As a geveral rule, when properly man- ys § can subsist on land that will not support iarger domestic avimals. They eat nearly all of the weeds. Ido not pretend to be able tosay just how the farmer can start a flock of sheep in the most economical mauper, as this will depend upon the location of the farm and she available supply of stock ewes in the locality. As a general rule, if it is possible to se- care the foundation flock near home, that would be preferred to buying them ata i ce. In selecting and buying ewes he very careful not to ges disease. Watch for scab. They should always be dipped before leav- ing their old yards, and if possible dipped agaiu on reaching the new home. Look for ewes that show good breeding. Old ewes, such ae are not desired by the butchers and can frequently be purchased at a very reasonable price,can he economic: ally carried over the winter, and after lambing sime in the spring they oan be culled out and the poorest ones fattened and wold. Every flock of sheep should be looked over very carefully each spring aud no poor ones left in it. The ewes should all be fed well just be- fore breeding and should bave sufficient food at all timee, Old country shepherdsecay that hy ‘‘flushing,” allowing them [ree ran of succulent pasture, just before and daring the breeding season, the ewes will produce a larger number of twins. The selection of the ram to head ove’s flock is a very important matter. By all means pick out a good, vigorous, pure-bred one, Ioa grade stock the pare bred ram exerts at least half and probably more than half the influence on the lambs thas be gets, Select a ram that is low ses, deep in body, wide of hack and heavily muscled over all pu. especially in the leg of muston, the ighest-priced out ip the whole body. Examioe the fleece carefully. Seoure a ram that is well wooled over the belly as this will insure against colds and poeunmo- nia when the sheep have to lie on cold or damp ground. As a general rule, the production or mar- ket sheep will bring in as great a profis as the rearing of fanoy stock. Sheep will thrive on most of the foods produced on the average farm. . A good mixture to supplement pasture is ten pounds of cornmeal, ten pounds bran and two pounds of oilmeal. Corn makes an excellent fastening food. Alfalfa makes an excellent pasture, and the same is true of clover, but oare most be taken to prevent bloat when first pastured. ~The Remedy. Remove the causes. Calves are usually fed too much milk. Have milk even tem ure each time and at body heat. Add a of hlood meal to the milk while the calf is drinking, for two or three days. Another remedy is a of forma- lin in each quart of milk. A few days treatment usually cures even persistent oases. Another cure recommended is to ohserve the rules of regularity, proper amount of milk, temperature, eto., and give two ounces of castor oil to clean out a calt ander a montk old. Then diet the oalf by re- duoing the amount of feed so as to rest the bowels. A few hours after giving the cas- tor oil give a teaspoon of this mixture in the milk : bicarbonate of soda, 1 ounce ; salol, hall ounce ; subaitrate of bismuth, half ounce. Give dose three or four times a day until oured. In oase of painfal diarrhoea give teaspoon ol tincture of opium every three or four hours until relieved. —Don’t feed moldy corn to horses. Itis y dangstous. Give a handful of oil-meal to the horse once a day. Itiw for bim and keeps him in good condition, and makes his coat soft and sleek. . Fis all collars carefully. It is torture to a horse to pull & heavy load in a collar so large that it rabs or so small thas it inter- ferea with breathi for the night.—From Farm Journal. ~It is generally believed that the load pulls easter if well forward on the Bat this is not eo on the ordinary 8: bere the hind wheels are larger side ie make the carried. You take a bath for the oatside of body to remove acoumulations and dead matter. Does not she inside of the bod peed an occasional bath think you, to help rid it of clogging and effete material, —Na- ture’s waste which has lodged in some ca- nal of the body and is poisoning the blood carrent with its corruption? Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cleanses the in- ner man, purifies the blood, strengthens the stomach, builds up the muscle. The game invigorating results which follow a bath, follow the use of “Golden Medical Dissovery.” Don’t saffer with constipation. Use Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets and be cured. raft excessive for Sierra Leone. Sierra Leone—known to fame as “the white man’s grave”—viewed from the deck of an incoming steamer presents an appearance distinctly attractive. As * | to climate, the sobsiquet “white man's grave” is sufficiently instructive. Suf- fice it to say that the first of the daily regimental orders ran tuus: “Funeral parade at 6:30 &. m. tomorrow,” and it was seldom indeed that the parade was dismissed for lack of a victim to the pestiferous climatic conditions. Indeed. so arduous became the duties cies; the latter are omous. The most deadly haps is the yellow jack, yellow and black reptile, w reputed to prove fatal within a space of twenty minutes.— Westchester Coun- ty Magazine. i What Is It, a Lobster? That the methods of public school instruction as applied in one city at least do not always meet the approba- tion of the parents of the pupils was evidenced when a German man whose bristly blond hair was standing per- fectly erect with anger strode into a Baltimore school one day and, ap- proaching the principal, demanded: “Yot is it, a lobster?” The principal explained in his suav- est tone that a lobster was a species of shellfish. “How many legs has it—der lob- ster?” The number of legs was promptly stated. “Look here,” exclaimed the irritated Teuton, “I vork for me in a big hurry, und if your teacher he cannot find petter dings to ask my boy Herman how many legs has it, a lobster, und make him come home to bodder his fadder mit questions, ‘What is it, a lobster? it is pad business!"—Lippin- cott's. Saved His Rupees. During a great flood at Haldarabad a native banker, overtaken by the sud den rush of water, made his way on to a mound, where he was quickly iso- jated. The water rose, and the bank- er's legs were covered to his knees. “Fifty rupees (about £3 7s.), 50 rupees,” he shouted, “to any one who will save me!” When the water reached his shoulder he was shouting, “One thou- sand rupees!” When enveloped to his neck, with death staring him in the face, he yelled: “Help, help! All that I have will I give toc any one to save me!” Shortly after the water began to recede. When once more he was covered only tc his knees an offer of rescue came. But the banker, piuck- ing up his courage, cried: “Keep off! Keep off! I will not give a rupee!” and succeeded in making his escape free of charge.—St. James’ Gazette. Origin of “Bonfire.” Stow, referring to the “bonefiers” which the citizens of London were wont to make in the streets on “the vigiles of festinall dayes and on the same festiuall dayes in the euenings after the sunne setting every man be- stowing wood or labour towards them” and which were an occasion of feasting and merriment, says that “these were called bonefiers as well of good amitie amongst neighbours, that, being before at controuersie, were there by the labours of others, recon- ciled, and made of bitter enemies, louing friendes, as also for the vertue that a great fire hath to purge the in- fection of the ayre.”—London Globe. Healthful Tombstone. Nobody ever dies in Tombstone un- less they brought it “with’'m,” or fall into a G00 foot vertical shaft, or buy an automobile, or “sass” their mother- in-law, or try to thaw out powder, or mistake cyanide of potassium for sugar, or start off a county seat re- moval racket. Some die of old age, some old partners of Daniel Boone, but none has ever been known to die from physical irregularities contracted in Tombstone aside from the above mentioned causes and occasionally an abnormal tightness about the throat, superinduced by a coil of manila rope, or from a cold caught through a hole made by a 45.—Tombstone Epitaph. To Philip Sober. When a woman who asked Philip of Macedon to do her justice was snub- bed by the petulant monarch she ex- claimed, “Philip, I shall appeal against this judgment.” “Appeal!” thundered the enraged king. “And to whom will you ap- peal?” “To Philip sober,” was her reply. The Waning Honeymoon. “I forgot something,” said the hus- ‘band. “Yes,” pouted the wife, “you forgot to kiss me.” “That may be, but what I came back for was my overshoes.”—Kansas City Journal. Same Old Jag. “Ebenezer,” called out Mrs. Jagway from the floor above, “have you been drinking again?” “No, m' dear,” answered Mr. Jag- way in the hallway below. “Not again. ¥ | 8till.”—Chicago Tribune. Reminded Him. Walter—Haven't you forgotten some- thing, sir? Restaurant Patron—I'm glad you spoke of it. My wife told me not to spend any money foolishly, and I was just going to give you a tip, ~—Chicago News. Adversity borrows its sharpest sting from our impatience.—Horne. Restraining Recollections. Wilson reports that the “They say I'm a little close,” said | duction of bees sogar bas increased fi Mr. Cumrox thoughtfully. in seven years. The yield is now 345,000 “Well, you don't exactly ons. spend it as if it were water.” “I try to. But, you see, I used tc live in Arizona, where water is scarce.” —Washington Star. Old Fashioned. “Did he ever castigate his son fo. playing truant? “No: he never fooled with them new /fangled ways o' doin’. He jest give ‘him a sound lickin’ ”—Baltimore Amer lean. AAI, Medical. — Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. The hay from these pastures, forage crops, is excellent for sheep. ——Bubsoribe for the WATCHMAN. Cozl and Wood. J{PWARD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, ee DEALER 1Nw— ANTHRACITE asp BITUMINOUS (= ~=CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS —- snd other graias. —BALED HAY and STRAW — HAreY RESULTS HAVE MADE MANY BELLEFONTE RESI- DENTS ENTHUSIASTI® No wonder scores of Bellefonte citizens grow enthusiastic, > I ehvugh to ik anyone ha nd re ter years sifloring. Public statements like the fol- lowing are but truthful representations of the daily work done in Bellefonte by Doan's Kidney Pills. BUILDERS' and PLASTERERS' SAND Mrs. John Eckel, 231 E Lamb 8t., Belle- fonte, Pa., says: “I have used Doan's Ridney Pills and can say that [ received more benefit from them, than from any other remedy [| ever used. For some time I suffered from a dull, nagging pain through my back, extending into my limbs at times. I also had headaches and felt lame and tired all the time. When | attempted to or lift | was seized with a dizzy spell, was aiso restless at night and did not seem to have anv strength. After using Doan's Kidney Pills, which I procured at Green's Phar- macy, the trouble all disappeared and I have not been so well in pravious ax [ am today. I do not hesitate to acknowi- edge the benefit I derived trom the use of 's Kidney Pills.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, ———KINDLING WOOD— by tha bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. Respectfully solicits the patronage of his pee friends and the public, at Central 1312. Telephone Calls Commercia! 682, nesr the Passenger Siation. 16-18 COFFEE, some. cause pleases them. When th quit, be put up in three separate boxes. and “‘puts you up on horseback.’ fee. fying, with a delightful, lingering Bush House Block, - - Saddlery. know, is a flavor. a food, a drink, a Stimulant or a berry. HOW TO “FIND-OUT COFFEE. reve Many people think of Coffee as It is all of these and then , 9 ple out of every hundred drink Coffee merely be- they like it. And they like it because a particular flavor of it People who ““don’t like Coffee” have never yet found the particular flavor of Coffee which would have pleased them. They can find it yet. do find it they won't quit drinking it, and they shouldn't But, how to *“find-out’’ really good Coffee. And how to find out the precise kind of Coffee flavor which best pleases your palate. For the first time in history you may now buy a “Find-out Package" of Bakerized Coffee. This Find out Package contains the three fla- vors of highest grade Coffee. Observe that the three distinct flavors in the ““Find-out Package'’ of Bakerized Coffee are not merely three kinds of Coffee, but three fixed and unvarying flavors of Coffee. When therefore you buy a “‘Find-out Package’’ of Bakerized Coffee, and find from this just which Coffee flavor best pleases your palate, you can then feel sure of getting that same identical flavor year after year, under its given brand. This package will contain over three-quarters of a pound of the best Coffee you have ever tasted. That Coffee will One of these three boxes will con- tain “VIGORO" Bakerized Coffee. This is a robust fuming aroma- tic stimulating Coffee—full of uplift, spicy odor and generous flavor. It is a vigorous, ‘‘black’’ Southern Coffee which ‘‘touches the spot” Another box will contain ‘BARRINGTON HALL." Bakerized Cof- This is deliciously smooth and fragrant, mellow, fine and satis- after-taste. It is more nearly the standard flavor of right-good Coffee than any other we know of. A third box contains ‘SIESTA’ pakerized Coffee. This is of mild and dainty flavor, full of subtle delicacy and bouquet. Buy a “‘Find-out Package'’ of Bakerized Coffee and treat your pal- ate to a new sensation. SECHLER & COMPANY, Bellefonte, Pa. Insurance. sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—[Doan’'s—and tuke no other. 54-0 Hair Dresser. THE LADIES.—Mies Jennie Mor- gan in her rooms on Spring St., is ready to meet any and all patients wishing treatments by electricity, treatments of the p, facial mas. sage or neck and shoulder massage. She has also for sale a large collection of real and imita- tion shell and jet combs and ornamen small Jewelry, belts and belt buckles, hair oe by and many novelties for the Christmas shopper, and will be able to supply you with all kinds of toilet articles, including creams, powders, toilet waters, Ve preparations. extracts and all of Hudnn 50-16 (ASTORIA. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and whict has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his personal supervision CHAS. H. FLETCHER since its iniancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations, and “Just-as-good’ are but Experiments that trifie with and endanger the health of Infants and Chil- dren—Experience against Experiment, WHAT IS CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It i= Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcot- ic subs ance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Siguatare of CHAS. H. FLETCHER THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. 549-6t WOULD YOU LIKE Your Money to Earn Twenty Per Cent ? Such a question is almost superfluous. All you naturally want to know is how and where you can get the twenty on your surplus capital. The Opportunity is Here We have just purchased 98 more Building Lots in connection with the Hamilton farm. The fact that we own and control a large number of building lots in this prosperous town places us in a position to offer the best proposition in real estate that has ever been offered in this state. Lots on Easy Terms There is a great demand for homes and rooms at State College. Houses rent from $25 to fioo per month. Russell Sage said, «Your REAL Estate Wi. Make Your Op AGE COMFORTABLE.” State College has the brightest future of any town in central Pa. Call and see our proposition, and select for yourself one of the choicest lots. THE BEST INVESTMENT ON EARTH 1s IN THE EARTH. FREE TRANSPORTATION TO ANY ONE BUYING A LOT DURING NEXT 30 DAYS CALL OR WRITE LEATHERS BROTHERS, 116 College Ave. Commercial 'phone. State College, Pa PAT AT AT AST AT MT TT MSM OMT MSS BSC SEBS IBS MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE Reduced in price—horse sheets, lap spreads and fly nets—for the next 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 sapply your wants at thie store. We have the largest assortment of SINGLE aAxp DOUBLE DRIVING HARNESS in the county anu at prices to suit the buyer. If you do not have one of our HAND-MADE SINGLE HARNESS you have missed a good thing. We are making a effort to sup- ply you with a harness that you may bave no concern about avy parts breaking. These harness are made from select oak stock, with a high-grade workmanship, a A GUARANTEE FOR TEN YCARS with each ses of harness, We hat « baud a fine lot of harness We oarry a lang line of oils, e &le grease, whips, brushes, ovrry- combs, sponges, and every th er Bm, ing We will sake plemute in showing goods whether you TO Eo ASO it or yourself. Yours Respectfully, JAMES SCHOFIELD, Spring street, U-37 BELLEFONTE. Flour and Feed. orm tse at ABST Bld, {OFTIs Y. WAGNER, Beocxzanore Mis, Bruuzvonrs Pa. Manufactures and has on hand at all mes the following brands of high grade WHITE STAR, OUR BEST. HIGH GRADE, VICTORY PATENT, FANCY PATENT—formerly Phes- nix Mills high grade brand. The only place in the county where All kinds of Grain bought at office. Exchanges Flour for Wheat. OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street, Bellefonte. MILL . « «+ ROOPSBURE. POPS, ETC., ne ime Snes ant, Lo RAR So are of the purest syrups and properly earbo- The public is cordially invited to test these drinks. Deliveries will be made of charge within the limits of the . C. MOERSCHBACHER, §0821y High Street, BELLEFONTE, PA THE PREFERRED ACCIDENT INSURANCE CO. ; THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY Benefits : $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5.000 loss of one hand and one toot 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,500 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eye, 25 pot week, 1 disability » imit A weeks.) 3 5 r week, partial disabi limit 26 weeks. ui PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, payable quarterly if desired. house-keeping, over a an nl th policy. my . FIRE INSURANCE I invite your igetion 30 my fire Insurance Agency and Hows Extensive Line of ‘Said Companies represen agenoy in Central rai H. E. FENLON, 50-21 Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. I OOK ! READ Sh a JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Age represents the Fire Yo Companies Saran ——NO ASSESSMENTS, ~~ Do not fail to give us a cali hefore insuring Life Enos ay om, 1% poston Office iu Crider’s Stone Building, 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. D. W. WOODKING. GENERAL FIRE INSURANCE. Represen ts only the strongest and mos' prompt paying companies. Gives reliable insurance at the very lowest rates and pays when losses occur. Office at 118 East Howard street, Bellefonte, Pa. 82-50 Fine Job Printing. JUNE JOB PRINTING Owe A SPECIALTY 0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no le of work, {rows the cheapest Dodger” to the Anse! ? {—BOOK-WORK,—1 that we can not do in the most satisfactory man. ner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call om or communicate with this office. ILES A cure guaranteed if you use RUDYS PILE SUPPOSITORY no remedy to equal Joan. Bric Deon tO i. ah Free Sam RUDY, Lancaster, Pa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers