Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 26, 1897, Image 3

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    . Demoralif atdpn
Bellefonte, Pa., March 26, 1897.
FARM NOTES.
—A fruit plant with roots exposed to sun
and wind will die as soon as a fish out of
water.
—~Cultivate, hoe or rake around plants
immediately after setting, and every few
days thereafter throughout the season.
—Horse radish needs to be dug early in
the spring to be of much value. So soon as
green growth begins the root becomes tough
and stringy.
—If there are farmers who have never
grown cauliflower they should doso and
discover what a luxury they have been neg-
lecting.
—When hogs die from cholera the safest
plan is to burn rather than bury the car-
(cass and all that has been in contact with
it. ~ Fire is a certain purifier.
—Date palms (from the seeds), pine ap-
ples (from the crowns of the fruit) and
other tropical plants can be grown, but will
die when frost approaches. They are orna-
mental novelties.
—Fifty bushels of sunflower seeds to the
acre is a fair yield, and this will produce
fifty gallons of oil worth $1 a gallon.
When mixed with other grains they are
relished by all farm animals and are espec-
ially good for fowls.
—March and April are months during
which sudden changes occur. Cold rains
and dampness cause more disease than the
severe weather of winter. Shelter and dry
_quarters are more important now than at
anyother period of the year.
—A Southern farmer says that good re-
sults are obtained by feeding Russian sun-
flower seeds to horses, hogs and other stock.
The feeding of this requires an exercise of
judgment, as the seeds are very rich, and
should be mixed or combined with bran.
—1\When closing up a gap in a wire fence
through which horses or colts have been ac-
customed to pass use a board for top of
wire by means of staples. If this is neg-
lected the animals will probably run into
the fence and you may possibly lose the
best one as a result.
—Sour food causes scours in pigs, and
when food has been cooked its liability to
become sour is greater than when raw.
For the first month the food of the sow
should be of the best quality, and no food
should be left over in the trough after she
has eaten.
—A Missouri fruit farm contains 105,000
peach trees, 50,000 of apple, 3,000 of pear,
3,000 of plum, 3,000 of cherry and 40 acres
of berries. The owner states that fruit
pays better than general farming, and he
has, therefore, entered into the business
largely. :
—For starting early tomato and other
plants in house or hotbed use sods cut in
three-inch cubes or old tin cans with sold-
er melted off or little paper boxes which
have only tobe wet when placed in the
ground, transplanting can then be done
easily and well without checking the
growth.
—The fields located at a distance from
the barnyard must not be slighted when
the manure is being distributed. If the
fields near the barn receive the larger share
the rear fields will gradually lose in fertil-
ity. The cost of hauling is quite an item
and for that reason farmers should use more
fertilizers.
—It is not necessary to plant onion sets
by pressing them into the ground one at a
time roots down. Mark off the rows, drop
the sets and pull a little dirt over them,
the furrow for the sets to be not deeper
than two inches They will grow right
away after being planted in the ground,
the cost of putting out the sets being but
little compared with the old method of
sticking each set in its place.
—Good barnyard manure worked into
the soil and a top dressing of wood ashes
will furnish the soil with nitrogen, potash,
phosphoric acid and humus, all necessary
to vigorous plant growth. Cultivation
will conserve moisture, and with these
conditions present good crops will result.
Do not mix the manure and ashes before
applying. If you do the nitrogen, the
most valuable constituent, will escape.
—Egg plants, tomatoes and peppers
should be in every garden, but to have them
bear early they should be now well under
way in hotbeds, or a few may be grown in
a box in the window of the dwelling house.
Egg plants are very tender, and should not
be put out too soon, as the potato beetle
prefers them to all other foods, eating the
whole plant, including the fruit. Toma-
toes and peppers are also tender, but are
more easily grown than egg plants.
—C Currants and gooseberries are not dif-
ficult to grow compared with some fruits,
and they always bring good prices because
less abundant than other kinds. Currants
can be left on the bushes one or two weeks
after ripening, which permits of picking
raspberries before harvesting the currants.
The bushes are attacked by insect enemies,
which can easily be kept in check with
careful attention and when a full crop is
secured there is a good profit therefrom.
—W. Z. Hutchinson, of Flint, Mich.,
one of the most successful bee keepers in
the country believes in clipping the wings
of the queen a= a means of reducing the la-
bor and anxicsy of the swarming season.
The hiving of bees he says, is a very simple
operation when there is oy one swarm to
handle, and this has hung itself within
easy reach of the bee keeper, but in a large
apiary where several swarms are often in
the air at once and there are tall trees near
by the getting of all the bees in the hives
in the right quantities, each with its queen,
is no slight task.
There is only oue way in which these
hosts of excited little bodies can be con-
trolled and that is through the queen. A
swarm will not leave the hive except with
a queen, and if the queens’ wings are
clipped, or there is a trap at the entrance
to the hive to prevent her escape there will
be no chasing after or losing of a swarm.
The bees will stay in the yard and can be
brought within reach of the bee master ;
the absence of the queen and the desire for
one gives him the control of the bees.
In a large apiary where queens are al-
Jowed to accompany swarms water thrown
from a pail by a fountain pump is the great
agent by which bees can be controlled.
Not that it should be thrown into a swarm
of bees, but alongside of it. Bees do not
like water and edge away from it, and can
thus be driven in any direction, and will
soon look for an alighting place.
Unless the queen is clipped or the queen
trap is used there should be no tall trees
near the apiary, as the swarms will surely
Wlips he would also be doing a double
go where it is difficult to get them.
Jackson and Walling.
Both Murderers Died With Admissions That
Their Confessions Were Falsehoods—The Gallows
Scene.
NEWPORT, Ky., March 21.—Scott Jack-
son and Alonzo Walling, were hanged at
11:30 yesterday for the murder of Pearl
Bryan on January 31, 1896. The con-
demned men spent a quiet night and were
out at 5,30.
Early in the morning Jackson had Pas-
tor Lee, the death watch, Walling and all
stand up and declared that Walling was
not guilty. This proceeding stopped the
march to the gallows, as sheriff Plummer
called in Walling’s attorney and they wired
Gov. Bradley. Then Walling dropped a,
note from the jail window to the newspa-
per men saying : ‘Jackson has freed me.”
Walling then made a touching appeal
that he be permitted to see Mayor Rhi-
nock. The request was granted. When the
mayor came in he was asked to sign a dis-
patch to the Governor to give him a re-
prieve for 30 days. Walling said : ‘‘Jack-
son can save my life if he will, but he
won’t. I have tried in every way to get
him to do it, but he will not. He ought
to save me.’"
“Now, Lon,” said Mayor Rhinock, I
want you to tell me where Pearl Bryan’s
head is.”
“Mayor Rhinock, before God, whom I
must soon meet, I do not know, I will not
lie now.”’
After a later consultation with the pris-
oners Judge Helm told Jackson that he
must hang, and if he allowed Walling to
hang with him he would have to answer to
his Maker for a double crime. He also im-
pressed Jackson with the fact that if he
went before his Maker with a lie on his
wrong. He then gave Jackson five min-
utes in which to yake up his mind, leav-
ing him unattended by the death watch.
At the expiration of the time Jackson
said that he could not say that Walling
was innocent. This settled the fate of
both prisoners. At 11:20 they started to
the scaffold. ;
Just before leaving the cell Walling said :
“I will tell you now at the last moment
of my life that I was not there and I am
innocent of the whole crime. Jackson has
said as much, but it seems it will not save
me. I cannot say any more. I will say
no more on the scaffold.”
At the scaffold the prisoners both stood
with bowed heads, saying a prayer, Wall-
ing’s eyes closed, Jackson’s open. When
Rev. Mr. Lee finished the prayer Jackson
bade farewell. Walling whispered ‘‘Go,
£o, go.”
Both died in great agony. Both were
strangled, the necks not having been brok-
en. Jackson was dead in six minutes.
Walling died first. Just before the bodies
were taken down the crowd rushed up, but
was ordered back by sheriff Plummer.
Both men were hanged simultaneously
from a double trap that fell on pulling the
lever. They declared that their confessions
were - false and made for effect upon the
Governor. There was a great crowd pres-
ent, but the militia and police kept order.
Pearl Bryan, the daughter of a wealthy
farmer near Greencastle, Ind., was a belle
in that town, and had been indiscreet, pre-
sumably with Will Wood, as the dead men
alleged. On January 27th, 1896, Pearl
Bryan left her home ostensibly to visit
friends in Indianapolis, but instead went
direct to Cincinnati to meet Scott Jackson,
then a student at the Ohio College of Den-
tal Surgery. Jackson failed to keep his
appointment with the girl, and after wan-
dering about the city she went to the In-
diana house and registered under an as-
sumed name. Thenext day Jackson called
to see her. On Wednesday, January 29th,
she left the Indiana house with Jackson
and a fellow student, Alonzo Walling, and
from that day until her headless body was
found at Fort Thomas nothing is positively
known as to the movements of the trio. It
was testified at the trial that George Jack-
son, a negro cabman, had driven the three
to near Fort Thomas, where the girl ‘was
decapitated. Her head has never been
found.
Jackson and Walling were arrested at
their boarding house in Cincinnati,
charged with the murder. . At the prelimi-
nary examination of the prisoners, and lat-
ter, while standing over the girl’s corpse
each accused the other of having killed the
girl. Jackson admitted that he was ac-
quainted with Pearl Bryan, but denied any
knowledge of the murder. Walling said
he did not know her. The trials were sen-
sational and resulted in separate convic-
tions. Each has made numerous confess-
ions and statements, the latest one a joint
effort, which blamed Dr. George F. Wag-
ner, of Bellevue, Ky., now an insane man,
with the crime. This, as were all the others
were disbelieved.
Jackson was 27 years old, the only son
of Mrs. John Jackson, a respected widow
of Greencastle, Indiana. His sister is mar-
ried to Dr. Edwin Post, professor of Latin
in DePauw university, Indiana. Walling
was 20 years old, son of Mrs. Walling, of
Oxford, Ohio.
Had Him There.
‘They say your father used to drive a
mule.”
“Who told you ?”’
‘‘One of my ancestors.’’
“Just what I expected. I always told
father that mule was smart enough to
talk.”’—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
"huntsman’s
Cheap Homes in' a Prosperous Country.
It was something of a surprise to the
newspaper people who lately attended the
meeting of the National Editorial Associa-
tion, at Galveston, Texas, and who were so
liberally and handsomely treated by the
St. Louis and San Francisco R. R. Co. to
learn that there are still many thousands
of acres of Frisco grant lands for sale in
Missouri. The State is hardly ever
thought of now as one of the young front-
ier commonwealths, so well provided is it
with railways, factories, large cities and
the other elements of progress and growth.
But it is learned that the wise western
policy in early days of aiding and encour-
aging capital to build railways through
vast reaches of unoccupied fertile lands was
one of the measures adopted by Missouri.
Thus her government lands were put to a
practical purpose. The St. Louis & San
Francisco railroad has some 120,000 acres
of land grant left. We get a view of speci-
mens of these from the car windows.. They
lie alongside of and are mixed up with the
famous wheat, corn and apple lands of Mis-
souri. No wonder the State is getting on
with such rapid strides! The founders
counted well. The heirs of her munificent
public domain, the railways, have met lib-
erality with even greater liberality, and
any one of our editorial party could step off
the Frisco train into possession of some of
the road’s lands at astonishingly low prices.
Think of the best land at from $2.00 to
$5.00 per acre. Apart from what the soil
can do in the way of grain, grasses and
those famous apples, one has a chance, if
he is as lucky as many others who have
gone before, to dig up zine, lead or coal.
Southwest Missouri has all of these. The
editorial reflections are soothed to rest in
contemplation of all this. Here is a haven
of peaceful release from a life’s toil on the
tripod ; a place where one may neither
freeze to death during bleak December nor
scorch under an August sun. There isa
strangely interesting variety of country,
scenery and climate along our route from
St. Louis to Texas. There can be no won-
der now at the wide popularity of this
route to the South. Between St. Louis
and Springfield, Mo., the latter of marvel-
ous growth to now 30,000 people, we cross
the Ozark Mountain range. These pictur-
esque slopes and steep declivities are the
paradise. The everlasting
mountgin streams furnish all the kinds of
fish native to such localities. Down in the
valleys are snug homes which boast of rich
delta lands, no mosquitoes or malaria, and
pure mountain air. Between Monett,
where the Frisco’s California route leads
off west, and Fort Smith, Ark., we cross
the Boston Mountains, and further south
the Kiamichi Highlands, whose scenery is
bewitching, and in some spots wild in its
grandeur. Streams, wild fowl, fish, deer
and smaller game complete any picture fan-
cy may draw.
Monett is a Frisco town. It is young
and strong. The road built it and is doing
much for it. It is new and fresh. Here is
the Frisco’s junction. We see passengers
getting aboard of the California-bound
train, which we learn passes through Neos-
ho, the biggest United States Government
fish hatchery west of the Mississippi River.
This novelty would have given us great
pleasure had we time to inspect it. So
would it have been worth our while to see
something of the noted lead and zinc mines
on the route west of Neosho. But even at
this early stage of our trip over an interest-
creating route we find we cannot ‘‘do’’ all
noteworthy points and take in every engag-
ing sight on and near the Frisco System.
The memory of the newspaper man,
trained as it is, almost despairs of recollect-
ing for purposes of correspondence all the
things we are to hear and see.
Let us hasten to stick a pin right here,
however, and ejaculate fervently that we
will not forget that feast Fred Harvey gave
us at Monett. As the Company’s perma-
nent manager of food supply en route and
as Harvey ‘himself’ he is the ‘‘only peb-
ble on the beach.’’
Asker (to fisher who is returning empty-
handed from a fishing trip)—What do you
call your dog ?
Fisher—Fish.
Asker—Why, that’s a funny name for a
dog. What made you give it to him?
Fisher—Because he won't bite.
——Read the best and most reliable
news. It will be found in the WATCH-
MAN.
Business Notice.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
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.
Bicycles. Bicycles.
To 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
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| :
? W HY?
ol YES, “WHY DO BJCYCLISTS BECOME °
o KEATING
I
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ol ENTHUSIASTS?
°
|
ol They note the quick response as the pedal is touched, the smoothness of
| motion as they glide along, the perfect trueness of the frame under the hardest S
straing, and then discover why we advised them to
°
°
| RIDE A KEATING. 2
i Be — — —— ————————————————
°
| No Swaying Frames - - - - - ©
of No Binding of Bearings - - - - -
SEE THAT CURVE. S
® Catalogue telling about the new
double roller chain, free. |". . . . ©
o!
| KEATING WHEEL CO.,
| MIDDLETOWN, Ct. ©
* Formerly Holyoke, Mass. {
| Dealers Wanted, Mention WATCHMAN. i
: 42-7- 3m . le
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‘COMFORT, SPEED AND
42-10-7Tm
Through Mud and Rain.
Hardships of the Union Army After the Battle of
the Wilderness.
General Horace Porter draws the follow-
ing picture of wartime experiences in his
“Campaigning With Grant’’ in The Cen-
tury : The continual rain was most dis-
heartening, On May 16th, Grant wrote to
Halleck : *“We have had five days’ almost
constant rain, without any prospect yet of
its es oR The roads have now be-
come so impassable that ambulances with
wounded men can no longer run between
here and Fredericksburg. All offensive
operations must necessarily cease until we
can have 24 hours of dry weather. The
army is in the best of spirits and feels the
greatest confidence in ultimate success.
* * * The elements alone have sus-
pended hostilities.”
In the Wilderness thearmy had to strug-
gle against fire and dust ; now it had to
contend with rain and mud. An ordinary
rain, lasting for a day or two, does not em-
barrass troops, but when the storm contin-
ues for a week it becomes one of the most
serious obstacles in a campaign. The men
can secure no proper shelter and no com-
fortabie rest ; their clothing has no chance
to dry, and a tramp of a few miles through
tenacious mud requires as much exertion
as an ordinary day’s march. Tents become
saturated and weighted with water, and
draft animals have increased loads and
heavier roads over which to haul them.
Dry wood cannot be found ; cooking be-
comes difficult ; the men’s spirits are af-
fected by the gloom, and even the most
buoyant natures become disheartened. It
is much worse for an army acting on the
offensive, for it has more marching to do,
being compelled to’ move principally on ex-
terior lines.
Staff officers had to labor day and night
during the present campaign in making
reconnoissances and in cross questioning
natives, deserters, prisoners and fugitive
negroes in an attempt to secure data for the
purpose of constructing local maps from
day to day. As soon as these were fin-
ished they were distributed to the sub-or-
dinate commanders. Great confusion arose
from the duplication of the names of hous-
es and farms. Either family names were
particularly scarce in that section of the
state” or else the people were united by
close ties of relationship and country cous-
ins abounded to a confusing extent. So
many formhouses in some of the localities
were occupied by people of the same name
that when certain farms were designated
in orders serious errors arose at times from
mistaking one place for another.
Tour to California via Pennsylvania
Ral ad,
ilroad.
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. 42-9-4t. |
——The two new engines constructed '
for the Northern Pacific Western mountain |
service, the largest engines in the world, |
have reached Helena, Mont. !
New Advertisements.
; i
Tee COAST LINE TO MACI.INAC:
i
TAKE THE 7 ’ |
D. &C.
MACKINAC |
DETROIT
T0 PETOSKEY
CHICAGO
NEW STEEL PASSENGER STEAMERS
The Greatest Perfection yet attained in FBoat
Construction—Luxurious Equipment, Artistic
Furnishing, Decoration and Fificient Service, in-
suring the highest degree of
SAFETY
Four Trips PER WEEK BETWEEN
TOLEDO, DETROIT AND MACKINAC
PETOSKEY, ‘‘THE S00,”” MARQUETTE
AND DULUTH.
Low Rates to Picturesque Mackinac and re-
turn, including meals and Berths. rom Cleve-
land $18 ; from Toledo, $15; from Detroit, $13.50.
DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE. :
BETWEEN DETROIT and CLEVELAND
Connecting at Cleveland with earliest Trains
for all points East, South and Southwest and at
Detroit for all points North and Northwest.
SUNDAY TRIPS JUNE, JULY, AUGUST AND SEPT. ONLY.
EVERY DAY BETWEEN |
CLEVELAND, PUT-IN-BAY and |
TOLEDO.
Send for illustrated Pamphlet. Address
A. A, SCHANTZ, G. P. A.
DETROIT, MICH., |
THE DETROIT & CLEVELAND STEAM
NAV. CO. .
Medical.
Medical.
ST VITUS
VANQUISHED.
What Cured Little Stanley Nichol of Chorea.
From the Republican Journal, Ogdensburg, N. Y.
A letter was lately received at the office
of the Republican-Journal from Hammond
to the effect that the cure of an extraordi-
nary severe case of St. Vitus’ dance had
been effected on the person of little Stanley
Nichol, the eight-year-old son of Mrs.
Charles Nichol of that village.
A reporter was accordingly dispatched in
that direction who, after some inquiry,
found Mrs. Nichol’s residence about a mile
outside the village. Mrs. Nichol said :
“A little over a year ago my boy, Stan-
ley Nichol, who is now only eight years
old, alarmed me one day by being taken
with a strange gurgling in his throat. Af-
ter the first the attacks became quite fre-
quent. Stanley did not complain of any
pain, but said that he could not help mak-
ing the noise. At that time there was a
New York doctor stopping in the village
who was a specialist on throat and nasal
diseases. I took my son to him and after
a careful examination he said that there
was nothing the matter with the boy’s
throat. The gurgling in his opinion was
caused by a nervous contraction of the mus-
cles of the throat. He asked who our fam-
ily physician was and said that he would
consult with him before he prescribed.
‘Stanley rapidly grew worse. He was
always a sickly boy. One day I noticed
that he was jerking his arm up in a very
peculiar manner. A few days later he
seemed to lose control of his legs, first one
and then the other would be pulled up and
then straightened out again. He was a
perfect bundle of nerves and was rapidly
losing all control of himself. When eating
at the table or drinking, his arm would of-
ten twitch so as to spill what he was drink-
ing. One day he scared me terribly by
throwing back his head and rolling his
eyes up so that only the white parts showed.
I took him to our family physician -who
prepared some medicine for him. He took
it and commenced to improve. The dose,
however, had to be increased and Stanley
rebelled against taking it. It was very dis-
agreeable medicine and I don’t blame the
boy for not wishing to take it.
“Our physician went to New York city
on business and while he was away the
medicine became exhausted and we could
get no more. Stanley was still very bad.
About that time I read about a little girl
who had heen cured of St. Vitus’ dance by
taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. I thought
I would try them and procured a box. I fol-
lowed the directions that came with the pills
and gave only half a pill at a dose. I did
not see much improvement and increased
the dose to a whole pill. The effect was
noticed in a day. Stanley immediately
commenced to get better and did not object
to taking the pills as he had the other medi-
cine. He took seven boxes of the pills and
to-day appears to he perfectly well. He
discontinued taking them some time ago.
He weighs nearly fifteen pounds more than
he did and is strong and hearty. A year
ago we took him out of school but he is so
much better now that he is going to begin
again this fall.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
contain, in a condensed form, all the ele-
ments necessary to give new life and rich-
ness to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are also a specific for trou-
bles peculiar to females, such as suppres-
sions, irregularities and all forms of weak-
ness. They build up the blood, and restore
the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks
In men they effect a radical cure in all cases
arising from mental worry, over-work or
excesses of whatever nature. - Pink Pills
are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) 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 Com-
pany, Schenectady, N. Y. 42-12
Castoria.
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FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
Castoria promotes Digestion, and overcomes
Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhea
and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered
healthy and its sleep natural. Castoria contains
no Morphine or other narcotic property.
“‘Castoria is =o well adapted to children that I
recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. ArcHEr, M. D.,
111 South Oxford St., vn iy NV.
From Joieonal knowledge and observation I
can say that Castoria is a excellent medicine for
children, acting as a laxative and relieving the
LN up bowels and general system very much.
Many mothers have told me of its excellent ef-
fect upon their chiidren.”
Dr. G. C. OsGoop,
Lowell, Mass.
“For several years I have recommended ‘Cas-
toria,” and shall always continue to do so as it has
invariably produced beneficial results,”
EpwiN F. Parpeg, M. D.,
125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City,
“The use of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and its
merits so well known that it seems a work of su-
ererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent
kt who do not keep Castoria within easy
reach.” CARLOS MarTYN, D. D.,
41-15-2y8 New York City.
New Advertisemnets.
We areselling a good grade of tea—green
—black or mixed at 28cts per. Ib. Try it.
_SECHLER & CO.
uss, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS,
BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS.
SECHLER & CO.
Schomacker Piano.
>
QCHOMACKER
THE RECOGNIZED——{
STANDARD PIANO OF THE WORLD,
ESTABLISHED 1838.
SOLD TO EVERY PART OF THE
PREFERRED
THE GOLD
GLOBE.
BY ALL THE LEADING ARTISTS.
Emit a purer sympathetic tone, proof against atmospheric action .
extraordinary power and durability with great beauty and even-
STRINGS
ness of touch.
instrument now manufactured in this or any other country in the world.
Pre-eminently the best and most highly improved
— HIGHEST HONOR EVER ACCORDED ANY MAKER.——
UNANIMOUS VERDICT.
1851—Jury Group, International Exposition—1876, for Grand, Square, and Upright
Pianos.
. Illustrated catalogue mailed on application
SCHOMACKER PIANO-FORTE MANUFACTURING CO.,
N
WARERGOMS: 1109 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
12 East Sixteenth Street, New York.
145 and 147 Wabash Avenue, Chicago.
41-14 1015 Olive Street, St. Louis.
Miss S. OHNMACHT, Agent,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
China Hall.
China Hall.
WILKINSON'S CHINA HALL.
LARGER ]
FINER
DAINTIER | than ever is our Stock of China Ware.
COMPLETER :
CHEAPER |
We have some elegant selections for the Winter Season. Just What You Want is What we Have. Come and
see the finest display in Centre county.
41-49
High Street
CHINA HALL,
PBELLEFONTE, PA.
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