Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 05, 1897, Image 3

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    Bellefonte,
FARM NOTES.
—There is no black grape to-day superior
to the Concord for general purposes. It is
the universal market grape. - It may be a
long while before a superior variety comes
to the front.
—Much of the manure hauled on farms
is not worth the labor of so doing. Hun-
dreds of farmers haul straw several miles
to livery stables and haul alot of dirty
straw home, valuing it as manure.
—1If is too soon and too cold to have the
sows Tarrow. If young pigs come they
must be kept in a place where they cannot
become chilled, as the pig that is stunted
at this season will not be worth keeping.
— The harness should be overhauled be-
fore spring, not so much as a matter of
; nomy as to have every piece perfect and
in condition not to injure the horses. Sore
backs and irregular draughts may be traced
to the harness in a majority of cases.
— Acting on the notion that as pruning
was good for fruit trees it would benefit
potato vines, Jerry Luckish, of Portland,
Ore., clipped off the vines in a patch close
to the ground as soon as they were well
up, and some of the potatoes grown there
were, it is said, among the largest and fin-
est found. ’
—A Pennsylvanian has a simple plan of
feeding bees. As he has never lost a col-
ony that had a queen and enough bees to
keep it warm, the plan is worth testing.
He makes candy of granulated sugar and
pours this into shallow pans. When cool
he turns itout on top of/ the frames right
over a cluster of bees. 7
—If a neighbor has a flock of sheep which
drops many twins it will be good policy to
obtain some of the ewe lambs, and thus
possess that kind of stock without much
expense, and at the same tie test the
practicability of breedis# for twins under
your own management. Such a course
will certainly procure more prolific breed-
£18.
—Low-down wagons, with wide metal
wheels, are being used with good results,
as they are more easily loaded and the
wide wheels do not cut up the roads, but
assist to pack the surface. Wide wheels
are not necessarily heavy, as improve-
ments in wheels have gained width and
lightness, metal being substituted for the
heavy hubs and spokes to be found in
wheels made of wood.
—1If it has not been done before, this is
a good time to destroy the black knot on
plum trees. Bach specimen should be cut
out, removing the limb to which it is at-
tached, if a small one. Keep the knife wet
with carbolic acid diluted while making
the cuts, and apply the same to the cut
surface. In this way the danger of prop-
agating the speres by use of the knife in|
pruning will be prevented.
—Grass land that was plowed last fall
and left in ridges should be first worked
early with a dise cultivator, so as to cut it
up, and to do the work properly the dise |
cultivator should be weighted to prevent |
compacting the ground. Early in the
spring, when the land is cross-plowed, it
will then
harrow.
or potatoes, as both ¢rops require frequent
cultivation.
—Do not ship live poultry to market in
midwinter, as the fowls suffer terribly on
the journey, not only from cold, but for
water and food, as well as from crowding |
in the coops. Kill and dress all poultry,
dry pick and pack in barrels or boxes, as-
sorting the carcasses, so as to have them
uniform. Live fowls lose weight on the
journey to market, and are frequently ex-
posed on the sidewalks until sold. Dressed
be in better~“condition for the |
sod. land should be used for corn |
Horses of Arabia.
Each Horse is Broken to Its Owner's Hand.—
They are Superb Coursers, but a Good Brood-
Mare Is Never Ridden or Sold—A Race in the
Desert.
R. Talbot Kelley, an English artist who
has lived much among the Arabs, writes
and illustrates a paper entitled “‘In the
Desert with the~Bedouin” for the Febru-
ary Century. Mr. Kelley writes as follows
of the famous Arabian horses: The Hana-
ardi and Nephaarta Arabs are famous horse-
breeders, and take great pride in their stud.
These horses are, I think, the best ‘Arabs’
I have seen; and far from Deing the
gazelle-like creatures usually depicted,
they are strongly built, large boned animals
of from fifteen to sixteen and a half hands
high. I have seen one of sixteen and a
half hands high, but this is unusual. Their
immense neck and shoulders make the map-
pear perhaps a little light behind ; but
they have plenty of staying power, and
their length 6fhock is an earnest of the
speed they undoubtedly possess. Parties
from these tribes are constantly roaming the
deserts of Syria and Mesopotamia in search
of good brood-mares ; and I have heard of
as much as a thousand guineas being paid
for one, and a good brood mare is never
parted with or ridden.
1 remember seeing a bunch of Nephaarta
horses brought in for the inspection of an
emissary of the Khedive who wished to
purchase a pair for his Highness. There
were some twenty or twenty-five of the
most beautiful colts possible, with the ex-
ception of one rather weedy-looking beast.
As soon as SheiksMansour saw it he shout-
{ed : “Take it away, and give it to the first
man you meet. I will not own that asa
Nephaarta horse!” The Khedive’s agent
eventually selected two, for which I saw
him pay five hundred pounds Egyptian.
Entire Arab horses are always diffi§ult to
ride at first, though after a few days, when
horse and rider have become reconciled,
they are docile enough, and easily trained.
Each man has virtually to break his horse
to his own hand, and should another
mount an apparently quiet beast, he would
have to do the work all over again. It
seems to be a tacit understanding between
horse and rider that their joint career be-
gins with a struggle for the mastery. To
a visitor like myself, whose mounts must
constantly be changing, the prospect is
sufficiently alarming. One’s early days in
an Arab camp are frequently days of pain
and tribulation, as one slowly recovers
from a bout with a half savage stallion.
Though they eventually hecome quiet
and obedient to their masters’ hand, great
care must be observed, when riding in com-
pany not to allow one’s horse to approach
within kicking distance of another or dis-
astrous results follow. The horses are al-
ways.ready for a fight, and deceitfully ap-
pear to be on their best behavior immedi-
ately before an outbreak. Iwas riding one
day with a small party of Samana Arabs,
when two men carelessly approached too
close. I called out to them to sheer offa
little, but before they could respond a cener-
al melee was in progress, and almost in-
stantly my horse had its teeth in the neck
of one of theirs, while the other was killed
by a kick which burst its stomach, Tort
unately we all escaped with a few bruises,
| though the riders do not always get off so
| easily. When riding at full gallop, how-
ever, the attention of the horse is concen-
trated upon the race, and the men may ride
as close together as they like, but care must
| he taken to wheel apart as the pace
slackens.
Nothing can exceed the intoxication of a
race in the desert. Choosing a stretch of
| level sand, you give your horse the signal
| to zo. and he is off with a spring that al-
mest unseats you ; and I haveseen an in-
stance where the sudden strain burst the
girths, and left man and saddle in the dust,
while the horse was a hundred yards away
| before the discomfited rider realized what
had happened. The speed that these horses
attain is very great, and their reach for-
ward is prodigions, as I found on one occas-
ion when my horse's hind hoof cut the
heel clean off my boos. After a gallop, in- |
Geo. B. Roberts’ Illness Ended.
The Pennsylvania Railroad President Dies at His
Home in a Philadeiphia Suburb.—Heart Failure the
Cause.—A Quiet, Happy Domestic Life.
George Roberts, President of the Penn-
sylvania railroad company, died Saturday
afternoon at his home near Philadelphia,
from heart failure, which was superinduced
by acute indigestion.
Mr. Roberts has been ill since August
and confined to bed for two months with
catarrh of the stomach. During the past
two weeks his condition had btcome prac-
tically hopeless, but he was conscious until
the last.
CAREER OF THE DEAD PRESIDENT.
George B. Roberts was born in Mont-
gomery county, Pa., January 15th, 1833.
His early education was received at the
Renssellaer Polytechnic Institute at Troy,
N. Y., and his entire life since his school
days has practically been spent in railroad
service.
In 1851 he began active railroading as a
rodman employed in the construction of
the mountain division of the Pennsylvania
railroad. In 1852 he became assistant
engineer of the Philadelphia and Erie rail-
road, and for the subsequent ten years was
steadily engaged in the location and con-
struction of various railroads.
In 1862 he returned to the Pennsylvania
railroad, with the title of assistant to the
President, under J. Edgar Thomson, at
that time President of the company. Mr.
Roberts’ skill as an engineer and fine ad-
ministrative abilities marked him for pro-
motion to the Fourth Vice Presidency in
1869. This election was followed almost
immediately by another, making him Sec-
ond Vice President. Upon the accession
of Colonel Thomas A. Scott to the Presi-
dency June 3rd, 1874, Mr. Roberts was
advanced by him to the First Vice Presi-
dency.
REACHES THE TOP
There was no halt, no break in his on-
ward course. It was the most natural
thing in the world, upon Colonel Scott’s
death in May, 1880, for Mr. Roberts to suc-
ceed him in the Presidency.
Mr. Roberts married early in life, had
six children, and lived at his country home
all the year round. Itis just five miles
from Bala to Philadelphia along the
Schuylkill Valley division of the Pennsyl-
vania railroad, and at 9 o'clock in the
OF THE LADDER.
President was as surely a passenger over
these five miles as it was certain that most
other prominent men are necessarily un-
certain in their movements. On his ar-
rival at the solid old gray stone building
in South Fourth street, in which the ad-
ministrative offices of his railroad system
are situated, he found a plain, flat-topped,
old-fashioned square desk and a straight-
backed chair awaiting his occupancy.
Mr. Roberts was a lover of the open-air
diversions, and delighted in long walks
over his farm. He was at all times a quiet,
self contained man. The 200 acres under
cultivation around his place at Bala are
rented out to a farmer, who looks after the
details. but were a source of instruction as
{ well as amusement for their owner.
| PURELY A DOMESTIC MAN.
{| When the magnates of the land met in
| social mood and the fame of their banquets
{ was spread far and wide, and the cobwebs
| were chronicled on their vintages and
|
|
speeches were made and stories told, Mr.
Roberts was not there. He was at home
about that time with Lis family ; as like as
| not in his library at Bala studying a prob-
{ lem in engineering. He had one of the
| finest private libraries it the country of
| books as references in applied science.
i For amusement he asked nothing better
| a romp with his children, or a walk around
the estate with his farmer.
The ties of society were not sufficiently
| strong to draw him away from the delights
of domesticity. The theater seldom attract-
ed from his fireside, and if he ever
made an after-dinner speech history did
| not record it.
One phase of his carcer deserves atten-
fowls will not quickly decompose in cold | stead of breaking into a canter and then | tion. He was a vestrvimen of St. Stephen’s
weather and will bring better prices.
—Hedges are useful or detrimental ac-
cording to the way they are kept. A well-
trimmed hedge is ornamental and becomes
better every year, but if neglected, and al-
lowed to grow without attention, it is very
unsightly. The first year is the most im-
portant in managing a hedge, and in three
years it should be ina conditionsto de-
mand but little trimming. An osage orange
hedge is better than a fence when once es-
tablished, and can be so managed the first
three years as to be impenetrable to small
animals. 7
— Be careful not to use seed potatoes the
coming spring that are scabby. Do not
plant potatoes on the same land that was |
used for the crop last year, as there may
have been no traces of disease discovered, |
yet it may have existed if even but slight-
ly, and if so, it will spread over the whole
field this year. Every bushel of seed pota-
toes should be carefully exaniined and
every precaution taken to avoid disease, as
once -the soil is ‘contaminated it may re-
quire years of hard work to get rid of the
difficulty.
—C(arrots, beets and parsnips should be
planted early, so as to allow the crops a
full season in which to grow. They will
also escape the late weeds.
of planting such crops after corn is put in is
to double the labor of fighting weeds,
which becomes laborious with crops grown
from small seeds. The land must be plow-
ed and made loose as soon as possible, so as
to give the first weeds a chance to grow,
when the cultivator and harrow should
work the land fine. It is useless to at-
tempt to grow such crops unless the seed-
bed is made exceedingly fine.
—Those who have attempted to grow
strawberries in single stools and keep down
the runners know that it means constant |
work, as for every runner cut off two seem
to start out the next day. When the plant
loses a runner it makes an effort to more
than gain the loss. By setting out the
plants 14 inches each way, checked like |
corn, the hand wheel hoe will keep the
weeds and grass down. The next year one
row may be removed, working with a
horse, which will leave the rows 28 inches
apart, the plants heing matted in the rows,
and a horse hoe or pony cultivator being
used.
—In the Cole Camp (Mo.,) Courier Rev. |
John Brereton, an experienced horticultur- |
ist, urges fruit growers never to put paint, |
their trees to protect them |
tar or grease on
from rabbits. He says. It stops the pores
of the bark, stunts the tree and finally kills
it. There arc many mixtures that will
keep off rabbits and insects. A, wash of
lime, ashes, cowdung, sulphur, and a
small quantity of crude carbolic acid, has
often heen recommended ; but a piece of
fine screen wire or short pieces of lath
voven together with pieces of wire and all
dog around the body of the tree is the
est.
The practice |
into a trot before stopping, they simply put
i their fore feet together and stop dead, their
| impetus frequently causing them to slide
(several yards. I understand that it is on
this acccont that Arab horses are shed on
i the fore feet only.
A Catastrophe.
i The train was roaring along about forty
i miles an hour, and the conductor was busi-
ly punching tickets full of holes, when a
little thin old man who sat in one of the
| corner seats plucked his sleeve.
i ‘‘Mister conductor, you be sure and let
{ me off at Speers Station. You, see this is
| the first time I ever rode on steam-cars, and
I don’t know anything 'hout them. You
{ won’t forget it eh 2’ :
I “All right, sir ; I wont forget.”
| The old man brushed back a stray lock
| of hair and straightening himself, gazed
| with increased wonder at the flying “land-
| scape, every now and then exclaiming,
| “Gracious I’ “By .gum!” ete.
| Suddenly there was a crash, and after a
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
number of gymnastics moves that made
him think of his school days, he found him
self sitting on the grass of the enbankment
alongside the track.
Seeing another passenger sitting a short
distance away, patiently supporting var-
ious parts of the splintered car across his
legs, he inquired.
“Is this Speers Crossing ?’’
The passenger; who was a drummer, and
| not altogether new to such happenings, re-
| . . . LT .
| plied with a smile, although in considera-
|
ble pain.
“No; this is catastrophe.”
| “Is that so,” he irritably exclaimed.
“Now I knew that conductr would put me
offat the wrong place.”’—Harper’s Round:
Table.
—————————————————
He Wanted the Earth.
Stanley and Henry, two four-yecar-olds,
funeral the other day. The uniforms made
a strong impression upon their youthful
minds, and the band, playing a funeral
march, a strong = one still. After the pa-
rade had passed on they resumed their
play.
“Let’s play fooneral,” said Stanley.
“All wight,”” assented Henry.
| dwive de toach.”’
“No. I'll dwive,’’ asserted Stanley.
“Den I'll be de band.”
‘No. Pl] be de hand.”
“Tan I be de dead man, den?’
“No vou tan’t. I’m doin to be de dead
| man,” insisted Stanley.
| “You want to he de whole fooneral. I
won't play.” And away he went in indig-
|
|
|
A
nation.
—————————————
Father, Like
Like son.
The milkman’s boy run off to sea,
i Although he “hadn’t orter.”
But like his pa, he wished to make
His living Pa theawater,
—Cincinnatti Conuncreinl Tribune,
gazed with wide open eves at a K. P. |
repute among his personal {friends and
neighbors.
He was buried on Tuesday afternoon
from St. Asaph’s the little Ilpiscopal
church he built near his country home
Pennsylvania ; Rev. Dr. William McCon-
nell, formerly rector of St. Steven’s church
and Mr. Olmsted conducted the services.
The honorary pall bearers were the di-
rectors of the Pennsylvania Railroad com-
pany, and the presidents of the various
railroads forming the general traffic associ-
ation. While the active pall bearers were
the eight colored porters, who have heen
longest in the service of the company.
Needed Ironing.
Bobbie had been studying his dear old
grandfather’s wrinkles face for a long
time.
“Well, Bob,’ said the old gentleman, do
you like my face ?”’
‘‘Yes, grandpa.’’ said Bob, ‘‘it’s an aw-
fully nice face. But why don’t you have
it ironed ?”’
‘Nelly, I wish I wuz a doll!’
“Why 7!
“Cause I'd have me stomach filled with
somet’ing, if it wuz only rags and saw-
dust ""—Truth.
——Johnny — “Ma, what is a grass
widow?’ Ma—*‘It isa woman whose hus-
band is engaged in the business of sowing
wild oats.” :
way of the world is to praise
and persecute living ones.
The
dead saints
Is he a society man ?
Well, he is in society.
|
——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN.
ana i Florida.
morning and 4:30 in the afternoon the"
Are There Classes ?
It is stated that there are 8,000 people in
Chicago that are actually on tlie verge of
starvation and 50,000 more almost wholly
destitute, and that steps have .been taken
among the charitable to relieve their dis-
tress. A ball was recently given in New
York which cost its patrons $275,000, of
which sun $15,000 alone was expended on
flowers, and yet we are told that there are
no classes—that under the broad aegis of
the great American republic all the people
stand upon the same footing.
few months ago that we were told it-was
Anarchistic to point out the wide gulf be-
tween the very rich and the very poor. It
is said that a certain clergyman of New
York stepped down from his sanctified
place, and before a political club har-
angued his hearers to the effect that there
were no classes, and that he would sacrifice
his right arm before he would train with a
party that taught the doctrine that there
was an issue between the masses and the
classes. We wonder whether this clergy-
man ever read the story of the poor, bare-
footed fisherman, who followed the lowly
Nazarene who preached social and religious
reform in Galilee against the tenets of the
autocratic Roman pretors ?
The struggle between the masses and the
classes has been on for many centuries and
it will continue to the end of time, and all
that the former can hope for is an occa-
sional concession reluctantly granted them.
“There are ninety and nine that live and die
In poverty, hunger, and cold, ®
That one may revel in luxury,
And be wrapped in its silken fold ;
¢# The ninety and nine, in their hovels bare,
* The one in a palace with riches rare.
“They toil in the fields, the ninety and nine,
For the fruit of our mother earth ;
They dig and delve in the dusky mine,
And drag its treasures forth,
And the wealth released by their sturdy blows
Into the hands of one forever flows.” —Er.
Very Cold in the South.
The Whole of Florida is Fost-Bitten and Much
Damage Donc—Reports From Other Places.
Reports to the Associated Press from the
South Atlantic States show the present
cold snap to be the most severe of the win-
ter, and quite general from Virginia to
At Danville, Newport News, Pe-
tersburg, Roanoke and Norfolk; Va., the
temperature ranged from 6 degrees to 20.
Snow lies over the State to a depth of from
2 to 6 inches and ice has formed on most of
the streams.
From Norfolk the statement is received
that the storm was very severe on the bay.
Lookouts on incoming vessels reported the
cold as intense. Life savers along the
beach also report a terrible night as they
patrolled the coast. The temperature
dropped to 14 degrees, with chilling north-
west winds.
than a quiet hour among these quiet friends,
Episcopal church and of the new church of |
St. Asaph, ‘at Bala, a regular attendant!
upon their services and a man of blameless
Jishop Whittaker, of the eastern diocese of |
t
|
Throughout Georgia and North and
South Carolina the weather is dry and cold
the thermometer ranging from 10 degrees
to 25 as a maximum.
Jacksonville, Fla., reports that the cold
throughout Northern Florida was the
most intense since February, 1895.
Across the northern counties, from Jack-
sonville to Pensacola, the thermometer
ranged generally from 20 to 24 degrees, go-
ing here a.:1 there as low as 17. Frost in
lesser degree was felt as far south, as Titus-
ville on the east coast and Tampa on the
west. Reports from the districts devoted
to the orange culture indicate that, except
in the more exposed situations, little in-
jury has been done. Not sufficient sap wi
in the wood to cause material damage.
The losses of the truck farmers in the
Gainesville district will be more severe.
A considerable percentage of the growing
lettuce, beets and cabbage has been killed,
but no close estimate can yet be formed.
-——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN.
It is only a{
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 Miss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
New Advertisements.
ANTED.—Good homes for two boys,
aged six and eight years. Also twins—
boy and girl, aged eleven years. Apply to
MRS. H. T. KURTZ,
Bellefonte, Pa.
Pres. of Children’s Aid Society,
We areselling a good grade of tea—green
—Dblack or mixed at 28cts per. Ib. Try it.
SECHLER & CO.
FUBS, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS,
BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS.
SECHLER & CO.
Castoria.
{ fuirery
—CRY—o0
FOR PITCHERS
Ag Tg HI A
C C A ®% TT 0 BI a
C A & TF a IN
C A 8 7 0 BR I A
C A 8 7 a nn I A
gle
CASTORIA DESTROYS WORMS, ALLAYS
FEVERISHNESS, CURES DIARRHEA AND
WIND COLIC, RELIEVES TEETHING TROUB-
LES AND CURES CONSTIPATION AND FLAT-
ULENCY.
CASTORIA
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
Do not be imposed upon, but insist upon hav-
ing Castoria, and
see that the fac-
simile signature of
is on tho wrapper. We shall protect “ourselves
and the public at all hazards.
THE CENTAUR CO,
77 Murray St, N. ¥,
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
41-15-1m
YECOGNIZED——}
+
THE
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STANDARD PIANO OF THE WORLD,
ESTABLISHED 1838.
SOLD T0 EVERY PART OF THE
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PREFERRED BY ALL THE LEADING ARTISTS.
THE GOLD
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extraordinary power and durability with great beauty and even-
STRINGS
ness of touch.
Pre-eminently the best and most highly improved
instrument now manufactured in this or any other country jn the world.
—— HIGHEST HONOR EVER
ACCORDED
ANY MARKER.———
UNANIMOUS VERDICT.
1851—Jury Group, International Exposition—1876, for Grand, Square, and Upright |
Pianos.
Illustrated catalogue mailed on application
SCHOMACKER PIANO-FORTE MANUFACTURING CO.,
WARER®OMS :
1109 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
12 East Sixteenth Street, New York.
145 and 147 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.
1015 Olive Street, St. Louis.
Miss S. OHNMACHT, Agent,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
China Hall.
China Hall.
see the finest display in Centre county.
41-49
verde
We have some elegant selections for the Winter Season. Just
ARTIS
LARGER
FINER
DAINTIER
COMPLETER
CHEAPER
—
What You
CBMrN RE
High Street
Want is What we Have.
than ever is our Stock of China Ware.
Come and
CHINA HALL,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Dr. Salm.
A MATTER OF GREAT
IMPORTANCE TO YOU
IN SUFFERING FROM LONG STANDI
CHRONIC DISEASES, DISEASES OF THE
BLOOD, SKIN AND NERVOUS SYSTEM,
AS WELL AS THOSE SUFFERING
. FROM
EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT
TROUBLE.
MORITZ SALM, M. D., Specialist,
Von Grafe Infirmary,
COLUMBUS, OHIO.
—— WILL BE IN—
BELLEFONTE, PA.,
a
THE BROCKERHOFF HOUSE,
——SATURDAYS—
Feb. 20, March 20, April 17, May 15,
June 12, July 10. Aug. 7, Sep.
4, Oct. 2-30, Nov. 27, Dec. 25.
ONE DAY
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EXAMINATION AND CONSULTATION
FREE TO EVERYBODY.
UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS
Hard of Hearing for 35 Cransed
tarrh, and curcd by Di. Salm,
ev. J. D. Leister, Swales, Pa.
hy Coe
Yr
1C0rs,
teplying to your
inquiry, as to testimonial with my signature,
published by Dr. Salm, will say, that I was under
iis treatment for 10 months for my hearing. It
was eatarrh 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 vou or not. If I were you, |
would certainly consult him. 1 was longer aftlict-
ed than you. ~My hearing was bad in one ear for
about 35 years, and in the other for about 24 or 25
years, Hoping that your hearing will be entirely
restored. Iremain.
Bedford Co. Bedford, Pa., [«aae Pierson.
Case of Calarrlk Cured by Dr. Sali.
Rev. J. D. Leister, Swales, Pa.
Yonrs came to
hand to-day. Dr. Salm treated wy 13 year old boy
for catarrh in the head, and cured him in ©
months. [don’t know whether he can eure you
or not, but on examination he, will tell you the
truth. I know aman here, that he examined,
and he told him that he could not be curved. |
know other people, that he has done a great deal
of good in other ca
Madisonburg, Centre Co, |
2a, Len Limbert.
After the Country Doctors Had Giren im
as Incurable, De. Sulu Cured Him,
I must truly say that Dr. Salm has treated me
well and 1 have improved wonderfully under hi
skillful treatment, even after onr country doctors
all gave me up as incurable,
Up
J. F. Weidenmeirer.
Paxtonville, Snyder Co., Pa, Aug. 24th, 1306,
Case of Catavrh Cured by Dr. Sali.
For 7 years I have had a bad case of catarrh,
took cold continually and almost always had
headaches ; a bad stomach, as well and too many
accompanying troubles to mention. But now, at-
ter only a short treatment of Dr. Salm, I am al-
Most 4 new man.
Henry Treou.
I Sunbury, Northumberland Co., Pa., Sep. 9th., 1806.
Received Great Benefit.
I have received great benefit from the 3 months
treatment, I have taken from Dr. Salm, for which
I feel very greatful.
D. F. Porter.
Butler, Butler Co., Pa., Aug. 1st, 1896.
Dr. Salm Snatched Her From Her Grong
Mr. Secretary :— 3
You asked me why I did not come
back last month. The medicine Dr. Salm gave
me helped me so much, that I thought it was not
necessary to return at present, but however, if i
need any further treatment he is my physician.
He cured me of scrofula, about one year ago,
snatched me, you might say, from the grave.
This is saying a good deal, but it is true.
Mrs. A. E. Meyer.
Linden Hall, Centre Co., Pa., July 14th, 1896.
Liver and Nerve Trovble by
Dr. Salm.
For more than 7 years I have had a bad stom-
ach, liver and nerve trouble. Beeame so weak
that I couldn't work any more. For 6 and one
half years I have tried the best doctors in the
country but got worse and worse, but now, after a
short treatment with Dr. Salm, I am able to at-
tend to my daily labors again, putting in a good
days work. Eat splendidly and have gained
greatly in weight. Philip R. Enders.
Dalmatia, Northumberland Co., Pa., Sep. 9th, 1896.
|
| Cured of Stomach,
Nobody Has Done More for My Health Than
Dr. Salm.
I have only taken a half month's treatment and
in that time, I dare say, no one could have done
more for my health than Dr. Salm, as I feel a
great deal better. William H. Knepp.
Troxelville, Snyde.: Co., Pa., Aug, 3rd, 1805,
Catarvh and Bronchitis Cured by Dr. Salm.
For some years I have been in had health. Suf-
fered very much from ecatarrh and brouchitis,
lost flesh “continually, coughed a great deal and
there didn’t seem to be a spot about me that
didn’t ache. So I went to Dr. Salm, who comes
here every four weeks, for treatment. Iam so
much pleased with the improvement that I want
everyone to know it. I can eat finely, feel a good
deal stronger, and 1 know I will soon he myself
again, Mr. Henry Keithan.
Sunbury, Northumberland Co., Pa, Sep. th, 1806.
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