Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, January 22, 1892, Image 3

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    Walco
Bellefonte, Pa., Jan. 22, 1892.
Farm Notes.
In Cuba and ‘Mexico the cows are
driven up and milked in the city streets.
It is not too early to begin on the
onion crop. The seed is plated very
early in the season and the ground
should be very rich.
Salsify (known as the vegetable oys-
ter), is a hardy plant, and can remain
in the ground all winter. It is a vege-
table worthy of cultivation in the gar-
den.
Spring pigs grow rapidly, and often
overtake those farrowed in the fall. Tt
is of but little, if any, advantage to
have the pigs of this year farrowed be-
fore March or April.
Prane the apple trees in winter. Saw-
ing off a few limbs is not pruning. If
the trees have heavy, hanging branches
shorten them back. Cut away all dead
wood, wherever it may be.
The cow will drink filthy water from |
a pool that has been warmed by the |
sun sooner than she will drink the wa-
ter ice in the trough. Nothing chills
an animal more than ice-cold water.
House plants, when kept in a warm
room, should be watered daily ; but the
earth should not be saturated: They |
are also benefited when well washed,
and the dust removed from the leaves.
Add a teaspoonful of ammonia to each
gallon of the water used.
By using males that are not pure
bred, the farmer is breeding down in-
stead of up, and he loses an entire year
of his life before he can ccrrect each
mistake, while each year's work in
grading up the herd or flock renders
the work of improvement easier the
next.
Getting the garden land ready can
be done in winter. The first duty is
plow the garden if the ground thaws
sufficiently, but if this is not feasible
spread two inches of well-rotted manure
over the ground. The manure should
be tree from litter and in a fine condi-
tion.
Grape vines may be trimmed at this
season. If rot attacked the vines last
year the ground should be raked over
and the refuse scrapings burnt. It
will be an advantage to scatter air-
slacked lime around the base of the
vines two or three times in order to as-
sist in destroying the spores.
No farm should ever become poorer.
The true farmer aims to make his land
richer each year, without regard to the
cost, as any outlay to improve the soil
is sure to return more than its equiva-
lent sooner or later. A poor farm is
unprofitable and it pays to improve it.
Agriculture does not reimburse its de-
votees immediately, but there will be a
gradual increase of wealth to him who
aims to make his farm pay in the fu-
ture,
The usual method in this section, in
growing a crop of clover, is to sow the
seed on wheat land, very early in the
season. In fact, many farmers sow
the clover seed on the snow, trusting
to the rains and water from the melt
ing snow to carry the seed down, and
assist in covering it, The object in
this method of sowing clover is to se-
cure a crop of wheat and leave the
land ib clover, by which arrangement
no loss of time ensues, while the wheat
shades the young clover and protects
it against the influence of the sun dur-
ing warm weather.
The Southern cow pea is used as a
renovator of the soil, and will grow on
any soil and in any climate where corn
flourishes, but if the season is short it
may not mature seed but will produce
a very large amount of green manurial
substance, Itis grown in New Jersey
without difficulty, and flourishes on
the poorest sandy soil. It is claimed
that a crop of cow peas, plowed under
and lime applied, will fit the land for
clover, The seeds are broadcasted
over the surface, about six pecks being
sufficient for an acre, but it is best to
sow the seed thickly.
When the land contains wheat that
has been drilled in there is an uneven
surface for the clover seed to fall npon,
and as the surface of the ground is hard
it is impossible to have the seed cove
the ground evenly, as farmers consider
themselves fortunate whee the field is
evenly covered with young clover.
These is a great loss of seed by expos:
ure to severe cold, much of it failing to
find covering, while a large portion is
also washed away, as well as destroy-
ed by birds. If the clover fails to
make an even “catch,” the fact is not
discovered until it is too late to re-seed
the field, and should the clover not be
uniform over the field the crop becomes
unsightly. As was recommended be-
fore, the wheat field should be harrow-
ed over before seeding to clover, which
not only benefits the young = heat but
gives the clover seed an opportunity of
finding lodgment in the soil.
As a spring application for wheat
there is no fertilizer equal to nitrate of
soda, the effect of the application being
manifested as soon as the growing sea-
son sets in, but the special manure for
clover is land plaster. When drilling
wheat in, during the fall, super-phos-
hate is considered the best fertilizer,
but the nitrate is more available for
providing plant food at the time when
the young wheat needs an invigorator.
Land plaster is a form of lime that is
partially soluble, and enables young
clover to secure lime food ag 800n as
the roots are formed. Cloveris a plant
that prefers potash and lime as its food,
and its roots fill up every square inch
of the soil if the crop is thrifty and vig-
orous. After the wheat is removed the
best fertilizer for clover is wood ashes,
One point to observe, when sowing clo-
ver seed on wheat, is to use plenty of
seed, as 'a large portion will fail to
IERNETE
What Shakespeare Might Have Said.
To take or not to take : that is the question.
Whether tis better for a man to suffer
The pangs and torments of indigestion,
Or something take,and,in its taking,end them.
Shakespeare didn’t say that, but very
likely he would have said something
similar, if he were living in the 19th
century, when so many suffer untold
agonies from indigestion. Of course he
would have gone on to say that a man
must be a fool not to take the ‘some-
thing” which would put an end to the
‘pangs and torments’’ spoken of, if he
could get it. Now it is a fact that
weakened, impoverished blood brings
on indigestion, which is the cause of
dyspepsia, constipation—a poisoned con-
tion of the whole system—and it is a
fact, also. that Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical discovery will so purify the
blood and enrich it that all the weaken-
ed organs are revitalixed and strength-
ened. It is guaranteed to do this. If
it doesn’t, your money will be returned
to you.
Don’t Flirt.
Do you want toact alie? Then flirt,
Do you care to lose the modest charm
of manner which is woman’s best herit-
attribute ? Then play at love.
Do you want your future lite embit-
tered by memories which will stab you
when your heart is beating with hap-
piness ? Then cheat some one into giv-
ing you true regard for falseness.
If you would be womanly, my wo-
man reader, or manly my manly, my
unknown questioner, give your esteem
toall who deserve it, your friendship to
those who are your frieads, and your
heart’s warm, earnest love to one man
or to one woman, and let it be unsullied
by the flirtations which may count in
triumphs on the fingers of both hands.—
Toronto Globe,
Pe —
Leaf by leaf the roses fall ;
One by one our dear ones die.
0, to keep them with us still!
Loving hearts send up the ery.
Wife and mother, O how dear,
jlaging like a mist away.
Father, let us keep them here,
Tearfally to God we pray,
Many a wite and mother, who seems
doomed to die because she suffers from
diseases peculiar to women, which saps
her life away like a vampire, and ba files
the skill of the family physician, can be
saved by employing the proper remedy.
This remedy is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription, the boon ever conferred by
man on weak, suffering, despairing wo-
men. It is a specific for all phases of
weakness, no matter what their name.
———
Conundrums.
What kind of fruit did Noah take in-
to the ark witn him? Preserved pairs.
What is the difference between a
young maid of sixteen and an old maid
of sixty ? The one is happy and care-
less, the other cappy and hairless.
Four men went to sea on a marble
slab. The first had no eyes, the second
had no hands, the third had no legs, and
the fourtn was naked. The first saw a
bird, theseoond shot it, the third ran
and picked it up, and the fourth pnt it
in his pocket. What is that? A lie,
of course,
A —————
——The best authorities, such as Dr.
Dio Lewis, Prof. Gross, and others,
agree that catarrh is not a local but a
constitutional disease. It therefore re-
quires a constitutional remedy like
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which effectually
and permanently cures catarrh. Thous-
ands praise it.
BE ——
—L Small singing birds live from 8 to
18 years. Ravens have lived for al-
most 100 years in captivity, and parrots
longer than that. Fowis live J10 to 20
years (and are then sold as spring chick-
ens to young housekeepers). The wild
goose lives upward of 100 years, and
swans are said to have attained the age
of 300. ] :
———
—*“A God-send is Ely’s Cream
Balm, I had catarrh for three years.
Two or three times & week my nose
would bleed. I thought thesores would
never heal. Your Balin has cured
me.”—Mrs. M, A. Jackson, Ports-
mouth, N. H.
———
——The United States has 884 paper
mills and 1,106 paper machines; Ger-
many, 809 mills and 891 machines;
France. 420 mills and 525 machines ;
England, 361 mills and 541 machines ;
Scotland, 69 mills and 98 machines;
Ireland, 18 mills and 18 machines ; Rus-
sia, 133 mills and 187 machines, and
Austria, 220 mills and 270 machines.
ES ——————
——Physician’s prescriptions have
failed to reach many cases of rheuma-
tism known to have been subsequently
cured by Salvation Oil. That is the
reason why the popular voice is practi-
cally unanimous in its favor. One bot-
tle is usually sufficient,
AB TT
——-Minnesota will send 1,6000,000
pounds of flour and Nebraska a train
load of corn to the famine-stricken peo-
ple of Russia. The U. S. government
vessel, “Constellation,” will take the
flour and corn to St. Petersburg under
the American colors,
——Dr. Andrew Wilron, the famous
British scientist, says women ere cruelly
beedless in stopping street cos so often.
They could save the horses by getting
off in groups he thinks. .
——————————————
——Under the title, “Thirty Years of
Wit.” Melville D. London will publish
a volume compiled from his lectures on
“Eli Perkins’’ and other sources.
——
Elizabeth Bisland, who did some
globe trotting a few years ago, and has
recently, and has recently been in Eu-
rope, will soon marry a New York law-
ver named Wetmare.
Mrs. John A. Logan declares that the
only part she every took in politics was
to secure the advancement of her hus-
band.
————
——Sardou, the great French play-
wright, writes a hand so fine that it al-
most requires a magnifying glass to read
germinate,
it.
age and man’s too infrequently found :
——A brother of Congressman Dolli-
ver, of Iowa, has been elected President
of the University of Utah, at Ogden.
He is only 24 years of age, and will have
a salary of $5000 a year.
ec mee
Mor» than $500,000 worth of gold
goes into people's mouths every year in
the filling of their teeth.
New Advertisements.
OTICE.—Is hereby given to all
whom it may concern that applica-
tion will be made to the January Term of the
Court of Quarter Sessions of Centre County to
have the L'own of State College,in said county,
incorporated as a Borough. Dee. 15th, 1891.
BEAVER GEPHART & DALE,
Solicitors.
36 49 3t
Y Ame AND SCALY HUMORS
Skin on fire, agonizing, itching, burning,
| bleeding eczema inits worst stages. A raw
i sore from head to feet. Hair gone, doctors and
hospitals fail, tried everything. Cured by
Curicura at a cost of six dollars. ISAAC H.
GERMAN,
Wurtsboro, N.Y.
EARLY DEAD WITH SCABS
Little girl five years old, eczema or salt
i theum. Tried five of the best doctors far and
near. She was nearly dead with scabs one
fourth inch thick. Tried Curicurss. In four
days scabs loosened ; in a month the cure was
complete.
CALY ECZEMA ON THE HEAD
My wife had what the doctors call eczema on
the head. Scales would accumulate. Used
three sets of Curicura REmEres. Best medi:
cine we ever saw. Cure complete. A. M.
CLARK,
440 W. 47th Street,
New York City.
ABY’S FACE WAS RAW
My boy, six weeks old, had a rash. It spread,
his face was raw; suffering intense. I doc-
tored with various remedies, but it got no bet-
ter. I used Curicura REMEDIES faithfully, and
in one week the boy looked better. In one
month he was cured.
MRS. CYRUS PROSCH,
Coytesville, Fort Lee P. O., N. J.
{UTICURA RESOLVENT.
‘I'he new Blood and Skin Purifier internally,
and Curicura, the great Skin Cure, and Curr-
CURA Soap, an exquisite Skin Purifier and
Beautifier, externally, cures every humor,
eruption, and disease ot the skin, and blood,
with loss of hair, from infancy to age, from
pimples toserofula.
Sold everywhere. Price, Curicura 50c.; Soar,
25¢.; RESOLVENT, $1.00. Prepared by the Por-
TER DRUG AND Cuemicar CorporaTioN, Boston.
Aa=Send for “ How to Cure Skin Disease,”
64 pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials.
IMPLES, blackheads, baby blem-
ishes, and falling hair cured by Curr-
CURA Soap. -
EAK, PAINFUL KIDNEYS,
With their weary, dull, aching, life-
less, all gone sensation, relieved in one min-
ute by the Caticura Anti Pain Plaster, the
only pain-killing plaster. 37-1-48.
Farmer's Supplies.
Dug SEED AND
LINSEED MEAL.
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FOOD FOR
COWS AND HORSES.
One fourth of a feed of Cotton
Seed Meal fed to Cows produces
rich milk. Itis well established fact
thatone pound of Cotton Seed Meal
is equal to two pounds of chopped
corn or four pounds of wheat bran;
hence it is the cheapest food for
cows.
LINSEED MEAL fed to horses in small
quauvtities prevents colic and
makes your horses thrive and
sleek in the coat.
PRATTS FOOD.
PRATTS FOOD for stock bas a good
reputation for keeping all kinds of
animals in good condition.
FOOD.
If you want healthy chickens
aud plenty of eggs, buy and feed
Dogliry Food, and ground oyster
shells,
"POULTRY
PLANT FOOD.
If'you want your house plants to
bloom buy aud use our Plant Food.
SLEDS AND SLEIGHS.
We have a few sleds and sleighs,
made to order—the best bob sled in
Central Pennsylvania.
CORN SHELLERS.
Corn Shellers of the latest im-
proved make for hand or power.
FODDER CUTTERS.
There is more economy in cutting
and crushing your corn” fodder for
stock. The Lion Fodder Cutler
cats and grinds fodder into a pulp.
The only Fodder Cutter made that
does its work complete.
CHEAP COAL.
ANTHRACITE COAL all sizes.
SNOW SHOE COAV, Run of Mines or
select lump.
Best in quality.
Lowest prices.
Prompt delivery.
Office and Store in the Hale building.
46 4 McCALMONT & CO.
T'ype-Writer.
No 1
I-BETtER
NOW--
THAN
—l AST YEAR.
PROBABLY
BETTER YET NEXT YEAR
THE
REMINGTON
STANDARD TYPE-WRITER
keeps constantly improving in practi-
cal qualities, hence its constantly in-
creasing popularity in the markets of
the world.
WYCKOFF, SEAMANS & BENEDICT,
37 14t 854 Chestnut St., Phila. Pa.
Liquors.
SCHMIDT BUILDING.——
G. W. SCHMIDT,
o—THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE—o
go
I
oO
| DISTILLER s AND o JOB BER
WINE, LIQUOR AND CIGAR HOUSE
ESTABLISHED 1836.
I+
IN THE UNITED STATES,—1}
0
|
|
—0F—}
FINE—§ —WHISKIES.
Telephone No. 662.
IMPORTER OF
WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
No. 95 and 97 Fifth Avenue,
PITTSBURG, PA.
fe eee foe
43~All orders received by mail or otherwise will receive prompt attention.
36-21-1yr:
Printing.
Printing.
INE 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.
Fine Job Printing.
FINE JOB PRINTING}
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing.
He 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.
—far THE WATCHMAN OFFICE]
BAroanss o
0
McQuistion—Carriages.
BARGAINS
meee] reine
o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o
AND
SPRING WAGONS,
at the old Carriage stand of
McQUISTION & CO.
NO. 10 SMITH STREET
adjoining the freight depo
C
We have on hand and for sale the
best assortment of Carriages, Buggies
and Spring Wagons we have ever ha
We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic,
and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano
and Whitechapel 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. e 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. ¢
In price we defy competition, as we
have no Pedlers, Clerks or Rents to
ay We pay cash for all our {ode
er securing them at the lowes:
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, 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,
80 give us a call before Jurchasivg
elsewhere. Don't miss the place—
alongside of the freight depot.
34 15 S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
Book Bindery.
JH CTrERS BOOK BINDERY.
prepared to
of all descriptions, or to rebind old books,
Special attention given to the Taling of paper
and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS,
dress :
[Established 1852.]
Having the lajest improved machinery I am
BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES
Orders will be received at this office, or ad-
F. L. HUTTER,
Book Binder Third and Market Streets,
25 18 - Harrisburg, Pa.
Ye JOB PRINTING
AT THE
WATCHMAN 0 OFFICE
Dodger” to the finest
but you can get done in the most satisfactor
manner, and at
| Prices consistent with the class of work
by calling or communicating with this office
Fine Job Printing.
0———A SPECIALTY———o0
There is no style of work, from the cheapest
o—BOOK-WORK,—o
Pure Malt Whisky.
Pereira
PURE BARLEY
=
=
M
DYSPEPSIA,
INDIGESTION,
2d all wasting diseases can be
ENTIRELY CURED BY IT.’
Malaria is completely eradicated frem he
system by its use. :
PERRINE'S
PURE BARLEY
MALT WHISKY
revives the energies of those worn with exces-
sive bodily or mental effort. It acts as a SAFE
GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigo-
rous weather. eis MELAS
ES
. Take part of a wineglassful on your arriva.
home afte r the labors of the day and the same
quantity before your breakfast. Being chemi
cally pure, it commends itself to the medics
profession. ]
None genuine unless bearing the signature
of the firm on the label.
M. & J. S. PERRINE,
3136 ly 38 N. Third 8t., Philadelphia.
Investors.
$5) Tock: AND GRAIN
SPECULATION
on
$10 AND UPWARDS.
1. P. RICHARDSON & CO.,
Stock, Bond and Grain Brokers,
31 & 33 Broadway, New York.
P. S.—Send for Explanatory Circular. 3687 6m
AFE INVESTMENT
SECURITIES,
MUNICIPLE BONDS,
INDUSTRIAL STOCKS,
CORPORATION BONDS,
APPROVED BANK STOCKS
Carefully selected, tried, safe, pay good
interest.
A180 ~—
IN PROSPEROUS CITIES.
For full particulars and references, write
ESCHBACH, McDONALD & CO.,
15 to 25 Whitehall St., New York.
36 38 1y
LL PT To rrr
DESIRABLE INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
Saddlery.
SQ CHOPPY 'S NEW
HARNESS HOUSE.
We extend a most cordial invitation tc our
patrons and the public, in general, to witness
one of the
GRANDEST DISPLAYS OF
Light and Heavy Harness
ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will
be made in the large room, formerly occupied
by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has been
added to my factory and will be used exelu-
sively for the sale of harness, being the first
exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as
heretofore the custom has been to sell goods
in the room in which they were made. This
elegant room has been refitted and furnished
with glass cases in which the harness can be
nicely displayed and still kept away from
heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in
leather. Our factory now occupies a room
16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes it
the largest establishment of its kind outside
of Philadelphia and Pittsburg.
We are prepared to offer better bargains in
the future than we have done in the past and
we want everyone to see our goods and get
prices for when you do this, out of self defense
you will buy. Our profits are not large, but
by selling lots of goods we can afford to live in
Bellefonte. We are not indulging in idle
philanthropy. It is purely business. We are
not making much, but trade is growing and
that is what we are interested in now. Profits
will take care of themselves.
When other houses discharged their work-
men during the winter they were all put to
work in my factory, nevertheless the .bi ?)
houses of this city and county would smile if
we compared ourselves to them, but we do not
mean to be so odious, except to venture the as-
section that none of them can say, as we can
say “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE
CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story.
The following are kept constantly on hand.
50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from
$8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE
STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per
set $25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE
COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00
each, over $100.00 worth of
HARNESS OILS and
AXLE GREASE,
$400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap
§150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Combs
Sponges, Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per
pound. We keep everythingto be found in a
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang-
ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two
shops in the same town to catch trade—NO
SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prices.
Four harness-makers at steady work this win-
ter, This is our idea of protection to labor,
when other houses discharged their hands,
they soon found work with us.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
33 37 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
Legal Notices.
i
HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue o.
sundry writs of Fieri Facias and Ven
ditioni Exponas issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas, of Centre county, and to me
directed, will be exposed to Public Sale at the
Court House, in the Borough of Billefonte, on
FRIDAY, JANUARY 29th, 1892.
beginning at one o'clock P. M.
All that certain messaage, tenement and lot
or piece of ground situate in the Borough of
Bellefonte, Centre Co., Pa., bounded and de-
scribed as follows: On the East by Spring
Street, on the North by Curtin Street, on the
South by Chas. F. Cook, and on the West by an
alley, said lot being situate on the South-west
corner of Spring and Curtin Streets, fronting
on Spring Street 50 feet and extending back
along Curtin Street 200 feet to an alley, bein,
the same premises which E. W. Hale by os
dated June 30; 1883, 1 ecoraed in book W, No. 2,
page 172.—Thereon erected a large stone
dwelling-house.
Seized. taken in execution and to be sold as
the property of Charies McCafferty and Cath-
arine McCafferty.
ALSO
All that certain messuage, tenement or lot
of ground situate in Spring Township, County
of Centre, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded
and described as follows : Beginning on the
South side of Water Street, in Bush's addition
where line of lot No. 103 intersects the same,
thence West along said street, 50 feet to line
of lot No. 105, thence along line of said lot
South 150 feet to an alley, thence East along
said alley 50 feet toline of lot No. 103, thence
North along line of said lot 150 feet to the place
of beginning. Thereon erected a two story
frame dwelling-house, stable and other out-
baildings,
Seized, taken in execution and to ve sold as
the property of J. W. Tate.
ALSO
All that certain messuage, tenement or lot
of ground situate in the Borough of Phillips-
burg, County of Centre, Pa., bounded and de-
scribed as follows: Beginning at a point on
North Front Street at corner of lot of Jeffey
Hays, thence by Front Street 33 feet to lot of
Wm. Parker, thence along said lot of Wm.
Parker, 240 feet to North Second Street, thence
along said North Second Street 33 feet to line
of lot of Jeffey Hays, thence along said lot 240
feet to the place of beginning, being one half
of lot known and designated as No. 51 in the
general plan of said Borough. Thereon erec-
ted a large 3 story brick building, used as a
store room and dwelling-house and other out-
buildings.
Rees taken in execution and to be sold as
the property of Henry Lehman.
ALSO
All defe ndant’s right, titleand ivterest in and
to a certain tract of land situate in Howard
township, Centre connty, Pa., bounded and de-
seribed as follows : Beginning at a dogwood,
by land surveyed to William Ramsey South
47° E. 135 perch to a eorner, thence South 47°
West 81 perch to a post, thence by land for-
merly ot Joseph Miles in right of Stephen Re-
gent, S. 68° West 18 perch toa post, by marked
chestnut, thence North 40° West 30 perch to a
st, thence by land of Curtin’s heirs North 50°
. 176 perch to a corner, thence North 40°
West 76 perch to a white cak, North 47° E. 65
perch to the place o: beginning, containing 127
acres, 68 perches more or less.
Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as
the property of Jacob R. Leathers.
ALSO
All that certain messuage, tenement or lot
or piece of ground situated in Bellefonte Boro,
Centre county, Pa., bounded and described as
follows: Beginning ata point on Linn street
15 feet east of the lot ‘of M. W. Cowdrick,
thence along Linn street east 65 feet to lot of
Chas. F. Cook, thence alov.g said lot north 200
feet toan alley, thence west along said alley
65 feet to a point 15 feet east of the line of s aid
M,W. Cowdrick’s lot, thence 200 feet by a line
parallel with the line of M. W. Cowdrick to the
place of beginning. Seized, taken in execu-
tion and to be sold as the property of J. C.
Harper and Laura G. Harper.
WM. A ISHLER,
Jan. 6, 1892, Sheriff.
OURT PROCLAMATION. —
Whereas the Honorable A. O. Furst, Pres-
ident Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of the
49th Judicial District, consisting of the coun-
ties of Centre and Hantjagaon, and the Honor-
able Thomas M. Riley and Honorable Daniel
Rhoads, Associate Judges in Centre county,
having issued their precept, bearing date the
4th day of January to me directed, for
holding a Court of Oyer and Terminer and
General Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of
the Peace in Bellefonte, for the county of
Centre and to commence on the 4th Monday of
Jan. being the 25th day of Jan., 1892, and to
continue one week, notice is hereby given to
the Coroner, Justices of the Peace, Aldermen
and Constables of said county of Centre, that
they be then and there in their proper I~
aons, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of the 24th,
with their records, inquisitions, examinations,
and their own remembrances, to do those
things which to their office appertains to be
done, and those who are bound in recogni-
zances to Prosecnte against the prisoners that
are or shall be in the jail of Centre county, be
shen and there to prosecute against them as
thall be just.
Given under my hand, at Bellefonte, the 25th
day of January, inthe year of our Lord, 1892,
and theone hundredand fourteenth yearof the
independence of the United States.
| WM. A. ISHLER,
i 37-1.4¢
She riff,
RB i i