6 etljc ime0f Htm Bloomfieli, $a. m l00mfitltr Sinus. Tuesday, June 7, 1870. FARM AND HOUSEHOLD ITEMS We invite communications f rem till pcrsonswho are interested in matters properly belonging to this department. communicated. Good fertilizers. Lime and ashes are very good fertili zers when applied alone or together, but some farmers are in the habit of mixing hen manure and ashes to put on their oorn and all are not aware that ashes and animal manure will not work together. Hen manure alone, is too strotig, but ashes cannot absotfb thestrength, but will cast it in the atmosphere. I consider rotten chip manure the best thing to mix with hen manure. It should be applied to corn in the hill when it is dropped and should be covered so as not to lose its strength. " Small Farmer." How im Keep Butter Sweet. It is the easiest thing in the world. Simply put in clean jars, and cover with strong brine. This will keep pure but ter a year, fresh and sweet, as we know by experience. It is almost equally good to put in oak casks,headed tight. This is almost equivalent to canning fruit. The brine, in case of jars, acts as a heading, keeping the air out. But butter bhould be made well ; we have never experiment ed on poor butter. Work out the but termilk till you have only pure " beads," -clear as rain water ; but do not work so much as to break the grain, in which case jou have a tough, heavy article in winter, and grease in summer. Such butter we advise no one to try to preserve. Crop Items. Melons do better in sandy than in any other soil. Not so liable to insects. Fruit growers are admonished to look after the worms in their orchards. Now is the time to destroy them. Don't kill robins. For every cherry they cat, they give you a peck of apples by the insects which they destroy. Put a strip of pasteboard tightly round jour plum tree, cover it well with coal tar, and the female curculio, which docs all the mischief, will not be able to get at jour fruit. Dr. Warder thinks the increase of in sects is the sole cause of the deterioration of the apple crop of the Ohio Valley. 'A united and vigorous effort should be made for their destruction. Carrots for Horses. The value of carrots for horses i3 thus stated in Youatt and Spooner's valuable work on the horse, and similar statements are made in other horse-books : " The virtues of this root are not suf ficiently known, whether of contributing to the strength and endurance of the sound horse, or the rapid recovery of the sick one. To the healthy horse they should be given sliced in his chalF. Half a bushel will be a fair daily allowance. There is little provender of which the horse is fonder. The following account of the value of the carrot is not exagger ated : ' This root is held in much esteem. There is none better nor perhaps so good. When first given it is slightly diuretic and laxative, but as the horse becomes accustomed to it, theso effects cease to be produced. They so improve the state of the skin. They form a good substitute for grass, and an excellent alterative for horses out of condition. To sick and idle horses they render grain unnecessary. They are beneficial in all chronic diseases connected with breathing, aud have a marked influence upon chronic cough and broken wind. They are serviceable in diseases of the fskin, and in combina tion with oats restore a worn horse much nooncr than oats alone.' " How to Kill Lice. A correspondent of the Prairie Farm er says : " Tako hog's lard, melt it and mix with a little sulphur aud apply the mixture thoroughly to a space six inches wide on cither side of the back-bone from the head to the tail of the animal. Do this ou a warm, sunshiny day, and if there is a living louse on the animal, twenty-four hours afterward, I wou't say that I will cat it, but I will say that louse has a stronger constitution than any other spe cimen with which I have come in contact." Forcing Radishes. Radishes may be grown in a few days by the following method : Let some good radish seed soak in wa ter for twenty-four hours, then put them in a bag and exposo it to the sun. In the course of tho day germination will com mence. The seed must then be sown in a well manured hot-bed, and watered from time to time with lukewarm water. By this treatment the radishes will, in a very short time, acquire a sufficient bulk, and be good to eat. Journal of Horticulture. Sweeney. As to that much talked of disease in horses, Sweeney, Prof. Law, of Cornell University, writes the N. Y. Tribune that in many supposed cases the shrinkage of the muscles of the shoulders is the result of disease in the feet. If it be decided that the disease is really Sweeney, he ad vises applying a mild blister repeatedly over the shoulder muscles, and giving plenty of walking exercise on a smooth road. Equal parts of the oil of turpen tine, ammonia and olive oil may be rub bed into the shoulder repeatedly. To Extract Ink from Colored Articles. Drop tallow on the stains, and soak and rub the same with boiling milk. Effec tual. Another mode is to gather tho leaves of the wood sorrel, dry them in the sun, powder them, and sprinkle the powder thickly ou ink stains on colored prints, etc. Pour boiling water upon the sorrel, and after lying a short time the stains will disappear. HOTELS. PERRY HOUSE, New Bloomlleld, Va. THE subscriber having purchased tho property on the corner of Maine and Carlisle streets, opposite the Court House, invites all his friends and former customers to give him a call as he is determined 1 1 furnish first class accommodations. THOMAS HUTCH, 3 ltf. Proprietor. JAGLE HOTEL NEW BLOOMFIELD, Terry County, Pcnn'n. HAVING purchased the hotel formerly occu pied by David 1!. Lupfer, situated on North Carlisle Street adjoining the Court House, I am prepared to receive transient guests or regular boarders. To all who favor me with their custom. I shall endeavor to furnish tirst class accommodations. A call is solicited. GEORGE DERRICK. Bloomlleld, March 9, 18G9. 3 10 ly 5 Thomas Mooke. S. S. Webeu. GREATjLY IMl'ROVJil) AND RE. FITTED ! 'THE UNION,' This line Hotel is located on Arch Street, Between Third and Fourth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. MOORE S- "WEBER Proprietors. January 1, 1809. BELLS. ( ESTABLISHED I IN 1837. BUCKEYE BELL FOUNDRY! CHURCH. Academy, Factory. Farm, Fire Alarm Bells, &c, &.U., made of PURE BELL METAL, (Copper and Tin.) warranted In quality, tone, du rability, &o and mounted with our Patent IM PROVED ROTATING HANGINGS. Illustrated Catalogues sent Free. I 'AND UZEN C TIFT, Nos. 102 and 104 E. 2nd St., 41101ypd C INC INK ATI, 0. 10 4 Sheeting JIuslin, 9 8 Sheeting Muslin, 5 4 Pillow Caso Muslin, 42 Inch Pillow Caso Muslin, 44 Sheeting Muslin, 3 4 Shirting Muslin, 94 Sheeting Linen, For sale at the lowest price by, F. Mortimer & Co. 2cw Bloomflcld. The Cheapest Paper in the State I 1 PERSONS wanting a good family newspaper, . Independent in politics, should subscribe fur " The Bloomflcld Times," published weekly at New Bloomflcld,. Pcnn'a. Each number contains choice selected or original Stories, Anecdotes. Local andMiseellaiieoiisNews, Farm and Agricultural information, and such a variety of interesting and instructive reading mat ter that as A CHEAP FAMILY PAPER, It cannot be excelled. It Is Issued In Quarto form, containing Forty Columns, and Is mailed to sub scribers for Ono Dollar a Tear in Advance. Specimen copies mailed to any address, on receipt of a two-cent stamp for postage. Address: FRANK MORTIMER. Hem Bloomflcld, I'enn'a. Philadelphia Advertisements. Banking and Stocks. BANKING HOUSE Of Jay Cooko & Co., T12 AND 1U SOUTH THIRD STREET, Philadelphia, DEALERS IN ALL GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Old 5-SOs Wanted IN EXCHANGE FOR NEW. A LIBERAL DIFFERENCE ALLOWED. Compound Interest Notes Wanted. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. t-COLECTIONS made i STOCKS bought and sold on Commission. T SPECIAL business accommodations re served for LADIES.. 3191 BA UGII'S RAW-BONE Super Phosphate of ILiine! MARK Spring 1S70. FARMERS INCREASE TOUIt CROP OF Corn, Oats, Potatoes, Wheat and Grass, AS WELL AS ADD TO THE FERTILITY OF YOUR SOIL, By a Judicious and Economical mode of 3VE -A IS TJRIITG. Get the Value of your Outlay the First Season. Olitaln Better Filled Ears and Heavier Grain. Keep your Soil Free from Noxious Weeds. Make your Land 1'ermanently Fertile. Over SIXTEEN years of constant use, on all crops, has proven that Baugh's Haw lione l'hos phuiemay be depended upon by Farmers. Highly In proved and Standard Warranted. For Sale by Agiicultural Dealers generally. BAUGH fit SONS, MANUFACTURERS, Office No. 20 S. Delaware Avenue, PHILADELPHIA. 4 11 6m 0 WOOD AND WILLOW WARE. OUAYIilLL & CO., Wholesale Dealers In Carpets, Oil Cloths, . Shades, Brooms, Carpet Chain, Batting, Wadding, Twines, &c, And a Hue assortment of Wood and Willow Ware, No. 313, North Third Street, Philadelphia, Pa. January 1, 18G9. TO OUll FllIENDS! THE undersigned have this day formed a Co Partnership under the name of SIDDALL & MARKLEY, TRADE and will continue the WHOLESALE DRUG BUSINESS, At No. 119 Market Street, Succcdlng to the well-known house of WRIGHT & SIDDALL. Trusting to receive a continuance of the favors so liberally bestowed on the old tlrm, We are yours, Respectfully, FRANCIS II. SIDDALL, One of the tlrm of Wright & Siddall. ARTHUR D. MARKLEY, M. D., Philadelphia, January 1. 1870. BALLOU'S MONTHLY MAGAZINE. THE greatest success is attending the publica tion of SALLOWS MONTHLY MAGAZINE of any perldlcal in the world. Each number con tains One Hunduku Pages of the choicest stories, Poems and Engravings, or Twelve Hundred Pages every year for 81. 50 being fully three-fourths as largo as as either of the four-dollar Magazines, at about one-third their price. Now is the time to subscribe. TE Terms. $1.60 a year; 7 copies, t9; 13 copies, J15 ea-Send stamp for specimen copy and propectus to ELLIOTT THOMES is TALBOT. Publishcrs,Boslon,Muss. NEW STORE ! CHEAP GOODS! THE subscriber having opened a new Store, one door East of Sweger's Hotel, solicits a share of the public patronage. He has Just received a full supply of New OS- o o d h , and will constantly keep on hand, a complete as sortment of DRY-GOODS, GROCERIES Q VEENS WA RE, HARDWARE, BOOTS t SHOES, HA TS & CABS. And Everything else usually kept In Stores. S" Call and see my stock. ROB'T. N. WILMS, New Bloomlleld, Ta. 3 42 Tho Bloomfield Times JOB-OFFICE! We now have the material to do all kinds of JOB - W O XT li Such as J?nllio Sale Bills, Plain or In Colors. Blanks of All Kinds ! BiUL- heads, LETTER HEADS; ENVELOPES, DRAFTS, AND CHECKS ! POSTERS OF ALL SIZES, PLAIN OR FANCY I In fact we are prepared to do every variety of JOB PRINTING, Uusually Done in a Country Office ! All Orders PROMPTLY 'ATTENDED TO AT REASONABLE HATES. OFFICE IN POTTER'S ItOW, orrosiTE 1). 51. i:m smith's Hotel ! fjjlrrflinfifltr (httts IS PUBLISHED WEEKLY, AT THE LOW PRICE OF ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, I3ST -A.r-V"-A.3STCE. NOTICE TO SOLDIERS. SOLDIERS DISCHARGED for sickness or other cause, who enlisted before July 22, 1801, for 3 years, will receive liounty now due them, or their heirs, by making immediate application, either In person or by letter to LEWIS POTTElt, New Bloomlleld. March 22, 1870.3t Perry County, Pa. NOTICE. MR. SAMUEL H, BECK Is this day admitted to an Interest in my business." F. MORTIMER, New Bloomlleld, January 15, 1870. The business will be continued at the same place, under th Unu of F. MORTIMER & CO. Northern Central Railway. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. ThroU'ft CVi Direct Route to and from Washing ton, Baltimore, F'.nxira, Erie, Buffalo, Rochester and Niac?ra Falls. ON AND AFTER. SUNDAY. DECEMBER 26. 1809. the trains on the Northern Central Rail way will run as follows : NORTHWARD. MAIL TRAIN. Leaves Baltimore. 8.16 a.m. Harrlslmrg, 1 p. m. Willlamsport 6.1ft p. in., and arr. at Elmira, 10 p.m. BUFFALO EXPRESS, leaves Baltimore, 10.10p.m. I Harrisburg, 2.30 a.m. Willlamsport. 7.40 a. in. Elmira. 12 noon. Arrives ai uananaatgua ai 3.40 p. m. FAST LINE. Leaves Baltimore 12.20 p. m. Harrisburg 4.20 p.m. Arr. at WiIliainsport8.25p.ni., and Erie at 9.45 a. m. CINCINNATI EXPRESS. Leaves Baltiinoie7.40p.in. ar. Harrisburg 11.55 p.m. YORK AND HARRISBURG ACCOMMODATION Leaves York at 6.30a. in., arr. at Harrisburg 8 a.m Emigrant Train with passenger car attached, caving Harrisburg at 7.30 a. m., arrives at Sun bury at 11.15 a. in. SOUTJnVARD. MAIL TRAIN. Leaves i Elmira 6.15 a. m. Williawxport 9.45 a. m. Harrisburg 2.45 p. m. Ar. Baltimore at 7 p. in BUFFALO EXTRERS. Leaves Canandalgua 4.45 p. in.. Elmira 8.40 p. in. Willlamsport 12.25 a. m., Harrisburg at 6.15 a. in. Arrives at Baltimore at 9 a. m. CINCINNATI EXPRESS. Leaves Harrisburg 10.45 p.m., Ar. Baltimore 2.30 a.m ERIE EXPRESS. Lvs. Sunbury 5.20 a. in., Ar. Harrisburg 7.45 a. in- PACIFIC EXPRESS. Lvs. Harrisburg 12.05 p. in., Ar. Baltimore 3.50 p.m. Yohk and ItAHiusnrita Accommodation. Lvs. Harrisburg 4.30 p. m Arr. at York 6 p. m. flo-Mall Train north and south. Fast Line north, and York and Harrisburg Accommodation north and south, and Erie Express. Erie Mail south, Cin cinnati Express north, Pacillc Express south, aud Emigrant north daily except Siindav. Buffalo Express north and south dally. Cincinnati Express south dailv except Saturday. For further information apply at the Ticket oflice, Pennsylvania Railroad Depot. ALFRED R. F1SKE. General Superintendent. HEADING KAIIROAD. WINTER ARRANGEMENT. Jlondaj, Nov. 22ml, 18G9. GREAT TRUNK LINE FROM THE NORTH and North-West for Philadelphia, New York, Reading, Pottsville, Tamaqua, Ashland. Shamokln, Lebanon. Allentown, Easton, Ephrata, Litiz, Lan caster, Columbia, Ike, &c. Trai ns lea vc Harrisburg for New York, as follows : At 2.30,5.35, 8.10, a.m., and 12.20 noon, and 2.55, 11.00, p. M., connecting with similar trains on the I'enn'a Railroad, and arriving at New York at 10. 15. A. M., and 12.05. noon, 3.35, 0.35. 10.00. p. M., and 6.00, A. M., respectively. Sleeping cars accompany the 2.30. and 5.35, a. m., and 12.20, noon trains with out change. Leave Harrisburg for Reading.Pottsville, Tama qua, Minersville, Ashland. Shamokln, Pine Grove, Allentown. Philadelphia, at 8.1(1, A. M., and 2.55, and 4.10, p. M., the 2. 55 train stopping at Lebanon onlv; the 4. 10 1. M. train stoppingatallsiationsandmuk in connections for Philadelphia, Pottsville and Co lumbia, and all Intermediate Stations between said points only. For Pottsville. Schuvikill Haven and Auburn, via Schuylkill and Susquehanna Railroad, leave Harrisburg at 3.40 p. m. Returning : Leave New York nt 9 A. M., 12 noon, and 5 and 8 p. m.: Philadelphia at 8.15 a.m., and 3.30 p. m. Sleeping cars accompany the 9 A. m. and 5 and 8 p. m. trains from New York, without change. Way passenger trai n leaves Philadelphia at 7.30 A. M., connecting with similar train on EastPeiin'a. Railroad, returning from Reading at 6.35 p. M., stopping at all Stations; leave Pottsville at 5.40, and 9 A. m. and 3. 05 p. m. : Herndon at 9.30 A. M. ; Shaniokin at 5.40 and 10.40 a. m. j Ashland, 7.05 a. m. and 12.30 noon : Tamaqua at 8.33 a.m. and 2.20 p. m. for Philadelphia and New York. Leave Pottsville via Schuvikill and Susquehanna Railroad at8.15 A. M., for Harrisburg,and 11.30 a. M for Pine Grove and Tremont. Reading accommodation train: leaves Pottsville at 5.40 A. M., passing Reading at 7. 30 a. m arriving at Philadelphia at 10.20 a. m., returning leaves Philadelphia at 4. 45 p. m. passing Reading at 7.40 p. M., arriving at Pottsville at 9.30 p. m. Pottstown Accommodation train : Leaves Potts town at 6.45 a. m., returning, leaves Philadelphia at 4.00 p. m. Columbia Railroad trains leave Reading at 7.15 a. m. and 6.15 p. m. for Ephrata, Litiz, Lancaster, Columbia. &c. Perkiomen Railroad trainsleavePerkiomcn Junc tion at 9 a. m. and 3.10 and 5.30 p. in. Returning, leaves Schwenksville nt 6.10, 8.12 a. in and 12.45 noon, connecting with similar trains on Reading Rail road. Colebrookdale Railroad train leaves Pottstown at 8.45a. m. and 6.20 p. m.,forMt. Pleasant. arrivingat 10.20 a. in. and 7.20 p. m. ; returning leave Mt. Pleas ant at 7. and 11 a. in., connecting w ith similar trains on Reading R. R. Chester Valley Railroad trains leave Bridgeport at 8.30 a. m., 2.05 and 5.02 p. in. Returning, leave Downingtown at 6.3" a. in., 12.45. noon, and 6.15 p. in., connecting with trains on Reading Railroad. On Sundays; Leave New York at 5 and 8 p. in. ; Phila. at 8 a. m. and 3.15 p. m. ; the 8a. in. train run ning only to Reading: Pottsville 8 a. in.; Hurris bui g 5.3oa. in., and 4.10 and 11.00 p. m.: and Read ing at 12.43 midnight, and 7.15 a. m. for Harrisburg; at 7.20 a. in. and 12.55 a. m. forNewYork: and at 9.40a. 111.. 4.25 p. m. for Phila. Commutation, Mileage, Season, School and Ex cursion Tickets to and from all points at reduced rates. Baggage checked through, 100 pounds allowed each passenger. G. A. NICOLLS, Gen'lSup't. Daily Express and Freight lino BETWEEN BLOOMFIELD & NEWPORT! THE subscriber wishes to notify tho citizens of Bloomlleld and Newport that he Is running u Dally Line between these two places, and will haul Freight of any kind, or promptly deliver packages or messages entrusted to his care. -Orders may be left for him at the stores of F. Mortimer & Co., New Bloomlield, or Milligiui & Musser, Newport, Pa. .1. 8. WHITMORE. Bloomlleld, January 25, 1870. Q.LASS AND Q UEENSWARE. A splendid assortment of Glass and Queens ware at greatly reduced prices has Just been ccelved by the subscribers. Persons wanting any article of this kind, will do well to examine the stock. F. MORTIMER & CO., New Bloomlleld.