June 18, 1897. FARM NOTES. —IKeep the manure pile free from the rubbish of diseased plants. Dr. Smith of the department of agriculture, mentions a case where the refuse from a melon bed in which there had been some disease (melon wilt), was mingled with the composg heap, and when the infected manure was put on’ the melon beds the following season, dis- astrous results ensued. —The following cure for a hard milk- ing cow is given by C. R. Walker of Ill- inois: Take a chicken feather—from the wing is the best—insert it in the teat, work- ing it gently round and round until it has passed upward an inch or more; then draw it out and proceed with the milking ; this do for a week or more and the eure will be permanent. Do not trim or cut the feather in any way, as the sharp edge will hurt the cow. ww—The tent caterpillars are out in force, and are playing havoc with fruit trees. Fortunately they are easily disposed of. They return to the tent at night and in the early morning, before the sun warms them up, it is easy to pull the tentand its sleep- ing millions out of the crotch of the limb where it is pitched, and drop them intoa can of kerosene or eternally mash them un- der foot. Take care that the last one of the | vermin is dead before leaving the tree. | The - melon Louse.— Whenever a few vines becomes badly infested with the | _melon louse pull up the plants and destroy | or burn them ; kerosene emulsion will. of | cogyse, kill all the lice it reaches, but as the insect confines itself to the underside of the leaves, it is for that reason difficult to reach. In any case do not allow the pest to gain a foothold, for that will mean the end of the crop. As soon as the louse is noticed, and if a good spray pump is not at hand, try dusting thoroughly on the underside of the leaves, as far as possible, with pure hard-wood ashes and fresh air-slaked lime, two parts of the former to -one of the latter, well mixed together ; dust on in the morn-- ing while the dew is present on the leaves. This is also an excellent remedy for many soft insects, as the cabbage and cauliflower worms and others. —The vine louse.—(Phylloxera vesta- trix )—The first visible signs of this on the vines is generally the number of galls or warts on the leaves. These galls bulge out on the under sides of the leaves, forming a cavity from above the mouth of which ap- pears to be drawn together with fine hairs. In this a very minute female insect lays the eggs (50 to 200) which soon hatch, and the young, moving to the young leaves, start by a puncture to suck the juices and thus cause the galls. This sucking, laying and hatching is repeated several times in the ! season, unless every leaf on which galls are | formed is promptly picked off and destroy- | ed by burning. In the fall the louse re- | turns to the roots. There is a difference of | opinion as to there being two distinet types | —root and gall—or whether the leaf gall maker becomes the dreaded root type, which feeds on the juices of the reots, form- ing hard, warty excrescences on them, so that the roots do not perform their func- tions and the vine in two or three years dies of starvation. ; EDUCATING THE COLT. This article is for the general farmer and applies to the average farm colt, for IT make | no pretentions at “*broneho busting’ and | the general farmer has no time for! “hroneks’’. Occasionally a bronck makes | a good work horse, but the percentage of them is so small that it will not pay a tarm- er to waste his time and patience in trying to change the disposition of a ‘buzzard head,” and the handling of the two is as different as their natures. A colt should be governed very much like a child—treating kindly at all times, and be made to mind at all times ; for it is easier to teach subjection at an early age, than to wait until later and have to over- come a vicious habit. The latter may be properly be called breaking. However, as much as 1 dislike the word breaking I will use it for brevity in place of educating or training. When a colt is thoroughly hal- ter broken and can be handled .at will, he has acquired half of his education ; and there is much that can be taught him in the stall, such as the meaning of the words whoa, back etc. He can also become used to the harness, and a colt should never be driven until he thoroughly understands the meaning of the words that command him to stop. go ahead or back. The colt should be bitted thoroughly, or until he will give up the slightest pull of the rein. All that! is required for a biting rig is a bridle with check rein and no blinders, a back pad with check hook, back strap, and crupper, and two lead straps. Fasten a halter ring to the back pad on each side half way up the side and one to the back strap over the hips. Check the colt’s head a reasonable height and fasten a lead strap on each side from the bit ring through the ring on the side to the one over the hips. Turn the colt into any open place where it caunot get into a wire fence or other obstruction, and let it handle it- self at first, if he is always submissive, for if he becomes tired—which he should never be at any time while breaking—he will become a lugger on the bit and lose his spirit. After he becomes used to the bit, put the lines on him and run them "through the rings on his sides. These will keep the lines at proper height and prevent him turning his head &o you. Have an assist- ant take him by the bit to start him. the first time if necessary and if he is tco head- strong put a ‘‘rarey’’ line on him, which is a loop in a three-eighths rope placed on the “lower jaw,—passing the rope over his head and down through the loop. The colt should be well broken to the lines and . then he can be hooked either single or double ; if double put him with a gentle horse that will mind the word and is free to go; if single, to a cart with stout shafts. Never use blinders when breaking, but let the colt see all that is to he seen, and make him accustomed to strange sights and sounds, for it is part of his education and he will be accustomed to strange ob- jects at this time much more readily than he will later. Be careful and. on your guard at all timesand you may avoid many difiiculties that would overtake a careless person. Never go out of your way toavoid ‘any object likely to frighten the colt hut rather seek strange objects and make the colt accustomed to then. Never whip a colt because he is fright- ened for it will only make him worse, and never urge him up to anything that’ fright- | ens him and then let him dodge by it, but | work him up to it gradually and then let | him see that it will not hurt him before he leaves it. Talk to him quietly, for the sound of your voice gives him confidence. If a colt gets too stubborn and ‘fractious throw him with a rope. ' ‘marched ; empires and they were in the days of the Ciesars and all its brief, bright history. | | ‘mighty mining booms in Colorado, Nevada, | | | | SEEN AND HEARD IN MANY PLACES. | Concluded on page 7. ar the most profoundly erudite captain of a | Princeton foot-ball team. The Forum, one of the so-called great Eastern, magazine—a typical exponent of | the Intelligence and Culture to which the | Atlantic wavelets plash perpetual pears of | admiring adoration—recently contained an article on **The Passing of the Boom’ that has attracted more attention than its in- | trinsic merits seem to warrant. It was from the pen ofa well-known and, con- | sidering his longitudinal environments, ‘usually weli-informed writer, himself the | successful manager of a leading periodicalp 1s | Starting out with the bold assumptions | that this country has now heen - fully ex- | plored, its mighty wildernesses subdued, | its Jands settled and brought under culti- | | vation, ifs mines discovered and opened up, | its ‘great’ railways built, its towns aud | tities founded, and all its resources and possibilities revealed, he maintains that. henceforth Americans must adapt them- | selves to the slow-going methods of ou | World peoples ; must ly aside their ro- | mantic and speculative notions and heel come a nation of plodders and teilers and pennyv-savers, modeled generally on the European peasant plan. "And he winds up his pessimistic pronunciamento with the declaration that ‘the day of the boom is past ; this country will never see another.” Papers hostile to the West and to one of its long-recognized modes of development, | have republished the boom-smiting, hoom- squelching diatribe far and wide ; and yet, from its titular headline to its last oracular assertion, it is’arrant nonsense, founded on baldest fiction. Every premise is baseless, ! and every conclusion preposterous. % | * i * \ # * * The Colonel has been asked as an expert to define a hoom—a much-abused word. An answer from him on that subject has the strength of a religious dogma. Here is his reply : What is a boom? In the Western sense it is a rush of people into any region offer- ing new and enhanced possibilities of im- provement in condition or estate. So long as the human heart and its ambitions and longings remain as they are a boom will take place whenever and wherever any new country or section of country is opened. up, presenting new riches of resource and op- 4 portunity ; new advantages of soil, forest. mine or climate, and new and increased chances for energy and enterprise to win fortune speedily. To say that ‘‘the day of the boom is past’’ is to announce that the last great realm of earthly possibility has been explored, and all its treasures laid bare ; that the world’s ultimate mysteries have heen solved and there is no longer an Unknown Land. Could absurdity father | go? The history of humanity began in Asia, and there Christianity had its birth ; and civilization had grown old in Africa, | when Eurcpe was a wilderness of naked barbarians and America had never been dreamt of. They are the old world’s oldest lands. Armies have marched and counter- dynasties have risen and flourished and fallen ; scientists have chipped and delved and sqguabbled ; historians and philosophers have written, prophets and apostles have preached and taught, and poets have sung for untoid ages on their ancient soil ; and to-day ex- ploration has but penetrated the outermost rim of their mighty areas, and their char- | acteristics and capabilities are almost as much matters of romance and conjecture as | | the Ptolomies. A boom, whose possible extent and consequences no mortal in- | telligence can foresee, is now following the Russian transmundane railway into Si- beri, long pictured as an uninhabitable | desert of perpetual snows, howling wolves and frozen prison horrors ; and during the | past eight or ten yearsa hoom such as this generation has never seen surpassed had swept over those desolate South African crags, whence Israel’s royal Wise Man may possibly have obtained the gold that glittered on his grand temple spires in the Judean sunlight of four thousand years ago. Think of it. Daring explorers still groping and fighting their way throuch the coast jungles of the lands of which Moses and Herodotus wrote, and David and Hesiod and Homer sang. Booms just be- | ginning in ‘King Solomon’s Mines,” in the domains of the Queen of Sheba, and on the trails of Tamerlane and Genghis Khan. While a New York magazine scribbler de- clares—and alleged great newspapers in- dorse his action by reproducing it—that exploration is finished, there is nothing | more to be discovered, and “the day of the” boom is past,” in a hemisphere against which the quaint old scows of Columbus drifted but as yesterday. # 3 : % a Now the Colonel comes home again. as witness these words : America is by many centuries the newest | of the great continental divisions of the | elobe, and the American Great West is the newest part of this new wonderland. The grass has hardly sprouted on the graves of Daniel Boone, Merriweather Lewis and | William Clark. ‘The mocecasined footprints of the first white men who ever trod on Western soil have scarcely faded from the | mountains and valleys and plains. The exploration of the West has not begun. | Discovery and boom have marched hand in | hand, and boom has followed boom through | The great agricultural boom, the free lands and free homes hoom in: Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and all the Mississippi and Missouri valleys ; the copper, iron and timber booms in Michigan and Wisconsin ; alifornia’s wonderful gold boom of fifty years ago, and her fruit-growing and town site-platting boom of later days; the | ! | i | | Utah, Idaho and Montana ; the Comstock, Deadwood and Coeur d’Alene, Leadville Cripple Creek © booms ; the Texas and Wyoming cattle-raising booms, and a hundred others have all been grand rushes of population following some new discovery of riches and possibilities, and have all | been potent factors in Western growth and | progress. But the West is still unex- plored and unknown. Its fabulous trea-. sures of metal and mineral are unprospect- | ed and undreamt of. The greatest ines of earth are yet to be opened in this West- ern Jand of miracles and wonders. Moun- tains of gold and silver ore, beside which | all the famed, riches of Ophir and of Ind, | of Golconda and the Comstock Lode will some day sink to beggars’ pence, yet rear their proud heads to heaven, untouched by pick ar spade or drill. The veritable treasure houses of the genii and the gods | vet await the enterprise and muscle of the | sturdy prospectors and miners who are | destined to fire the avarice and the envy | of the world with their Midas-surpassing | wealth of solid ducats. From Alaska to! Nicaragua the whole vast system of Rocky | Mountains and Cordilleras isan almost un- | broken ore and mineral bed. Although, | since the days of the Montezumas and the Incas, thousands of millions have been taken from it, not one ten-thousandth part | of it has ever felt the tap of a prospector’s | | | | { work days and plan during the nights, and | foreign country, but Mr. Bryan found no | speaker. | visited the Senate and subsequently dined | mont. gradual, beginning also with this year, and that the roll will be extinguished in 1945. | | Predictions don’t count in pensions. | nearly six-fold. 1 000,000 a year, and since that time it has { been as high as $145,000,000. a ” Medical. ¥ v © Lyon & Co. : | 1.057 CONTROL OF HER NERVES. ‘ From the Tribune, It issaid that the present generation is living in an era of nervousness. Some at- tribdte the cause to the climate of our country ; if there isan atmospheric effect it certainly is the least of thecauses that pro- duce nervousness. The great freedom en- joyed by the American people is in a large measure to blame for the hung-strung con- dition of our nerves. There is rustle and hustle on every hand. There are excur- sions, picnics, and long journeys. We in our hurry we holt our food, sleep with irregularity, with seldom a thought of our nerves. Mis. C. H. Guise, of 410 Central avenue, East Minneapolis, had the nvisfortune to suffer constantly from nervousness, and her trouble was aggravated by want of sleep. Night after night of sleeplessness had cre- ated a worn out condition and she some- times would jerk and jump unconsciously. In relating her experience to a Zribune representativeggshe said : “I wish 0 to you the great benefit I have derived from Dr. Williams’ Pink} Pills for Pale People. For many months I was afilicted with nervous debility and . N x NN > _ © ©, NY td No, $ 3 Sy . o S NI = = I # MHinnerpolis, Minn. could get no relief, until 1 began using the Pink Pills, the required result came very soon, and I hope I may have the privilege of recommending them to every one suffer- ing as I did, for I am certain the medicine gives instant relief without any bad results. (Signed) “Mgs. C. H. GUISE.” Subscribed and sworn to before me, a No- tary Public. oa T. E. ANDREWS, Nolary Public. : Hennepin Co., Minn. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to fe- males, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. 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, overwork 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 Company, Schenec- tady, NX. Y. > hammer. The surface dirt is hardly broken, | the glittering hoards are scarcely touched. | The great bonanza fortunes are yet to he won! Ina wild and hitherto unheard-of region of the Pacific Northwest discoveries have just been made, and are daily being | made, that bid fair to eclipse all the daz- | zling miracles of the past ; and this Forum | boom-annihilator will only have to live a | few months longer to witness such a boom as the new world has never seen since the California golden days of 1349—if even that is not surpassed. Now vou know what a boomer is and have listened to the king of the race. MEGARGEE in the Phila. Z0mes. ——William J. Bryan has heen speaking this week in the four principal cities of Canada—D>Montreal, Quebec, Ottawa and Toronto. His reception has been of the most generous'and kindly character. It is something new for an American political leader to champion his doctrines in a lack of appreciative hearers. Speaking of his reception at Ottawa, the Dominion capital, a correspondent says : rh At the parliament building he was given a seat on the floor of the house heside the It was a“ private members’ day and proceedings were exceedingly dull. All the cabinet ministers present and the. leader of the opposition went down the gangway and greeted Mr. Bryan. He also with the speaker of the commons, whose | official residence is in the parliament build- | ings. In the évening Mr. Bryan lectured to an audience of about 2,000 assembled in the Rideau skating rink. : The best hall in Montreal was crowded to hear him, and the audience represented the best classes in the city. The applause was enthusiastic, but the correspondent suggests it was for the man and not the principles he advocated. Probably some- thing of both. Crossing the line from Canada, on Thursday Mr. Bryan had an enthusiastic reception and addressed large meetings in rock-ribbed Republican Ver- He is sowing good seed wherever he goes; and the crop will he harvested in {due time. ? ——The noted expert of the war depart- ment, Colonel Ainsworth, who is supposed | . . . 1 to he thé best authority on pension matters estimates the high water mark of the pen- | sion roll will be reached this year; that | | the maximum of the list will he £1,095,62= and he estimates that the decrease will be | Pres- | ident Garfield, when in the house nearly a : quarter of a century ago, stated that the | pension list had then reached the high water mark. Since that prediction of Mr. Garfield the pension list has been increased It cost then about $25,- The agita- tion has commenced for a service pension putting every man on the pension roll who enlisted in the Union army. That will add over half a million to start with. It is likely to pass Congress. The revolu- tionary war ended in 1732. A few pen- sions are still being paid on that account. The rebellion ended in 1865. Its pension roll will last, according . to this precedent, till 1920. Grandpa had a new thermometer, and the first time little Edith saw it she had many questions to ask aboutit ;so when she went home she told papa and mamma that grandpa ‘‘had something to tell how many hots it is 1’ The merit of Hood's Sarsaparilla Is literally written in blood. } It is traced in the vital fluid Of millions of the human race. [ts positive medicinal merit And curative power is written Upon the hearts; and graves upon The minds of thousands ) Of people whom it has cured And given good health When there seemed nothing before Them but darkness and despair. It cures all diseases arising From or promoted by impure. Blood hy its intrinsic merit os The One True Blood Puririer. Business Xotice. Children Cry for Pltcher's Castora. _ 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, ghe cried for Castorig, When she became Miss, she elung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. “of several rods. Tried to Blow Them Up. Dynamite Used in an Attempt to Kill a Kansas Family. A diabolical attempt was made upon the life of Governor Andrew J. Smith, of the National soldiers home at Leavenworth, Kan.,and his wife and daughter, last week, by some one, as yet unknown. Dyna- mite-was employed in the outrage, and the explosion all but demolished the Gov- ernor’s residence. ! ’. Mrs. Smith had a miraculous escape from death, the base of - the explosion being di- rectly beneath her bed chamber. She was cut and bruised by broken glass and pieces of flying bric-a-brac, and is now in a pre- carious condition. Governor Smith and daughter were uninjured. The residence is a scene of wreckage. The brick walls are torn and cracked, one side being almost completely blown out. The windows are shattered, and the debris is scattered over the grounds for a distance The interior is a scene of sonfusicn and destruction. The veterans at the home are standing by Smith manfully, and swear they will lynch the wretch if he be caught. Joseph *V. Oliver, a dishonorably discharged vet- eran, has been arrested by the police. He lad just come to his home after being out | ll nighty His clothes were be-draggled, and he said he was sorry the explosion had not killed the Governor, as he deserved such a fate. A Terrible Record. Melvin Strouse, an Indiana lad, has be- come violently insane as a result of cigarette smoking. His record is 50,000 in five Years, an average of 25 cigarettes per day. Strouse is only 13 years old. €astoria. . 4 BT 0 5.1 4 od) 2 ECL B71 A C AS T OO RT A C A 8S T 6 B 1 Al Cc A 8 T 0 5B 1 A! cee | FOI INFANTS AND CHILDREN. DO NOT BE IMPOSED UPON, BUT INSIST UPON HAVING ASTORIA, AND SEE THAT THE FACSIMILE SIGNATURE OF CHAS: H. FLETCHER IS ON THE WRAPPER. WE SHALL PRO- TECT OURSELVES AND THE PUBLIC AT ALL HAZARDS, XN 4A 8 TT 0 1m 13 cC A-8 TT 0 BE © XA Cc 4A 8 T 06 B.1 8 C 4 8 TT 0 mer XA Cc A 57 or 1X ccc 2 THE CENTAUR CO., 41-15-1m 97 Murray St.,, N. Y. | New Advertisements. | | i | i | \ \ J eare selling a good grade of tea—green —Dblack or mixed at 2S¢ts per. 1b. - Try it. | SECHLER & CO. ® russ, Rais, WASH RUBBERS, BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS. : SECHLER & CO. SE & a 7 VON SCH i . 5 We are never satisfied unless we know we are offering values far below anything in the market. OUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS LOWER AND OUR OQUALI- « TIES BETTER. . Umbrellas. We have again opened anew lot of those 26in, Gloria Silkk Umbrellas, natural stick, loop handles or Dresden handles, A 26in. blue Glorix, natural stick handle, quality, tight roll, fancy ivory handles, at $1 25, $1 50, S1 75— these qualities are as good as you can get from other merchants at £1 50, $2 00, $2 50. A very handsome, Taffeta Silk 26in. Umbrella, tight roll, at $2 50, real value &3 0, Parasols. Children’s Fancy Parasols 23c. and Tie, A handsome line of Fancy Silk Parasols for ladies in the new novelties—brown, blue, green, at £1 75, real value $2 50. White Silk Parasols, in plin and ruffled, from §1 25 to $2 ho—excellent values at these prices, Organdies. “Just opened another lot of Organdies, from 7c. to 25e. We 25¢. imported Organdy is as handsome as you ean buy elsewhere at Soc. Silk Mitts. A full line of White, Black and Colored Silk Mitts, from 15¢. to 50¢, OUR Just opened another jot of have frequently been told that our styles and patterns are the best in the town.” Our CLOTHING Laces. Just opened another new lot of Fine Laces in French; Valenciennes, Point de Paris and Oriental. = Children’s Hose. Aull lite of Hosiery for children in Fast Black, sizes 3 to 9, from Se. a pairup toive. A full line of Russets from 10e. up to soe. A full line of Children’s to 10 years, from 40c. up to 00. Boys’ Blouse Waists, with large ruffed sailor collar, in colors, only 50c. Ladies” Ready-Made Skirts from £125 up. Ladies’ Shirt Waists from 25¢. up. . y 9, en 8 ? i i | able Suits, ages 3 Have just opened another lot of Children’s { Slippers, in tans and ox-bloods, from 50c. up, | Have just opened another lot of Ladies® Oxfords— «ties, blacks and ¢ lors—from 9c. up, Have just opened another lot Ladies’ Shoes, in hlack and colors, laced or buttonod, the new coin toe, at £1 25, $1 49, 81 75, $2 00, $2 S0—excellent values at these prices. Are just opening another lot of Men's Shoes, black and colors, in laced or con- | gress, from $1 00 to-23 50—all the new toes. DEPARTMENT Since the special sale began, and will keep up thé great sale of these high values at the low prices. Ifyou $1 49 come in before they are all sold. mere Pants, real valve $3.50, our price $2.49. roy Pants, geal value $3.50, our price $2.50. have not seen those All Wool Pants at A nobby pattern All Wool Cassi- An excellent quality Cordu- A full line of the stylish Brown Plaids in Men’s, Youths’ and Boys’ Suits in All Wool frem $2.50 to $10. g=Come in and see that we have—even more than we have room to ad- vertise. G. LYON, trading as. - LYON & CO. BELLEFONTE, PA. New Advertisements. DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. — Let- ters of administration on the estate of J. Shannon McCormick, late of Ferguson township, deceased, having been granted to the vndersign- ed, all persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate are requested to make payment and those having claims against the same will present them for payment. JOHN T. MeCORMICK, 42-18-6t* State College Pa. Aco DENT oe 4 Nl)z=m HEALTH INSURANCE. | THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO- CIATION WILL PAY: YOU If disabled by an accident & If you lose two limbs, $208 If you lose your eye sight, If you lose one limb, $83 to If you are ill £10 per month, If killed, will pay your heirs, 8208 to $5,000, If you die from natural cause, 2100, 300 to $100 per month IF INSURED, You eannct loseall your income when you are sick or disabled by accident. 5 Absolute protection at a cost of £1.00 to $2.25 per month. : The Fidelity Mutual Aid association is pre- eminently the largest and strongest accident and health association in the United States. It has $6,000.00 cash déposits with the States of California and Missouri, which, together, with an ample reserve fund and large assets, make its certificate an absolute guarantee of the solidity of protection to its members, For particulars address J. L. M. SHETTERLEY, New Advertisements. JLDWARD McGUINE TAILOR. MeClain Block, opposite the Bush House, | Second Floor, es | A Full Line of Spring and Summer Suit- | ings is Now Being Shown to Purchasers of | Fine Clothing. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. 42-7-3m Fos WOMEN ONLY. The bargain counter has attractions for women —-it i= different with the men. . The women prefer the largest assortment to se- leet from, hence they go to the stores to buy— they come to our store hig:ause we have every- thing they want in ow #ne—churns, creamers and other dairy fixtures, including the best house refrigerators in the market, sewing machines, washing machines, ete., in great variety. Some men prefer to buy goods delivered and patronize the traveling fakir, by whom they are often taken in. Who ever heard of a woman being taken in by a fakir? The men who do not read advertise- ments monopolize this privilege. Women read the advertisements and are al- ways on the lookout for the best bargains, The best thing for men to do, those who do not read advertisement, is to authorize wives and daugh- ters to purchase all the needful articles and they will save money. When the mothers and daugh- ters want anything in our line, they come to us to buy, for the reason, that they always know where they can purchase the best bargains. We have a free exhibitioff®at our store, on High street, of everything for the Farm and Garden, every work- ing day in the week, to which everyone is cor- dially invited. Secretary and General Manager, 42-11-1y McCALMONT & CO. 42-19-1-y. San Francisco, Cal. . Bellefonte, Pa. Insurance. ‘Insurance. a - i a N . | 0 0 0 [0 0 0 0 Q 0 0 0 0 0 0 | i | | UNION MUTUAL LIFE. el le : EE —— if a | { i PORTLAND, MAINE. of le! Fen E. Ricnapps, J. Frank Lawe, oe bet ow f President. . Secretary. I] bil { ORGANIZED 1848. : I |e - {=| NEARLY FIFTY YEARS OF SUCCESSFUL.PROGRESS AND i c SQUARE DEALING WITH POLICY HOLDERS. Is] CONDENSED ANNUAL STATEMENT DEC. 51, 1800, 2 Assets - - - - : Liabilities - - - ! . Surplus - - iol. Total Payments to Policy-Holders - I 0 Total Insurance in Force } Age 35 $74.05 io ih tS 140 | 4 a8 05 4 Hf $0 84.95 el “40 88.35 | “ 45. 113. { 50 182.95 | x80 NI, oe fr 9-3m ——O0LD STRONG AND PROGRESSIVE. —— Our policies are all up to date and have the endorsed cash values—paid up insur- | ance values and protected by the popular Maine non-forfs 7 { Below we give a list of rates according to different a | —computed on a basis of $5,000 insurance, 00 rfeiturd law es under popular tesm plon These preminms are redieable each used towards reducing the cost, J. E. LAWRENCE, i | | i { Y | year by annual dividend which may he | | Manager. | i ! | Office over Centre Co., Bank, . BELLEFONTE, PA. 0 0 0 0 0 o pte