Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 05, 1897, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., March 5, 1897.
FARM NOTES.
—A bran mash, composed of bran and
linseed meal, scalded, should be given oc-
casionally to cows and horses that have
been fed principally on hay and fodder in
order to regulate the bowels.
—If you pasture the young orchard, first
put such a guard about the trees that the
stock can reach neither trunk nor branch.
Even if not killed, many a young tree is
thus deformed forever.
—A good shovelful of ashes should be
scattered around cach currant hill, and a
handful thrown in the crown, says Ameri-
can Gardening ; they serve two purposes—
fertilizer and a preventive of insects and
disease.
—The mole is a nuisance when it turns
up the lawn or goes down a Tow of some
favorite crop, but it is claimed that the
mole is a friend to the farmer, living upon
worms and grubs, the benefit he imparts
being greater than the damage inflicted.
—1If for any reason you should fail to
have as much clover as you need for the
hogs next season you can supplement it to
good advantage with a field of peas for their
use. Bear this in mind and leave a little
land vacant for the purpose next year.
—The claim that too much manure will
burn up the crop depends upon the amount
of moistureand how the manure is applied.
If the manure is well worked into the soil
there will be no liability of injury from a
heavy application. The difficulty really is
that the manure is spread over too great a
surface, not enough being made.
—To find the number of trees or plants
to the acre, multiply the distance in feet
between the rows-by “the distance trees are
apart. in rows; the product will be the
number of square feet for each tree, which,
divided into the number of square feet in
an acre (43.560) will give the number of
trees to the acre.
If you havea ficld of crimson clover plow
it under for corn and you will need no ni-
trogenous fertilizers but potash and phos-
phoric acid must be used. As they are
cheap the cost of fertilizers for corn, where
the crimson clover has been turned under,
will be but a small sum compared with the
value of a complete fertilizer on the mar-
ket. :
— Save the egg shells and use them for
starting early plants in the house. Fill:
them with rich earth, plant a few seeds,
and allow one plant to grow. When the
plant is of sufficient size set the shell and
plant in the ground out of doors, after dan-
wer of frost is over. Melons are frequently
started in that manner, as they will not
bear transplanting without risk of loss.
— Every barn should have a cistern or re-
ceptacle for liquids from the stable that
cannot he absorbed, it is better to absorb
the liquids and add them to the manure
heap if it ean be done. The cistern should
be so located as to permit of pumping the
liquids on the =old accumulations of the
heap. In this manner all the valuable
properties of the manure will be retained.
The liguids are worth more than the solids,
although they are frequently permitted to |
£0 to waste.
— All stable manures will be improved if
potash in some form is added, especially of
potash salts. Kainit has been found useful
for this purpose. It is crude sulphate of
potash, and contains a large proportion of |
It will arrest the escape of ammonia |
and prove valuable of itself when applied |
salt.
on the land. It is also excellent on land
infested with grubs, though not a complete
remedy for such pests. It is cheap and
should be used more extensively where
manure is being gaved.
—1If it is proper to destroy an animal in
order to prevent the spread of disease it is
equally important that a diseased tree be
cut down and burnt. When blight attacks
a pear tree it is a risk to attempt to save it,
as the disease will soon appear on other
trees if there is a delay in stamping out the
difliculty. By prompt action in sacrificing
a tree years of work may be avoided and an
orchard saved from destruction. The
“yellows” in peaches should receive atten
tion promptly, cutting down the tree on
the first signs of disease.
—The rough staring coat of calves and
colts their first winter is always due to
troubles of digestion from changing sudden-
ly from succulent to dry feed. But a part
is also due to drinking too little water, be-
cause the water in winter is always cold.
If water for young animals were warmed to
a temperature near that of animal heat
they would drink more freely, and their
food will digest, instead of remaining in
the stomach breeding fevers and discase.
Do away with constipation in young stock,
and most of the difficulty in keeping them
thrifty will be overcome.
—It is some years sinee. we have seen an
apple of that good, old fashioned variety,
the Spitzenberg. It is not strange that it,
is not common in the market, for if the
farmer has one or two trees of it they prob-
ably bear no more than he needs for home
use. It is a spicy, high flavored apple,
but a very shy bearer. The tree is not a
strong grower, and on old soil is very apt
to fugous diseases of the leaves. It will
bear manuring more heavily than other
kinds of apple trees, and is especially bene-
fitted by liberal applications of potash fer-
tilizers.— American Cultivator.
—The borers will begin to attack peach
trees in May and the apple trees in June.
One remedy is to apply coal tar around
the trunk of each tree, digging away the
earth six or eight inches, and after the ap-
plication returning the earth to the tree,
extending the tar a foot or more above the
level of the ground. This should be done
as soon as the condition of the ground per-
mits, repeating the application soas to cov-
er every portion of the tree.
kerosene on peach trees. If preferred the
trees may be wrapped with tarred paper,
which will be held in position by the earth
or may be fastened with a string.
—In feeding all young animals thrifty
growth is far more important than to fatten
them. Many people suppose that the only
way to lessen fatis to restrict diet until
near starvation point.
fat-forming nutrition, restricting its amount
makes what is given so much better di-
gested that the fattening process goes on as
before. A far surer and better way to ac-
complish what is wished is to give more food
plentifully, but not of the kind that builds
up fat, and especially to give what makes
bone<hnd muscle. It is for this reason
that wheat bran and wheat middlings are so
valuable for feeding. They will not fatten
if fed moderately with hay, straw and roots,
and they will keep young stock thrifty
growing.
Do not use |
But they find by !
trial that if the food given contains the |
EE
Col. Dunham's Bear Story.
A Wonderful Tale by Howard's Inventive Writer,
Which He Affirms is True, Wonderful Mix-Up of
Man, Horse, Bear, Ram, and Buggy. Presence of
Mind of the Surgeon.
Doctor Ipecac is a well know physician
residing in Nittany Valley, Centre county,
and has an extensive practice in that val-
ley and other sections of the county.
Whether it isy due to his skill as a physi-
cian, to the healthfulness of the climate
and the nifural robustness of the inhabi-
tants, or just to good luck, the writer can’t
say, but the fact is, Doc has gained a rep-
utation among the people for success in his
- profession that is the envy of his brother
physicians. It is his proud boast that he
has helped more people of the valley out
of the world, and more into it, than any
other two physicians for twenty miles
around. .
The story which we chronicle was re-
lated by Doc before reputable witnesses,
and if any readers have any doubts as to
the truth of the facts, they need only to
consuit any of his numerous friends who
are familiar with his love of truth and
veracity and their mind will be convinced
of the genuineness of the facts here re-
corded.
The adventure occurred one morning
Jast December. As Doc says, he was driv-
ing along the road near Nittany mountain
on his way to visit a patient, when on top
of a short hill he saw in the depression be-
tween him and the next hill an enormous
black bear crossing a field that would take
him over the brow of the next hill, ata
point where the road crossed it.
The Doctor being a great hunter of small
game, his sporting blood rose to the high-
est pitch, and he determined to capture
that bear. He aroused old Bob, his horse,
with his whip and spurted down the hill
and up the other one like a hound on the
scent of a deer. When they arrived at the
top of the next hill the bear was not to be
seen, and the pursuit was stopped until a
little reconnoitering was done. So he
stood up in his buggy and scanned the
next hill for signs of the game. On the
slope of the hill across which he was look-
ing a flock of sheep were pastering under
the charge of an old ram that seemed to
have decided objection to bears trespassing
on his domains, and immediately went to
work to resent the intrusion. Whether or
not the bear was innocent of the taste of
mutton will never he known.
Doc standing in his buggy. scanning the
distant horizon did not see the bear coming
towards him with the ram in pursuit un-
sil they wereclose to him, when he was so
surprised that he could only stand still in
amazement. The bear struck the fence at
the point of the road where Doc was stand-
ing his buggy, and attempted to crawl
over but the ram arrived at the time the
bear was on the top rail, and having fair
mark hit the bear with terrific force, Doc
of a vam. The force of the blow sent the
bear clear off the fence down into the road
onto the wheels of the buggy, old Bob
awakened up, and between his jump and
the bear striking the buggy, Doc was land-
| ed on the other side of the road. The bear
was jerked in between the wheels and the
bed of the buggy, as Bob started
to sprint for the county seat and the land
beyond. The result was a mixture of
wheels, bear an buggy, flavored with a
kicking horse. The ram having recovered
| from the recoil followed the bear into the
| road just in time to meet the heels of the
| protesting steed, and then ceased to take
| buggy, harness, bear and ram, and he was
| . Yonnl .
| afterwaids caught on Spring Creek, 10 miles
away.
over,” but was on his feet in time to wit-
ness the above mentioned proceedings. To
say he was mad al over, but faintly ex-
| presses his feeling. There was his bug-
| ov smashed to splinters, a runaway horse,
and a dead ram that he expected he would
have to pay for, as he recognized it as
Christ Decker’s. Christ owed him a pretty
good sized bill, but refused to pay it on the
ground that part of the medicine he took
did him no good, and the other part made
hin worse. 3
However, the doctor proceeded to clear
up the ruins. He found the bear had both
legs on the right side broken, and was una-
ble to get from under the buggy box until
he pulled it off him, then the bear was
ready for business. Doc grabbed a broken
spoke and aimed a blow at brn. Mr.
Bear retaliated by a swipe with his left
paw that narrowly missed Doc’s bread bas-
ket, as it was it, disrobed him of his vest,
| and sent his watch and chain flying. The
chain caught on the extended claws of the
bear's broken foot.
The doctor took in the situation, and ob-
serving the bear was left handed, he
opened his medicine chest and took out a
vial of morphine pills, got behind the bear
grabbed him by the left paw and whirled
the animal around, landed bruin on his
back. Quickly emptying the contents of
the vial into his open jaws, he rammed the
morphine down with the broken spoke.
In a short time the bear sank peacefully to
sleep, to awaken no- more. The doctor
says the bear, when dressed, weighed 408
pounds.
After the bear was disposed of Doc began
to see what he could save out of the wreck.
Fiist, there was Christ Decker’s full blood-
ed Leghorn ram, killed by a kick from old
Bob. @hrist would claim full value for
the ram. Upon examining the ram he
found it still breathing, but it had a frac-
tured skull. Prompt to act, the doctor
had his surgical instruments out in a
trice, and within 10 minutes he had that
ram’s skull trepanned, using the name
plate of the buggy for a plate. As soon as
the pressure was removed from the ram’s
brain, by removing the bones, the ram re-
covering and appeared to be thankful to
the doctor for saving his life.
Christ Decker came along, and after hear-
ing of the morning’s adventure, and find-
ing the ram all right, he loaded the doctor,
bear and buggy into his wagon and took
them home. Sometime afterwards the
doctor presented Christ Decker with a bill
for trepanning that ram’s head for an
amount which Christ alleges was sufficient
to pay all repairs to the doctor’s buggy and
harness, with a little additional to compen-
sate for Old Bob’s fright.
Twisted.
From the New York Tribune.
Johnny—1It was a wintry day the last
time I went to grandma’s. It blowed and
it—
Mother—It blowed is not proper. Say
it blew.
Johnny—1It blew and snew awful.
——To cure a cough or cold in one day
take Krumrine’s Compound Syrup of Tar.
If it fails to cure money refunded. 25cts.
says that after seeing that ram in action he |
had no further doubts which is the butt end |
any further interest in the proceedings. A
few kicks and a jump cleared old Bob of |
When Poe was thrown out he lauded ‘all |
{what Hood's
Rope Walker Blondin Dead.
The Hero of Niagara Passes Away Near London.
Blondin, the rope walker, is dead.
Blondin, was the stage, or rather tight
rope, name of Jean Francois Granele, who
won world-wide fame thirty-seven years
ago crossing the Niagara Falls chasm on a
tiht-rope.
Prior to this wonderful feat, Blondin
had been only a gymnast, as his father was
before him. He conceived the idea of con-
quering Niagara with his balancing pole,
and came quietly over from France and
studied the ground. Then he startled the
world by the mere announcement of what
he was going to do, and laid the world
prostrate at his feet by doing it.
But that was not enough. Blondin next
dressed himself up in a way that made him
look like an ape of prize fighter proportions,
and in this guise scampered over the rope,
cutting up all sorts of monkey antics on
the way—hanging by his toes, skinning
the cat and othersimilar playful capers, all
in midstream. After that he tottered gay-
ly over his rope wheeling a wheelbarrow
before him as he went. But his culminat-
ing feat was when he walked over with an
ablebodied man hanging to his back. The
name of the hero who took that “exhilerat-
ing ride is now unknown to fame. =
There were two or three things about
Blondin’s walking which went to make up
the secret of his success. One was that he
never unsteadied his nerves by the use of
tobacco in any form and the other that he
always put up his rope himself. But the
great secret of his skill, he used to say, lay
simply in the fact that he did not want to
fall. This was his laughing explanation
when asked to reveal the mystery. What-
ever the key to this skill is, it certainly
was a good one, for he made something
like 4,000 journeys on the tight rope in
various parts of the world, and had only
one accident and the result of that one was
only a few scratches.
Four years ago when he was 68 years
old, Blondin was still vigorous and as agile
on the tight-rope as he ever was. He ap-
peared in Manchester, England, and among
other bits of mid-air playfulness cooked an
omlet on the tight-rope and passed it down
to the admiring audience below. Of late
years he has lived near London in a pretty
house, which he called Niagara Villa.
Since Blondin’s day several venturesome
spirits have made the journey on a rope
across the Niagara. Clifford Calverly, of
Toronto, broke all previous records as a
tight-rope sprinter over the chasm. His
time from shore to shore was six minutes
and eight seconds, something like half that
of his townsman, Dixon, who was consid-
ered fast at twelve and one-half minutes.
Calverly walked solely for glory and con-
tingent future profits, and got little of
either.
glory there was on
1859.
the 19th of
‘Two Physicians Failed.
The great Blondin secured ail the |
August |
Ratlroad.
In Southern California is found the
realization of a dream of the ancients. Here
are the “Golden Apples of the Hesperides,’
ripening beneath a sky more beautiful
than that of Rome, and in a climate more
perfect than that of Athens. Never in the
wildest flights of his imagination did either
Homer or Hesiod ever conceive of a garden
richer in verdant beauty, more productive
of luscious fruit, or set among more pictur-
esque and lovely surroundings. Here the
rose entwines the orange, and the snow
mantled peaks of the Sierras reflect the
golden glow of the evening twilight.
The last of the Pennsylvania railroad
tours to California will leave New York
and Philadelphia March 27th, stopping at
Chicago, Omaha, Denver, Colorado Springs
and the “Garden of the Gods,’”’ and Salt
Lake City. Tourists will travel by special
train of Pullman palace cars, going and re-
turning via any route within nine months,
Regular one-way or round trip tickets will
be issued®by this tour in connection with a
special ticket covering Pullman accommo-
dations, meals and other tour features go-
ing. The latter ticket will be sold at the
following rates : From New York, Phila-
delphia, Harrisburg or Altoona, $60.00 ;
Pittsburg, $58.00.
Apply to ticket agents, tourist agent,
1196 Broadway, New York, or Geo. W.
Boyd, assistant general passenger agent,
Broad street station, Philadelphia, stating
return route desired. 42-9-4¢.
Mrs. Cleveland at Princeton.
She Arrived There Yesterday Afternoon, Accompa-
nied by her Mother and Her Three Children.
PRINCETON, N. J., Feb 29.—Mrs. Cleve-
land arrived at Princeton this afternoon in
a special car. She was accompanied by her
mother and three children, besides maids
and other servants, making in all a_house
of ten. Professor West, of the university,
met them at the station and assisted them
to carriages, which conveyed the party to
the old Slidell mansion, which will hence-
forth be the permanent home of President
Cleveland.
Mrs. Cleveland was very plainly dressed
in a brown traveling suit and wore an al-
pine hat of the same color, all of which was
most becoming to her. The baggage which
came with the party consisted of ten trunks,
besides a nnmber of valises. There were
also several cages containing birds and
other pets, which will enliven the nursery
that has been fitted up for the little ones.
Mis. Cleveland will remain in Princeton
only a few days at present. After getting
the house in order, she will go to Washing-
ton in time for the reception of Mr. and
But Hood's Sarsaparilla Perfectly and Permanently |
Cured. —A Child wns Losing Flesh and was Con- |
i come Secretary of Agriculture?’
tinually Crowing Worse.
The anxiety of parents who see a child
1 SON.
gradually wasting and failing in health is |
known only to those who have been through
this experience.
monials written in favor of Hood's Sar-
saparilla. Health in place of sickness,
strength instead of weakness, happiness
succeeding despair cause the gratitude
which prompt thousands of people to tell
Sarsaparilla has done for
them. The following is an illustration :
“My youngest son was strong and healthy
up to the ageof 14 months and from that
time we could see that he was
FAILING EVERY DAY.
trouble was due to worms. He treated
| him for this, butstill he was getting worse.
The gratitude of such |
parents has prompted many of the testi- | ° { )
| the Windy ity something to storm aboat.
Mrs. MeKinley, and later will return to
the new home with Mr. Cleveland.
A Boy's Chances Spoiled.
Farnier’s Boy—*‘‘Father, why can not I
rise in the world the same as other men ?
For instance, why can not I some day be-
Old Farmer—*“Too late, too late, my
You know too much about farmin’.”’
——Washington Hesing, the postmaster
of Chicago, has just given the women of
In an address recently delivered before the
League of Christian Citizens Mr. Hesing
‘said : “Joliet has more prisoners as the re-
sult of millinery bills and dressmakers’ ac- |
counts aud the greed of wives that it has |
from the effeet of the saloons.”’
To cure a cough or cold in onc day
take Krumrine's Compound Syrup of Tar.
I called in another doctor, and the child
wus under his treatment for sometime, hut
did not get any better and continued los-
ing flesh.
I collected herbs, myself, and
yr . rhe . i 1 nila 4 . (> OTE ol
We called in a physician and he said the | 1f it fails to cure money refunded.
25cts.
——Subseribe for the WATCMAN.
New Advertisements.
gave him medicine, and finally I told my |
wife that a change of air would do him
good. On the 2nd of January we took him
to Ohio. We took a bottle of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla along with us and began giv-
ing him this medicine. After he had taken
the first bottle we
COULD SEE A CHANGE
he could eat better and his sleep was not so
much disturbed. I continued giving him
Hool’s Sarsaparilla until he had taken
four hottles and he was then like a new
being.
He has continued to improve since |
TT
PHILADELPHIA
RECORD,
after a career of nearly twenty years of unin-
terrupted growth, is justified in claiming that
the standard first established by its founders is
the one true test of
A PERFECT NEWSPAPER
that time and to-day is as lively as a |
cricket.”’
Freedom, Pa.
Pope Leo's Anniversary.
On Tuesday last, March 2nd, ope Leo
XIIT celebrated the eighty-seventh an- |
Vincenzo Gioac-
niversary of his birth.
chino Pecci was born in 1810, at Carpineto,
in the diocese of Adagni, in the State of
the Church. Anne Prosperi, his mother,
was (it is interesting to note) a descendent
of the celebrated Cola di Rienzi, ‘‘the last
of the Roman tribunes.”’ Young Pecci was
received into the priesthood on the 23rd
of December, 1837, nearly sixty years ago.
He rose to be Bishop in Perugia, where he
remained for two and thirty years, and
became Cardinal. In 1877 he was nomin-
ated by Pope Pius, he was called upon to
act as head of the Church for temporal and
momentary purposes, and he superintended |
the arrangements for the conclave which
ended in his elevation to the Papal throne,
in April 1878.
Pope Leo X1II has thus reigned as the
Supreme Pontiff for a period of nearly |
nineteen years. Heis one of the oldest
Popes to sit in the chair of Saint Peter ;
and he has been one of the best. He was
born and bred in the keen air of the Vol-
scian Hills, a Southern Italian, but of the
mountains. As F. Marion Crawford has
said : *‘He he still about him something of |
the hill people. He has the long, lean,
straight, broad-shouldered frame of the
true mountaineer, the marvelously bright |
the eagle features, the well-knit
eye,
growth of strength traceable even in old
age.”’ And all the civilized world, Roman
Catholic or otherwise, send happy
greetings to this venerable ecclesiast, who
is one of the saintliest Pontiff’s that ever
filled he Holy Chair.—Record.
Business Notice.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
Thomas White, Park Quarries,
To publish all the news promptly and sneeinetly
and in the most readable form, without elision
, or partisan bias; to discuss its significance
{with frankness, to keep an open eye for public
abuses, to give besides a complete record of
current thought, fancies and discoveries in all
departments of human activity in its daily edi-
tions of from 10 to 14 pages, and to provide the
whole for its patrons at the nominal price of
ONE CENT—that was from the outset, and will
continue to be the aim of “THE RECORD.”
THE PIONEER
one cent morning A in the United
States, “The Record” still leads where others
follow.
Witness its unrivaled average “daily circulation
exceeding 160,000 copies, and an average ex-
ceeding 120,000 copies for its Sunday editions,
while imitations of its plan of publication in
every important city of the country testify to
the truth of the assertion that in the quantity
and quality of its contents, and in the price at
which it is sold “The Record” has established
the standard by which excellence in journalism
must he measured.
THE DAILY EDITION
| of “The Record” will be sent by mail to any ad-
i dress for §3 00 per year or 25 cents per month.
THE DAILY AND SUNDAY
editions together, which will give its readers
the best and freshest information of all that is
; going on in the world every day in the year in-
cluding holidays, will be sent for $4.00 a year or
35 cents per month.
Address
THE RECORD PUBLISHING CO.
Record Building,
Tour to California via Pennsylvania |
Medicai.
Medical.
A WINTER BATH
IN WHITE RIVER. Se
What Came of Breaking Through the Ice in a Wisconsin River in February.
Five years ago last winter, there was con-
siderable commotion on the banks of the
White River, Wisconsin, as a young man
named E. N. Halleck, had broken through
the ice, and was for some moments lost to
view. It was not long, however, before
Mr. Halleck came in sight again, and by
artistic means was fished from the fluid and
restored to society. If the ducking had
been all, it would have been well, but un-
fortunately, the young gentleman contract-
ed a heavy cold, resulting in chronic rheu-
matism, complicated with disease of kid-
ney and urinary organs.
‘For six months,”’ writes Mr. Halleck,
“I was laid up, and not able to do* any-
thing. During this time I suffered with
pains in the stomach and small of the back,
and headache, urination was frequent and
painful, my heart’s action was increased,
and I had aches all over my body, and was
generally used up. Then I was able to go
out, but was a confirmed invalid, and for
nearly four years I was in that condition,
and expected then that I should always be
disabled for nothing that I took gave me
any relief.
‘In December, 1895, I read an advertise-
ment about Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and
on speaking of it to Mrs. A. E. Derby, she
strongly urged that I should take them, as
she said she believed they would cure me.
I had been under the physicians’ care for
over two years, but as they did me no good
I did not ask their advice about taking
these pills, but laid in a supply and began
to take them. In about ten days I began
to experience substantial relief, and con-
tinued to take them for four months, by
which time I was soon cured. The first
From the Chronicle, Chicago, Il.
benefit I obtained was a less frequent de-
sire to urinate, and lessening of that dread-
ful pain in the back, which ceased alto-
gether very soon. My stomach became
comfortable, and my Leart’s action normal.
After the first break my recovery was rapid
and to-day I flatter myself I am a sound
man, and able to attend to my business
better than I ever could before.”’
(Signed) E. N. HALLECK.
I, E..N. Halleck, do hereby certify, that
ti¢e foregoing statement signed by me is
true. E. N. HALLECK.
STATE OF ILLINOIS, }
Cook COUNTY.
I, John T. Derby, a Notary Publicin and
for the County and State, de hereby certify
that E. N. Halleck, whose name is signed
to the foregoing statement, is personally
known to me, and that he did in my pres-
ence and of his own free will and accord,
sign and swear to the same.
[sEAL.] JouN T. DERBY, Notary Public.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
are not a patent medicine in the sense that
names implies. They were first compound-
ed as a prescription and used as such in
general practice by an eminent physician.
So great was their efficacy that it was deem-
ed wise to place them within the reach of
all. They are now manufactured by the
Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenec-
tady, N. Y., and are sold in boxes (never
in loose form by the dozen or hundred, and
the public are cautioned against numerous
imitations sold in this shape) at 50 cents a
box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be
had of all druggists or direct by mail from
Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co.
42-9
Casteria.
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POR INPAXIR ARD CHIVDRER
DO NOT BE IMPOSED UPON, BUT INSIST
UPON HAVING CASTORIA, AND SEE THAT
| THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
| CHAS. H FLETCHER
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THE CENTAUR Co,
41-15-1m v1 Murray St, N. Y.
New Advertisemnets.
5 A T careselling a good grade of tea—green
—black or mixed at 28cts per. Ib. Try it.
SECHLER & CO.
FEUBS, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS,
BASKETS.
SECHLER & CO.
BROOMS, BRUSH
IES,
CHOM ACK I pees
THE RECOGNIZED =%
SOLD 70 EVERY PART OF THE
THE GOLD
STRINGS
——HIGHEST HONOR
Schomacker Piano.
PREFERRED BY ALL
EVER ACCORDED
STANDARD PIANO OF THE WORLD,
ESTABLISHED 1838.
GLOBE.
THE LEADING ARTISTS.
Emit a purer sympathetic tone, proof against atmospheric action
extraordinary power and durability with great beauty and even-
ness of touch.
instrument now manufactured in this or any other country in the world.
Pre-eminently the best and most highly improved
ANY MAXER—
UNANIMOUS VERDICT.
1851—Jury Group, International Expdsition—1876, for Grand, Square, and Upright
Pianos.
Tlustrated eatalozue mailed on application
SCHOMACKER PIANO-FORTE MANUFACTURING CO.,
WARERGOMS: 1109 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
12 East Sixteenth Street, New York.
145 and 147 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.
11-14 1015 Olive Street, St. Louis.
Miss S. OHNMACHT, Agent,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Fac-simile signature of Chas. H. Fletcher is on ;
the wrapper of every bottle of 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.
hi
42-8-3t Philadelphia, Pa.
China Hall. China Hall.
i WILKINSON'S CHINA HALL. . . te
| LARGER 1
| FINER
| DAINTIER | than ever is our Stock of China Ware.
| COMPLETER
i CHEAPER |
see the finest display in Centre county.
1-49
Wwe
We have some elegant selections for the Winter Season. Just What You Want is What we Have.
High Street
Come and
CHINA HALL,
° BELLEFONTE, P
oe
A LB AS SM SN A MEE
CLA me
Viste
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