Denoruaic Walp Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. II, 1895. Farm Notes. .. —The corn fodder is worth more than the corn, in food value, from one acre, but not if the fodder remsins in the fields to be injured by -exposure to storme, —Of the exports from this country three fourths are farm products, and Great Britian takes about one-half. That country is our best market, and our trade with her is large and valua- ble. —1It is not difficult to keep hairs out of milk, but manure finds its way into the pail unless the udder and teas of the cow are thoroughly washed and wiped dry with a clean towel. It is necessary to do this in order to obtain clean milk. —ZExperiments the past season show that ‘‘brushing” clover seed, or sowing it on the surface, results in a great loss of seed, and is the cause of many fail- ures, Covering the seed from half an inch to an inch deep has been found an advantage. —Fourteen strawberries to the quart is the latest on record in small fruit culture, made by a New England wom- an, who has a fruit ranch in San Diego and who has achieved remarkable suc- cess in fruit culture through careful ex- perimentation. —Hedges composed entirely of rose bushes are very common in Texas, but it is claimed that some of the hardy varieties can be used for hedges in this section. Such hedges, being ornamen- tal, should have two or three strands of barbed wire running along through them, and must receive careful atten- tion, manure and light cultivation be- .ing required. —Preserving milk will greatly add to its valu eand lessen the risks from its use. The bacteria can be destroyed by boiling, but boiling the milk injures its flavor. It has been found that a current of electricity through the milk for a certain time will destroy the bac- teria and do no injury to the flavor. Further experiments are now being made in that direction* —Good cider is made from the best apples. If imperfect apples are used the flavor will ‘be affected. The crab apple is regarded as the best cider ap- ple. As cider vinegar is sometimes scarce, it is better to use apples that are unsalable for cider, to be turned to vinegar, than to allow them to waste. For choice cider, however, the sound apples only are suitable. —The yield of wheat depends on the variety and soundness of the seed. Varieties that give good results in one place may not do so well in another. No farmer should procure seed north or south of his location until after ex- perimenting with such seed on a small plot. When a satisfactory variety is secured that is adapted to the soil re- tain it and take no risks with any oth- er. —Good straw makes the best bed- ding, but it should not be used after be- ing saturated by drying it for use a second time, as such method does not condnce to cleanliness. It is cheap enough to be allowed to go to waste, according to the practice on many farms : hence it is better to use it more liberally and add it to the manure heap as an absorbent, thus keeping the stalls clean and neat. —Seed wheat should be dry and plump. All imperfect grains should be removed. The character of the crop next year depends on the selection of seed this fall. South of this State wheat is eometimes delayed until the middle of October. The dry weath- er has greatly retarded seeding in this section, as many farmers prefer to have their wheat in by the middle of September. —The fall is the time for the young colts to come. They can remain with their dame during the winter and will be easily weaned by spring, so as not to interfere with spring work. They will eat ground oats during the winter, which with a liberal supply of milk from the dams should make them grow rapidly. During severe cold weather the mare and colt should have good shelter and box stalls. —Finely-cut clover, scalded, and bran added,iwill make a better mess for promoting the growth of pigs than any other kind of food that can be giv- en, for the reason that the hog should have some kind of bulky food as an aid to digestion, and will eat the cut clover readily. The clover is also nitroge- nous, and will give Letter quality to the meat, while the animal will attain greater weight than if fed on corn in a certain length of time. —Farmers seem to give very little attention to forestry, and great tracts of timber are cut without regard to the future. Now that we have had a se- vere drought in this section, while oth- er sections haverbeen dry in previous years, 1t is time to consider the cause, which is claimed to be the destruction of the trees. If there is an inducement to cut timber because it brings a “high price, it will be at the cost of droughts and losses in the future —A garden cannot be had without extra effort. Cover it with manure this fall and work the manure into the soil. No value can be placed on a gar- den because it provides something which money cannot always secure— fresh fruits and vegetables for the fam- ily. No doubt, one can buy all the small fruits and vegetables required, but they cannot be had in that fresh condition as when they are transferred from the garden to the table in a few minutes. Prepare for the garden by the use of plenty of manure now, go as to have it thoroughly decomposed by spring. 3 Distress in Nicaragua. Eighty Per Cent of the Population Suffering and Ralf Starving. President Zelaya, of Nicaragua, has just appointed General Santiago Calle- jas, his present minister of the treasury and acting minister of interior, to go to Bluefields, and other Atlantic ports of Nicaragua, with full powers to make such official changes and issue and en- force, if he can, such orders and de- crees as he may find necessary in an effort to try and regulate satisfactorily to the government of Nicaragua the political, financial and jury systems there. In other words, an attempt to cause the people on the eastern coast of Nicaragua, who all have grown up under a civil and criminal jurispru- dence, copied or modeled by one of their former supreme court judges from the New York State code, to adopt and comply with the unimproved, commin- gled old Spanish laws and Napoleonic code that has been used, abused and evaded, as conditions suited, by lethar- gic western Nicaraguans for many years past. President Zelaya has issued a decree granting free transportation of corn beans, and rice, plantains in an effort to reduce the prevailing high prices in western Nicaragua for all articles of food. The long-continued, unseason- ably dry weather has largely decreas: ed the crop, the demand for labor and the wages to all kinds of laborers ; consequently a majority of the middle ard lower classes, ghioh Soasiinie about 80 per cent of the entire popula- tion of about 350,0000f Nicaragua, are reduced to living in closest ecomomy on such wild fruits and berries as they can gather, supplemented by the small quantities of corn, ‘beans, plantains or rice they can buy, from day to day with their small earnings. The coffee crop in the districts of voleanic-formed soils—the largest cof- fee-producing areas in this country—-is not expected to yield this year over one-halt the average production, and will require not one-half the usual number of laborers to gather through the three months when ripening, and then the competition of the unor- ganized laborers will reduce, most prob- ably, the heretofore very low prices paid for this work. ¢ After the State Printer. Will the State Printer be compelled to carry out the provisions of his con- tract? Just now he is going through the annual excoriation to which he is subjected, but whether it will have any effect remains to be seen. This public printing business is one of the disgraces of the State, and unless the Governor and other officials do something to rem- edy the existing evils, there is no reason to doubt that the slipshod methods now prevailing will continue indefinitely. An investigation has been started, but the printer runs at the first charge, on a physician’s certificate of illness. He has escaped heretofore on all sorts of flimsy pretexts, and those who have watched these investigation fear the usual result. The manner in which the printing and binding is done is a shame, and only the most radical reform will improve the work. A Milllionaire on Happiness. A millionaires idea of what consti- tutes happiness is always somewhat interesting. The other day, Baron A. Rothschild was asked whether hethought riches led to happiness. “Ah, no,” he answered, ‘‘that would be too glorious.” Happiness has little to say to gold. I admit many advantages do attach to woney, but happiness, as I understand it, is something totally different. Be- lieve me, the truest source of happi ness is work.” . ——The following from the Hunting- don News will stir up the wild blood of our local hunters, and we may now look for many hazardous adventures : John P. Swope, the expert trapper, of Bar- ree, this county, went out one day last week and caught two wild cats, six foxes, and ten minks, a pretty good day’s haul, the value in scalps amount- ing to $12.50. It wasn’t long since that Mr. Swope while in the wilds of Dia- mond valley saw a bear and her two cubs, but not being prepared for them he gave them a wide berth. ——Her Brother—A wfully bad news, sister. The Sister—What ? Her Brother—That count of yours is a bogus one. The Sister—How did you find that out ? Her Brother—I was telling him to- day how hard up I was, and he actual- ly offered to lend me $100. ——Dr. Talmage has accepted the call to the Washington church. Senator Mahone Stricken. The Case Rather Severe and May Prove Fa- tal WasHINGTON, Sept. 30.—Ex-Senator William Mahone had a “slight stroke of paralysis this morning. He bas been stopping at Chamberlain’s hotel and this morning his son Butler Ma- hone, calling at his father’s room found the general still in bed and ap- parently very drowsy. Not suspecting anything wrong Butler left the room and calling again later found his fath- erin the same condition. He became alarmed and a physician was summon- ed. After examination the doctor pro: nounced it a cage of paralysis. The right arm is useless, and the tongue is paralyzed eo that speech is impossible. Both lower limbs are all right, It is not yet known how far the paralysis has extended or how gerious it may be. ——A disgruntled subscriber writes “Mr. Editor—I like your paper gener- ally—likewise yourself—you deserve much of my respect. Nevertheless, cross from your dazzling list of subscrib- ers my humble name or stop printing those blinders of Dr. Pierce. know him by heart—his medicines are O. K. I had the sickest liver that ever was sick and lived, and his ‘Pellets’ straightened out its crooks My wife, sister, children, cousins, aunts and uncles, have all been strengthened by ‘the mystery of their magic.’ I am truly grateful ; but when I sit down to read one of ‘Napoleon Bonaparte’s Jokes’ or ‘An Irishman Orossing the Alps,’ must I always have to blunder into the old story of how ‘Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets’ are purely vegetable and anti-bilious, pleasant to the taste—cure sick headache, relieve torpid liver and are guaranteed to give satisfaction or money returned ?’’ Still After Turkey, The Powers Will Soon Reopen the Aymenian Question. ConsTANTINOPLE, Oct. 1.—It is re- ported in official circles here that the envoys of the three powers, Great Britain, France and Russia, will short- ly receive instructions from their gov- ernments to resume negotiations with the porte regarding the Armenian question. WasHiNGTON, Oct. 1.—The Turkish legation has received the following telegram from the minister of foreign affairs of Turkey : “I beg to inform you that acting under the instigation of certain Armenian agitators, hostile gatherings were formed opposite and in the neighborhood of the Armenian Patriarchal. Thanks to the measures taken, the city is now perfectly calm.” A Catskill Hotel Man. (From Catskill N. R,, Recorder.) Mr. Joseph McGiffert, one of our prominent hotel proprietors, has reason toextol the merits of Dr. David Ken- nedy’s Favorite Remedy. In speaking of it he said : “I was all run down from kidney and liver trouble, three physicians treated me but I grew worse. A friend said to me. ‘Why don’t you take Dr. Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy? It cured me.” So I began its use the result was I gained daily, and in a little while I was sound and wall again. I suppose I have recommended itto a hundred or more of my summer board- ers, and in every instance it has done them good.” Four Rebels Killed. Havana, Oct. 2—Colonel Oliver's column had a battle with a band of reb- els at Rulueta, in the Romedos dis- trict, on Sept. 29, in which four rebels were killed and smany wounded. “=—i * A Goon APPETITE.—Always accom- panies good health, and an absence of appetite is an indication of something wrong. The universal testimony given bv those who have used Hood’s Sarsa- parilla, as to its merits in restoring the appetite, and as a purifier of the blood, constitutes the strongest recommenda- tion that can be urged for any medi- cine. Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, bilious- nesg, jaundice, indigestion, sick head- ache. 25c. 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 mr ——— Castoria. 38-43-2y —— The worst mistakes are made on purpose. Cottolene. IP YOU MAKE DOUGHNUTS THIS Sift 1 quart flour, 1 saltspoonful salt, 1 saltspoonful ground nutmeg or cinnamon, 2 rounding teaspoonfuls baking powder, to- WAY ? gether. Beat 2 eggs; add 1cup sugar, 1 cup milk, 2 teaspoonfuls melted COTTOLENE. Stir these into the flour, rool and cut into shape. Have kettle 34 full COTTOLENE—at just the right heat —and fry the doughnuts in it for 3 minutes. For frying, COTTOLENE mut be %ot,but don’t let it get hot enough to smoke or it will burn. To find if it is hot enough, throw into it 'a singie drop of water. When at just the right heat, the water will pop. Genuine has trade marks—*“Cottolene” and steer’s head in cottonsplant wreath—on every tin. THE N., K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, CHICAGO and 132 N. Delaware Ave., Philadelphia. 40-10 Lyon & Co. Saddlery. {) rine OF 0 fm flee eer, vese. THE FALL CAMPAIGN....... Oo A HOT CONTEST I I I I * Against all High Prices; against all old methods of business. We are ready with the largest stock of Cléthing, Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes for the Fall and trade. NOTE THE FOLLOWING—————— A Cassimere suit at $5, as good as we had a year ago at §3. An extra heavy mixed Casimere suit at $6 as good as we had a year ago at $10. An all wool black Cheviot at $5.50, as good as we had a year ago at $8. A fine black Diaganol suit at $8; would be cheap at $12. A fine black Diaganol at $10; usually sold at $13. An extra fine Nigger Head Cheviot at $3, something entirely new,as good as a $12 suit. An extra fine Nigger Head Cheviot at $10; extra fine trimmings and linings, extra making, worth every cent of $15. An extra fine Nigger Head Cheviot at $11 50, as fine as any tailor made at $18 or $20. Childrens suits 90¢ up. Childrens brown, blue and black Cheviots from $1.25 up. A good heavy Cheviot Cassimere in black, blue and mixed at $1.50. We have the greatest lot of boys suits at $2.50, all wool, extra wearing, as good as you can buy for $4. Childrens overcoats $1.39 up. Youths suits from $3 up to the very finest, all the varieties. Boys knee pants 23¢ up the very finest. Boys all wool knee pants at 50c. Mens all wool pants at $150 per pair. Mens good quality heavy merino shirts and drawers at 37c. Mens merino under shirts and drawers at 19c. Childrens merino shirts and drawers Tc up. Mens suspenders Sc up. We have the greatest line of boys suits af $3.5 in black, blue and brown Cheviots, Casimere, etc., as good as you will buy anywhere for $5. Meas fur hats, a regular $1 bat for 69¢; mens far stiff hate worth $1.25 for 98c; boys wool hats 18c; boys first quality wool hats 40c; bove first class fur hat 49c. DRY GOODS............. Canton flannels 4c up. Shaker flannels 5c up. All wool splendid quality dress goods 37 inches wide, 30c per yard. Plain dress cloth from 1Sc up. Dress plaids from 5c up. All wool serges in all colors 40 inches wide 34c. All wooll serges 46 inches wide in all colors 37c up. Unbleached muslin 1 yd wide from 3}c up.” The very best calico 43 and 5c. Good quality dark dress ging- J. kam at 5c, Bleached muslin from 4c up. —_—X— Ep The greatest stock in this part of the state. Ladies kid shoes at 99c. Ladies genuine Dongola kid shoes, patent leather tip, opera toe, common sense toe, razor toe $1.25 per pair, every pair warranted. A ladies very fine quality Dongola kid, all the latest shapes, every pair warranted, at $1.39. Ladies very fine Dongola kid, McKay sewed, in all the different styles, at $1.90; every pair warranted. A still finer grade Dongola kid, all the latest shapes, Goodyear welt as fine as hand made, at $2.40 ; every pair warranted. Mens heavy boots $1.45, $1.90 etc. Mens dress shoes $1.24 and up, all warranted, A mans working shoe at $1 up to $1.48. If they don’t give satisfaction we will make it right. We have the largest stock of all the above goods ; our prices will compete with New York and Philadel- phia prices. We have opened a mail order depart. ment; if you can not come and see us, write for prices and samples. ooo 8 0 0 LYON La BELLEFONTE PA. ye THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS ONLY. Ranging in Price from $7.75 up to 810, $15, $20, $25, —_—C— 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. a Persons desiring harness and fly-nets should buy now before the prices adyance. JAMES SCHOFIELD. BELLEFONTE, PA. 3337 INluminating ©@il. oy 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 Wicls. 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 supplied by THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. Bellefonte Station, Bellefonte, Pa. 39 37 1y Miscellaneous Advs. ARM FOR SALE.—A most ex- cellent farm of 178 acres well located, good buildings, plenty of water. well fenced tnd Win Siew Fos of dalla station, can e purchased at a bargain by a ing 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 stroagestland purest Lye made. Unlike other Lye, it being a fine Joler 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, etc. PENNA. SALT M'F’G CO. 40 20 6m Gen. Agts., Phila., Pa. ILCOX 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 82.00, in metal boxes bearing shield trade mark, all druggists. Send 4 cts, for Woman's Safe Guard, securely mailed. WILCOX SPECIFIC CO., 40-20 228 South Eighth street, Phila., Pa. Po 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 Fine Job Printing. Boe JOB PRINTING 0——A SPECIALTY——o0 AT TEER WATCHMAN o OFFICE. There is no style of work, from the cheapes’ Dodger” to the finest 0~-BOOKE-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.