\ [Bellefonte, Pa., April 30, 1897. FARM NOTES. —In these days of rush and scramble for —no one knows what—many seem to have discarded all things that do not produce cash, and the home garden is the first to suffer—on the plea that their owners can- not afford the time ; while it really is the most profitable acre on the farm. A good garden will save very much in groceries, meat ; and in many cases, doc- tor’s bills; to say nothing of the better culture and satisfaction in the home where its fruits are to be had. Living on meat, potatoes and bread differs very little from the savages and is a very poor diet to broaden the intellect of either young or old. The first important step toward a gar- den is the selection of seed. One must | have good seed, -else his labors are all for naught. This does not mean simply seeds that will grow, but fresh well selected seeds that are purg'and true to name. The seed of most varieties of vegetables will grow when they are several years old, but none of them are improved with age ; and sev- eral varieties will not amount to anything if the seed is two or three years old. The seed usually sold in the grocery stores are of this class and are not to be depended upon. There are many reliable seed firms and they all send their catalogues free. Very cheap seeds, however, are seldom pro- fitable to buy ; so my advices is to buy of a seedsman who seems to give a fair and impartial description of his seeds and charges a fair price for them. For the garden plot I prefer rather a low, well drained piece of ground with a slight south slope in preference to a south hillside. Garden ground cannot be too rich naturally, but if stable manure is used it should be fine and plowed in as deeply p | possible. Make and keep it mellow, e and as clean as possible and do not work it when it is wet and you will surely have plenty of excellent vegetables the year around. 2 A packet each of tomatoes and cabbage is enough. The tomatoes at least should be planted in a box in the house during the month of March and transplanted May 1st so as to get deeper and give more room; and the last of May the weather will be safe to set them out in the garden—setting four feet apart each way. Of peas, beans and corn, get a pint to a quart of each va- riety, according to the size and tastes of the family ; of other seeds about an ounce of each kind. It costs but little more and as Mrs. Means told her husband, ‘‘While you're gittin’ git a plenty.” Don’t be stingy with the garden. The chickens and stock can eat what you can’t if you don’t sell it. I will give a list of varieties I have tried and have found best so far ; vet I am still trying to find something better : Asparagus Conover’s colossal, I think this is the most desirable vegetable. Coming in as it does, the first in the spring, it should be in every garden. Grow it on low, rich, well drained soil in a bed or in rows four feet apart and plants two feet apart, dig outa place two feet deep and fill in with all sorts of old rubbish, as bones, rotten wood, old shoes and well rotted manure ; cover with soil and set the plants so that the crown - will come about five inches helow the sur- face. Keep the bed clean from grass and weeds. Do not eut any of the asparagus for two years; when it will do to use. Never cut asparagus.above the surface as many do, but cut it an inch below and keep it all cut before it starts to bush out. This will keep it in bearing as long as you want it. For beans I use Wardwell’s Kidney Wax and Burpee's Dwarf Bush Lima; beets,” Eclipse; cabbage, Early Jersey Wakefield, for early and All Head Early or Sure Head for main crop ; cauliflower, Henderson’s Snowball ; celery, Golden Self Blanching or White Plume ; sweet corn, Cory, None Such, Country Gentlemen and Evergreen, planted at the same time These will give good corn all the sea- ' son. For lettuce, Tomhanock, Grand Rapids, and Denver market ; musk melon, Emereld Gem and Jenny Lind for early and. Miller’s Cream or Princess for late ; water melon’s Phinney’s Eye ; onions, Red Wethersfield, Yellow Danvers and White Globe’; pars- nips, Hollow Crown ° peas, Alaska, Pre- mium "Gem, Heroine: or Telephone and Champion of England. These planted at the same tine will give excellent peas for six weeks. The last two named are tall varieties and need to be brushed to do well. For radishes, Scarlet Olive Shaped, planted once a week ; spinach, Bloomsdale or Long Standing ; squash, Summer Crookneck and ‘Winter Hubbard or Sibley ; tomatoes; Acme fora good all around tomato ; turnip, Pur- ple Top Strap: Leaf ; salsify. Sandwich Isl- ‘and, a fine winter root used for soups or stews, and should be grown by all. In the fall dig them and pack in sand in the cellar. =e : . I have found thoroughly air slacked lime to be the best and cheapest thing to keep the flee beetle and striped cucumber ‘or melon bug from destroying plants. It. has to be put on after every rain or heavy. dew as long as the enemies are around, but they will not bother the plants as long as it is on them and the lime does mot injure -the plants asdoes the kerosene emulsion. I am still looking for a reliable and practi-' cal remedy for the cabbage worm. : When properly conducted, the Kitchen’ garden should be the most profitable part of the farm. Too often -its confined area and the laborious methods employed in its management make the labor of cultivating it out of all proportion to the returns. In- stead of confining the garden toa small area, it is better to enclose one or two acres of good rich land with a good windhbreak of some kind, so that it will make a garden plot twice as long as wide. Leave a head- land in grass about fifteen feet wide around, as good crops cannot be grown next to a windbreak. The rows should run the long way of theland. If the garden is surround- ed by a fence, it will be found a good plan to have the part at the ends “of the rows made of movable panels, so they may be removed when cultivating. Onions need to be sown as early in the spring as the land can be plowed. Select a rich part of your garden, use plenty of well rotted manure, pulverize the soil after harrowing with a fine tooth garden rake, putting- all the coarse litter to one side. Take your radish seed and mix it with the onion and sow with a seeder ; Use the rad- * ishes till past their season, then go through and pull up all that are left, thereby get- ting two crops in one and saving extra care | and weeding. For early use get ‘‘sets.”’ They are ready to use the last of May for salad.—The Northwestern Agricutturist, -—~Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. THE WHOLE STORY SO FAR. The contest on the Greek frontier is the last phase of a struggle that has existed for centuries. The Roman Empire in the Au- gustan age compassed the then civilized world. India and China were cut off from | the rest of the globe, and though they reached a high stage of civilization after’ their own kind, they were not counted as part of the civilized world. The decentra- lizing process began soon after the death of Augustus, and before long there were two Roman emperors and the seat of power was transferred to Byzantium, rechristened Constantinople after the first Christian Em- peror. A few more centuries rolled by and the propaganda of Mahomet began with the object of bringing the whole world un- der the banner of the prophet. At one time it seemed destined to succeed. Asia and Africa fell before the Moslem invader, and Europe drove back the rising tide after herculean efforts. The fight was kept up ; four hundred years ago Constantinople fell into the hands of the Turk, and with it Greece and the Balkan states: The struggle for dominion has been car- ried on ever since, but in the present cen- tury, in the memory of many yet living, the domains of the Sultan have been re- stricted, and but for the powers there would be no Turkish rule in Europe to- day. The balance of power has demanded that the Sultan control the Bosphorus and the Dardanelles, and all efforts to drive him out have so far failed. The concert of the powers on its present basis began after the Napoleonic wars. With Napoleon safe in Saint Helena, the monarchs sat down to make a new map of Europe with guarantees for the future. The powers were five at that time—Eng- land, Russia, France, Austria and Prussia —all the rest being of the second class, and in a sense dependencies of the others. Time has brought some changes. Prussia is now the German Empire, and Italy is added to the list. The basic principle of the agree- ment was that no power should aggrandise itself without compensation to the others to maintain the balance of power. The Crimean war broke the concert and Eng- land and France joined with Turkey against Russian ambition. At the conclu- sion of that war certain promises were made by the Sultan which were not kept. The outrageous massacres of Christians in Bulgaria brought on the Turco-Russian war. The powers stood one side until the war was over. The triumphant Russians came in sight of Constantinople, and the treaty of San Stefano was made, which practically gave Russia control of the Bos- phorus and would have resulted in the elim- ination of the Turk from European po- litics. Then the powers interfered. The treaty of San Stefano was set aside, and at the Congress of Berlin in 1878 a new ar- rangement was made. Russia was given new territory along the Black Sea and was allowed to continue her conquests in Asia, but she lost Constantinople. Turkey was despoiled of much of her European terri- tory. Some of the Balkan states became independent, some were put under the suzerainty of the Emperor of Austria, and others received nominal autonomy, while England received Cyprus as her share. The Sultan agreed to carry out certain reforms as to the Christians in his dominions and Greece received the promise of a rectitied frontier, which she did not get. For a time there was a hope of better things. The Sultan seemed to be progres- sive. But Sultans have a way of dying very suddenly, usually by request, and ere long Abdul-Hamid gained the throne, and the rest is recent history. The massacres in Armenia exceeded anything known in civilized history, and the powers at once began to remonstrate. - ‘‘Identical notes’’ and threats have been served on the Sul- tan from time to time without effect, hut the powers were not agreed upon any policy of coercion. The massacre of Christ- ians in Crete brought about the crisis. The Cretans are largely Greek in language, race and religion. They asked the protection of Greece, and that little nation rose as one man in behalf of her neighbors. Then came more ‘‘identical notes.” The pow- ers were amazed that anything should be done without their consent. The ‘‘peace- ful blockade’ of Crete began and that of Greece was threatened. The logic of events soon made such measures useless. The impatient Greeks have a patriotic organiza- tion of a military character. These irre- gulars swarmed over the border’ into that portion of Turkey assigned them by the Berlin Congress, which they had never received. Now war is here in earnest. In all the manoeuvering that has heen going on for years it has been apparent that the aim of Russia is to control the Bosphorus and give an outlet for her navy to the. Mediterraneon. The Baltic is closed: in winter, and in any event the control of the Danish Straits is easy in time of war. The principal antagonist of Russian ambi- tion is England, which fears the advance of the Muscovite toward the Indian frontier. The control of the Bosphorus would threaten the Suez Canal, the key to the Indian situa- tion. i : ‘The Russian diplomacy is not run on any individual plan. Pan-Slavism is a prin- ciple that depends on, no Czar. The pres- ent youth may he well disposed toward the Greeks for family reasons, but he cannot, control the Russian spirit. In the far East Russia is tightening her coils around China, and she is moving steadily in the direction. of the Bosphorus. Her restraining’ hand: has been:apparent in all the last two years, of fruitless negotiation, Whatever hap- pens, Russia must be the gainer, and tinie’ i8' working to her advantage. The Russians! are oriental and are the hatural allies of; the Sultan ‘until the time comes to absorb, Turkey into her own dominions." : What the future of diplomacy will be no man can foresee. It seems as if something important must soon be done, and when the contest comes Europe is threatened if, the ambitions of Russia are not curbed. It is the old fight of the East against the West. Charles Martel liurled back the. Turk in the seven days’ battle at Tours. Who is to be the modern deliverer of Eu- rope? The Greek war is important now, hut it'seems. destined soon to become an incident only.— Philadelphia Inquirer. —— ‘Please ma’am letter 27’. The voice was that of a little boy, by whose side stood a smaller child carrying a great basket upon his arm. The lady ad- dressed took the note and read : ‘‘Good person, please give these starving little ones—fatherless and motherless—a penny.”’ The reader regarded the beggars with tearful eyes as she inquired, in a voice. choked with emotion : **Who wrote this, note for you, children ?”’ . With a sniffle of expectancy the elder’ answered, suavely, ‘‘Me muvver, ma’am !”’ , won’t you read the Stains on ‘Wall Paper. Fresh stains upon wall paper where peo- ple have rested their heads can be removed by covering the spot with a mixtare of pipeclay and water made inte a soft paste and letting it remain over night. Then brush it off with a stiff whisk broom. ‘for a month or more. In the Flood Country. People Twenty Miles from the River Find Th / Drowned Out. - “Too much cannot be said of the citi- zens’ committee of Memphis. It is made up of the very best people of that city, who undertook the relief of their neigh- bors across the river in Arkansas without any idea of calling on the people outside of the State for co-operation. It was only after they had exhausted their means and saw that the flood was to last longer than had been at first feared that they were compelled to accept assistance from other cities,” said to a Louisville ‘‘Courier Journal’ writer. : ‘‘The negroes are the greatest sufferers. For the most part” they had a mule, a few hogs and a dozen or more chickens, the value of which measured the amount of their credit. The water has swept away- these small belongings and with them the owners’ credit. They are, of course, thrown upon the charity of the public. The white people have suffered also, but they are.in no ‘wise in such large numbers as the negroes. Most of them still have credit, and they are as a rule too proud to accept charity and are living on their expectations after the flood subsides. The committee tries to be judicious in the distribution of its supplies, and only those who are in actual need and are poverty-stricken are given assistance. The committee’s work has resolved itself into keeping people from starving. ‘‘The idea most people get from the news- paper accounts of the flood is that when a crevasse is made the water rushes over miles of the country, carrying death and destruction with it, much like the Johns- town flood did. Of course, the property immediately surrounding the break is swept away, but the people 10 or 15 or 20 miles back in the country knew nothing of the break until they awaken to find water in their yards. They see the -water rise to the level of their horses’ necks, and before they can do anything to save their belong- ings all their live stock has been drowned and the people themselves are compelled to seek safety on the tops of their cabins or on floors built on stilts. Some have lived in this way for weeks. “I went out on a relief boat yesterday and visited many of the cabins so situated. Our boat went five miles back into the woods, one of the country roads forming the channel of the great yellow lake we traversed. At certain points in this great lake the committee has stations, barges an- chored in the water. Irom these barges innumerable skiffs radiate and carry the supplies to the water-besieged people for miles around. Tee ‘‘The opinion seems to prevail that sup- plies will l@ve to be sent to the sufferers The unfortunate people have already fought against starva- tion for three weeks. - The supplies that have been sent consist of almost everything edible ; pickles, crackers, fruits, vinegar, cornmeal, bacon and so on. The commit- tee much prefers the meal and bacon to the other things, since articles to sustain life are needed much more than anything else. I found that the people about Memphis were very fearful that the levee about New Orleans would go, and if such should be the case the calamity would be incalcu- lable. ‘‘Frequently a boat can be seen bearing the remains of some person who has died of starvation or who has been drowned. These are buried on the tops of Indian mounds, when such can be found, but often they must be .carried miles before dry ground can be found in which to deposit the hodies.”’ : Mr. Allmond said the Memphis relief committee is very much in need of assist- ance at present. His Conscience Prevented. “Yes,” said the gentleman with the pea- green whiskers, ‘‘I was a farmer once, but 1 quit the busines.’ *‘Too lazy, were you ?’’ asked the gentle- man in the bad wig. ‘Oh no. Too honest. the crooked work.’ ‘“What crooked work ?’’ ‘Building rail fences.’’ It being Monday matinee, it was notice- able that the bass drum remained about one lap behind in the athletic performance which immediately followed.. I couldn’t stand ——Tenant--Say, who’s the man in the flat below mine? He's always pounding on the floor under our feet. Landlord—Oh, he does that in his busi- ness. ‘ Tenant—What’s his husiness ? Landlord—He’s a manufacturer of ceil- ing whacks." ——German scientists have recently furn- ished information in regard to the ages of trees. They assign to the pine trees'500 to 700 years as the maximum, 425 years to the silver fir, 275 years to the larch, 245 years to the red beech, 210-to the aspen, 200 to’ the birch, 170 to the ash, 145 to the’ elder |" and 130 to the elm. Business Notice. i - : 8 Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. Fac-simile signature of Chas.’ H. Fletcher “is‘on the wrapper of every bottle of-Castoria. » dR uk ln : Jian gael ald hk When baby was sick, we gave her Gastoria, «:: When she was a Child, she'cried for Castoria,, ‘When she became ‘Miss, she clung to Castoria, . Sati oINy ‘When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. New Advertisements. QOMETHING NEW. TESTED GARDEN AND FLOWER SEEDS . AT HALF PRICE. We offer great bargains in papered Garden and Flower Seeds, as well as bulk seeds of the Best: Selection. - Orders by Mail given Special Attention. An inquiry on a postal card will receive prompt answer. : FIELD SEEDS.—Choice Clover Seed and Timo- thy Seed, including Barley, Seed Oats, Spring Rye and Spring Wheat, Seed Potatoes. Garden Tools and Spray Pumps. Corn Planters, Champion and Pennsylvania Grain Drills. ! Chilled Plows, Cultivators, Spring Tooth Har- rows at a Way Down Prices. —CONKLIN WAGONS.— In short. We have everything for the Farm and Garden. Don’t fail to visit us and examine our Stock before purchasing. Everybody is welcome. McCALMONT & CO., Bellefonte, Pa. SHORTLIDGE & CO., State College, Pa. 42-11-1y Medical. SPINAL DISEASE. And Painful Affections of Nearly all Pink Pills. Medical. the Organs Cured by Dr. Willams From the Journal, Detroit, Mich. ‘‘Disease of the spinal cord and nervous prostration, was what the doctors called it at first,”” Mis. Rosa Tapley, of No. 721 Harrison street, Ionia, Mich., said yester- day to a reporter, ‘‘but it was not long be- forf every organ and member of my body wis affected. There was a confinuous beat- ing at the pit of my stomach, my head ached on until I thought I should grow .insane. I felt as if I was smothering and my legs would become so weak that I had to'drop when I felt the spells coming on. As for sleep, that was out of the question, except little cat naps, for in addition to the feelings I have attempted to describe, I had neuralgia, and for six months I kept get- ting worse, and at last was confined to my bed in October, 1894. : ‘‘I have nearly always thought it was la grippe, that I had,”’ Mrs. Tapley continu- ed, ‘though the doctor never would say so, but whatever it was it kept getting worse and worse especially my head and nerves, and I thought I should die, but I dragged on a wretched existence until ahout one year ago, when, while I was reading the Detroit Journal and Saranac Weekly, I saw a long account of a similar case to my own being cured by the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. I made up my mind to try these pills, and so procured a supply and began taking them according to directions. ‘My experience has been most happy. My heart’s action is normal, my back and spine gave me very little trouble, all neu- ralgic and rheumatic pains have left me. I have no headache, whatever, and after the hell that I suffered my life by comparison is now like heaven. ‘I cannot say too much in praise of Pink Pills. You may use all the adulatory lan- guage of which you are capable,’’ Mrs. Tap- ley said to the reporter, ‘‘and I will en- dorse it. I havenever tired of recommend- ing the pills to my neighbors, and my sis- ter who is a school teacher, and had a ser- ious time with her nerves and suffered from loss of memory, at my suggestion is taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and is being rapid- ly cured. , ‘Read over what you have written,” Mrs. Tapley requested, and after listening attentively to what she had dictated, said : “I can sign that statement with the great- est” pleasure,” ‘and when the last’ remark was entered the lady signed her name to the reporter’swnotes thus : (Signed) Mes. RosA TAPLEY, 721 Harrison street, Ionio, Mich. “Dr. 'Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life: and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as loco- motor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50 (they are never sold in bulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Wil- liams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Felled by a Rabbit. Animal Hits a Man From a Height of Sixty Feet. An odd accident occurred Friday at the stone quarry of Thomas Johnston, near Clearfield. The men at the upper edge of the pit drove a rabbit out of its lair, and the frightened animal leaped over the edge into the pit, falling 60 feet and striking John Hanson, a laborer, on the neck. Hanson was knocked down and so badly hurt that he had to be carried home. The rabbit was killed. . —— “The man who brought this in,”’ re- marked the editor’s assistant as he unrolled half a yard of manuscript, ‘‘told me confi- dentially that he needed the money for it.” ‘‘Yes,”” was the melancholy answer, ‘‘it’s a strange fact that the longest poems seem almost invariably to be written by the shortest poets.’’ Castoria. A 5 TT 6 nm. 1 A «C C A 8S TT 0 BR 1 A C A §8 T7T 0 BR I A C A 8 T 06. BR 1 A C A 8 7 0 Bt A CCc¢ FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. Castoria promotes Digestion, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhea and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Castdria 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. Arcuer, M. D., 111 South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. From personal knowledge and observation I can say that Castoria is a excellent medicine for children, acting as a laxative and relieving the ent up bowels and general system very much. any mothers have told me of its excellent ef- fect upon their chiidren.” Dr. G. C. Oscoop, Lowell, Mass. “For several years I have recommended ‘Cas toria,’ and shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results.” EpwiN F. Paroeg, M. D., 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City, “The use of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and its merits so well known that it'seems a work of su- Dereropation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent amilies who do not keep Castoria within easy | reach.” CarLo8 MagryN, D. D., - i : New York City. —— 41-15-2ys ——Health and vigor are essential for success. Therefore make yourself strong and healthy by taking Hood’s Sarsaparjlla. New Advertisements. OURT PROCLAMATION.— Whereas the Honorable J. G. Love, President Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the 49th Judicial District, consisting of the county of Centre and the Honorable Corlis Faulkner, Associate Judge in Centre county, having issued their precept, bearing date the 1st day of April to me directed for holding a Court of Oyer and Terminer an General Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the Peace in Bellefonte, for the county of Centre and to commence on the 4th Monday of Apr. being the 26th day of April 1897, and to continue two weeks, notice is hereby given to the Coroner, Jus- tices of the Peace, Aldermen and Constables of said county of Centre, that they be then and there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock in the fore- noon of the 26th, with their records, inquisitions, examinations, and their own remembrance, to do those things which to their office appertains to be done, and those who are bound in recognizances to prosecute against the prisoners that are or shall be in the jail of Centre county, be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be just. Given under my hand, at Bellefonte, the 1st day of April in the year of our Lord, 1897, and the one hundred and twenty-first year of the inde- pendence of the United States. W. M. CRONISTER, 42-13-4t Sheriff We are selling a good grade of tea—green —black or mixed at 28cts per. 1b. Try it. SECHLER & CO. "rues PAILS, WASH RUBBERS, BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS. SECHLER & CO. sce Piane. SOHO MACREY THE RE€OGNIZED——} s SOLD TO EVERY PART OF THE v STANDARD PIANO OF THE ‘WORLD, 3h Taw Tn Ea 3% ESTABLISHED fais : La PREFERRED BY ALL THE LEADING - ARTISTS. n wall ted GLOBE. aa ‘THE GOLD \ x 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 in the world. . ——HIGHEST HONOR EVER ACCORDED ANY MAKER —— \ UNANIMOUS VERDICT. 1851—Jury Group, International Exposition—1876, for Grand, Square, and Upright mailed on application Philadelphia. Avenue, Chicago. Pianos. : Illustrated catalogue SCHOMACKER PIANO-FORTE MANUFACTURING CO. WAREROGOMS: 1109 Chestnut Street, : 12 East Sixteenth Street, New York. 145 and 147 Wabash 41-14 1015 Olive Street, St. Louis. Miss S. OHNMACHT, Agent, BELLEFONTE, PA. :| not excepting my eyes. g A MATTER OF GREAT IMPORTANCE TO YOU Dr. Salm. 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. shod THE BROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ——SATURDAYS—— Feb. 20, March 20, April 17, May June 12, July 10. Aug. 7, Sep. 4, Oct. 2-30, Nov. 27, Dec. 25. 15, ——AND AT THE— SYRACUSE HOUSE, HOWARD, PA. April 26, May 24, June 21, July 19, Aug. 16, Sept. 13, Oct. 11, Nov. 8, Dec. 6. from 10 a. m., to 2 p. m. ONE DAY ONLY. EXAMINATION AND CONSULTATION FREE TO EVERYBODY. ' UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS Catarrh and Eye Trouble Cured by Dr. Salm. For several years, my daughter Dilla, has had a bad case of Catarrh accompanied by all the usual symptoms attending the disease. Catching cold continually. At last the eyes became afflict- ed, they become weaker and weaker from in- flammation,® then we became alarmed, and brought her to Dr. Salm. After a course of treat- ment, she is now, thanks to his skill, entirely cured. Jaco B. MAURER. Globe Mills, Snyder Co., Pa. A Fearful Case of Rheumatism Salm. Cured by Dr. I have had a fearful case of rheumatism for over 3 years, so bad that I could not lift my arms to my head, and at every change of the weather the pains were most excruciating. Any one hav- ing suffered with rheumatism, can only a preciate what I mean. I have only had 3 month's treatment from Dr. Salm, you might almost say, I am cured, and I am happy once more. Iwas 71 vears old at my last birthday. J. D. GARDNER. Howard, Centre Co., Pa. ’ After Having Tried Buffalo, Pittsburg, Greensburg and Indiana Co., Physicians, Her Suffering Grew Worse, but Dr. Salm Cured "Her at Last. For more than 10 years I have been leading a miserable existence, on account of illness. I had tried at least 10 doctors in Buffalo, Pittsburg, Greensburg and surrounding towns. My suffer ing grew worse and worse. I became thin, too weak to work, and passed many sleepless nights. Couldn't eat, my stomach was out of grder, and my nerves seemed all unstrung. I don’@want to live through another such a time, for anything in the wide—wide world, and often [ have prayed to die. After I had given up all hope of enjoying health again, 1 to consult Dr. Salm, and, thank the good Lord, that I did so. After a course ot treatment, I once more enjoy fine health, eat, sleep and work once more, as heretofore. Iam truly grateful to Dr. Salm. He certainly under- stands his business, as my case ‘is not the only wonderful cure he has performed in this county. Mes. S. E. McCREARY. Tunnelton, Indiana Co., Pa. After Having Tried 8 of the Best Doctors in the Country, Without Avail, Dr. Salm Cured Her. For more than 12 years I have suffered a good deal of pain, in fact, I was in distress and misery nearly all the time, partienlarly on sitting down. The misery was in my left side, in the region of my heart. It was’ very seldom ‘that I could at- tend!to my, labors. Itried 8 different doctors, so said, the best in our country, but I got worse in- stead of better,” at last I went to Dr. Salm, who makes regular visits to Sunbury, and thanks to ‘| his skillful treatment, I am now eatirely cured. . Mgrs. L. B. MuUNsELL Dewart, Northumberland Co., Pa. Every’ ‘Body Ought to Know What Dr. Salm did Jor: Me. He..Cured Me of a Fearful Skin Disease. For more than 4 years I have had a most terri- ble skin trouble. I seemed to be covered, like a fish with scales all'over my body, even to my face he pain was almost un- endurable, and I walked the floor many a night, on account of my ony. To work, was out of the question, nor could I wash myself. I tried 5 of ! : = '|"our best doctors,’ spent money on patent medi- Emit a purer sympathetic tone, proof against atmospheric action: cines, such as Cuticura, Golden Medical Discov- ery Ointments,’ etc., got treatment from Pierce Medical Iustitute, Buffalo, but it went from worse to worse. Then I heard of Dr. Salm’s wonderful cures in this neighborhood, took his treatment, and to-day, I am a new man. No more skin troub- le. I am working again, and as well as ever. Every body ought to know this. FraMg RICHARDSON. Dunlo, Cambria Co., Pa. Bad Case of Sore Eyes Cured by Dr. Salm. Ever since I was a babe, I have suffered with sore eyes. They became very painful, and with every cold I took, and that was often enough, they became worse and worse. Little scales had to be removed from the lashes every morning, and the margin of the lids began to look like raw beef ; of course all this didn’t enhance my eye-sight, nor.improve.myappearance. Thé doc- tors around here didn’t do any good, my eyes got worse and worse. Iam now 20 years oid, I went to Dr. Salm, and he has done wonderful! work. No more redness, no scales forming, soreness has al- most entirely left, and my eye-sight is better. I know I will be cured in a short time. GERTRUDE MARTIN. Grisemore, Indiana Co., Pa. Address all communications to box 760, Columbus, O. OUR ADVERTISEMENT WILL APPEAR TWICE BEFORE EACH VISIT. 40-1