Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 28, 1894, Image 3

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Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 28, 1894.
Farm Notes,
— Each field is adapted to some spec:
ial crop. Study the soil and the needs
of the crop.
--Sweet potatoes contain a lare pro-
portion of sugar, and are more fatten-
ing than corn ! The smallest sizes are
equal to the best for stock.
—This is the season for preparing
the asparagus bed. Cut down the seed
stalks and use manure six inches thick
on the bed. Next spring you will
have large stalks and plenty of
them.
—Ground wheat, when used with
cooked turnips, carrots, or small pota-
toes, will induce rapid gain in stock.
Variety of feed is also necessary in or-
der to promote the thrift ot the ani-
mals. Keep them in good appetite.
—The seed corn for next year can-
not be too dry. Let the select ears re-
main on the stalks until the leaves
turn yellow and the kernels are hard
and dry, then hang the earsup in a
dry place.
— Linseed meal is a food that always
proves beneficial to horees and cows,
and it should be given at least three
times a week. It may be mixed with
ground grain or gprinkled on chopped
carrots or cooked roots of any kind.
— Loss of appetite is sometimes due
to close confinement. When the win-
ter sets in and stock must be kept up,
there should be a large yard for
exercise. If thereis a field adjoin-
ing the yard, into which the animals
can go on clear, warm days, so much
the better.
—The past season has no doubt
taught an excellent lesson to those who
have depended mostly on special crops.
It is not safe to rely on one crop for a
profit, for should excessive rains or
drought injure such a crop the farmer
will Jose the whole year. A diversity
of soils should be made to produce
general crops, which with judicious ro-
tation, gives the farmer an opportunity
to realize on some of the crops, though
he may lose on others,
—The management of the soil is at
the present day a subject as important
as the management of stock, and as
the soil can gain or lose in fertility ac-
cording to its treatment, the value of a
farm depends upon the manner in
which the soil has been cultivated.
And not only does cultivation affect
the soil but the kind of crop grown in-
fluences it also, and changes its quality
and texture to a certian extent, Many
soils have been Jrought to a high de-
gree of fertility with the aid ot but a
limited amount of manure, by growing
certain crops which not only cover the
soil and protect it, but which also de-
rive nitrogen from the air and add it
to the plant food already existing in
the soil. It is not only in the gain of
fertility that the farm is enriched, but
also in the prevention of loss by so
managing the soil that even after the
crop is removed a protection is given
against ruins, beat and frost. While
these agents are at times beneficial
and important, under certain condi-
tions of the soil it is necessary to
guard against losing that which was
gained earlier in the season of growth.
MULCHING THE SOIL.
—It is an advantage to plow some
soils late in the fall, but scientis's are
not unanimous in their opinions re-
garding this subject. It is advocated
that there is too much exposare of the
soil, by which large portions of soluble
matter are lost. Nature covers the al-
ways, and never leaves it exposed.
Under the fallow system, practiced in
former years, when “resting” the land
a year or two, by omitting crops, the
soil gained in fertility, yet the plow
was not used during the resting period.
The gain in fertility was attributed to
the scanty growth of herbage, which
covered the almost barren fields, but
the real gain was in the covermg of
the soil and the additional plant food
brought down by the rains, and which
was transformed into other substances
by the indigenous herbage covering
the soil as a mulch, and thus promot-
ing the formation of humus. Learning
from experience, it has occurred to
many progressive farmers that mulch-
ing the soil is to protect it against loss
as well as to add to its fertility.
WEEDS MAY BE BENEFICIAL.
—Weeds are claimed to be Nature's
recuperative crops, which repair the
losses made by man. Weeds compel
the indolent farmer to cultivate the
oil to save his crops and they at once
cover the soil with heavy growth as
soon as the farmer ceases to have crops
on the land. If the crops of the farmer
do not cover the soil so as to afford
complete protection, the weeds make
an attempt to gain the mastery, but
when the crops 1s heavy and dense the
weeds are kept down. Difterent soils
may be covered by different weeds,
even the poorest soils having weeds
that will thrive on them, though not
euitable elsewhere. If the weeds are
allowed to produce seed they become a
crop, but if plowed under they add to
the soil.’ The question then arises as to
covering the soil in the winter. Ifthe
land is plowed and then seeded toa
crop in the fall, the soil, is protected,
but if this is not done. Nature still
makes a further eflori, with weeds
that spring up late ‘in the season, to
cover the soil with a muleh. The sub-
ject is one that commends itself to the |
consideration of farmers, and though it
is admitted that theory is at present in
the ascendancy; yet it is believed that
practical experiments will in future
lead toa complets revolation in the
treatmenti of soils after the regalar
crops have been removed. Shadinz
the soil promotes fertility, snl this
gain occurs mo:tly in simmer, but it
must be consarved anil retained in
winter for use the following year.
i
i
ttt
Cartridges and Revolution.
The seizure of 50,000 cartridges, ship-
ped to Havana in casks labelled as tal-
low, is prematurely reported as a sign
of the approaching outbreak of revolu-
tionary hostilities in Cuba. It is proba-'
bly nothing more than a smuggling
case. The duties on ammunition are so
high in the island that all sorts of de-
vices are employed for evading them.
The discovery of this consignment is
probably due to the neglect of the
smugglers to secure by bribery the con-
nivance of the customs officials. Under
the high revenue tariff in that island
smuggling is practiced in many lines of
merchandise. The rapacious customs of-
ficials know what is going on, and they
are well paid for their services in pass-
ing goods which are fraudulently in-
voiced. Otherwise they would not be
able to make fortunes in the service and
to send to Spain high commissions to
those responsible for their appointments.
A revolutionary uprising in Cuba
will be heralded by something more
sensational than an everyday occurrence
like smuggling, even when cartridges
are shipped as tallow. It will come
about some day when the jealousies be-
tween the Spanish-born and Cuban-
born classes have-burned out, and there
is an instinctive recoil against an order
of government that is ruinous to all in-
terests. The conditions have undergone
a radical change since the close of the
patriot war. Then the landed proprie-
tors, the sugar and tobacco planters,and
nearly all the men of wealth and in-
fluence were on the side of the govern-
ment. To-day the land-owners and
planters, whether Spaniards, Germans
or Cubans, are annexationists at heart.
They know that their fortunes depand
upon radical reforms of administration
which Spain will never bring about.
They are waiting for some turn of the
wheel which will enable political revo-
lutionists to proclaim themselves annexa-
tionists. In a crisis of that kind neither
cartridges nor rifles will play an im-
portant part.
There is less talk about filibustering
expeditions and revolutionary outbreaks
than there has been in former years ;
but all classes of the population in the
island are drawing together, old feuds
and animosities are passing out of re-
membrance, and annexation is looming
up as a popular policy which will re-
deem the fortunes of the misgoverned
island.
Done Every Twelve Hours.
Railroad Time Corrected Twice a Day by Tele-
graph from This City.
There was a time, says the Philadel-
phia Zunes, when folks used to set their
watches by the town clock, but they
don’t do it much anymore. Nowadays
the railway timepiece seems to set the
pace. There is so much traveling and
so many have to catch trains that men
try to keep railroad time.
Few think, however, how difficult it
is to keep that same railroad time
straight. A bad watch or false time,
even to the extent of a minute or two,
might easily involve the destruction of
a train and many lives. Conductors
and engineers not only must have a very
accurate standard of time to go by. All
clocks vary, but most clocks vary too
much for railroad accuracy.
All over the great Pennsylvania sys-
tem the clocks are regulated twice every
twenty-four hours by telegraph from
Altoona, where they get the standard
time in seconds from Washinzton. The
conductors and engineers running out ot
Philadelphia get their time from the
clock in the rotunda at the Broad street
station, the big one in the centre just
outside the waiting room, which occu-
pies the same position in the new station
that it did in the old. This clock,
which cost over $400, is considered a
wonder, and in the old station seldom
varied more than two seconds in the
twenty-four hours. It has not been do-
ing quite so well since taken down and
put up again, but is improving, and is
so much better than any other clock
knowa that nobody thinks of changing
it, and in all probability in a little while
when it gets accustomed to its position
and surroundings, it will come as near
perfect accuracy as it ever has in its his-
tory.
The House of Hanover.
Upon the death of Queen Victoria
the house of Hanover will cease to rule
in England, and. failing surviving issue
to the Duke of York, the London
Times assumes thal the heirship to the
throne will lie with the daughter of the
Duchess of Fife.
“The crown came with a woman,”
said the Stuart king of Scotland when
he heard of the birth of a‘daughter, the
subsequently unfortunate Mary Stuart,
“and 1t will go with a woman.”’
The Tudor dynasty, at any rate, pass-
ed with a woman—Queen Elizabeth—
while that of the Stuarts in England
came in through the girl child to whom
the dying Scots king made melancholy
allusion. The Electress Sophia, grand-
daughter of James 1, was the female
iink betwaen the ling of Guelph and the
preceding dynasty, while her majesty
connects Saxe-Coburg-Gotha with the
great family which made popular in
England the badge of the White Horse.
—Philadelphin Press.
The Soldier, the Indian, and the
‘Whiskey.
“The way an Indian loves whiskey
beats everything,” said the soldier. “I
once met a Cheyenne on his pony.
‘Give me a drink of whiskey ; I'll give
you my bridle for it," says he. ‘No,’
says I. ‘Ill give you my saddle,’ says
he. ‘No,’ says I. ‘I'll give you my
pony,’ says he. ‘No’ says I. Finally,
if you'll believe it, he offered his bridle
and saddle and pony all in a bunch for
a drink !"
“Well, and wouldn’t you give it to
him for all that ?”’ asked the soldier’s
listener.
“Not much,” said the soldier. , “I
had only one drink left, and T wanted
that myself.”—in Harper's. Magazine
for October.
RA ATT ART.
Qur Rivers Meet.
Susquehanna —“Get out of my way.”
Chenango (somewhat drily) —Bag
pardon. Dida’t know you werd out. I
was feeling dusty and was looking for a
drink.”
Both —¢“Let’s irrigate.”
——%0Oh, punctuation marks are not
of much account. They’re just put in
I don’t want to bother about
them.”
Such are the sentiments of a good
| many schoolboys with regard to the
branch of letter and composition writ-
ing. Others again, appear to think that
all that is necessary is to putin a com-
ma here and there at haphazard, to set
off “the looks of things.” How risky
this way of doing things is may be
learned from the following incident.
It seems that, some twenty years ago,
when the United States, by Congress,
was making a tariff bill, one of the sec-
tions enumerated what articles should
be admitted free of duty. Among the
articles specified were ‘all foreign fruit-
plants,” etc., meaning plants imported
for transplanting, propagation or ex-
periment.
The enrolling clerk, in copying the
bill, accidentally changed the hyphen
in the compound word ‘fruit-plants,” to
a comma, making it read, “all foreign
fruit, plants, ete. As a result of this
simple mistake, for a year, or until Con-
gress could remedy the blunder, all the
oranges, lemons, bananas grapes, and
other foreign fruits were admitted free
of duty.—This little mistake, which
anyone would be liable to make, yet
could have been avoided by carefulness,
cost the government not less than $2,-
000,000. A pretty costly comma, that.
|
for looks.
ArouND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY
Days.—Did Jules Verne ever think
that his imaginary Phileas Fogg would
be eclipsed by an American girl, who
once made the circuit in less than seven-
ty-three days ? But Phileas had to take
“second money.”” The fame of Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has
gone around the world long ago, and
left its record everywhere asa precious
boon to every nation. In the whole
world of medicine, nothing equals it for
the cure of scrofula of the lungs (which
is Consumption.) Coughs and bron-
and the blood is purified by it, until all
unsightly skin blotches are driven away.
Don’t be skeptical, as this medicine is
guaranteed to ever purchaser you only
pay for the good you get.
——An exchange says that if sul-
phate of iron is applied to the roots of
affected peach trees it will restore the
tree and make it bear.
——A. M. Bailey, a well known citi-
zen of Eugene, Oregon. says his wife
has for years been troubled with chronic
diarrhea and used many remedies with
little relief until she tried Chamber
lain’s Colic, Cholera and diarrhea
Remedy, which has cured hersound and
well. Give it a trial and you will be
surprised at the prompt relief it affords.
25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by F. P.
Green.
——The key to success, in any depart-
ment of life, is self-denial. Idleness,
laziness, wastefulness, come from lack
of it ; while industry,promptitude,econo-
my, thrift and a successful career are
the result of it.
——To eradicate the poisons which
produce fever and ague, take Ajyer’s
Ague Cure. It cures without leaving
any injurious effect upon the system,
and is the only medicine in existence
which may be considered an absolute
antidote for malaria.
——Subsecribe for the WaATcEMAN.
chial troubles succumb to this remedy,
Business Notice.
Children Cry or 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
Castoria. 38-43-2y
Medical.
Coon HARDLY WALK
ON ACCOUNT OF
R-H-E-U-M-A-T-I-S-M
—P. H. FORD—
QF ee
Quachita COity, La.,
—AFTER—
Two Years Suffering is Cured
By the use of
—AYER'S { SARSAPARILLA —
“For fully two years, I suffered from rheu-
matism, and was frequently in sucha condi-
tion that I could hardly walk. I spent some
time in Hot Springs, Ark.,and the treatment
helped me for the time being; but soon the
complaint returned and I was as badly afflict
ed as ever. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla being recom-
mended, I resolved to try ;it, and, after using
six bottles, I was completely cured.”—P. H.
Ford, Quachita City, La.
The
Only
Admitted
AYER'S SARSAPARILLA
AT THE WORLD'S, FAIR.)
39-19-1t
New Advertisements.
A N EYE SPECIALIST
H. E. HERMAN, & CO0.," Limited.
Ey
Formerly with]
& QUEEN & Co., OF PHILADELPHIA.
AT W. T. ACHENBACH, JEWELER,
eee | I] eee
BELLEFONTE EVERY FRIDAY
From 8:30 a. m., to 5:30 p. m.
There is no safer, surer, or cheaper method
of obtaining proper relief for overstrained and
defective eyesight, headache, and so forth,
than to consult this specialist, The happy re-
sults from correctly fitted glasses are a grate-
ful surprise to persons who have not before
known the real profit to themselves in wearing
good glasses. No charge to examine your
eyes, All glasses are guaranteed by H. E.
erman. 38-49-1y
Printing. Printing.
EINE JOB PRINTING.
Fine Job Printing Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Prinisg:
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job|Priating.
Fine Job Printing: Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
Fine Job Printing. Fine Job Printing.
{FINE JOB PRINTING}
v
Fine Job Priating: 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.
—AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE]-
Sechler & Co.
’
Saddlery.
AQECHLER & CO.——*
GROCERS—BUSH HOUSE BLOCK.
——HEAD QUARTERS FOR—
FINE GROCERIES, TEAS,
SPICES AND FRUITS
IN TEAS we have Oolongs, Gun-Pow-
der, Imperial, Young Hyson, Japan
English Breakfast, and our Fine Blend:
ed Tea is something that will please any
one who appreciates a cup of Royal Tea.
IN SPICES, Cinnamon, Cloves, Al
spice, Nutmeg, Mace, Ginger, Cayenn
Pepper, Mustard all strictly pure goods,
IN COFFEES AND CHOCCLATE,
Mocha—genuine, Java—Old Govern
ment, Rio—Finest Brazilian. All ex-
cellent quality and always fresh roasted.
Baker's Premium Chocolate and Break:
fast Cocoa, Van Houten's Cocoa, Wil-
bur’s Chocolate, and German Sweet
Chocolate.
IN COOKING EXTRACTS we keep
a line of Joseph Burnett & Co's, (Bos-
ton) goods, they are the finest we can
find, also a line of Knight's extracts.
BEANS, California Limas, New York
yy and Pea Beans, dried Green
eas.
RICE New Crop Carolina Head Rice.
DOMESTIC CANNED FRUITS
AND VEGETABLES, ToMATOES
Cottage, Home and Worthington Brands
—CoRrN Persian and Mountain Brands,
—CoRrN Granules, Lima Beans and
Succotash, Dew Drop brand. GREEN
Peas, Early Junes, Scottish chief and
Cecelia brands. PINE APPLE sliced and
grated, Strawberries and White Cher:
ries, Dew Drop brand. Boston Baked
Beans.
CALIFORNIA CANNED FRUITS,
Yellow Crawford, Lemon Cling, and
White Heath Peaches, White Cherria
and Apricots.
IMPORTED VEGETABLES AN1
FRUITS, French Peas and Mush-
rooms, Preserved Cherries, Straw-
berries, Brandy Cherries and Crosse
Blackwell's Jams all in glass.
MISCELLANEOUS, Pure Maple
Syrup, Honey strained and in combs,
Plum Pudding, Armour’s Corned Beef
Potted Tongue and Ham, Condensed
milk, Dunham's Shred Cocoa nut.
Rich Mild Cream Cheese, Small Family
Cheese, Bradford County Dairy But-
ter.
Buckwheat Flour, Corn Flour, Gluten
Flour, Vienna Flour.
Fine Confectioners and Cut Loaf Sucars
Extra Fine New Crop New Or .eans
Syrups, Pure White Sugar Table
Syrup, Pure Cider Vinegar.
NUTS, Princess Paper Shell, Califor
nia and Bordan Almonds, Assorted
Nuts, English Walnuts, Pecans extra
large, Cream Nuts, Fresh Roasted
Peanuts, Cocoa Nuts extra quality.
IN CONFECTIONARY, we han
Fine Mixtures, - Cream Chocolates
Roast Almonds, Cream Dates, Ros
and Vanilla, Jordon Almonds, Frencl
Glace Fruits, Fine Chocolate Caramels.
Chocolate Marsh Mallows, Cocoa Nut
bon bons, Chocolate Madridos, Lozenges,
Clear Toys, and a large assortment of
fine ges in this line all carefully se-
lected.
FRANQO AMERICAN SOUPS,
French Bouillon, Consomme, Ox Tail,
Mock Turtle, Mulligatawny, and
Terrapin.
OLIVE OIL, S. Rea § Co.s} Pint,
Pints and Quarts. The finest ana-
lysts in the World pronounces it pure.
PICKLES IN GLASS, Crasse §&
Blackwell's Chow Chow, Gherkins,
Mized, White Onions, Cauliflower,
Picalilli, and Walnuts.
CEREAL GOODS. Oat Meal, Rolled
Oat, Cracked Wheat, Pearl Barley,
Breakfast and Dinner Hominy, Ma-
caront and Vermacceli.
MEATS. Fine Sugar Cured Hams,
Breakfast Bacon and Dried Beef,
White Rose Lard.
GREEN FRUITS, Florida Oranges,
Messina Lemons, White Almeria
Grapes, Catawba Grapes, and Jersey
Cranberries.
CURED FRUITS. Evaporated Cali-
fornia Pared and unpared Peaches,
and Apricots.
RAISINS, Imperial Cluster, Fine Lay-
ers, Ondaras, Valencias, Sultana and
California Seedless and Loose Muse
catels.
boneless and evaporated, SALMQ2
Magnolia, Astoria and Glacier brand
Hoeg’s Spiced Salmon, Shrimps, Lob
sters, Crab Meats and Spiced Oysters
Sardines, French }s, and 4s Boneless.
SECHLER & CO.
BELLEFONTE, Pa.
38-1
FISH. New Mackerel very fine, Codfish
SCHOFIELD S NEW
HARNESS HOSUE
We extend a most cordial invitation to our
patrons and the public, in general, to witness
one of the
GRANDEST DISPLAY 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 exclu-
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 roem in which they were made. This
elegant room has been refitted and furnished
with glass eases in which the harness can be
nicely aisplayed 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.
Weare prepared to offer better bargains Ia
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
in will buy. Our profits are not large, but
y 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. ofits
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 Mm
houses of this city and county would it
we compared ourselves to them, but we do nos
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 ent 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 Nete sold cheap
$150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Combs
Sponges, Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDE SADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
priees, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25¢ per
und. We keg everything to be found e a
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang-
Ing, over 2 yours In tis 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 Suring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
A,
INuminating Oil.
Ciro 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 3qusl
AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL.
We stake our reputation as refiners th
IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD.
Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by
THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO.
Bellefonte Station
Bellefonte, Pa.
37 87 1y
Miscellaneous Advs.
ATENTS, CAVEATS, TRADE
MARKS, COPYRIGH 1S.
CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT?
For a prompt answer and an honest opinion
write to MUNN & CO., who have had nearly
fifty years’ experience in the Daten business,
Communications strictly confidential. A Hand-
book of Information concerning Patents and
how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalos
gue of mechanical and scientific books sent
ree.
Patents taken through Munn & Ce. receive
special notice in the Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public
without eost to the inventor: This splendid
Paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated,
as by far the largest circulation of any scien-
tific work in the world. $3 a year. Sample
copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year.
Single copies, 25 cents. Every number con-
tains beautiful plates, in colors, ;and photos
graphs of new houses, with plans, enabling
builders to show the latest designs and secure
contracts. Address UNN & CO.
38-49-1y 361 Broadway, New York.
Went THE
o —
BOW (rine)
it is easy to steal or ring watches from
the pocket. The thief gets the watch
in one hand,the chain in the other and
gives a short, quick jerk—the ring
slips off the watch stem, and away goes
the watch, leaving the victim only the
chain.
This Idea Stopped That
Little Game :
The bow has a groove on each {
tend. A collar runs down inside }
ithe pendant (stem) and fits in-i
ito the grooves, firmly locking:
ithe bow to the pendant, so that:
iit cannot be pulled or twisted}
: off. i
:
Sold by all watch dealers, with-
out cost, on Jas. Boss Filled and
ale
other cases containing this
trade mark—
Ask your jeweler for pamphlet.
KEYSTONE WATCH CASE CO.,
30-35-16 Philadelphia,