Bemorrair aldo Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 18, 1896. SE a RE aaa B SARE, FARM NOTES. —Have a receptacle for the liquid manure and make all preparations for saving it be- fore winter comes, so as to have the stalls dry and a more valuable manure heap. —A box of oatmeal should be kept ina handy place so as to add a handful of the oatmeal to every pail of water given the horse, which will prevent many of the ill effects of watering the horse when he has not cooled sufficiently after being driven, —The hog that is forced to consume filthy food may do so from necessity, but it will not make the growth which could be ob- tained from better food. Economy in the production of pork is practiced most when the hogs are given food which they relish and which makes a perceptible gain. —Two tablespoonfuls of kerosene to a gallon of ashes or slacked lime, carefully stirred in so as to prevent caking, has been found to be an effective remedy against the striped cucumber or melon beetle. Dust the plants three times a week, from a tin can having the bottom full of holes. —The bull should be made to work and furnish tread power, instead of the horse. At such work he can be very useful, and will not only be benefited thereby, but be less vicious and more manageable. He should at least furnish power for churning and cutting the feed, which workis not very heavy. —A great many of the diseases that kill mature ewes are brought on by their poor condition in the fall. They have not the disease-resisting vitality of those that are well nourished. And, moreover, the cause of weak and dead lambs is due to the same fact. It is best to feed the ewes a half- pound of oats each day to get them in thrifty condition. —Sheep, says a writer, are subject to in- ternal parasites much more than formerly, and flocks are often decimated by them. Salt sulphur and spirits of turpentine are the best remedy. To administer it take salt, four parts ; sulphur, one part ; tur- pentine enough to slightly moisten ; mix them and place in the trough when the animals are hungry for salt. —Much of the food given to animals is wasted in the careless manner in which it is handled, hay being thrown into loose racks or narrow troughs, or even on the floor of the stalls in excess of the actual requirements, a portion being trampled. A saving can also be made in grinding the grain during the winter when labor is not so high, and will consequently be more digestible. —A fruit man gives this advice : If it becomes necessary to remove any large limbs from the fruit trees, always make two cuts, one ten or twelve inches from where the limb should be cut. This will remove the weight and thus avoid the bruising and splitting ; then the stub left can be cut close to the shoulders and leave the wound in better shape. Such wounds should be covered with grafting wax, or white lead will do. —The hot water treatment for cereal smuts, so repeatedly and widely publish- ed, seems to have attracted very little at- tention from farmers. There is no doubt that this very simple treatment, once gen- erally used, would greatly increase the value of Northern wheats, so notoriously smutted at present, besides increasing the yield at least ten per cent. The millers need especially to unite in absolutely re- fusing to receive smutted wheat. —Butter that has a greasy appearance is not attractive in market, although it may be fresh and good. Too much working of the butter sometimes occurs. It is only necessary to get rid of the surplus water or milk, the grain to be retained as much as possible. It requires experience to fully understand when the butter is just right, but while some are careful in that respect * the large majority seem inclined to work the butter longer than is necessary. —When buying trees do not depend on the catalogues to help you in selections, but learn, if possible, which varieties will thrive best in your section. When a tree is planted and a mistake made, it may be years before the error can be discovered, when there will be not only a loss of time but of fruit, while disease may appear or the tree prove unprofitable. The first steps in tree planting are the most im- portant, and especially in the selection of varieties. White clover-is a hardy plant and isa favorite with all classes of stock. Sheep prefer it to anything else. The seed is not difficult to sow and it will pay to broadcast it now wherever there is a chance for it to secure a stand. Much of the seed may grow, but white clover will appear on many spots that are not now covered. No pasture is complete without it. It will make suffi- cient growth to become established before winter and start off early in the sfting. —Many farms in this State have entailed more labor than was cheerfully bestowed in piling stones taken from the land, stone fences being seen for miles, yet right along- side of these fences of stone the farmers have driven fetlock deep in mud for years, when they could have used the stones to better advantage on the roads than in any other manner, as they were encumbrances. Now that the stonebreaker quickly reduces the stone for the purpose, muddy road should be covered with stone. : —There is much waste every year in al- lowing sweet cornstalks to stand and dry -up after the greater part of the ears have been removed. The nubbins that are left are worth more to feed green than they can be for any other purpose. They are worse than worthless to keep for seed next year. Yet on scores of farms this is what the last nubbins of sweet corn are left to be every year, while the farmer wonders that he is unable to raise such good early crops of sweet corn as he used to do. —It is often thought that if weeds are piled in heaps and left todry and are burn- ed that all danger from their dropping seed is avoided. Yet unless brush has been mixed with the weeds so as to make a hot- ter fire withsome coals some of the seeds will escape. This is seen every year where weeds have been burned the previous sum- mer in the growth of weeds of the same kind as those that were burned. As the weeds dry the seed falls out of them, drop- ping to the soil, and the slow burning of wet or damp weeds concentrates carbonic acid gas under the heap, so that much of what is there found, though it be thorough- ly dried, cannot burn. The seeds of some kinds of weeds are made more sure to grow by being exposed to extreme heat. The Fifty-Cent Dollar. All dollars issued by the United States contain one hundred cents. The goldites call the silver dollar a fifty-cent dollar be- cause the silver bullion in a dollaris only worth in the market now as much as the gold in a gold: dollar. This is nota fair argument, because the greenback is not a fifty cent dollar, and the paper of which it is composed is worth less than one cent, and it would be very ridiculous to call the greenback a one-cent dollar. Every silver dollar in circulation will buy just as much as a gold dollar, and there are more than four hundred millions of silver dollars in circulation, including the actual coin in circulation about sixty millions and the silver certificates in circulation amount to about three hundred and fifty millions. The silver certificates are by law redeema- ble in silver dollars and nothing else. If a person takes a silver certificate to the Treasury Department he can get a silver dollar. Notwithstanding the silver in cir- culation and the silver certificates repre- senting silver coin in the Treasury circu- lates on a par with gold, the goldites per- sist in calling them fifty-cent dollars. Some goldites have gone so far as to utter the bold lie that the government credit is behind the silver dollar. There is nothing behind the silver dollar or the silver certifi- cate except the legal-tender function which is bestowed upon the dollar by Congress. The law commands everybody to receive silver dollars ‘n payment of debts and taxes. That keeps them on a par with gold without any agreement, expressed or implied, to redeem them ingold. But the goldite suggests that if silver was remonet- ized the silver dollar would then be worth only fifty cents, and in the same breath he says that bullion in the hands of the silver miner would be doubled in value. Now, if the silver is worth only fifty cents, how could the silver bullion be doubled in value ? It would be a strange phenomena to have the amount of bullion required to make a dollar silver worth only one hun- dred cents and the dollar afterwards coined worth only fifty cents. The argument that the silver miner would be benefitted 50 per cent, on the value of his bullion is an admission that silver bullion would go up to par with gold, and that being the case, where would the fifty-cent dollar come from ?—gSilver Knight Watchman, of Washington, D. C. Three Points. The depression from which this country has been suffering has been attributed to many causes ; to tariff legislation and the lack of it ; to tariff agitation and free silver agitation ; to want of confidence and ex- cessive confidence, or overtrading ; to over production, or a persistent misfit between demand and supply, and, to the practical abandonment of silver as a monetary basis and the concentration of our financial sys- tem upon the other precious metal. The citizens suffering from prolonged hard times have a right to ask doubtfully why this last named reason for our troubles is the true reason. They have reason to sus- pect a fault in the judgment of leaders who in other political campaigns protested with equal vehemence that all the woes of the land were due to agitation of some sort, or want of confidence, or the tariff, and who now put the blame on currency or the cur- rency agitation. The plain people who do the voting and have not time or taste for much reading, are fully warranted in receiv- ing with distrust all assurances from what- ever quarter as to the meaning and the cause and the cure of this long continued depres- sion, and we will lay before them for quiet consideration these few significant facts which may aid them to make up their minds as to the nature of the troubles that beset us and the hest escape from them. First : the fall in prices began in 1873, when the demonetization of silver also be- gan, not in America alone, but in Europe as well. Second ; the prolonged period of depres- sion has not been confined to America alone, or to the nations having a protective tariff, or to free trade nations, but it has been world wide. Third : the only disturbing cause having world-wide effect upon every branch of trade and industry was that adjustment of the money standard which was undertaken at very nearly the same time by the United States, Germany, France, Holland and the Scandinavian nations, which finally brought the rest of the civilized world to the gold basis and caused the stoppage of silver coinage even in India. These three points are worth thinking over and they suggest a close relation of cause and effect. They can not be explain- ed away.—Lancaster Intelligencer. Improved Modern Methods. ‘You know Demosthenes used to fill his mouth with pebbles to improve his ora- tory.” ‘Of course we have improved on that. When a man wants to improve his voice nowadays he doesn’t stop at the pebbles. He uses rock and rye.”’ —— ‘Every human being should do his share toward lifting the masses of his fellow men.”’ “Well I done my share—I ran an ele- vator for seven years’’—Chicago Record. Business Notice. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was-a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became a Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. ST ————— New Advertisements. F nest Roasted Coffees, Rio, Java, Fresh Roasted. SECHLER & CO Santos and Mocha. RL YR Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. New Advertisements. Dr. Salm. ae AND WINTER, ‘ Prices talk louder than anything. We can save you from 15 to 35 per cent. on all your purchases. We have done it before and will do it now. We have just opened a line of Fall and Winter goods : Good Canton flannel 44c per yard to 15c. fine white flannels from 15 to 65c ; Shaker flannels from 4c up to the best. New pat- terns fall dress gingham from 5c. upward. A good yard wide wide unbleached muslin 4 cents ; heavy yard wide sheeting Sets ; yard wide ticking from 6c. up to the finest linen twill ; all wool dress serges from 25c. up to $1.25 per yard ; all wool suitings in the new mixtures, suitable for dresses and coats, 30c. to S1. : CLOTHING......... Heavy wool knee pants, ages 4 to 14 @ 25¢ ; better quality from 35¢. to $1. Boys’ overalls with aprons 30c. Mens’ heavy cotton pants 65, 74, 84, 98 cents. Special bargains—a lot of mens’ all wool cassimer pants at $1.50. CHILDRENS SUITS. Good dark Winter suits 98c; better qualities $1.24 and up to the best. Mens’ good heavy Winter suits $4, $4.50, $4.75. Mens’ fine all wool suits $6 and upwards ; mens’ fine clay worsted dress suits from $4.90 to $15. A handsome line of boys’ and youths suits from $2.75 up. A fine line of mens’, ladies’ and children’s shoes. A fine dongola ladies shoe at $1 ; a better quality, razor, square or common sense toe, $1.25 to $3.50. Children’s]good and serviceable school shoes from 50 to the best. Infant’s good shoes from;25¢c. to 65c. Boy’s good wearing shoe from 90c to $2.50. Mens’ good working shoes $1.24. Mens’ fine dress shoes from $1.15 to $5. CARPETS......... A fine line of Ingrain carpets from 25c. to the best. Window shades in all colors ; spring rollers 12}c. to the best. SPECIAL.......... Just opening a full line of ladies’, misses’ and childrens coats and capes ; also double and single school satchels. LYON & CO. BELLEFONTE, PA. Katz & Co. Limited. 40-15 pe GLOBE. DRY GOODS AND MILLINERY. A CARD TO THE PUBLIC. We take pleasure in informing our patrons that we have devoted the entire second floor of our building to the exclusive line of men’s youths and boys clothing and furnishing goods. This line in connection with our immense line of Dry Goods makes our store now the largest in Belle, fonte. We have the assortment and can not fail to please you. A call is all we ask jof you whether you intend buying or looking apound. We take pleasure in showing our goods. espectfully, KATZ & CO. Ltd. Se FIUBS, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS, BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS. SECHLER & CO. i ae COAST LINE TO MACKINAC.— nsefl A TE TH Peemens. D. AND C MACKINAC DETROIT PETOSKEY CHICAGO 2 NEW STEEL PASSENGER STEAMERS. The Greatest Perfection yet attained in Bost Construction—Luxurious Equi ment, Artistis Furnishing, Decoration and E ne Service, in- suring highest degree of COMFORT, SPEED AND SAFETY, FOUR TRIPS PER WEEK BETWEEN TOLEDO, DETROIT axp MACKINAC PETOSKEY, ‘‘THE 800,”’ MARQUETTE, AND DULUTH. Low Rates to Picturesque Mackinac and Re- turn, including Meals and Berths. From Cleve- land, $18 ; fsom Toledo, $15; from Detroit, $13.50. EVERY EVENING BETWEEN DETROIT AND CLEVELAND Connecting at Cleveland with Earliest Trains for all points East, South and Southwest and at Detroit for all points North and Northwest. Sunday Trips June, ns August and September nly. TO EVERY DAY BETWEEN CLEVELAND, PUT-IN-BAY AND TOLEDO Send for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address A. A. SCHANTZ, G. P. A., DETROIT, MICH. THE DETROIT AND CLEVELAND STEAM NAV. CO. 41-20-6m JEST TABLE-OIL, MUSTARD OLIVES, SAUCES, KETCHUPS, SALAD DRESSING, MUSHROOMS, TRUFFLES, CAPERS. 38-1 SECHLER & CO. Castoria. { nuoREY 0 CRY 0 FOR PITCHER’S A §S T 0 BR 1 A cC A 8 T 6 B11 & c A 8&8 7 0 B.T1T & ® A § TT 0 BR I A A 8 7 Ce S ® BR I A Cagtoria promotes Digestion, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhea and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. ““Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.” H. A. ArcHEr, M. D., 111 South Oxford St., igh. NY. “I used Castoria in my practice, and find it specially adapted to affections of children.” Arex. Rosertson, M. D., 1057 2d Ave., New York. THE CENTAUR CO., | 41-15-1m 71 Murray St., N. Y. Saddlery. Fo.000 $5,000 $5,000 ———WORTH OF—— HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS SADDLES and FOR SUMMER, —— BRIDLES —NEW HARNESS FOR SUMMER,- FLY-NETS FOR SUMMER, DUSTERS FOR SUMMER, WHIPS FOR SUMMER, All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. “rn asians NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS...... To-day Prices | _° have Dropped | THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 33-87 BELLFONTE, PA. A MATTER OF GREAT IMPORTANCE TO YOU IN SUFFERING FROM LONG STANDING CHRONIC DISEASES, DISEASES OF THE BLOOD, SKIN AND NERVGUS SYSTEM, AS WELL AS THOSE SUFFERING FROM EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT TROUBLE. MORITZ SALM, M. D., Von Grafe Infirmary, COLUMBUS, OHIO. Specialist, ——WILL BE IN— BELLEFONTE, PA. : ee A Tees THE BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ———SATURDAYS— Aug. 8, Sep. 5, Oct. 3-31, Nov. 28, Dec. 26, Jan. 23, Feb. 20, March 20, April 17, May 15, June 12, July 10. ——CENTRE HALL,— RUHL’S HOTEL, MONDAY, Oct. 5, Nov. 2-30, Dec. 28, Jan. 23, Feb. 22, March 22, April 19, May 17, June 14, July 12. ONE DAY ONLY. EXAMINATION AND CONSULTATION FREE TO EVERYBODY. UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS Hard of Hearing for 35 Years, Caused by Ca- tarrh, and cured by Dr. Salm. Rev. J. D. Leister, Swales, Pa. J : Replying to your ngnps, as to testimonial with my signature, ublished by Dr. Salm, will say, that I was under is treatment for 10 months for my hearing. It was catarrh of the middle ear, and like yourself, could hear better some days than others, could hear better in noise. My hearing was very much improved by the treatment, and have no doubt, but that he can help you. Dr. Salm appears to be an honest man, and he will tell you the truth, whether he can help you or not. If I were you i would certainly consult him. I was longer afflic- ted than you. My hearing was bad in one ear for about 35 years, and in the other for about 24 or 25 years. oping that your hearing will be entirely restored. remain. Bedford, Pa., Bedford Co. Isaac Pierson. Case of Catarrh Cured by Dr. Salm. Rev. J. D. Leister, Swales, Pa. Yours came to hand to-day. Dr. Salm treated my 13 year old boy for catarrh in the head, and cured him in 6 months. I don’t know whether he can cure you or not, but on examination he will tell you the truth. I know a man here, that he examined and he told him that he could not be cured. know other people, that he done a great deal of ood in other cases. adisonburg, Centre Co., Pa. Ren Limbert. Granulated Lids Cured by Dr. Salm. For the last four years I have been troubled very much with granulated eye lids; it partly blinded me. Doctors here did me no good, it also seemed to affect my general health. Dr. Salm has cured me. I can again see splendidly, and fee’ better than ever. Bessie Tomas Indiana, Pa., Dec. 5th, 1804. Thaught I Would Lose my Mind, but Di. Sali Cured Me. For years I have been suffering with catarrh and ear trouble, and was miserable indeed. 1 thought sometimes I would lose my mind on ac- count of the fearful noises in my head, and then my hearing was leaving me rapidly, and there was’ent an organ about me rhat was’ent out of shape. But to-day, thanks to Dr. Salm, all those fearful noises 'have left me. Can hear well, no more catarrh, and feel as well as any one of my age could expect. June 12th, 96. Shanksville, Somerset Co., Pa. Mrs. Emma Brant, Four of the Best Doctors in the County. Said She was Incurable, but Dr. Salm Made a Healthy Woman of Her. For over five years I have been suffering with heart trouble and a bad case of dropsy. We went to four of the best doctors in the county for relief but all of them said a cure was impossible. At times I felt so bad that I was certain I had to die. I fainted away very often, and my friends told me afterwards that every moment would be my last. And I hereby affirm that had it not been for the splendid treatment received from Dr. Salm, who has entirely cured me of that great trouble, I would have been under the sod long ago. Sadie I. Ross, Attested by her husband, Henry R. Ross, Leechburg, Armstrong Co., Pa. Dr. Salm Worked Another Miracle. For more than 8 years I have been suffering un- told agonies, with stomach and general trouble. I became thin and pale, too weak to work, and hardly able to-drag Speer around. I looked so badly, that my neighbors, friends and relatives thought I had a and wouldn't last much longer. During those 8 years about 10 or 12 of our best doctors treated me, but I became worse and worse, until I went to Dr. Salm, and I can not eat more in a day, than 1 have heretofore in a week, can attend to my daily labors, look finely, have no more pains, and I actually think 1 am well, People around here think Dr. Salm worked another miracle, and I am thankful to him, for he has saved me from an early grave. June 12th, "96. Mrs. Hannah Mosholder, Listy, Somerset Co., Pa. Address all communications to hox Too, Columbus, O. OUR ADVERTISEMENT WILL APPEAR TWICE BEFORE EACH VISIT. 40-7 U