Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 01, 1889, Image 3

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Bellefonte, Pa., November |, 1889.
Farm Notes.
A well-fed calf in autumn, having
full flesh, is worth two others of the
same age poorly feed and of stunted | better results on a certain amount of
growth from which recovery is next to
inpessible. :
Evergreen branches make an excel-
lent winter pretection for many plants,
and they are often useful to hold down
forest leaves and prevent the wind from
carrying them off.
No farm is complete without a good
house to store the implement in, and |
no farmer understands his . business
that does not store his implements
when they are not in use.
If you have any fears of more or |
less danger with trees set out in the
fall of being injured by thawing and
freezing, draw up a small mound of
earth around them and remove again |
in the spring.
Buy your trees and have them de-
livered in the fall, and then heel them
in. This will be found much the bet-
ter plan, while the additional cost is
very small, being only the interest on
the money and the work of heeling
them in.
The opinion prevails that the horn-
ed Dorset sheep are not the ones for
this country. The bodies and fleeces
are too light and their horns an ob-
jection. Their only recommendation,
so far as known, is their extraordinary
prolificness.
Never whip a horse for not doing
what he cannot understand is wanted of
him. Few horses wilfully refuse to
performed a service required. But
thev do not understand. Spend your
energy in patiently making thé animal
understand instead of spend it in whip-
pind him.
It seems strange when men are so
particular about the food they eat and
turn with loathing from moldy or
musty dishes, that they neglect to
guard the horses and cattle as zealous-
ly. It takes a little time to screen the
oats and remove the dirt and chaff,
but it pays.
A mixture of ensilage and finely cut
clover hay is claimed to be superior to
hay or ensilage alone, as the two kinds
of food serve to partially balance the
ration, the ensilage being carbonaceous
and the clover nitrogenous. It is al-
ways cheaper and better to feed a mix-
ed ration to all classes of stock.
For farm teams the cheapest pro
tection against flies is leather nets.
With reasonable care these will last
for vears. They should be cleaned and
oiled at least once a month while in |
use or the sweat of the animals will ra-
pidly tot them. The best protection
for hogs is the wallow.
You know that if cows eat cabbage,
onions or other strong-smelling and
pungent food they will make the milk
have that flavor. Now, it stards to
reason that water that has become im-
pregnated with manure wash, frog
spittle or slime will have the same ef-
fect upon the milk. Keep them away
from it.
It is said that burning the button-
like horn protuberance on the calf’s
head with caustic potash when the calf |
is about 10 days old will prevent furth-
er development of the horn. It appears
that “the horns must go,” and the
most humane way would seem to be to |
prevent their growing, if possible.
Get good road-grading machines,
make a few miles of good road in each
township every year, as the work is
readily done, encourage wide tires to
keep the roads good; tile-drain, ma-
cadamize or brick-pave the roads, and
show to the world our characteristic
American enterprise in our public
roads as in our private works.
Every season the weight of fleeces in-
creases, A weight of 45} pounds is
now reported for the fleece of a merino
ram 4 year old. The fleece was for
365 day growth. Heavy fleeces, how-
ever, should be washed before weigh-
ing them, as grease and dirt add to the
weight. In some cases the weight of
the fleece is one-half that of the body.
The growth of the mutton breeds of
sheep, when carefully managed and
highly fed, is in marked contrast with
the wool breeds. A Vermont farmer
reports a weight of 200 pounds for
twin lambs of the Shropshire breed
when 4 months old, or 100 pounds each.
An Oxford lamb near Elgin, Ill, in
1885, one of twins, weighed 100 pounds
when 60 days old. At birth the lamb
weighed thirteen pounds.
A pecular vehicle on which to draw
cornstalks consists of four large wagon
wheels with a tongue, and axles seven
or eight feet long, with a large plat-
form swung under, about a foot from
the ground. This will hold all any
team should draw. Thus equipped, two |
men soon clear a large field, drawing
about 1000 hills to a load. The many
advantages of gathering corn in this
way are plainly to be seen.
A physician of our acquaintance
who has a large practice where roads
his horses very hard at times, has
worked them for several years without |
course |
shoes and with advantage. Of
draft horses drawing heavy loads over
stony or very hard roads or pavements
need heavy shoes with calks, but many
farm horses in the country that we be- |
lieve would be more servicable as well |
as comfortable without shoes, except | ji qangerous tendency to consumption.
in icy weather.
[ce is a good thing in the dairy, but
not always absolutely necessary.
With well or spring water at forty
eight to fifty degrees, and a cool, sweet, |
dry cellar, there is but httle need of ice.
Iu the absence of these a supply of ice |
becomes quite important if not abso-
lutely indispensive.
necessarily an expensive ice-house, well
filled each winter, is a great aid to the
summer dairv. We do not approve of
putting ice directly into the milk or
~ | with safety.
A good but not |
“cream, although many do it. Aside
from other considerations ice is seldom
i pure enough to be used in this way
It is better to use it in
some form of refrizerator.
The amount of butter and milk pro-
| duced by a cow should be measured by
its cost. Itistrue that high feeding is
necessary to induce large yields, but the
| fact remains that some cows will give
| food than will others. A careful ac-
| count of the food allowed each animal
| will show which cow is the more pro-
| fitable. The proportion of cost to re-
| ceipts alone can determine the actual
| profit made, and in many cases it hap-
| pens that a cow may yield largely and
| yet be not as valuable as another not
so productive, but which yields more
| In proportion to expense entailed.
Br —————
| $15,000 for $1.
| Cabinet-Maker Deckler Wins a Big
Prize and Will Take Things Easy.
“I tell you we are just taking things
easy and propose to do so for the bal-
ance of our lives,” said Cabinet-maker
P. A. Deckler to a News reporter to-
day.
“I am looking around for a good
| piece of tenement property,’” continued
| Mr. Deckler, “and when I purchase it
{ I am going to settle down. Of course 1
| shall do some light work, but there is
I not going to be any more standing at
| the work-bench six days out of sevan
| for me.”
| Mr. Deckler is a married man and
has two children. He resides at 631 9th
‘ave., on the third floor. For six or
| seven year past he has worked for the
| firm of Wessel, Nickle & Gross of 437
| West 45th st. They are manufacturers
| of piano actions.
ff “Cn Labor Day,” he said, “my
brother-in-law asked me to invest a
{ dollar in a one-twentieth ticket in the
Louisiana State Lottery. I told him I
would do so as I was going to invest a
dollar in the next drawing myself. By
return mail I received two tickets.
Mine was No.8,174. I had been buy-
ing tickets in the Louisiana State Lot-
tery occasionally for several years, and
always fancied those bearing high num-
bers, so when I got this one I said to my
wife that I did not believe this one
would draw anything. She replied
that she did not think the number
would make any difference and that I
never would have luck enough to have
a prize. Still IT kept the ticket, and
when I read in the News the dispaich
from New Orleans that ticket No. 8,174
| had drawn the capital prize of $300,000
it made my little wife open her eyes.
I telegraphed to New Orleans to have
the story verified. The nextday I re-
ceived a reply that my dollar invested
| had yielded $15,000. TI took the tickets
| to Wells, Fargo & Co. for collection.
| There was a slight delay in the matter
owing to the heavy storms, but on Mon-
day I received the $15,000, less the col-
lection charges of $62.50. So you see 1
have a neat little fortune to retire on
and bring up my family. I regard New
York real estate as the best possible in-
vestment that a man can malo.
James Doherty, of 211 West 46th st.
in the same drawing collected one-
twentieth of ticket
drew the third capital prize of $50,000,
by which he received $2,500.—New
York Daily News. Oct. 5.
beat until foamy.
sifted pastry flour in the sieve, and add
a teaspoonful of cream of tarter and half
a teaspoonful of soda.
of cold water into the beaten eggs and
sugar ; then sift the flour on this. Mix
quickly and thoroughly. Have a tin
mold of oval shape about four inches
high and six wide and eight long, top
measurement, the mold tapering. The
space between the outer and inner walls
should be an inch and a half. Butter
this mold and pour the cake mixture in-
to it.
utes. Let it stand in the mold until
nearly cold. Turn on a flat dish. Put
the whites of two eggs in a bowl, gradu-
ally beat into them one cupful and a
haif of powdered sugar and season with
Ice the cuke'with this and set away to
| dry.
| with one generous
| one cupful of sugar,
| of vanilla and one pint of scft custard.
| Freeze the same as ice-cream. Spread
{ the inside of the cake with a large tum-
[ bler of quince jelly. At serving time
| pack the frozen cream in the centre of
| the cake. Heap whipped cream on the
| top and at the base and served immedi-
[ately. This is an elegant pudding, and
s not difficult to make.—Miss Parloa’s
Recipe Book.
a ——— ————————
quart of cream,
Man wants bat little here Felow.
But wants that little strong.
This is especially true of a purge. The
ly hanker for it; as a rnle, but when
taken, wishes it to be promt, sure and
effective. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purga-
| tive Pellets leave nothing to be desired
in point of efficacy, and yet their action
[is totally free from any unpleasant sym-
toms,or disagreeable after affects.  Pure-
ly vegetable, perfectly harmless.
ACT ——— ECL ——————
| some butter. Beat up one egg and add
thereto a few bread crumbs. Mingle
these together with the mashed parsnips,
adding pepper and salt to tast. Form
the mixture into cakes and fry in boil
ing lard. The number of eggs must be
| regulated to suit the quanty of parsnips.
m——————
The worst feature about catarrh is
purifying the blood.
Foren or Hasrr,—¢ John,” said a lady
to her very sick husband, “the doctor 1s
down stairs, and wants to see you.”
«Pell him I'm out and he'll have'to
call again,” said John, from sheer force
of habit.”
——————
When everything else fails, Dr.
Sage’s Oxtarrh Remedy cures, 50 cents,
by druggists.
— Look here ; I'm not going to feed you
all the time.
work ?
Tramp—Did 1? Well, I guess. TI ate
a whole pie made by your neighbor.
Lady—Come right in and I'll get you
a nice dinner.
Business Notices.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
When baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Migs, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Cas-
toria. 34 14 2y
Rurrure CURE GuanNanNteep. Ease at once.
No operation or business delay. Thousands
cured. For circular, Dr. J. B. Mayer, 831 Arch
street, Philadelphia. At Keystone Hotel,
Reading, Pa., second Saturday of each month.
34 4 1y
TO CONSUMPTIVES.—The undersigned
having been restored to health by simple
means, after suffering for several years with a
severe lung affection, and that dread disease
Consumption, is anxious to make known to his
fellow sufferers the means of cure. To those
who desire it, he will cheerfully send (free of
charge) a copy of the prescription used, which
they will find a sure cure for Consumption,
Asthma, Catarrh, Bronchitis and all throat and
lung Maladies. He hopes all sufferers wilt try
hisRemedy, as it is invaluable. Those desir-
ing the prescription, which will cost them
nothing, and may prove a blessing’ will please
address, Rev. Edward A. Wilson, Williamsburg
Kings County, New York. 33-48-1y.
New Advertisements
A i OW CAN THE LONG
line H
may
be a
very
i long one
and yet be
the shortest
between giv-
en points. For
instance tha St.
Paul, Minneapoli
& Manitoba Railway
has over 3000 miles
of road ; magnificent-
ly equipped and man-
aged, it is one of the
greatest railway systems
of this country; for the
same reason it is the trave-
ler’s favorite to all points in
Minneseta, North and South
BE THE SHORT
No.69,159, which |
——Quince Icep Pupping.—Beat |
| three eggs very light; then add one cup- |
ful and a half of powdered sugar, and |
Put two cupfgls of |
Stir half a cupful |
Bake slowly for fourty-five min- |
a half teaspoonful of vanilla extract. |
In the meantime make a cream, |
one tablespoonful |
average man or woman does not precise- |
ParsNIP CAKES. — Boil some parsnips
. : { till quite tender, then mash them with |
are of very hard gravel aud who drives |
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures catarrh by |
Dakota and Montana. It isthe
only line to Great Falls, the fu-
ture manufacturing centre of the
Northwest; to {the fertile free
lands of the Milk River Valley:
and offers a choice of three routes
| to the Coast. Still it is the shortest
line between St. Paul, Minneapolis,
Fargo, Winnipeg, Crookston, Moor-
head, Casselton, Glyndon, Gratton,Fer-
gus Falls, Wahpenton, Devils Lake and
Butte City. It is the best route to Alaska,
China and Japan; and the journey to the
Pacific Coast, Vancouver, Tacoma, Seat-
tle, Portland and San Francisco
will be remembered as the delight of a
life-time once made through the won-
derful scenery of the ~Manitoba-
Pacific Route. To fish and hunt;
to view the magnificence of
nature; to revive the spirit; res-
tore the body; to realize the
dream of the home-seeker, the
gold-seeker, the toiler, or the
capitalalist, visit the coun try
reached by the St. Panl,
Minneapolis & Mani-
toba Railway. Write to
F. 1. Whitney, G. P. &
T. A., St. Paul, Minnesota,
for maps, books and guides.
If you want a free
farm in a lovely land,
| write for the “Great
Reservation”
read it and HAND
| resolve [to accept OF
the golden FORTUNE!
34 43
Prospectus 18g0.
TIDE AWAKE FOR 1890.
The brightest of the Children’s
Magazines,” —Springfield Republican.
FIVE GREAT SERIALS :
That Boy Gid. By William O. Stoddard.
Young and old will follow Gideon’s adventures
and his sister's on their father’s acres with
| laughter and breathless interest.
The New Senior at Andover. By H.D. Ward.
| A serial of school life in famous Andover—our
| Rugby. The boys, the professors, the lodg-
ings, the fun.
“The Sons of the Vickidgs.” By Hjalmar
| Hjorth Boyesen. A righitdown jolly story of
moderu Norse boys. ;
Bony and Ban, one of the best of the Mary
Hartwell Catherwood serials
Sealed Orders. By Charles Remington Tal-
bot. An amusing adventure story of “wet
sheets and a flowing sea.”
Confessions of an Amateur Photographer. By
Alexander Black. Six practical and amusing
articles.
Lucey Peryear. First of a series of graphic
North Carolina character sketches by Margaret
Sidney.
Tales of Old Acadie, Twelve powerful true
stories by Grace Dean McLeod, a Canadian
author.
The Will and the Way Stories. By Jessie
| Benton Fremont. About men and women who
did great things in the face of seeming impos-
sibilities.
{The Puk-Wudjies. By L.J. Bridgman.
funny Indian Fairy Folk.
Business Openings for Girls and Youngwomen.
A dozen really helptul papers by Sallie Joy
White,
f'welve more Daisy-Patty Letters.
ox-Governor Clatlin, 5
| welve School and Play-Ground Tales. The
I first will be “Lambkin; Was He a Hero or a
Prig?’ By Howard Pyle the artist.
Les Postal card Votes and Cash Pri
Short Stories sifted from thousands: t
18 on a vegetable cart, Charlotte M. Vail.
The
By Mrs.
Rijune. William Preston Ottis. How Tom
Jumped a Mine, Mis, H. F. Stickney. The
Run of Snow-shoe Thompson, Lieut. F. P.
Fremont. Polly at the Book-kitchen, Delia
| W. Lyman. Trailing Avbutus Hezekiah
| Butterworth. Goiden Margaret, James C.
Purdy. Pc s Bullet, Kate Upson Clark.
How Sime nd Sacho Panza Helped the Rev-
| olution, Miss Risley Seward. The Difliculties
i of a Darling, L. B. Walford. “One Good Turn.”
Harriet Prescott Spofiord.
Illustrated Articles, novelties: Dolls of Noted
{| Women, Miss Risley Seward. How to build
a Military Snow Fort. An ola West Pointer.
| How the Cossacks Play Polo. Madame de
| Meissner. All Around a Frontier Fort, Lieut.
F. P. Fremont. Home of Ramona. Charles I,
| Lummis. A Rabbit Round Up, Joaquin Mil-
ler, Japanese Fighing Kites, J. B. Berna-
don, U.S. N, Indian Base-Ball Players. F. L.
Stoan of “I'he Hampton Indian Nine,” A Party
in a Chinese Palace. tL. Scidmore.
The Poems, Pictures and Department will be
more interesting than ever,
X= The Chi
to admit a gre:
Allen, entitle esday the
Tale of the South Pacific.
Wide Awake is $2.40 a year.
December.
31-42, D. LOTHROP COMPANY, Boston.
+ enlarg ad 16 page
I'enth;” A
New Vol. begins
His HARD Work.—Lady of the House
Did you ever do a bit of
TT Emme I Tar iim
o—SCHMIDT
DISTILLER AND JOBBER
oF
FINE 0 WHISKIE
G.W.SCHMIDT,
All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention.
BUTLDING- 0
didi LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE WINE, LIQUOR AND
CIGAR HOUSE IN THE
UNITED SATES.
— ESTABLISHED 1836. ———
0 [0]
Sil.
Telephone No. 662.
IMPORTER OF
WINES, LIQUORSAND CIGARS,
No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
34 11 1y
BARrans o BARGAINS
—In—o
o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, a
AND
SPRING WAGONS,"
at the old Carriage stand of
0———MCcQUISTION & CO.,——a
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 ever had.
We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic,
and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano
and Whitechapel bodies, and can give
vou 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
He advantage over inexperienced par-
ies.
In price 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 ceter-
mined not to be undersold, either in
Printing.
Printing.
S——- our own make or manufactured work
from other places; so give us a call for
Surries, Phaetons, Buggies, Spring
Wagons, Buckboards, or anything else
FINE JOB PRINTING.
Fine Job Printing.
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+FINE JOB
PRINTING}
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—lar THE WATCHMAN OFFIC el
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 purchasing
elsewhere. Don’t miss ihe place—
alongside of the freight depot.
34 15 S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
————— —
Hardware.
I [ware AND
—AT—
STOVES
o——JAS. HARRIS & CO.’S—e
—AT—
LOWER PRICES THAN EVER.
NOTICE—Thanking our friends for
their liberal patronage, we desire to ex-
are admitted to be the best published.
short stories will be given during the year.
wood engravings.
of all engravings.
same money.
TERMS :
2 Copies, With a
3 Copies,
4 Copies, & 40 f
6 Copies, .
5 Copies, z £3 00 f
7 Copies,
Send for sample copy with full particulars.
34 42
Prospectus.
JprrraoRs MAGAZINE FOR 1890.
“BEST AND CHEAPEST !”
The Best Stories—Our stories and novelets are from some of the most popular authors, and
For 1890, such writer:
The Best Household Department—embracing articles on health, nursing the sick, home
dressmaking, the garden, kitchen and other subjects invaluable in every household.
The Best Fashion Department—giving the latest and choicest styles of dress for outdoor
and house wear, fully described, illutrated by Handsome Colored Fashion Plates and numerous
Also a Full Size Dress Pattern monthly,
Best Fancy- Work Patterns—many ot them printed in colors—embracing the newest and
most popular designs produced at home and abroad.
The Best Steel-Engravings—*PEerersoN” is now the only magazine giving these, the finest
{IX CHEAPEST—as no other magazine gives so much of interest and variety for the
Its price is within the reach of everybody.
$2.00 PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE.
Elegant Premiums For Getting Up Clubs!
handsome engraving, “The Two Readers,” or
$3 50
4 a IL of one of our standard bound books, as premium.
{ With an extra copy of the magazine for one year, to
9 00 | to the getter up of the club.
With an extra copy for one ye
. 10 50 { a book, as premiums to the getter-up of the club.
FOR LARGER CLUBS, STILL FINER PREMIUMS.
PETERSC
306 Chestnut S
Address, N'S MAGAZINE,
., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. Lucy H. Hooper, Alice
Bowman, Frank Lee Benedict, Alice Maud Ewell, Ella Higginson, Howard Seeley, and others
will contribute some of the best of their productions. Eight novelets and nearly one hundred
and the angraving or
press our determination to merit a con-
tinuance of the same, by a low scale of
ig PRICES IN HARDWARE............
We buy largeiy 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,
a
o—AT LOWEST PRICES—o
For Everybody.
o—JAS. HARRIS & CO.,—o
22 2 BELLEFONTE, Pa.
Miscellaneous Advs.
$20 A DAY MAN!
A VOICE from Ohio. Mr. Garrison,
of Salem, Ohio. He writes: “Was at work on
a farm for $20 a month ; I now have an agency
fof E. C. Allen & Co's albums and publications
and often make $20 a day.” hi,
(Signed) W. H. GARRISON.
WILLIAM KLINE, Harrisburg, Pa., writes
“I have never known anything to sel like
your album. Yesterdav I took orders enough
to pay me over $25." W. J. Elmore, Bangor,
Me., writes: “I take an order for your album
at almost every house I visit. My profit is
often as much as $20 for a single day’s work.”
Others are doing quite as well; we ve not
space to give extracts from their letters. Every
one who takes hold of this grand business
piles up grand profits. SHALL WE START
YOU IN THIS BUSINESS, reader? Write to
us and learn all about it for yourself. We are
starting many; we will start you if you don't
delay until others get ahead of you in your
Pare of the country. If you take hold you will
he able to pick up gold fast. A%=Read—On
account of a forced manufacturer's sale 125,000
TEN DOLLAR PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS are to be sold
to the people for $2 dollars each. Bound in
Royal Crimson Silk Velvet Plush.  Charming-
ly decorated insides. Handsom albums in
the world. Largest size. Greatest bargains
ever known, nts wanted. Liberal terms.
Big money for agents. Any one can become a
successful agent. Sells itself on sight—little
or no talking necessar) Whenever shown,
every one wants to purchase. Agents take
hundreds of thousands or orders with rapidity
never before known. Great profits await every
worker. Agents are making fortunes. Ladies
make as much as men. You, reader, can do
as well as any one. Full information and
terms FriE, to those who write for same, with
particulars and terms for our Family Bibles,
Books and Periodicals. After yon know all,
should you conclude t9 go no further, why no
harm is done. Address E.C. ALLEN & CO,
Augusta, Me. 341 1y
]
Banner Lyc.
BB ERY FAMILY
Wastes or gives away during the year
mere or less kitehen se, each pound of
which can in a few mirutes be converted into
two pounds of the PURI SOAP, far better
than can be found on sale, The only expense
for making ten pounds of this soap, with five
and one-half pounds of grease or oil, is the
trifle cost of one can of Reo indy
to be found at nearly BANNER LYE
every grocery store,
”®
Dissolve the contents of one can of Banner
Lye in three and one-half pints of cold water,
and pour slowly into five and one-half pounds
of lukewarm grease, stirring from the start,
until it thickens into a mushy condition ; then
pour into any kind of mould to harden—a
child ean make it, and full directions are to be
found back of each label.
A can of BANNER LYE will do the work of
twenty-one pounds of washing soda, and be-
sides its value for scrubbing purposes, the
cleansing and disinfecting of Sinks, Closets
and Waste Pipes, destroying the Filth and
Disease arising therefrom, makes its system-
atic use one of the greatest boons the house-
keeper has fallen heir to,
+ gg-sSend for Hustrated Pamphlet on soap
10
1g, Free,
THE PENN CHEMICAL WORKS,
Philadelphia, Pa.
NHECK-WEIGHMAN’'S RE
PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 15(
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,
Saddlery.
GOOD RECORD.
A
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 quality, quantity 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
have found me at times not able to fill my
orders. The above facts are worth consid-
erin idence of merit and
ng, for they are e
fair dealing. 'I'bere is nothing so success-
ful
0—AS SUCCESS—o
and this is what hurts some. See my
large stock of Single and Double Harn oss,
Whips, Tweed Dusters, Horse Sheets, Col-
lars d Sweat Pads, Riding Saddles,
Ladie ide Saddles, very low: Fly-Nets
from pair and upwards. Axle, Coach
and Harness Oils, Saddlery Hardware and
Harness Leather SOLD AT THE LOW-
EST PRICES to the trade, Harnessmalk-
ers in the country will find it to their ¢
vantage to get my prices before purchas
ing hardware elsewhere, I am better pre-
pared this year than ever to fill ji
promptly.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
33 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
; Bb 5 §
# # &
[
INMuminating Oil.
Crow ACME.
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,
34 35 1y Williamsport, Pa.
For sale at retail by W. T. TWITMIRE
Gun Works.
New Books.
J EW BOOK FOR BOYS,
EXCITING AS MUNCHAUSEN.,
HAIRBREADTH ESCAPES
OF MAJOR MENDAX.
fierce eyes glaring down into mine.
termendous coil were tightened around me,
knew that [ might at once check my luggag
for the undiscovered bourve. In this erisis ¢
my fate I saw the great python’s tail in clos
proximity to his mouth. I grasped the snake’
tail and pushed a yard or two down his yaw:
ing jaws. Serpents seldom bite their prey
they lubricate it and suck it down.
a long and cold-blooded
that it would take over a half a minute befor
the sensations of his tail could be conveyed t
his head, and render him aware that he wa
committing suicide.”
By F. Beare Crorron. His perilous encoun
ters, startling adventures and daring exploit
with Indians, Cannit Wild Beast,
Balloons, Geysers, et
a personal narrative,
Bennett, pages, Cloth, el
'@SS Critics says:
an World. “Bold but humorous.
lic Opinion. “*Munchausen never
greater marvels,” News
J? Gazette,
e by all Booksellers, or mailed on 1¢
ceipt of price. HUBBARD BROS. Pubs
23 Chestnut St., Philada, 4-08-01
gant; $2.00
—Pul
“I was canght ina python's folds and saw
If that
With such
reature, I calculated
Serpents,
Jl over the World, in
the bowels of the earth and above the clouds, |
Spirited Illustrations by |
|
“lrresistibly comie,”--
rors OUTFIT.
A large stock just received at
0——DESCHNER'S—0
GREAT CENTRAL GUN WORKS,
1 Allegheny Street,
of BELLEFONTE, PA.
a
=
j ome WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. —s
0 A
THEODORE DESCHNER, gl
Great Central Gun Works,
31 48 1y BELLEFONTE, P4
Gas Fitting.
)
| YR M. GALBRAITH, Plumber an
| Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Ps.
imagined
“Beats everything
- | Pays perticular attention to heating buildings
» by steam, copper smithing, rebronzing gas fix-
tures, &c. 20 26