nearly one thousand feet. The “Great Tow- er,” for London, England, in course of construction from designs of Mr. Henry Davey, C. E., will outtop all metal structures, being built of steel, and its extreme height will be 1250 feet when finished. The highest and most remarkable metal chimney in the world is erected at the imperial foundry at Halsbrucke, near Frieberg, in Saxony. The height of structure is 452.6 feet, and 15.74 feet in internal diameter, and is situated on the right bank of Mulde, at an elevation of 219 feet above that of the foundry works so that its total height above the sea is 10 less than 711.75 feet. The works are situated on the left bank of the riv- er, and the furnace gasses are conveyed across the river to the chimney on a bridge through a pipe 3227} feet in length. The highest artificial structure in America is the water works tower at Eden Park, Cincinnati, O. The floor of the tower, reached by elevators; is 525 feet above the Ohio River. The base is 404 feet above the stream. If the height of the elevator shaft.be add- ed to the observation floor the grand total height is 589 feet. The highest office building in the world is the Manhattan Life Insurance Company of New York city ; its height above the sidewalk is 847 feet, and its foundations go down 53 feet below the same being 20 feet below the tidewater level, making a total of 400 feet. The foundations consist of fifteen masonry piers, and are carried by the same num- ber of steel caissons. The latter were sunk to bedrock by the pneumatic proc- ess. The cantilever system was used for the foundations.— From Machinery. Explorer Peary Safe. Brought to St. John's by the Relief Steamer, Kite.—Erpedition Was Partly a Failure.— Party Had Been 30 Hours Without Food When the Kite Arrived. St, Jouxs, Sept. 22,—The Peary re- lief steamer, Kite, arrived here yester- day afternoon, bringing Peary, Lee and Heneon eafe home. When the Kite reached Whale sound on August, Peary, Hugh J. Lee and their colored seryant, Matt Hen- son, were waiting for it. The party bad only ten days previously returned from their great overland expedition, which had proved a comparative fail- ure, as there were not enough men in the party to accomplish any bold ven- ture. They were further deterred from any great undertakings by the insuffi- ciency of food supply. In this respect this year’s work was but a repetition of last year’s failure, although the weather experienced was much more favorable this year than last. The party had been without food for 36 hours when the Kite arrived. CHO00SING A HUSBAND. — “Of beauty just enongh to bear inspection ; Of candor, sense and wit, a good collection ; Enough of love for one who needs protection.” Excellent resolve ladies, and let the Faubles. 4 SPECIAL GOOD THINGS.... FOR WHICH WE ARE —SOLE AGENTS.— —THE— | Buy your boy a suit that is posi- NEPTUNE |tively water- proof. Every ANTI-PLUE Fou guaranteed. Your money back / a if they do notdo We are Sole Agents all we claim for for Centre County. them. THE MRS. JANE HOPKINS ph All pants made BOYS double knees and seat. Holdfast AND | buttons and pat- | ent seams consid- CHILDRENS | ered by all mer- chants the best CLOTHING. | children’s cloth- | ing made. “HIGH ART” BRAND CLOTHING.... | MENS .--Tr7AT Firs. CLOTHING. The make and style are not only as good, but better than any made by Centre county merchant tailors. WE CAN The great fat fellows; tall, slim husband see thatthe wife, who has 2 linked her life with his, possesses sound pt ALL ae or the rege sense and good judgment. If she suf- Noe man fers from nervous debility, or uterine ALL SORTS Look at these Tn as alas’ so many do, let her goods. It will manifest her good sense by using Dr. F MEN. [pay vou. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, which D |p y bas nevar been known to fail in such cases. It is the only remedy so sure in results that it can be sold on trial. See Shirin wrapped around each bot- e. Business Notice. ee Se are mos " Ps Agents Jar it HOWARD HATS esive the County. Shapes Children Cry or Pitcher’s Castoria. FAUBLES. 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 Cottolene. QCRAMBLED EGGS Take a small quantity of Cottolene and a little cream ; warm in a fry- ing pan. Break 6 eggs in it and stir until slightly cooked. Serve hot. Use not more than two-thirds as much Cottolene as you would butter and be sure that you do not overheat it before dropping in the eggs. This is always essential in cooking with Cottolene. Genuine Cottoline is sold everywhere in tins with trade marks—*Cotfolene" and steer's head in cotton-plant wreath—on every tin. Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, CHICAGO and 132 N, Delaware Ave., Philadelphia. o> 40-39. a Clothiers and Outfitters. 40 1p Saddlery. oR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS ONLY. Ranging in Price from $7.75 up to $10, $15, $20, $25 ese (fm OLD PRICES OF — ——HARNESS LEATHER. After that time Prices will be forced to conform with the unprecedented raise > in the cost of Harness Leather. Ne $400.00 WORTH OF FLY-NETS. AT THE OLD PRICE. Persons desiring harness and fly-nets should buy now before the prices adyance. JAMES SCHOFIELD. BELLEFONTE, PA. 3337 INuminating Oil. la 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 I8 THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station, ; Bellefonte, Pa. 39 37 ly Miscellaneous Advs. ARM FOR SALE.—A most ex- cellent farm of'178 acres well located, good buildings, plenty of water, well fenced and within a tew rods of railroad station, can be purchased at a bargain by applying to JOHN P. HARRIS. 39 46 tf. 1st Nat. Bank Bellefonte. 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 strongestland 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 Soap in 20 minutes without boil- ing. Itisthe best for cleansing waste pipes, disinfecting sinks, closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, ete. PENNA. SALT M'F’G CO. 40 20 6m Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa. [LCOX COMPOUND— TANSY PILLS. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS. The only safeand always reliable relief for Ladies. Accept no worthless and dangerous imitations. Save money and guard health by taking nothing but the only genuine and orig- inal Wilcox Compound Tansy Pills, price $2.00, in metal boxes bearing shié ade mark, all druggists. Send 4 . cts, for Woman's Safe Guard, securely mailed. W1LCOX SPECIFIC CO., 40-20 228 South Eighth street, Phila., Pa. PEesoxs TO TRAVEL WANTED.—Several faithful gentle- men and ladies ‘to travel for an established house. SALARY $780.00 AND EXPENSES. Position permanent if suited; also increase State reference and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. THE NATIONAL, 316-317-318 Omaha Bldg., CHICAGO. 40 31 4m - NS Fine Job Printing. IT JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY—0 AT TF WATCHMAN o OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes’ Dodger” to the finest 0—BOOK-WORK,—c but you can get done inthe most satisfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work by calling or communicating with this office