SAAR Bellefonte, Pa. February 7, 1908. FARM NOTES. —Plans should now be made for the coming year. —For bard working horses sugar isa great restrorer. ~The ines can be trimmed now. Cut them back to two or three bade. —For warts on cattle, castor oil rubbed weil into the wart twice daily for a week or two is reeommended. —Calves need salt as much as older stock, and it is a mistake vot to keep is before them at all times. —The Iowa State Dairy Commission hae discovered that it takes from six to twelve cents to make a pound of butter. —When confined to the stable, cows should he watered at least twice a day. The water should he clean, and the chill taken from it. —The Census Bureau estimates that there were 49,000,000 animale slaughtered at the various packing houses in the United States last year. —The apple crop this year in Western New York has paid ample dividends on all time and money that growers have spent in spraying the orcharde. —Woond ashes may be applied at the rate of 25 to 50 hushels to the acre. Ove ton of good wood ashes will contain about 140 pounds of phosphoric acid. —Fish and eggs are more palatable if eaten as soon as possible after they are canght or lain. Beef and mutton, on the other hand, improve with several days’ ripening. — Grooming does much to quiet the cow and gain her confidence, and experiments show that from 2} to 8 per cent. may be gained in milk and [at production by regu- lar grooming. —For fattening cattle, corn takes the lead, its equal not baving been found |. among the other kinds of gian. In rome cases corn and cobmeal have been found superior to corn. —Don’s place any dependence oo the free Governmeut seeds sent out by the Congress men. The best seeds are none too good. Procure the catalogues of reliable seedemen and order from them. ~The silo has certainly come to stay. No better proof of this assertion is the fact shat in the older dairy districts of New Eogland many new silos have been con- structed this past season. —The draft stallion should have good size and he must alwo have energy and fine action. The big, sluggish draft horse is not wanted in the market, and should not be bred to reproduce that type. —It calves have been foroed to take rough handling, when selling time c' mes, there will be a discount of 25 per cent. on the price given for stock that has been kept dry, well bedded and well fed. —United States Secretary of Agriculture Wilson charges the farmers of this conntry with being soil robbers. The charge is rather sweeping, but it placed on trial a good many of them would have to plead guilty. —There is no better place to cart the ashes than the cabbage plot. They thoald pever be nsed on the potato patch, for the reasou thas the lime in the ashes is apt to assist in the production of scab on the tabers. —The swamp huckleberry is not only excellent fauis, but is an admirable orna- mental shrub as well. It has pretty clus- ters of white flowers in spring, and in aa- tumn nothing surpasses it in the rich orim- son of its foliage. —New York leads all the States in pota- toe production, yes her yield per acre last year was only one-half shat of the State of Maine. If her yield per acre had equaled that of the New England State it would have exceeded 80,000,000 bushels. , In trimming trees the wound made by outting off a limb close to the trauvk will soon heal over, while the wound made by cutting off the limb two or three inches from the trunk leads to decay and some. Sine) eawtenithe ultimate loss of the tree —From the the standpoint of agricultur- al economy it is just as blameworthy a ce to have a field lying bare and idle as the result of a poor stand of corn as it is to have the same area growing nothing hut weeds. A fall stand t« the max- imum of economic utility and efficievoy. —It must not be torgotted that the fer- tility thas lies in the mavure heap came from the soil and belongs to it. Is might be said that fertility has heen loaned, and should be returned. There is no better way than to cart out all the manure, es- pecially that which is lying around the —Bee hives should never be faced to- ward the north. Ina northern latitade a northern exposure in winter is almost sure to cause the loss of the colony, by the rig- orous north winds blowing in at the en- trances being shaded on mild, sunny days when the bees in hives facing southward fly freely. — According to some experiments noted by the Department of Amricultare it was found that where cows were wilked thiee times a day, morning, noon and evening, the milk was richest at noon and poorest in the morning; and, when milked moro- i i —If the cow gives bloody milk as a re- sult of an injary to the udder, tbe best treatment is to let natare effect a oure. Dry the cow off and les the uider reet till the cow is fresh again, it is useless to try to treat serious injury of the interior of the udder when this has to he manipalat- ed twice each day in milking. —A famous veterinary surgeon declares that grass beats all drugs in creation asa cure for siok horses and mules. Horses shonld bave a few quarters of ous grass daily, from spring notil fall. The freva lent notion shat it is harmfui is » . foundation. Grass is to horees what fresh vegetables and fruit are to the buman fam- — Experiments shat milking ina stable where the R roalasion of air carries out the dost, wiping the udder witha damp oloth, and scalding the utensils with | livesteam from hoili water, will nos val reduce the content of the m but largely inorease its keeping qual- iyietian well as that of the tn THAW IN ASYLUM Slayer of White Not Guilty On Ground of Insanity. New York, Feb. 3.—After furiously reviling his attorneys because they did not procure his instant freedom, Harry K. Thaw, who was acquitted of the murder of Stanford White, was thrust within the gloomy portals of Mattea- wan asylum for the criminal insane. Thaw upon his acquittal by the jury had expected to go free, but Justice Victor J. Dowling, immediately follow- ing the rendition of the verdict, an- nounced that the testimony adduced by defense in the long trial had convinced him that the defendant could not safe- ly be set at liberty, and he, therefora, directed his incarceration at Mattea~ wan as a dangerous lunatic. Lawyer Dan O'Reilly said that the lawyers would get together and decide on what course to take to liberate Thaw from the asylum. “There are two courses open to us,” he said. “We can secure a writ of habeas corpus and take Thaw before a jury and have his sanity questioned in that way or we can begin an action against the sheriff for illegal detention, in which case a gheriff’s jury would pass upon Thaw's present condition of mind. In any event we shall have the question thrashed out before a jury at the earli- est opportunity and have no doubt we will be able to convince the jury that he is sane and rational now. We shall have Thaw out of Matteawan before the summer.” EXPLOSION KILLS SEVEN Boller In Rolling Mill Blew Up, In juring Twelve Others. Sunbury, Pa., Feb. 4—Seven men were killed and more than a dozen were injured by the explosion of a boiler in the rolling mill of Van Allen & Company, at Northumberland, two miles north of here. The dead are: Grant Reeder, Ed- ward Kreps. William Brouse, Samuel Sarvis, Duval Clark, John Scholvin and Thomas Jones. The seriously injured are: William Morgan, badly cut and bruised; Harry Smith, injured about the head and scalded: Daniel Sanders, injured in- ternally, will probably die, and Wes- ley Reichenbach, badly scalded and bruised. The rolling mill had been shut down for three months and was to have resumed work Monday. All the boilers and machinery had been overhauled during the suspension. The men were preparing to begin work, when from some cause not yet ascertained one of a number of boilers blew up. The whole building in which the boilers were located was wrecked, and the dead men were found under the ruins, Those killed were well-known citizens and are survived by iarge families. The loss to the plant is estimated at $75,000. LEWIS GUILTY OF MURDER Slayer of Little Mary Newlin Convict. ed In First Degree. West Chester, Pa., Feb. 3. — With the same composure and sort of dis interested demeanor that has marked his attitude and behavior during his trail for the atrocious murder of little Mary Newlin, his step-daughter, the young Franklin township farmer, Irwin A. Lewis, heard the jury render the verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree. His almost immobile face slightly flushed, and his hands tightly clenched, and he was escorted by Deputy Sheriff Garrett back to his cell. There was no motion for a new trial, and Judge Hemphill promptly discharged the jurors. WOUND IN HEART SEWED UP Remarkable Operation Performed In Hospital at Washington. Washington, Feb. 4. — One of the most dificult operations ever perform- ed on a patient in this city took place at the Emergency hospital, when the physicians took five stitches in the heart of Richard Denton, a negro, who was stabbed Saturday night. Denton’s heart was severed almost in half, and it was necessary to lay open the breast. The physicians are watching with interest the outcome of the operation. When taken to the hospital Denton was unconscious. He was placed upon the operating table, and within an hour his breast had been opened and the heart slightly raised and sewad up. Ballot Box Stuffers Sent to Jail. Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Feb. 1. — Judge Staples, of Stroudsburg, specially pre- siding in Luzerne county. sentenced Anthony Carron, James Caffrey, Domi- nick Callahan, Willlam Connolly and William Monohan to a term of fifteen months in the eastern penitentiary for conspiracy in connection with last No- vember's election. They are members of the Preston-Hanover township elec- tion board and returned 225 votes for the leading Republican candidate and none for the Democratic. Farm Boy a Future Financier. Woodbury, N. J., Feb. 8. — Charles Budd, a young farmer boy, who had been working at League Island navy yard, but was laid off, took what ready money he had, went into Mary- land, bought 1400 bushels of corn at fifty-three cents a bushel, including the freight to this city, where he read- ly sold it at fifty-seven cents, netting a cool $70 in a few hours. The Passing of “Ouida.” An exceptional was Louise de Ila Ramee, called Ouida, the aged writer of romance who recently died as Florence in dire poverty. A sensationalist of an ex- treme type, a8 such books as “‘Strashmore’’ and “‘Chaudos,” and even ‘‘Moths’’ attest, Ouida lacked entirely the quality which generally dominates the sensationalist, hunger for public applause. She need not bave died poor, for the world would not bave so utterly neglected her, il she had pot covsistently despised the world, and refused to be of it, or to accept its favors. She bad the pride and aloofness of an old aristocrat. She refused help in extreme necessity, and would not even accept medi- cal assistance when she was too poor to pay for it. Of her literary feeling she spoke with cruel frankness to a physician who offered his services in vain : ‘‘My sole mo- sive for writing always has been the pleas- ure of seeing myself in print.” But the cruel blunt phrase expresses a great deal more than mere vanity. Sir Thomas Browne, and his great admirer of a later age, Charles Lamb, who ‘‘wrote for antiq- uity,”” might bave felt thus about their work and its public acceptance, though they would have expressed the feeling less harshly. It is difficalt to comprehend how the writer of “Under Two Flags,” ‘Tricot rin,” and “Moths,” books eagerly devour- ed by multitudes, could have felt so. There was unquestionably heroism and deep pathos in the passing of Ouida. Her death will reawaken an interest in her hooks, of the profits of which she vever re- cerved a large share. For a long while appreciation of their genuine literary merit has been growing, the shook caused by their frequent defiance of prudery, not to say decency, baving subsided. She was a facile writer, with extraordinary descriptive powers, and a comprehension of humanity which was not hread to be sure, and not softened by char- ity, but was deep and true. She was both ironical and sentimental, and her senti- ment was not always wholesome. In lit- erature as in life she was a law onto her- self, and the last word about her is that she and her books are not to be easily classi- fied.—New York Times. — If a man wants to raise his house, he can put jacks under and slowly lift it inte po- sition. He can raise it much quicker by exploding a charge of dynamite under the house, but it will ruin the bounee. There are two methods of treatment for the how- els, the slow, sure method, by whicha small pill and a carefully graduated dose removes obstructions. That's she method of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. There are other pills that act like dynamite. Bat they ruin the system in doingis. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets represent the best of modern skill and science applied to the production of a perfect pill. They help the system, and their use does not beget the pill habit. Castoria. Clas10RIA The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his rsonal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and “*Just-as-good" are but Ex- riments, and endanger the health of hildren—-Experiance against Experi- ment. WHAT IS CASTORIA Castoria isa harmless substitute for Cas tor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syraps. It is Pleasant. It contains neith- er Opium, Morphine nor other N substance, Its age is its tee. It destroys Worms and alleys Feverishness, It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. [It re- lieves Tecthing Troubles, cures Qoustipa- tion and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The iidren's Panscea~The Mother's Friend. Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. ‘x lpr In Use For Over 30 Years. The Centaur Company, New York City. 51-21lm iowa KE. RHOADS Shipping snd Commission Merchant, cee DEALER [Nome ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS {core} ~=CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS —- snd other grains. —BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS’ SAND ——KINDLING WOOD— by the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Senpetially selictin the of his * and the public, wee HIS COAL YARD...... Central Telephone Calls Commarciat 52. Jet te Pasuengu Blatian, Money to Loan. MONE, Io. 1088 god wnat J. M.KEICHLINE Att'y at Law. 5l-14-1y Crvixe FOR HELP. LOTS OF IT IN BELLEFONTE BUT DAILY MONEY SAVED GROWING LESS, The kidneys cry for help. Not an organ in the whole body so deli cately constructed. Not one so important to health. The kidneys are the filters of the blood. When they fail the blood becomes foul and poisonous. Ce el dn dd di li Be AB A BM Be Le Bere le Ae Ml WE ARE ALWAYS PREPARED FOR THE ——GENERAL TRADE—— Finest Florida and California Seed- less Oranges—swees [rait. Florida Grape Frois. White Malaga Grapes, reasonable There can be no health where there is Lemons. poisoned blood. Bananas. of kidney trouble. Suanbervies, It ix the kidneys’ ery for help. Heed it. Celery Doan's Kidney Pills are what is wanted. Pure Maple Syrup Are just what overworked kidneys need. "I hey strengthen and invigorate the kid- neys ; help them to do their work ; never fall to cure any case of kidney disease. Read the proof from a Bellefonte eiti- Oysters, zen. Mrs. L. P. Lonsbury, living at 124 8. Spring St., Bellefonte, Pa, says : “1 can evttainly recommend Doan's Kidoey Pills fur backache and pains in the region of my kidneys. [ suffered with pains through my loins and could hardly get around the house at times. A friend ad- vised me to try Doan's Kidney Pilis and Igota box at Green's Pharmacy. The pains soon vanished and I felt betier in every way. | do not hesitate to recom- mend Doan's Kidoey Pills to any one suf- fering from backache or kidney trouble.” For sale by ali dealers. Price 50 cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United Btates, Remember the name—Doan's—and take no other. 53-4-2m-0.0.W, 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Backache is one of the first indications 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Saddlery. IS MONEY MADE Reduced in price—horse sheets, lap spreads and fly vets—for the pexs thirty days. We have de- termined to clean up all summer goods, if you are in the market for this class of goods you can’t do better thao call and supply your wants at thie store. We have the largest assortment of SINGLE aAxp DOUBLE DRIVING HARNESS in the county ana at prices to sait Both Phones. the buyer. If you do not have 12-43-1y one of our HAND-MADE SINGLE HARNESS you have missed a good thing. We — are making a special effort to sup- ply you with a harness that you Finest Foll Creeam Cheese. Fine Table Raisins. Canned Fruit of all kinds. New Crop New Orleans Molasses. evTTYTwY | Almonds and Nats of all kinds. Figs. Dates. Citron. Our Creamery Batter is as Fine as Bilk. Mince Meat, our own make, and as fine as we can make is. Pare Olive Oil. Sauces, Pickles, Extracts, Olives, Sardines, We bandle Schmidts Fine Bread, Shaker Dried Corn. Fine Cakes and Biscuit and a line of caretully selected Confectionery, OC CYT WYTePe eT TET TTY weve ve - We will bave a full supply of all Seasonable Goods right along and can fill orders at any time. SECHLER & COMPANY, Bush House Block, - - Bellefonte, Pa. - - 52-1 | Plumbing etc. A E. SCHAD Fin : Sanitary Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Furnace, Steam and Hot Water Heating, Slating, Roofing and Spouting, Tinware of all kinds made to order, Estimates cheerfully furnished. Eagle Block. BELLEFONTE, PA Green's Pharmacy. ASTANA ue PREFERRED ACCIDENT THE $5.000 TRAVEL POLICY INSURANCE CO. Benefits : $5.000 death by accident, 5,000 losa of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5.000 loss of one hand and one foot. 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,500 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eye, 265 pe! week, total disability (limit 52 weeks.) 10 Io week, partial disability limit 26 weeks. PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, payable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in pro may have no concern about any parts breaking. These harness are made from select oak stock, with a high-grade workmanship, and 4 A GUARANTEE FOR TEN YEARS with each set of harness, We have { on baud a fine lot of single barness iE in price from $13.50 to We carry a large line of oils, axle grease, whips, brushes, curry- combs, sponges, and everything you need about a horse. We will take pleasure in showing you our goods whether you buy or not. Give us a call and see for C. MO. 5082-1y High Street, times the following brands of h ® igh grade WHITE STAR, OUR BEST. HIGH GRADE, VICTORY PATENT, FANCY PATENT-—formerly Phe- nix Mills high grade brand. The only place in the county where SPRAY, an extraordi fine grade of 5 wheat Patent Flour can be ALSO: INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD. FEED OF ALL KINDS, Whole or Manufactured, All kinds of Grain bought at office. Exchanges Flour for Wheat. and STORE, - OFFICE ay E, Bishop Street, ROOPSBURG. for ies, families and the putite ne erally afi of which are mani at of the purest syrups and properly carbo- blic is cordially invited to test be made of charge within the limits of the Headquarters 50-9-1m BELLEFO! PA. ll OS It is made in the cleanest and most up-to date factory in the United States......... IT 1S ABSOLUTELY ACETYLENE The Best and Cheapest Light. COLT ACETYLENE GENERATORS.......... GIVE THE LEAST TROUBLE, THE PUREST GAS, AND ARE SAFE. Generators, Supplies and Fixtures. . . . JOHN P. LYON. BUSH ARCADE, § General Agent for Central Pennsylvania for she J. B. Cols Co. a alin Bl Bo 0 Be NB AM AIA Br... < ¥ W |..FENWAY CANDY... i ——— —— i Pure. ? It sells for a less price than } yourself. g i wd Yours i tally, any other first-class candy \ JAMES SCHOFIELD, | Chocolate Creams, 6oc. 1b. | Spring street, Sheil} a PONTE. YCheeqmy Creams, 3oc. % bt m— m— « Liggett's Saturday Candy, = Flour and Feed. < a soc. quality, sold every : = ! Saturday at 29 cents...... no { » (QURTIS Y. WAGNER, ’ an ! Brocxeaworr Miuis, Beuieronts Pa. é ’ § b 4 You can get it at P GREEN’S PHARMACY CO, : FEED, CORN MEAL, Et. ) Tho Batali Slave, } Also Dealer in Grain. { Bush House Block, | re ‘ BELLEFONTE, PA. ; Manufactures and has on hand st all { uly b 1 . Belletvnte, Ps. portion. Any persou, male or female engaged in a preferred occupation, in. cluding bhouse-keeping, over eigh- teen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under ° this policy. : FIRE INSURANCE 1 invite your attention to my fire Insurance Agenoy, the strongest and Moet Extensive Line of Solid Companies represented by any agency in Central Pennsylvania. H. E. FENLON, 50-21 Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This ney represents the largest Wire "insurance Companies in the ——NO ASSESSMENTS, —— Do pot fail to give us a call hefors insuring your or Property as we are in position write large lines at any time. Office iu Crider's Stone Building, 48-18-17 BELLEFONTE, PA. D. W. WOODRING. GENERAL FIRE INSURANCE. Represents only the strongest and most prompt paying companies, Gives reliable insurance at the very lowest rates and pays promptly when losses occur. Office at 119 East Howard street, Bellefonte, Pa. 53-30 Fine Job Priuting. FINE JOB PRINTING Owe A SPECIALTY 0 AT THE WATOHMAN{OFFIOE. There is no le of work, froin the ch t Dalyer othe Sacer ’ {—BOOK-WORK,—} that we can not do in the most satisfactory man- ner, Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office. A cure guaranteed if you ase DYS PILE SUPPOSITORY Sel Bt, ogee, Sot, Cad Sen
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