rtalic Bellefonte, Pa., November 8, 1889. Farm Notes. Cost considered, says Waldo F. Brown, the best implement for pulver- izing the soil is a plank drag. Todo the best work the drag must be used on fresh-plowed land. Those seeking the market for hot- house lambs may bear in mind that consumers prefer lambs with black faces and legs, as well as as they do brown eggs. Cows soon to calve should have a cool, laxative diet and not be overfed. If they are good milkers and are high- ly fed up to the time of calving there is danger of milk fever. No man who understands the dairy business ever sells his best cows at any price. The better the dairyman the more suspicious the buyer should be of the cow he wants to sell. An English Court once decided that a lamb hecame a sheep as soon as it had acquired its first pair of perma- nent teeth. If that is sound doctrine the lamb becomes a sheep when it is about a year old. Sheep should not be compelled to feed at the same rack with cattle. They are liable to be hooked, and a vicious ram sometimes does injury to cattle. Separate yards and separate racks are safest and best. The pampered calf, brought up on whole milk, is fat and sleek, but lacks the bone and muscle at eight months or a year old that are possessed by calves reared on oatmeal and bran mixed with skimmed milk. Experiments in West Pennsylvania and Ohio in crossing full-blood Oxford Down bucks with a high grade of Blacktop Merino ewes seems to promise the best results in wool, lambs, mut- ton and hardiness. For early lambs ewes must be bred September or October says an exchange, and well fed, with good warm quarters and good grass or rye pasture to keep the lambs growing, as early lambs sell in spring for goou prices and are always in demand. If you have a particular fine plant of tomato which shows qualities ahead of the rest, save the seed, but if you have a green-house do not depend on keeping it pure in this way, but late in the month strike cuttings from it and winter over in a cool green-house. A hoe for use in the garden requires as much care as a scythe that is used for cutting grass. Iu should be sharp enough to cut off the ‘roots of all kinds of weeds, and should have so good a polish that it can be moved through the soil with- out much exhibition of strength. The Ohio Farmer declares that “it is a waste of cash product to feed a calf whole milk after its rennet stomach changes =o as to ball for solid food,and it is a mistake to so feed it after itis 10 days old.” It considers warm skimmed milk and a little oatmeal much better. Sheep like a sunny slope, where the sun strikes the grass and develops its autritive qualities. If they have their choice of feeding ground on a hill, they will invariably spend the most of their time on the sunny side. For some reason the grass there is more palata- ble to them. It is the opinion of Professor Robert- son that it pays to feed each cow two to three pounds of wheat bran a day throughout the whole summer season. He would stir the bran into water and give it as a drink a half hour or so be- fore milking. The increased flow of milk, he says is quite apparent. By all means stack your straw. If vou do not need it you can sell it to your neighbor. Itis valuable for bed- ding your stock, and will be a great saving of bay if you keep it on hand at yourstables. Besides this, it furnishes. nice bedding and some feed for your stock that are not stabled. Young ewes may be poor mothers. {t is better, therefore, to have them drop their lambs a little later than the older ewes do. The flockmaster wiil have more time to give them attention and the weather will be warmer. April or May is time enough for a young ewe to drop her lamb. Sugar beets, mangolds, ruta-bagas, yellow turnips and white turnips, in order named, ave fed to sheep by those who have studied the comparative value of roots. Of these the sugar beet contains the most fat-forming ele- ments,” and the mangolds and ruta bagas the most flesh-torming elements. If vou do not get good results from feeding wheat bran, consider whether vou are feeding enough meal with it. Bran alone will increase the flow of milk, but has a tendency to whiten the butter. Corn meal mixed with it makes the ration more carbonaceous and heating, and gives color to the butter. History is repeating its:lf, says the Pittsburg Stockman. It has been only a few vears since many farmers in the sheep-growing States, and especially in Pennsylvania, were offering their flocks at 50 cents per head and less. Some of these men are now hunting for stock sheep at $3 and #4 per head, and procuring them with difiienlty. A small ew with the right kind of machinery in her, writes a correspon: dent of the Rural New Yorker, can get all the milk solids out of a given amount of teed as well as a big cow. But if you have good, big cows and they give you a fair profit, keep them, but bread them to the smallest dairy bull yon can find, and if the result is a more concentrated cow, I think vou are the gainer. If the number of good cows in the country is to be kept up somebody must rear the heifer calves, It is the daty of every dairyman who has first: class cows to use the best dairy blood he can get in his herd and rear the | heifer calves from them. In this way | only can the quality of the dairy herds of the country be kept up and possibly some improvements be made. By do- ing this the dairyman has a chance to select the best for his own use. Although milk is en an average about 87} per cent. water, it really does not satisfy thirst when used as a drink. It may at first seen to be satis- | factory, but as the milk coagulates and digestion begins, the heat of the stomach is raised and a feverish thirst comes on. Professor Johnson says the temperature in the calf’s stomach oft ten rises to 104 degrees. The young of all animal, as well as children, crave pure cold water. It will often stop the crying of a child. ps A Great Liar, but a Great Man. Detroit Free Press. In a stove store yesterday a man came rushing in and said to the proprietor : “Have you gone into lying fora | trade 7’ #Oh, no.’! “Well, you lied about that stove.” “Man on his way up there now to put it up. Rushed to death, you know. Hope you haven’t suffered.” The next caller was a woman, who fastened a cold glare on the stove wan and deliberately said: “I'll never do a cent’s worth of busi- ness with you again if I live here fifty years,’ “Stovepipe is on the wagon there and ready to go up, ma'am. Woke up in the night tc hope you wouldn't be put out.” The third caller was a boy, who stood in the door and called. “Hey, you! My father says he'd like to knock your head off.” “Oh, yes, you are Mr. Blank’s son. Just sent a man up to your house with that damper ten minutes ago. Lost the sale of a stove to hurry him off.” “Are those fair samples of your call- ere?’ was asked the dealer. ¢ Just about. I catch itabout twenty times a day at this season of the year.” “And you never talk back ?” “Never. I hustle anddo the best I can, and if a kicker comes in I hold my peace or talk taffy. One word back talk would lose their trade. Everybody waits till the last minute for a stove or repairs, and then everybody comes with a rush, There comes a woman to blow me up about fixing a door to a stove. That door has been broken for five years, but it’s only within the past week that she has decided to have it fixed. She’ll be savage but I'll mollify her some way and get that stove down by Monday. So long—ray busy day." From the ——A new idea embraced in Ely’s Cream Balm. Catarrh is cured by cleansing and he=aling, not by drying up. It is not a liquid or snuff, but is easily applied into the nostrils. Its effect is magical and a thorough trextment will cure the worst cases. Price 50c. ee: The hoosier is no longer the pic- turesque creature he was years ago. There is no more homespun clothing. Ready-made clothing has penetrated to the uttermost parts of the county, and the countryman can now only be detect- ed by his sun-burned face and the swing of his arms. As to the young woman from the small towns, they can only be identified by their fresh bloom- ing complexions and bright eyes. In the matter of styles, they are fully up to their sisters of the large cities; in fact, the belles of small towns are often. fa- miliar with New York fashions long be- fore they become general in St. Louis ; this being due to the fact that the town dressmaker closely follows the plates in the fashion paper as soon as novelties are pesented. —Henry Arnheim, in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Mrs. Jones, how is your health this morning ? Thank you, madam, much improved. TI bought a bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup last night, and after the first dose, my cough was check- ed, I slept well, and have not coughed once this morning. WSE————————ET————. ONE man can build an eight wheel passenger locomotive for a stand- ard gauge railroad in 1,500 days. It will require 1,650 days’ work for him to build a consolidrated ten wheel locomo- tive for a standard gauge. The average cost of the required labor would be 34,685, and the cost of the necessary metal is usually estimated at about $2,000. The profit may be put.down at another $2,000, which would include the expenses of sale and delivery. This would make an engine, when absolutely | ready for service and complete in every | way, worth about $9,635. | | rare ————— ——A cure or no pay is what the pro- prietors of Dre Pierce’s Golden Medical | Discovery guarantee to those who use that wonderful medicine for any blood | taint or humors, eruptions, pimples, | blotches, scrofulous sores or swellings. Money returned if it don’t benefit or cure. is beginning to push Pret- —— OREGON sihlania z I California in the honey business. { already there is more made there than is needed for local use. Dealers say the | Oregon product is richer than the Cali- fornia article. It comes from wild flow- | ers on the mountains,and the bees gather | it into the trees with all the industry of an Eastern bee that has learned to hustle in Western fashion. Some of the sweet stuff ie hard to get at, since woods are accessible only by narrow trails, but it is pays to go for it. ——————— Accidents will occur not only “in the best regulated families,” but every- where and at all times. Therefore keep Salvation Oil convenient. PS ROE. 48 —A test of metal railway ties will soon be made in Chicago. Itis pre- dicted that metal ties will be used before long on ail railroads in the country. Be- vond their technical value, these ties suggest the possibility that our American tion. rremre—— ———— “It's only a question of time,” and a short time, too, as to when your rheumatism will yield to Hood's Sarsa- parilla. Try it. ty soon it will begin to come Kast, for | found in such large quantities that it | I Butterworth. Purdy. forests mav be saved from total destrue- SouTHERN JouN¥Y Caxe.—Take one quart corn meal, add one teaspoonful of salt, and pour over it one pint of boiling water in which one teaspoonful of lard has been melted. Stir well, spread on a | board of hard wood, shape with the { hand,and bake before an open fire until it is brown; turn over to brown the other side. Eat hot. 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 Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Cas- toria. 34 14 2y Rupture Cure Guananteep. 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., seeond Saturday of each month. 344 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 TY OW CAN THE LONG line H may be a ; very long one and yet be the shortest between giv- en points. For instance the S§. Paul, Minneapolis & 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 itis the trave- ’s favorite to all points in Minneseta, North and South Dakota and Montana. It is the only line to Great Falls, the fu- ture manufacturing centre of the Northwest; to jthe 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. Panl, Minneapolis, Fargo, Winnipeg, Crookston, Moor- head, Casselton, Glyndon, Grafton, 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 & Man i- toba Railway. Write to PF." 1.“Whitney, G. P. & I. A. St. Paul, Minnesota, for maps, hooks and guides. BE THE SHORT If you want a free farm in a lovely land, write for the “Great Reservation” read it and resolve fto accept the golden HAND OF FORTUNE! 3443 Prospectus 1890. TIDE AWAKE FOR 1890. The brightest of the Children’s Magazines." —Springfield Republican. FIVE GREAT SERIALS: That Boy Gid. By William 0. Stoddard. Young and old will follow Gideon's adventures and his sister's on their father’s ucres with laughter and breathless interest. The New Senior at Andover. By H. D. Werd. A serial oi school life in famous Andover—our Rugby. The boys, the professors, the lodg- ings, the fun. “The Sons of the Viekidgs.” By Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen. A rightdown jolly story of modern Norse boys. Bony and Ban, one of the best of the Mary Hartwell Catherwood serials. Sealed Orders. By Charles Remington Tal- ot. An amusing adventure story of “wet sheets and a flowing sea.” Confessions of an Amateur Photographer. By Alexander Black. Six practical and amusing articles, Lucy Peryear. First of a series of graphic North Carolia 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 Younqwomen. A dozen really helptul papers by Sallie Joy White. I'welve moré Daisy-Patty Letters. Ex-Governor Claffin, The By Mrs. Twelve School and Play-Ground Tales. The first will be “Lambkin; Was He a Hero or a Prig?” By Howard Pyle the artist. Ha-Postal card Votes and Cash Prizes. ~&i Short Stories sifted from thousands nta Claus on a vegetable eart, Charlotte M. Vail. Rijane. Willian Preston Ottis, How "Tom Jumped a Mine, Mrs. H. F. Stickney. The Tun of Snow-shoe Thompson, Lieat. F. P, Fremont. Polly at the Book-kitchen, Deli W. Lyman. Trailing Avbutus, ezekiah 1 Goiden Margaret, James C, Peggy's Bullet, Upson Clark, How Simeon and Sacho Panza Helped the Rev. olution, Miss Risley Seward. The Difficulties of a Darling, L. B. Walford. “One #ood Turn.” Harriet Prescott Spottord. Illustrated Articles, novelties: Dolls ot 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 IF. Lummis, A Rabbit Round Up. Joaquin Mil. Jer, Japanese Fighing Kites, J. B. Berna- don, | Iudian Base-Ball Players. F. L. Sloan of “Ihe Hampton Indian Nine,” A Party in a Chinese Palace. E. R, Scidmore, The Poems, Pictures and Department will be more interesting than ever, Ka The Chiistmas Number enlarged 16 pages to admit a great serial of adventure, by Grant Allen, entitled ; “Wednesday the fenth;” A Pale of the South Pacific. Wide Awase Is $2.40 a year. New Vol. begins December. 34-12, D. LOTHROP COMPANY, Boston, Wines o—SCHMIDT CIGAR HOUSE IN TF DISTILLER AND JOBBER OF FINE 0 G. WSCHMIDT, All orders received by raail or otherwise willl and Liquors. ree LARGEST AKXD MOST COMPLETE WINE, WHISKIES. BUILDING. 0 LIQUOR AND 15 UNITED SATES. ——ESTABLISHE® 1836. — [) Telephone No. 662. IMPOBTER OF WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS, No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue, PITTSBURGH, PA. receive prompt attention. 34 11 1y Printing. Printing. PRL ion prints. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. —ar THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. Fice Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Priwting. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING} Fine Job Printing. Fime Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Prirging. Fine Job Printing. ] J are admitted to be the best published. Bowman, Frank Lee Benedict, Alice Maud Ewel will contribute some of the best of their producti short stories will be given during the year. * The Best Household Department—embracing dressmaking, the garden, kitchen and other subj The Best Fashion Department—giving the la and house w wood engra ngs. The ] of all engravings. : THE CHEAPEST—as no other magazine g same money. TERMS : 2 Copies, 3 Copies, 4 Copies, 6 Copies, 5 Copies, ’ 7 Copies, Best Steel-Engravings—“PETERsoN” is no $2.00 PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE. $350 Witha bh $6 40 With an 9 00 | to the gette Send for sample copy with full particulars. 34 42 Prospectus. Presons MAGAZINE FOR 1890. “BEST AND CHEAPEST I” The Best Stories—Our stories and novelets are frofhisome of the most popular authors, and For 1890, such writers as Mrs. Lucy H. Hooper; Alice 1,. Ella Higginson, Howard Seeley, and others ons. Eight novelets and nearly one hundred articles on health, nursing the sick, home ects invaluable in every household. test and choicest styles of dress for outdoor r, fully described, illutrated by Handsome Colored Fashion Plates and numerous Also a Full Size Dress Pattern monthly, Best Faney- Work Patterns—many ot them printed in colors—embracing the newest: and most popular designs produced at home and abroad. w the only magazine giving these, the: finest ives so much of interest and variety for the Its price is within the reach of everybody. I y y Elegant Premiums For Getting Up Clubs! andsome engraving, “The Two Readers,” or a 4 50 1 choice of one of our sndard bound books, as premium. extra copy of the magazine for one year, to r up of the club. 88 00 f With an extra copy for one year and the angraving or 10 50 | a book, as premiums to the getter-up of the club. FOR LARGER CLUBS, STILL FINER PREMIUMS, PETERSON'S MAGAZINE, Address, 306 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Miscellaneous Advys. $20 A DAY MAN! x= A VOICE from Ohio. Mr. Garrison, "Salem, Ohio. He writes: “Was at work on m for $20 a month; I now have an agency FE. C. Allen & Co's albums and publications and often make $20 a day.” : (Sigued) W. H. GARRISON. WILLIAM KLINE, Harrisburg, Pa., writes “1 have never known anything to sel like your album. Yesterdav I took orders enough to pay me over $25.0 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 have 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 ns and learn all about it for yourself. We are starting many; we will start I if you don’t delay until others get ahead of you in your sart of the country. If you take hold you will ye able to pick up gold fast. &@-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, Handsomest albums in the world. Largest size. Greatest bargains ever know Agents wanted. Liberal terms. Big mone r agents. Any one can become a successtul nt. Sells itself on sight—-little or no talking necessary. Whenever shown, every one wants to purchase. Agents take hundreds of thousands of orders with rapidity never before known. Great profits await every worker. Agents are making fortunes, Ladies make as much as men. You, reader, ean do as well as any one. Full information and terms r to those who write forsame, with articu and terms for our Family Bibles, in and Periodicals. After you know all, should you conclude ty go no further, why no harm is done. Address IS. C. ALLEN & CO, Augusta, Me. 341 1y Banner Lye. BE ERY FAMILY Wastes or gives away during the year | mere or less kitehen grease, each pound of which ean in a few minutes be converted into two pounds of the PUREST 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 rer oa to be found at nearly BANNER LYE every grocery store, Dissolve the contents of one ean of Banner Lye in three and one-half pints of cold water, and pour slowly into five and one-half pounds of lukewarm a’ stirring from the start, until it thickens into a mushy condition ; then pour into vy kind ot mould to harden—a child ¢: 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 sernbbing purposes, the cleansing and disintecting 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. ga-send for lliustrated Pamphiet on soap making, Fre THE I 3437 3m PENN CHEMICAL WORKS, Philadelphin, Pa. NYHECEK-WEIGHMAN'S RE: PORTS, ruled and nidnbered np 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, Saddlery. 20 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 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 woeth Fd ering, for they are evidence of merit and fair dealing. There is nothing so success- ful 0—AS SUCCESS—o and this is what hurts some. See my large stock of Single and Doubie Harness, Whips, Tweed Dusters, Horse Sheets, Col- lars and Sweat Pads, Riding Saddles, Ladies’ Side Saddles, very low: Fly-Nets from pair and upwards. Axie, Coach and Harness Oils, Saddlery Hardware and Harness Leather SOLD AT THE LOW- ESI 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. I am better pre- pared this year than ever to fill So promptly. JAS. SCHOFIELD, Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa, fie ii [ os L New Books. N EW EXCITING AS MUNCHAUSEN. HAIRBREADTH ESCAPES OF MAJOR MENDAX. “When he was within twenty yards [ stooped down, and grasping Gumbo by the ankles {from behind, liftea his legs from under him, making him fall forward on his hands. I ran him right at the lion, wheel barrow fashion, the bewild- erec nigger instinctively putting one hand be- fore the other before he knew what he was about. This brought us within a spring of the lion. I hurled his legs forward over his head with such force that when they struck the ground his body rose and he described a con- vulsive somersanlt, BOOK FOR BOYS, lion, if the latter had stayed.’ By F. Blake Crofton. His perilous encoun. ters, startling adventures and daring exploits with Indians, Cannibals, Wild Beasts, Serpents, Balloons, Geysers, ete, all over the world, in the bowels of the Earth and above the Clouds, a personal narrative, Spirited illustrations by Bennett, 225 pages. Cloth, elegant, $2. 0, erities say: “Funnier than Mun- — Standard, “Very amusing.,'— “Will highly amuse boys." —Graph- ic, “Beats everything ot its kind."—Gazette SPrresistibly Comie'—Christ. World, For sale by all Booksellers, or mailed on receipt of price.” HUBBARD BROS. Publishers, 723 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Press chausen.” Spectator 24 42 Gt, This carried him two | lengths ahead of me—into the very jaws of the | Carriages. 13Areans) o BARGAINS — In o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o AND SPRING WAGONS, at the old Carriage stand of 0 McQUISTION & CO., 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 ever had. We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic, and Thomas Coil Springs, with Plano and Whitechapel bodies, and can give you a choice of the different patterns of wheels. Our work is the best made in this seetion, 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 busine Along with that we have had forty years’ experience in the busi- ness, which certainly should give us ha advantage over inexperienced par- 1e8, 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 deter- 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, Buckbeards, or anything else in our line, and we will accommodate you. We are prepared to do all kinds of o REPAIRING——0 on short notice. Painting, Trimming, Woodwork and Smithing. We guaran- tee all work to be just as represented, 80 give us a call before purehasing elsewhere. Don’t miss the place— alongside of the freight depot. 34 15 S. A. McQUISTION & CO. Hardware. I [Arr anE AND STOVES i —AT— | eT AS. HARRIS & €0.'8—0 —AT— LOWER PRICES THANX 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 sseererenns PRICES IN HARDWARE............ We buy largeiy for cash, and doing our own work, can afford to sell cheaper and give our friends the benefit, whieh we will always make it a:point to do. —& FIRST-CLASS TIN SHOP— CONNECTED WITH OUR STORE. ALL.OTHER THINGS DESIRABLE IN HARDWARE FOR THE WANTS AND USE OF THE PROPLE, WITH PRICES MARKED 30 THAT ALL CAN SEE, o—AT LOWEST PRICES—o For Everybody. o—J AS, HARRIS & €CO.,—o 22 2 BeLLEFoNTE, PA. Wi WN ACME. THE BEST BURNING. OIL THAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM. Tt gives a Brilliant Lignt. It will not Smoke the Chimney. It will' Not Char the Wiek. I't has a High Fire Test. I'tt does Not Explode. It is withows an equal AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL. We stake our reputation as refiners that IT IS THE BEST ©iL IN THE WORLD. i Ask your dealer for #. Trade supplied by ACME OIL CO., 34 35 ly Williamsport, Pa. For sale at retail by W. T. TWITMIRE Gun Works. S PORTSMEN'S OUTFIT. | A large stock just received at DESCHNER'S—o0 O- GREAT CENTRAL GUN WORKS, Allegheny Street, BELLEFONTE, PA. 0— WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. —o¢ THEODORE DESCHNER, Great Central Gun Works, 31 48 ly BrriLeroNtr, Pa Gas Fitting. i M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and | Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa. ays perticular attention to heating buildings y steam, copper smithing, rebronzing gas fix. tures, &e, 20 26 Tn
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers