Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 26, 1889, Image 3

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    Farm Notes.
Watering troughs by the roadside at
convenient distances, are highly appre-
ciated by travelers, and are sure indica-{
tions of kind and hospitable farmers.
There is no plant that enjoys plenty
of good manure more than the rose,
and a lack of this will always result in
scragey plants and miserable blooms,
There is one or two advantages in
properly sorting fruits and vegetables.
It aids to protect the souud fruit from
decay and adds very materially to the
appearance and quality of the fruit.
Select as good a variety as possible
of such crops as your soil seems best
adapted to, get the best quality of seed,
put the ground in a good condition and
give the necessary attention to the de-
tails.
We advise every amateur to well
consider climate and soil before he
brances out very extensively with any
kind of plants. By so doing he will
find the essentials not very hard to
contend.
Time intelligently given to bees will
pay equally well with that given to
any other kind of farm work, and
where too many are not kept it may
be done at such times as not to inter-
fere with other important work.
The belief that a hog will thrive on
any kind ot feed, if he has an abund-
ance of it, and the shiftless, reckless
way of feeding practiced by many is
the immediate. and so'e cause of much
of the disease that prevails among the
swine.
Somebody has made the statement
that butter made from cream churned
at a low temperature will stanl up
better in hot weather than when
churned at the ordinary temperature
of about sixty degrees. It may be this
is 80, but who knows ?
Professor Thorne, director of the
Ohio Experiment Station. is another
who has found raw corn meal to pro-
duce better results in pig feeding than
cooked meal. This has now been
proved in so many cases that it is be-
ing accepted as an established fact.
Clean up the front yard ; tack on
that loose board or picket, slick up and
make home and its surroundings as
neat and cheery as possible. You
will live just as long, have just as good
crops and feel a great deal better if
you “tidy up a bit.” Try it.
Very much depends in planting the
orchard upon sound and discrimina-
ting judgment not only in the selection
of the soil, with a view of retaining
moisture and manures, but also the
slope and exposure, its aptitude for
natural or artificial shelter.
The pig's usefulness as a mixer,
turner and refiner of the manure heap
need only be alluded to. There seems
to be a value given to manure worked
over by pigs which neither the theory
of the philosopher nor the crucible of
the chemist can account for. Yet it is
positively there.
If your chicks are running with
large fowls make a covered slatted
feeding place about 18 inches high,
and place the slats so close that the
large birds cannot get in, and your
chicks will soon learn to get there tor
their food, and will suffer no annoy-
ance from the other birds.
The Rural Canadian indorses the old
rule that every cow kept for butter will
keep a sow and pigs. The skim milk
and butter milk form a basis for
healthy feed, and if given a run in the
pasture or in the orchard the litter of
pigs in the fall will bring nearly as
much as the housewife has made from
her butter.
A prosperous Missouri farmer re-
marks that when he raises a crop he
has to ship it to market to obtein a
sale for it; but when he raises al orse
the buyer comes to him and buys his
product. A little horse sense of this
character will open the eyes of hun-
dreds of farmers in this State, and not
before it is needed, either. :
Experiments in feeding pigs, institu
ted by the Danish Agricultural Society
2o to show that skim milk has double
the feeding value of buttermilk ; that
rye and Ss are of about equal
value, with a slight percentage in favo.
of rye; and that six pounds of skim-
med milk have the same feeding value
as one pound of rye or barley.
The American Agriculturist, in an
exhaustive article on the cultivation of
oats, says the reasons why the average
yield of oats is so low are weeds, wet
and undrained land, starvation, poor
tilth and late sowing, and adds: “A
very large proportion of our land is so
wet in the spring for want of under-
draining that it 1s not in condition to
plow until it is too late to sow oats with
any rearonable expectation of getting
a large yield.’
Lord Hampden’s dairy factory, near
Lewes, Eng. receives about 8000
quarts of milk a day, for which the
farmers are paid 3 to 4 cents per quart
delivered at the factory. The butier
sells recdily at 26 to 30 cents per
pound net at the creamery, about 8
quarts of Jersey r.ilk yieiding a pound
of butter. The separate skim milk
sells quickly at 13 cents per quart.
Farmers in the same place who ship
whole milk to London get only 3 to
33 cents per quart, and find the cream-
ery more profitable.
I
3rOILED ToMaTOES.—Select firm, ripe
tomatoes, cut them in two, and place
them upon a well greased double broil-
ing iron. Put'them over a clear fire
and broil, first on one side and then the
other. Now place on a hot dish and
A Man in the Kitchen.
Good Housekeeping.
A mother carefully taught her sons
many details of work usually considered
the sole province of girls and concerning
which boys generally grow up in ignor-
ance. They washed and wiped dishes,
learned to prepare plain meals, had prac-
tice in sweeping and dusting and puttiug
to rights and were taught to patch and
darn neatly and to sew on buttons. Some
of them learned somethings of the
“higher branches.” When they went
out into the world they bad frequent oc-
casion to bless the mother for these use-
ful accomplishments; and when they be-
came heads of households, they had an
intelligent practical knowledge of the
details of the work of which their wives
had charge and were able to make the
burden easy in many ways where anoth-
er man would have made it heavier.
No man worthy of the name permits
his wife or any woman in the house to
do the heavy drudgery of carrying coal
and wood, caring for furnaces and
stoves, beating carpets, and so on. But
this need has to be the limit of a man’s
usefulness about the house: There is no
reasonable reason why a man should not
be able to broil a stake, boil or bake
potatoes, ‘cook an egg, make coffee or
tea and prepave other articles of food
should an emergency arise to make it
desirable ‘and such emergency do often
arise,) ana do it too without turning the
kitchen anh dining-room topsy-turvy in
the operation. Some men can and do
accomplish such work, and even make
biscuits, griddle-cakes and the like. A
woman whose husband is in the habit of
“taking hold” when needed in house-
work has been heard tosay that she
would rather have him to depend on in
case of indispositiou or other emergency
than any girl that could be hired. He
does not interfere when there is no cause
for it, but he saves labor for his wife
and expense for himself, and he is not
ashamed of doing it nor afraid to under-
take it. Noman need be; rather than
that any man should be ashamed of un-
willingness and should regret inability
to perform any ordinary household task
on occasion.
A HANTS
Many So Called “Weak Hearts” Are Due
Merely to Dyspepsia, Tight Lacing’ Ete.
A weak heart insists upon putting it-
self in evidence at all sorts of inconveni-
ent and convenient times. If its possessor
finds himself rather late for the morning
train and makes a “spurt” to recover
lost time, the exertion is usually follow-
ed by sucha bad quarter of an hour
that he resolves rather to lose a
dozen trains in future than to risk tem-
porary suffocation or permanent syncope
again. The practical evils associated
with weak heart are innumerable and
readily suggest themselves to those who
have so unsatisfactory a pumping
apparatus.
But, according to The Hospital, weak
hearts are by no means so common as is
often supposed. Many a man who thinks
he has got one is merely dyspeptic; ma-
ny a woman owes her symptoms to
tight lacing or insufficient feeding. If
the dyspepsia be cured, or the tight lac-
ing be dispensed with, the symptoms of
heart weakness will disappear. Even
when the heart is genuinely “weak,”
the weakness is not always due to special
disease of that organ. It may be only
part of a general weakness of the whole
system which is easily curable. The
late Sir Robert Christison, one of the
most eminent of British physicians, used
to smile at certain persons who were al-
ways complaining of weak hearts. *‘Gen-
tlemen,”’ would say to bis students when
lecturing on digitalis, ‘gentlemen, the
best tonic for a weak heart is a good
brisk walk.” Not a doubt of it.
The majority of weak, flabby hearts
are weak and flabby because every other
muscle in the body is weak and flabby,
and this general weakness and flubbiness
is due to want of vigorous use. Exercise
of the legs and back and arms give addi-
tional and much needed exercise to the
heart whichjgrows String by exercise
exactly as every otner muscular organ
does, for the heart is a muscle. If a man
has no organic disease of the heart, no
enlargement, and no functional disorder,
plenty of brisk walking, with occasion-
al running, will soon dispel his breath-
lessness and heart weakness, other things
being equal. The muscular inactivity
of the modern town man is the parent
of more ill health than any other single
cause whatever.
Brack CurraNT Jam.—To every
pound of truit allow one pound of gran-
ulated sugar and one gill of water.
Strip the fruit from the stalks and put it
into the preserving kettle with the wa-
ter; boil these together for ten minutes;
then add the sugar, and boil the jam
again fcr forty-five minutes, reckoning
from the time when the jam simmers
equally all over, or longer, should it not
appear to set nicely when a little is
poured on a plate. Keep stirring it to
prevent it from’ burning, carefully re-
moving all the scum, and when done,
pour it into pots.
pL —
——1Irate Husband—¢ For heaven's
sake, can’t you talk about, something be-
sides dresses ?7 Wife—¢ ‘Certainly, my
dear. You ought to see the bonnets
they are making nowadays at Smith’s.
I stepped in to-day and saw a beautiful
thing in pink for only $37, and others
were, of course, a good deal more expen-
sive. A $50 gem just took my eye, but
I thought I wouldn't get one that cost
as much as that before I saw you. Of
course, I can talk about something be-
sides dresses, you dear old hubby.”
Tur INGENToUs Dupe.—“I weally
think, Cholly,” said Fweddy, “that I
am improving in my widing. I sitin
my saddle moah gwacefully and don't
bob up and down so hahd.” «How do
vou know how you look when you ride?”
usked Cholly, “How do I know?" echo-
ed Fweddy; I hiah a cab-dwivah to
hang a gweat big looking-glahass on the
back of his cab, and T wide on the boul-
evahd behind that cab evewy aftahnoon,
bah Jove!” — Chicago Tribune.
r———
—A little girl in Albany whose fam-
ily was about to move to New Je sey,
and who had heard Jersey spoken of as »
forlorn and particularly God-Forsaken
place, was saying her prayers at her
mother’s knee the night before their dn-
tended departure. She said all that had
ever been taught her, and then with
pour overthem melted butter, seasoned
with cayenne popper and salt. Serve
imme liately.
peculiar emphasis and solemnity : dded
‘And now, good-by, God, to-mcrrows
we go to New Jersey.”
Wines and Liquors.
Carriages.
o—SCHMIDT
DISTILLER AND JOBBER
OF
FINE
0 WHISKIE
G.W.SCHMIDT,
— ESTABLISHED 1836.
All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention.
BUILDING—o
pus LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE WINE, LIQUOR AND
CIGAR HOUSE IN THE UNITED STATES.
0 0
S. Telephone No. 662.
IMPORTER OF ’
WINES, LIQUORS ANDC CIGARS,
No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
3411 1y
‘To Farmers.
Machinery.
ARMERS' SUPPLIES.
SEEDS.
Farmers are advised that we have a
stock of Choice Recleaned Western
Clover Seed; the only seed of this
quality in Centre county. We invité a
comparison of seeds under magnifying
glasses. Choice and Prime Clover
Seed.
Timothy Seed.
Timothy Seed.
Alfafa; Alsyke Clover Seed, Blue
Grass, Orchard Grass, Red Top, Lawn
Grass, Broom Corn Seed, Hungarian
Millet, and all other grass seeds sold
at a seed store.
Garden Seeds.
pers for four cents.
cent papers for four cents.
son's Tested Garden Seeds
rices.
We sell Beans, Corn, Peas. by dry
measure at low prices.
Plows. We are agents for the sale of
the South Bend Chilled Plows, the
most popular plows now in use. Re-
pairs for same. Roland Chilled Plow is
the best bevel land side plow now in
use. Itis the best chilled, the wear-
ing parts are the inost durable, it cleans
in any soil, and is in every respect the
best beve! land side p'ow, and is sold at
the lowest price. niversal plow is
one of the new inventions and is
adapted to plowing soft or hard soil in
the same field. The beam can be
changed for deep or shallow plowing
by means of a thumb screw in about a
quarter of a minute ; they are a great
favorite with those who use them.
Spring Tooth Harrows. We have
purchased a stock of the Clipper
Spring Tooth Harrows. We sell 18-
tooth Harrows for $16, and guarantee
to.indemnify any purchaser against any
proendad claims of those who try to
ceep up a spring tooth harrow monop-
oly. We caution our friends wo beware
of any false representations. The
monopoly agents make any represen-
tations to enable them to keep up pri-
ces. Call on us before purchasing.
Cultivators for one or two horses.
Buggies, Spring Wagons and Farm
Wagons. Mowers and Reapers, Fodder
Cutters, Churns add Dog Powers. Ag-
ricultural Salt, Fertilizers and Land
Plaster. Linseed Meal. Cider Mills
and Presses. Threshers, Separators,
. Portable and Traction Engines.
Balers and Shippers of Hay.
Your patronage is solicited.
——0 MoCALMONT & CO., o—
BELLEFONTE, PA.
0
0
Choice and Prime
Ferry’s five cent pa-
Landredth’s five
Hender-
at list
344 ly
J S. WAITE & CO.,
* BELLEFONTE, PA.
We do not claim to be finished mechanics,
but we simply say te our customers and com,
petitors that we use better stock and employ
none but good mechanies to manufacture our
fine line of
CARRIAGES, o BUGGIES, o SUR-
REYS & SPRING WAGONS.
The best proof is that we find ready sale for
our new goods, which some of our competitors
do not. A second carload of celebrated Conk-
lin Wagons now on hand, and the largest
Stock af Implements ever brought to Belle-
onte.
We are glad to have Farmers call any time to
examine these goods, and if you find it will be
an advantage to deal with us we will be ready
and willing to promptiy replace any defective
Prin as we fully guarantee all goods sold and
andled by us.
We make a specialty of Repairs and Repair
Wo on all kinds of Buggies and Wagous.
34 11
Ny phage
IMPROVED
—MILK-COOLING CAN——
And System of Gathering Cream.
Over 75,000 Cans in active use in the State of
Ohio, and over 200,000 in the United States.
One setting of milk is all that is needed to
prove the merit of the Can. Usual size of Can
3 gals. Write for descriptive circular and tes-
timonials. I also make a specialty of buildin
Creameries and furnish all the best improve
machinery and apparatus.
JOHN WILHELM,
Wooster, Wayne county, Ohio.
4 Samaria, Mich., Jan. 10, I887.
The Milk Cans I bought of you give perfect
satisfaction. We can make just as good and
just as much butter in the most unfavorable
season of the year by the use of your cans as
at any other time of the year. I ..ave four
Cans. Have used them 8 years, and would not
be without them. My customers say that the
butter is always the same in quality. Tre
Cans are to be credited for the uniformity of
the butter. 34 2lm3 CC. L. OSGOOD.
Fine Job Printing.
KF INE JOB PRINTING
0 A SPECIALTY
0
AT THE
‘Dodger to the finest
o—BOOK-WORK,—o
manner, and at
by calling or communicating with this office.
WATCHMAN o OFFICE.
Ther? is no style of work, from the cheapest
but you can get done in the most satisfactory
Prices consistent with the class of worl.
J EIN & LINGLE,
[Successors to W. P. Duncan & Co,]
BELLEFONTE, PA,
IRON FOUNDERS
and
MACHINISTS.
Manufacturers of the
VULCAN CUSHIONED POWER HAMMER
BELLEFONTE TURBINE
WATER WHEEL,
STEAM ENGINES, SAW MILLS,
FLOURING MILLS,
0 o ROLLING MILLS, &C., &C. o o
Works near P, R. R. Depot. 11 50 1y
Financial.
Tr FUNDS TO LOAN
0—ON FIRST-CLASS MORTGAGES,——o
For a Term of Years,
AT LOW RATE OF INTEREST,
IN AMOUNTS FROM
$2,500————TO0———850,000 !
0-4. BROCKERHOFF,—o
REAL ESTATE BROKER,
3110 ly
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Miscellaneous.
2
GOOD RECORD.
THE OLDEST HARNESS HOUSE
IN TOWN.
#
Over 18 years in the same spot—no
change of firm—no fires—no going back,
but continued and steady progress. This
is an advanced age: People demand more
for their money than ever before. We are
up tothe times with the largest and best
assortment of everything that is to be
found in a FIRST-CLASS HARNESS
STORE, and we defy competition, either
in Justis Shae or prices. NO SEL-
ING OUT FOR THE WANT OF TRADE.
VO COMPANY— NO PARTNERS — NO
ONE TO DIVIDE PROFITS WITH BUT
MY CUSTOMERS. Iam better prepared,
this year, to give you more for your monoy
than ever before. Last year and this year
haye found me at times not able to fill m
orders. The above facts are worth consid-
ering, for they are evidence of merit and
fair dealing. There is nothing so snccess-
ful
0—AS SUCCESS—o
and this is what hurts some. See my -
large stock of Single and Double Harness,
Whips, Tweed Dusters, Horse Sheets, Col-
lars and Sweat Pads, Riding Saddles,
Ladies’ Side Saddles, very low: Fly-Nets
from $3 a pair and upwards. Axle, Coach
and Harness Oils, Saddlery Hardware and
Harness Leather SOLD AT THE LOW-
EST PRICES to the trade. Harnessmak-
ers in the country will find it to their ad-
vantage to get my prices before purchas-
ing hardware elsewhere. Iam better pre-
pared this year than ever to fill orders
promptly.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
iad
HE D. & C.
T0 MACKINAGC
SUMMER TOURS.
PALACE STEAMERS.
33 37
o 0
LOW RATES.
Four Trips per Week Between
DETROIT, MACKINAC ISLAND
Petoskey, Sault Ste. Marie, and Lake Huro
Way Ports. :
Every Week Day Between
DETROIT o AND o CLEVELAND,
Special Sunday Prins during June, July,
August and September.
Double Daily Line Between
CHICAGO AND ST. JOSEPH, MICHIGAN.
Our Il'ustrated Pamphlets. Rates and Excur-
sion Tickets will be furnished by your Ticket
Agent, or address
E. B. WHITCOMB, G. P. A,
Detroit, Michigan.
Detroit and Cleveland Steam Nav, Co. 33 14mé6
HECK-WEIGHMAN’S RE-
PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 150
with name of mine and date line printed in
full, on extra heavy paper, furnished in any
quantity on two days’ notice by the
32 39 WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS.
ARGAINS! o BARGAINS!
en enn
B
o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o
AND
SPRING WAGONS,
at the old Carriage stand of
McQUISTION & CO.,
oO
0
NO. 10 SMITH STREET,
adjoining the freight depot.
We have on hand and for sale the
best assortment of Carriages, Buggies,
and Spring Wagons we have La
We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic,
and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano
and Wiitechapal bodies, and can give
you a choice of the different patterns of
wheels. Our work is the best made in
this section, made by good workmen
and of good material. We claim to be
the only party manufacturing in town
who ever served an apprenticeship to
the business. Along with that we have
had forty years’ experience in the busi-
ness, which certainly should give us
the advantage over inexperienced par-
ties.
Inprice we defy competition, as we
have no Pedlers, Clerks or Rents to
pay. We pay cash for all our goods,
thereby securing them at the lowest
figures and discounts. We are aeter-
mined not to be undersold, either in
our own make or manufactured work
from other places; so give us a call for
Surries, Phaetons, Buggies, Spring
Wagons, Buckboards, or anything else
in our line, and we will accommodate
you. !
We are prepared to do all kinds of
0: REPAIRING——o0
on short notice. Painting, Trimming,
Woodwork and Smithing. We guaran-
tee all work to be just as represented,
so give us a call before prtelinny
elsewhere. Don’t miss the place—
alongside of the freight depot.
34 15 S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
Hardware.
If jowane AND STOVES
AT
o——JAS. HARRIS & CO.)S—o0
—AT—
LOWER PRICES THAN EVER.
NOTICE—Thanking our friends for
their liberal patronage, we desire to ex-
press our determination to merit a con-
tinuance of the same, by a low scale of
PRICES IN HARDWARE........
We buy largely for cash, and doing our
own work, can afford to sell cheaper
and give our friends the benefit, which
we will always make it a point to do.
—A FIRST-CLASS TIN SHOP—
CONNECTED WITH OUR STORE.
ALL OTHER THINGS
DESIRABLE IN HARDWARE
FOR THE WANTS AND USE
OF THE PEOPLE, WITH
PRICES MARKED SO THAT
ALL CAN SEE,
0—AT LOWEST PRICES—o
For iverybody.
o—JAS. HARRIS & CO.,—o
22 2 BELLEFONTE, PA.
INIuminating Oil.
Miscellaneous Advs.
WhY SHOULD I
GO TO MONTANA!
GREAT RESERVATION. Because 18,000,000 acres
of free Government land, with a delightful
climate, and equallv suited for general farm-
ing and stock raising, have just been opened
to the homeseeker, in the Milk River Valley
and near Benton and Great Falls.
Stock RarsiNg. Because the favorable cli-
mate and superior grasses of Montana make it
the natural home of horses, cautle, sheep, and
other domestic animals ; and because winter
feeding is not required, as stock grazes at large
the year round.
GENERAL Farming. Because a rich soil and
abundant sumiaer rains proiuce wheat, oats,
barley and the grasses and vegetables of a size
and yield unsurpassed.
Mining. Because Montana produces more of
the precious metals than any other state or ter-
ritory, and abundant opportunities remain to
secure valuable properties at nominal cost.
. Iayicrarior. Because the Great Reserva.
tior is the iaeeting point of settlers from the
Pacific Coast and from tie Eastern States, and
is tue only extensive tract of good land left
suitable for settlement. ,
Business. Because the rapidly growing
towns along the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Mani-
toba Ry. offer splendid opportunities to engage
in business.
Manufacturer. Because the 1,000 000 horse
power water-power at Great Falls, the extensive
coal veins, wool, mineral and grain raising re-
sourses of Montana offer exceptional opportu«
nities to the manufacturer.
Tourist. Because the canon of the Gates of
the Mountains, the Great Falls of the Missouri,
the Giant Fountain and Continental Divide of-
fer the most sublime and diversified senery to
bs found on the Continent. Take a summer
our. !
Way TravEL BY THE ST. P., M. & M.>--Be-
cause only by it can you travel through the
largest body of free land left for settlement.
Because it reaches the Great Falls, with the
largest water-power on the Continent. Bes
cause it reaches Helena, the richest city of its
size in the world; and because it is the shortest
and best route to Butte, the largest mining.
camp on earth. Si tourists’ and land-
seekers’ rates. Daily trains through solid to
Montana. Choice of three routes to the Pacif-
ic Coast. Find out all about it by writing for
“The Great Reservation,” and “Tourists’ Sum-
mer Guide.” For further information, rates,
[ApS ete. apply to F. I. WHITNEY, G. P. &
T. A., St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Ry. ,
St. Paul, Minn. 34-27
REE—$93 Sewing Machine. To
at once establish trade in all parts, by plac-
ing our machines and goods where the people
can see them, we will send Free to one person
in egch locality, the very best sewing-machine
made in the world, with all the attachments.
We will also send free a complete line of our
costly and valuable art samples. In return we
ask that you show what we send, to those who
may call at your home, and aftér 2 months all
shall become your own property: This grand
machine is made after the Singer patents,
which have run out, before patents run out it
sold for $93, with the attachments, and now sells
for $50. Best, strongest, inost useful machine
in the world. All is free. No capital required.
Plain, brief instructions given. Those who
write to us at once can secure free the best
sewing-machine in the world, and the finest
line of works of high art ever shown together
in America. TRUE & CO., Box 740, Augusta,
M11
Maine. y
AUTION—Whereas a Charter has
been obtained for the Benner’s Run As-
sociation for the Propagation and Preservation
of Fish and Game, and the State having stock-
ed this stream with brook trout, it is unlawful
for any person to fish therein for a period of
three years from the first day of May, A. D. 1889.
(See act of Assembly, June 10, 1881, and sup-
plements thereto.)
Notice is further given that Wm. RESIDES,
at the request of this Association, has been ap-
pointed a special police-officer by the Gover-
nor of the Commonwealth, with police power to
arrest any one found fishing in the waters of
Benner’s Run, and that all keepers of Jails,
Lock-ups, or Station Houses are required to re-
ceive any person arrested by him for trespass.
ing upon the property of this association, or
fishing in the waters of the stream aforesaid.
(See act June 10, 1881, and supplement thereto.)
W. R. TELLER, BENJ. RICH,
See. & Treasurer. President.
Benner’s Run Ass. for Prop’n Fish & Game,
34-19
{oown ACME.
uy
THE BEST
BURNING OIL
THAT CAN BE MADE
FROM PETROLEUM.
It gives a Brilliant Light.
It will not Smoke the Chimney.
It will Not Char the Wick.
It has a High Fire Test.
It does Not Explode.
_ It is without an equal
AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL.
We stake our reputation as refiners that
IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD.
Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by
ACME OIL CO.,
33 34 1y Williamsport, Pa.
For sale at retail by W. T. TWITMIRE
Educational.
rps PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE.
Winter Term OPENS JAN. 3p, 1889.
Examinations for Admission to the Next
Year, June 29 and September 13.
This institution is located in one of the mos
beautiful and healthful spots of the entire Al
legheny region. It is open to students of both
sexes, and offers the following Course of Study:
1. A Full Scientific Course of Four Years,
2. A Latin Scientific Course.
* 3. The following SPECIAL COURSES, of two
years each, following the first two years of the
Scientific Course: (a) AGRICULTURE; (b
NATURAL HISTORY ; (¢) CHEMISTRY an
PHYSICS ; (d) CIVIL ENGINEERING. :
4. A short SPECIAL COURSE in Agricul-
ture.
5. A short SPECIAL COURSE in Chem-
istry.
BoA reorganized Course in MECHANIC
ARTS, combining shop-work with study,
7. A new Special Course (two years) in Liter-
ature and Science, for Young Ladies, Ample
facilities in Voeal and Instrumental Music.
8. A Carefully graded Preparatory Course.
9. SPECIAL COURSES are arranged to meet
the wants of individual students.
Military drill is required. Expenses for
hoard and incidentals free. Tuition free.
Young ladies under charge of a competent lady
Prineipal. :
For Catalogues or other information, address
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D.,
President,
State College, Centre county, Pa.
. y
27 25
REE—$85 SOLID GOLD Watch.
Soud for $100 until lately. Best $85 waten
in the world. Perfect timekeeper. Warranted,
Heavy Solid Gold Hunting Cases. Both ladies®
ahd gents’ sizes, with works and cases of equal
value. One Person in each locality can secure
one free, together with our large and valuable
line of Household Samples, Thes samples, as
well as the watch, we send Free, and after you
have kept them in your home for 2 months and
shown them to those who may have called,
they become your own property. Those who
write at once ean be sure of receiving the
Watch and Samples. We pay all express,
freight, ete, Address Stinson & Co., Box 812,
Portland, Maine. 34-1-y
1, ee CHEAP!
Any person in need of
HEMLOCK LUMBER,
FLOORING,
SIDING, or
WHITE PINE SHINGLES,
can get the advantage of low Prices by inquir-
ing of J. T. LUCAS,
34 14 6m Moshannon, Pa.
IFTY DOLLARS FOR LIFE=
SCHOLARSHIP.
PALMS’ BUSINESS COLLEGE
1709 Chestnnt street, Philadelphia.
Positions for graduates. Time required 3
to4 months. BEST Equipped. Best course
of study. Circulars free if you name this
paper. 27 3m
GENTS WANTED.—To canvass
for one of the Largest, Oldest Estab-
lished, BEST KNOWN NURSERIES in the
country. Most Liberal Terms. GENEVA
NURSERY. Unequalled Facilities. Estate
lished 1816. W. & T. SMIH
34 17 Geneva, New York.
0 STOCK RAISERS.
The full-blooded Guernsey Bu
T
# LANG,”
will be found at the farm of Cameron Burn.
oO 0
side, Esq., two miles east of town, on the
North Nittany Valley Road. Services reasons
able. 33 39
Music Boxes.
TABLISHED 1824.
Superior Quality
o—M USIC BOXES—o
GAUTSCHI & SONS,
1030 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Send stamp foreatalogue, Examination will
prove our instruments the most perfect and
durable made. They play selections from all
the Standard and Light Operas, and the most
Popular Music of the day ; also Hymns.
33 49
1y
————(
Gas Fitting.
M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and
Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa,
Pays perticular attention to heatin buildings
by steam, copper smithing, rebronzing gas fixe
tures, &c. 20 26