2. Place the hands on the hips, and, Then bend a% the knee, pointing the ed | foe downward and bringing the fool 2p. Repeat this ten times at first the exercise in reverse. 8. Stand ereot and lean over at the hips withont bending the knees and try nearer the floor. This exercise will make the body sapple and strengthen the back, and will encourage grace. 4. Extend the right arm aad, placing the left on the hip, bend to the right side as far as possible, and then re verse the exercise, which should be , ten times at first, and, like oll others, increased from day to day This is an excellent general gymnastic. { No woman shonld indulge in any ex. ereise to such an extent that even the slightest strain is possible. Fifteen home shonld result in muscular de velopment and greatly help to retair health, — New York Press, A Woman's Voice. “Her voles was ever gente, jow and soft! sn exosiient thiog in woman. It has long been conceded that » pleasant voice is one of woman's greatest charms. And many of ne verify this truth for ourselves for re valling the sweet influence of some women, who, like the lovely Cordelia, | spake in acrents soft and low. “Ihe voice sh sweet, the words so fair, As some soft shime bad stroked the air: And though the sound had parted thence, Still loft an ocho in the sense.” A preity face and a musical voice go { well together, but, of the two, the lat ter is preferable. The power of a truly good woman possessing such » gift cannot be overestimated, especi- ally if she is refined and intellectual. | Har harmonious tones fall with a rest. ful cadence upon the ear of the invalid, They are posce for thie weary, balm for the sorrowful and are frequently {more efficacious than a sermon in { touching the obdurate hearts of the wayward (Jn the contrary, we sometimes find rare beauty of feature seriously marred by the incongruity of a disagreeable voice. It is maid of the Empress Engenie that the stranger was enrsp- tured with her wonderfal beanty, bat { the moment she spoke all admiration was forgotten in the noplensaut sensa. tion eansed by her barsh Spanish voice, n will : i man’s club, snd the table with the best the market af- blessed with particalarly musical t. The plsus are now voloes, The colds, drawn for the clubhouse, which bave saflicient accommodation fo bers. 3- | chungues of climate subject them more or less affect the vocal organs. In t, soft, rippling utterance seems to matter how great her natural defects may be, can, with few exceptions, i her voice within a becoming vate distinet, well tones, mont for physical ouiture and voice " | enltare and every other kind of | ealture, the noisy, garrulous woman of watering-place famae will have soon | away, aad in her stead come a ing who will not converse as though { every one in her bearing were deal {and she were bound to finish the sentence she is bent on uttering that very moment or never. . ‘There is no greater assurance of a the happy home than a ealm, well-regu- tha aad sesses it has won half the victory to- the satin coats wird social and domestic success. New York Ledger. his season. Thin black often difficult Yo design, are very attractive. It is Gleanings Freon the Store. Remuauts of fonlard cheap. Silk-cord fourageres ia effects. Shirt waists with an inside yoke of the goods. Corset covers having a yoke of Valenciennes lace. Fine lisle and silk bose in plaid and striped effects, Cherry velvet for collars and sashes ob black gowns, Black dress goods in poplin, ¢repon and smooth effects. Mivoir velvet for fall hats and costume accessories, | Boft and hard twisted serges in shower-proof effects. { Black taffeta gowns trimmed with black snd white satin. Nightgowns with a pateunted addition for keeping the feet warm. Small taffeta dressing jackets decor. sated with a fichu and plaited ruffles of mull, Sashes of white satin and taffeta ribbon for costames trimmed in white, » fashionable fad. Black hairlined striped cherry and | gurrant red tafteta forcostame linings, petticoats and shirt waists, { Fancy black silk and mohair braid | passementeries in open embroudery | patterns and narrow widths, Do! Gowns of a plaited net skirt, sash, first, and vest and yoke, with sleeves, collar, reasonable blouse jacket and over.drapery of ~~ {foulard or figured talfeta silk. wililary sit is far cooler thao taf- muslin frocks can be owly raise yourself on ar as possible. Retain ran stant and then resting all the weight of the body on! | the right foot, slowiy raise the left lag, | and extending it in front of the body | stand on the left foot and repeat | to touch the floor with the fingers. Day by day you will come nearer and] ns mach as cirenmstances will permit. | | necessary, minutes a day spent in exercise at that Le intends to supply. that have been fonnd of value and you : fwonid be a great mistake. | ably good care, Atlanta Journal, English women, as » rale, are not | eatarrh and | bromehial trouble to which the sudden | belong more generally to lsods of | eternal summer, Yel any woman, uo key, and b oper rare and exercise hi 4 uh modalated | Let us hope with the present move- | lated voice, aud the woman who pos- | de is made from a fat hoop soaked in | water aud beut (ato the proper shape. | This handle can Le supported by two Buacrhwheat in Orchards. Perhaps ax good a crop as any to in the orchard is bunekwheat Its seed is #0 cheap, and the mulch its growth makes it so effective, that it more than offsets the poverty of buckwheat in fertilizing material. | Where hue wheat is gown in orchards, | the land will be made extremely light and qaoist, especially if the last srop of buck whest in the season is plowed ander. The only drawback to this is that growing buckwheat leaves the soil bare, and in a severe winter frost may penetrate deeply enongh to in. jure the roots of frait trees. The peach tree is especially apt to be in. jared by winter freezing of the sail near the tree. ! no Fonte Fall Planting of Fruit Trees, The majority of fruit trees can be set out in the fall with good results | . After the snmmer's work is done the sail intended for the orchard should be put in the best possible condition for trees by careful and thorough plowing, harrowing, fertilizing snd, if | draining. Every hour spent in preparation of the soil before | the trees are set will count so much | more toward fninre success of the | orchard. In the selection of varieties the planter should be largely guided | ty successes of other planters on | similar soils in the same climate, as well as on the demands of the market As a rale, it is not sale to set largely of mew varieties nnless they have been tested ander conditions similar to those sur. rounding you and found valoable i As an illastration of the loss that: may follow from setting largely of new | sorts of any kind of fruit without a test, there have been tested at Edge: wood, N. J, during the past five years, nnder field enitare, over sixty new varieties of strawberries, all of them highly landed and of that nam. ber but a half dozen were found of valine for genera! planting in that lo | eality, It is bat fam to say, however, | that on other soils many that were al- | most worthless at Fdgewood have been found decided acquisitions. De. pend upon the best of the varieties will find the orchard a profitable por tion of the farm when it has reason: A Fral «Gathering Box. The ordinary basketis nol a conveni~ ent receptacie into which to piek fruit | from a indder. Too little of the open | ing is presented between the rounds, owing to the round form of the has | ket's top. The ronnd form also keepa | the basket from being stable, as 1t is Aoi . iss pi n— i ! ce STR 4 rm eg A HANDY RECEPTACLE PGR FRUIT PIONEERS i OO PR A ARS a 65 aan x ee constantly swinging about on the ons | book supporting it. A fruit-gather- ing box ia shown in the eat which abe viates both of these defects, Ita han books, keeping the box very firm, | With a box the fall opening from one side to the other is afforded for pu ting wn frat. If the box is careiully lined with a doable thickness of bar. lap there will ba less likelihood of bruising the fruit, even inthe smallest degree — New York Tribone. Care of Milk fa Antumn, i I have seen a great deal of good milk spoiled in the fall, becanse the | dairy rooms in which it was kept over | night were closed as soon as the milk | was set away at evening. Shutting | off ventilation now, while it will not | spoil the milk as quickly as in hot weather, results in the impairment of its quality. Milk designed for the cheese factory or creamery is better | left outside in the free cool air, than! in any building where the cirenlation | is shut off or 1s imperfect. A great deal of second grade butter and cheese | lof antamn manufsctare is dae to the tendency of dairymen to leave their milk cans in the barn at night as soon | as frosty weather appears. Milk kept on the farm for twelve hours before delivery should be aerat ed as thoroughly now as in July It is not a high temperature that always’ plays havoe with it, but the retained beat when it stands in balk. This danger can be obviated by making the summer care of milk a criterion foi the whole year. On the cheese factory patron who delivers ilk once a diy, an 1mpor nitrogen, | crops, even in mall mmonots, and if i need might good. hiftle of { aasaily a delasion. mostly to the | terials, whether thems are the ones | needed or not, and to have tos little of | the move expensive ingredients to do any good whatever, proportion of the hen manure Lthe | tant responsibility reste The repuia- | tion of the factory in largely in his ‘hands, and also the amount of his own | dairy returns He ix only earming money for his own pocket by taking the most sorapuions care of his milk. First, beng aerated, if it stands in the | delivery can over night, the cream shanid be separated from the sdges of the vessel 1 the morning and gent. | milk. | Morning's milk should not be mixed | with the night, bat should be carried | ¥ ly reincorporated with the to the factory in 8 separate can Whey, whether sour or sweet, should | not be carried from the factory to the | farm in cans that have just conveyed the milk. Dairymen who patronize creamer. jes should observe just as much eau. ¥ | tion in not using their milk cans for If the skimmed milk | was always stored in a clean recepta | swill barrels, ele st the creamery the case would be different, but Like the whey vat at the cheese factory it is more often fithy, | The only safe and proper way isto E keep milk cans, and milk nteusils generally, for nothing bat nulk. | enjoin thus earnestly about the fall | ere of milk, because, through » jack | of vigilance, due to the advent of cool | weather, I have as a minouiactorer en. countered a vast amount of anneces | sary poor milk in sutamn, (reorge F. Newell in New England Homestead Low Cirade Fertilizers. In buying fertilizers it is always gourd poliey to get the best that can be bad rather than fo pay a lower price for what is so cefleient that it can be sold at that price with a profit The cheaper fertilizer, as it is cailed, ponsists very largely of material that has no value whatever, and of course all the labor required to apply it is wasted, and so also is that seeded to transport the worthliens material from the fertilizer factory 85 the farm. If the miperal fertilizer ix too concen. trated to be applied economically, what inert material it required to make greater bulk cas ba better ap- phied ou the farm than asywhers else Bat to say that the highest priced fertilizer is always best for avery crop The dear- est of all kinda of fertilizers, available is not adopted to some do injury rather than (4 the minerals, phosphate dearest, and potash closely following it. If the erop needs either ar both of these, economy 1s to be found in getting each WE EY eY trated form as posable. The low grade, cheap phosphate, that has a» each jagredient in it, It is sare to run elpensive mia mn Dest 3h na legal mized When fortilizers are to be j for the purpose of making them go farther, it ia important that what is used zs a divisor shall not be some ‘ thing that will neutralize the mineral cor at least make it inscigble most often done in miging saperphos- phate with land plaster, which 1s sui. phate of lime. The result of this is 1! that the excess of lime converts still more of the lime into a sulphate, and greatly lessens the effect of the phos phate, soil, the phosphate will revert to an entirely insoluble condition more lime in any form shoald be ap: plied to land where superphosphate Las heen nsed undo what the sulpharic seid baa doze to make the phosphate avail- able. If mitrogencns maunre is needed . with potash or phosphate, it can be beat gaed in the form of poultry Cerensent that bias been thoroaghls mented amd sifted. Only a he mized with the fertilizer, an i will make it too ahs to diiil tubes #53 i At 12 will make | whatever it 1a applied to grow rapia iy, and it will also greatly inereace the effectiveness of any muneral fertil 1zer that is apphed with 8 Ameri cal Agrcalturst, Farm asd Garden Notes. If your stock does not have access to running water see 10 it that their tank is kept fall The milk cow and the growing heifer must be supplied with a ration that 1s suitable to the needs of each. Never give the cows reason to let up | on their milk-giving for » single day, | ‘and then they will uiways be at their 7 : best, therefore more suitable for horses, the field ble and followed by thorough tion, “Make hay while piow wiale "tis cool,” that should be observed 1# aa old saving I? the tivatur is kept going wiile the dew 1s on the grasa in the wesnings anil no grass ent until it 1a dry, at mach eadie? to eure it good quality of hay. is i leaves Wo (ifr yf ‘Gley a I fnena, $" burg is This gently If the season after be dry, so as to have little fermentation in the N % w : funeral af his father Its only effect ia to | shonid well through the sun shines and enl- : evenly amd make 8} ! Castle, PRISONER RETURNED. Wiliam Beller Jevres Jal wa! Buvprie Hie WU hide awaiting Tra Bie proms, Wilkins Hollar & froonth age escaped from Coninsy jal wher Bf tire for 1 Firuday rovived ry rum red iI =a 1 Bao kK, i I amy” Hol ih robbing the Nar I prstoiMeos, He brike Menwinger, knotiyer hack fo (he was sie and that ne would far the Beontesn ig tt ¥ Wk fone hainr tly agit he Bere im Barged HEYA Tet a» ne edad) Ris supper, bat PHL IN ADL AppeArance ber {erm HEL A posses sent fays The following te 1 Wore granted 1 Penfield, W. 2: Jessa Foch ardwon. Alteens IX fowl Buchman, Fawr Branch Warren, $8: Michasi 8. Reheper Melipg Grove BB Mason I Lay Armatrong., vorviss Parerine Zollarsvitbes Wanh- 2 ote BR Hamuel of Campton, Willilamaport, 38 160 $8. Williams W Perry, Hingegold Fo 1 $6 Henry Ho master, Rpring Mills, Center, 38 10 $4. Teanart M Bromley $8] City, $4 er BR Geivrge Wo Kisfer, Phttaburg to FIG George FF. Norris, Bimpsonyg Ftors, Washingion 38 to 3. Harvey Rinder West Frownsville 8 ta $12 Mary ¥. Vonrad Gallitgin, Cambs, 2 lara RB Ballantyne Huniingdon, isabella 1° Deeler. Huntingdon, Jolin I Richardson, Clearfield, $5. John Cornish, Eillotteviile, $33 Bidney BH Armour Bpartansburg. $10 William (3. Meyers Clearfisid, = Thomas Clark. Carrs, Conrad B Walter, $$: Peter Updegraf, dead. Lewisburg: $3 Henry E Romig, Hotes #8 William Mall, Wank rgton, 36 Andrew Edinger. dead, Bt Petershary. $0 Shartel Crow. White Ash, 32 to B Elgabeth Tptegralt, fewinburg, 3B Emma Finger Mt Petarshuri $12 Eligatwth Hensel fevanevijie, Somerset, BW Elisabeth Fl. Hamilten Pitteburg $3. Mary Williams, Mench Bedford, 13 Lewis Bradfoml 8 Jos. Flawk, faechburg 3B. Jacob WW. Paloeer Al Jaen 8 MeFiray, Pitts Adam Miclkter, Buasshiurg 3B. Edward RB Steck, dead. (ives. burg, 30 te $M J OC Evans Ebwins. Burg 3% 10 312. John BH Phillips lar ton. $x Fiz Mollie Breck, (ives: burg, 3B Barbara Lang Allegheny I8 Saray J. Frierson, Deep Valley, Greene, ast Ww eit Madison A Elrvn pt Wh wa Petre tonen InLIon Pe Tile ¥ pee . Wn Turner Hall he kert. a Member Ramo Lp ivan, invalyed in ation with ex Policewian Petes stewird of the club Biker? was Pavia Wood 4 fone ura} 1s4at rR Greed gud shaoagader Fes yy ed Bad quite a lively 0 Hic kery ad Way in werpowering hin . } attempted bo EME Ww kert had saturday af At Jepnmeite sight Oharies % Fras Tod 0 Tike silane Crem WR. EF b shot fy wwe Par Fat Ley rey f Camb Mow is wrrenting § hs “¥ p £4 # thief of Paulie Lik Tey Fivrueem #3 iy fade Tire : ey ited imia- was Pond FETE Tis Ming al AS agedl Tag plete 61 Tw yon red | File fad wae ie derers Psd ariel Lew 1% a +1 h wt nt 1 i Men died SAR 1 cored Wor pe thee Bow mypradiny was uy Toonami vorktend oo snelh : i Th me raihe ar JW ard fo, of Clameva, driving sing #& ad WRaInE another hay Field wy o& Rhine of Mghwavipen, The hs haughty of a wa 3 ¥ me mane Be Cave pend from the hagey aod ras Rave rein and whip te the Bore dasknd through the gang bring hate froan Three ravalvers hye wr tinic Bed the horse she ‘Bad willing received a bgllet in ils dank A hundred thousand dollars wWaath of farms and private reosiderves he onging fovmweriy the Mreciars of the Tarybie Manulfscturing Company and the hig engine suarks of the com. pany were add at Chambersburg, bw Ppiteny States Marshal Reilly, of Philadelphia. The proparty Bad before been sald by the Sherifl of Frankiin county, and a clash helwesn Srate and national authorities in i Kely While preparing Fut Bp Mafnt rr Bas TE wef thought of PHT tis Tee Cart to attend Fasten last week, John inewnsed 4: His slop sable By anid stabbed with a Rnife inficting an which may result fatally, on attempted fo make Bis ew. wis capture by an officer § to fail to awalt the ralirvad al fogart loame TIN Janes {Ie en tao eg Erie Jwigy Modis 20 terms of «Eastern auieel RB Tyee fyny PEACE AYRE y Harman Wa i ix ef Narthaing. fab at Dwvbstowsn a He wonhl have vials erie tua asrder hy tans, and wold throw out igor’ gang allgethe: Lowe ton Farmers few dave age in ge The Georges M. Neville found dead in | fast werk His He | wirK. | Aa freighy car at Blairsville was 8 resident of Mt Union body was satisfactorily entitled was going west in search of He leaves a widow and one child, A vaimalies horse and buggy. stolen from Jacob Freshly, of Springtown, N were recovered at Miss Cirace Plant, of Jamestown, while driviag with ber father killed a ratilosnakes three feet jong that six raitivrs Lan Riaw of A. ran in bis 3. Zarger, fumt edd in decir A mariage: of deaf mul eR nae. at HBespding a few days age, John M in iakc use I Misr Anna taking Lhe owe in sign andahae, The groom An artist Tha a freignt tral a 3% { EL ORLA é 4% food at his ? «at Bellefonte Tha d wn in Man tar. CRbrus +o Juseph L ; y fread ageat ; 1, of Kingman, Kan, was robbed on a train at Mew of 1% ax New York drait for $250 and about $9 in notes and drafts. a aa Haollar | wi the the | ako was Killed an Bist an the the he sujer- | Euston, wheres | | they had been sold to Willlam Sausmer | PF fer Bl ] Corn contains nearly sixty-three per | cent. of starch and oste about forty- | five per cent. Having more than pro- | tein than corn and less starch, oats are | Ca Seyear.cid son . : PA hambershurg. Seab in the heads of wheat cannot be controlled when it once appearsin Tae only way to averd it seems to he hy sowing early varieties, the work being done as early as possi- eltivas aad : caused by a splinter, which | uf i residit- | . i ing the general =chaiz ; , THE MARKETS. FPITYSREUR & firain, Flour and Feed, WHEAT No. 1 red ei Nev, 2 red : ra : {ORS wo 3 yeiiow SRY. Xo. ¥ yellow, she fod { Mignf omar. .... . i DATS Si ¥ white i Ne, § white | RYE--Na, FILOUR Winter gatents, Fasey straight winter Rye Sour : BAY No § timothy, i Cinyer Na. §.... x FEED Xa | white mid, son Brown mbldings. . . ....... Bran, bulk aa CWTRAW.. Wheat, {rat ius | REEDS Clover, 40 he Timothy, prime Pairy Prodacts I BUTTER Hips creamery... 1) Ohio crentnsey Sina ah Pansy sonniry roll s CREESE. (Oh, new New York, new Bia Frat and Vegetables BEANS. Green, ¥ ba Cruel POTATOER. «White, ¥ ub