Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 29, 1897, Image 3

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    Demorvalig \atcuom
Beliefonte, Pa., Oct. 29, 1897.
FARM NOTES.
—Decrease the size of the entrance of
your hives when the honey crop is over,
but be sure and have it very large during
the honey crop.
—Fodder cut somewhat green, before the
leaves turn yellow, is said to be highly rel-
ished by horses when shredded, bnt much
depends upon the stage of growth at which
the fodder is cut.
—Plant walnuts where you wish the
trees to grow. It is not necessary to re-
move the hulls. Cover to the depth of two
inches. Plant a row which can be used for
transplanting to vacancies that may occur.
—To prevent disease spreading in an or-
chard dig up every tree that shows signs of
being affected, and then use spraying solu-
tions on the others. In the fall it will be
found beneficial to use air-slaked lime free-
ly on the ground, both for trees and vines.
—Wheat stubble and refuse may be the
harboring places of chinch bugs and other
enemies. As soon as it can be done rake
up all refuse and fire the pile. The fall of
the year is a good time to fight the enemies
that do the most damage in spring and
summer.
—It is of no advantage to haul the
manure to the field and leave it in heaps.
The rains will leach it and much of its
plant food will be deposited in spots on
the field. If the manure is hauled to the
fields it should be at once spread evenly
on the surface of the ground.
—Soils are said sometimes to be ‘‘sour,”’
and lime is recommended to correct their
acidity. In most cases a good underdrain
will effect a permanent cure. These sour
soils are usually very rich when drained,
as their acidity has kept the most exhaus-
tive crops from growing on them.
—The fruit-grower who would be suc-
cessful must decide upon being a constant
user of insecticides, to know their compo-
sitions and uses. and what to apply in
various emergencies. Paris green will
have no effect upon sapsuckers, nor will
kerosene destroy those which devour the
leaves.
—DBurning over the strawberry bed is
work which some will not perform for fear
of injuring the plants. A grower who
desired to test the method piled straw in
the spaces of a few of the plants to the
depth of six inches. The foliage of the
plants that were burned over was of better
color the next season and much heavier
than on those not so treated.
—Fence posts treated under the follow-
ing manner will last a lifetime or more.
Posts that have been in the ground seven
years, when taken out, were as good as
when they were first put in the ground.
This is the receipe : Take boiled linseed
oil and stir in it pulverized charcoal to the
consistency of paint. Put a coat of this
over the timber.
—Barb-wire fences will not confine
sheep, or certain kinds of dogs that are
well covered with hair, unless the strands
of wire are very close, and even then a
shaggy dog will work himself through the
fence, despite the bars, with but little in-
jury. If the dog cannot get through he
will dig under the fence, hence a strand of
wire should be below the ground.
—Store the tools and implements under
shelter. If possible take them apart and
give the pieces a thorough cleaning with
kerosene, which will assist in preventing
rust. It would be also an advantage to
sharpen all blades, and be in readiness for
work without delay as soon as spring opens.
All repairs and extras should be ordered
now, as it may require days or weeks to
secure them at a time when work is press-
ing.
—A man or an animal can endure any
amount of ventilation during the day, but
when night comes the animal, like the
man, delights in a warm and soft bed, free
from cold draughts of air. The cold
draughts in the stable frequently come
along the floor, chilling the animal when
it is at rest. This fact should teach the
farmer that he will make no mistake in
using plenty of dry bedding, and it should
be thick and loose, thus preventing draughts
from below and assisting to retain the
animal heat.
—A poultry house is not simnply a place
in which the fowls should roast. In win-
ter, when the ground is covered with snow,
the hens are almost helpless, and must re-
main inside. They should have plenty of
room on the floor, which should be kept
covered with cut straw or leaves, in which
they can scratch and work. Overfeeding
on grain is the cause of hens not laying,
and it also leads to double-yolk eggs, soft-
shell eggs and disease. Each fowl should
have ten square feet of room on the floor ;
that is, a poultry house 10 by 10 feet should
accommodate ten fowls.
—Work that does not pay in the fall may
bring good results in the spring. Every
fence corner, or other harboring place for
weeds, should be cleaned out. Every
weed means pernaps a thousand seeds, and
hundreds of weeds may grow therefrom in
spring. The seeds of some weeds are light
and can be carried to every portion of the
farm by winds. To avoid work in spring
that is unprofitable clear every weed off
the farm now, and as soon as it can be
done, as every day’s delay gives the seeds
an opportunity to mature.
—It is a good plan to plant all peach
pits when itis known that the fruit has
been grown on trees free from yellows. If
the peach is an extra good one, it may well
be left to fruit on its own stock. Some
Kinds of peaches reproduce themselves from
seed and all kinds of this fruit are more
likely to produce something nearly like
themselves. If the native fruit proves to
be worthless, a few buds inserted higher
up after it has grown large enough to show
what it is, will change it to whatever
variety may be desired.
—The canaigre plant, commonly known
as ‘‘tannin weed,’”’ which heretofore has
growd wild on the bottoms of the eastern
slope of the Missouri valley, is now being
successfully brought under cultivation
with indefinite possibilities of adaptability
to agricultural conditions before it. The
bark produce used for a century in the
tanning of leather. and which has built up
a great American industry, is now well-
nigh exhausted. To take the place of
bark, the production of ‘‘tannin’’ or tannic
acid promises to be the future resource for
the manufacture of leather.
-——Subsecribe for the WATCHMAN.
The Dingely Deficit.
Debt Increasing While the Trusts are Wallowing In
Prosperity.
The deficits of revenue still increase. |
Though, according to McKinley, Hanna |
and Dingley, it was necessary to call an
extra session of congress in order to
pass a tariff act which would produce
enough revenue, the measure which
was the outcome of their deliberations
has already rolled up a deficit of some
$18,000,000 in two months.
This is a most surprising record. The
internal revenue taxes which the Re-
publicans.overlooked produced $1,000,-
000 increase, yet the total deficit was
larger than ever before in our history.
If continued at this rate, it would pro-
duce a debt of over $100,000,000 in-
stead of the increased revenue of $113,-
000,000 predicted by Mr. Dingley in
his first guess.
The deficits seem to be regarded pret-
ty coolly by the Republicans. They
need reminding that only a few months
ago they were loudly asserting that the
deficits of the Wilson tariff were ruoin-
ing business. Now the Dingley deficits
are doubly greater. Are they not ruin-
ing business?
When the Republicans called their
extra session to carry out their agree-
ments with the trusts, it was announced
that the first work would be ‘to restore
confidence’’ by making the receipts
equal to the expenditures. Well, the re-
ceipts are not equal to the expenditures
by some $18,000,000. Are we to under-
stand that confidence has been restored
in some unpremeditated, impulsive way?
Singularly enough, the Hanna papers
that harped so long on deficits have no
more to say on the subject. In their
lexicons there is no such word as de-
ficit. When the topic is introduced, they
resolutely look the other way and main-
tain a silence as profound as that of
Bill McKinley before he secured the Re-
publican nomination. The worst of it
is that the Hannaites have an argument,
if they only knew it. They could point
to the fact that though the governmént’s
account is overdrawn and its debt in-
creases, the trusts are literally wallow-
ing in prosperity.—Kansas Citv Times.
‘A Monstrous Job Planned to Cheat the
Government Out of $20,000,000.
A ring has all 1ts plans laid to cap-
ture the Union Pacific railroad and
cheat the government out of at least
$20,000,000. If this plot succeeds, it
will be followed by a similar robbery
in the case of the Central Pacific.
Conspicuous among the members of
this ring are J. Pierpont Morgan and
Collis P. Huntington.
Attorney General McKenna, who con-
sents to this robbery, was appointed to
his place in the cabinet through the in-
fluence of Huntington.
No honest reason exists why the
Union Pacific should not be made to pay
every dollar of its debt to the govern-
ment. The aided portion, on which the
government has its lien, is a paying
property.
Congress refused to authorize the deal
with the ring, known as the reorganiza-
tion committee, which, with the active
concurrence of the attorney general,
will be consummated unless the pres-
ident forbids. This he has ample power
to do. The law of 1887 provides a way
for dealing with the Union Pacific
whereby the treasury can be protected
against this intended plunder and the
whole debt collected.
Why should the administration has-
ten to do between sessions of congress
what congress has declined to sanction?
That body will convene again within
less than two months, and a matter so
important as the public’s interest in the
Union Pacific railroad cannot in decen-
cy be disposed of without the participa-
tion of the people’s representatives.
The Union Pacific ring has hatched a
monstrous job of brigandage, and the
administration is threatened with a
scandal the like of which has not
shamed the country since the Credit
Mobilier exposure.
President McKinley’s own reputation
is at stake.—New York Journal.
Hanna Deuies the Power of a Protective
Tariff to Raise Wages.
rianna is apostate to the principles of
protection. The excuse for protection
has always been that it raises the work-
ingman’s wages, no matter what the
condition of the labor market may be.
Under protection it was not necessary
that the surplus labor should be em-
ployed before wages would rise. Protec-
tion would inevitably bring about a
rise. But Mark Hanna says of the pres-
ent situation, under full protection:
‘‘It is necessary that business should
improve so much that the surplus of
labor shall be used up before it is pos-
sible that the general scale of wages
shall be advanced. It is the same old
principle of supply and demand.’
Thisis very significant. It practically
denies the power of a protective tariff
to increase wages. Not until the surplus
labor—the thousands begging for work
in the large cities and tramping the
country—is absorbed can wages be ex-
pected torise. No one claims that un-
der protection surplus labor is ever ab-
sorbed. If this were so, strikes would
succeed under protection to a greater
extent than under a low tariff. But
they do not.
Mark Hanna knows, if anybody does,
that it is the law of supply and demand
that fixes wages and not a high tariff.
And he has in an unguarded moment
said so, thereby announcing himself an
apostate to the McKinley doctrine.
More Substantial. )
Mr. Hanna is not depending upon his
war record or the big crops. His hope
is in his bar’l and Uncle Sam’s bar’l.
The Party of Trusts.
But for the trusts there would today
be no Hanna. In fact, there would be
20 Republican party.
Governed by Trusts.
Laws Are No Longer Made by and For the People.
Money is the Supreme Power. Monopolies Have
Grown Bold In Corrupting Legislatures—Their
Stool Pigeons In Every Caucus and Convention.
Brazen Parade of Absolutism and Wealth.
The invasion of congress and the
state legislatures by the hired lobbyists
of the trusts is nothing new, says the
Cincinnati Enquirer. These aggrega-
tions of capital have made bribery one
of the fine arts and have reared up a
school of professors to apply it in the
interests of what they call their vested
rights. These fountains of corruption
not only furnish bribers, but bribe tak-
ers. The knowledge that out of their
millions some hundreds of thousands
will be used in the legislatures to se-
cure immunity from investigation and
‘‘protection’’ from adverse legislation
has bred a large class of men who “‘run’’
for congress and for places in the state
legislatures as an occupation. These
wretches press themselves forward upon
party managers ag candidates upon the
very ground that they will be accept-
able to the great institutions which in-
dulge in the luxury of a lobby. Indeed,
the trusts and the great corporations
kindred to them furnish a good propor-
tion of the party managers themselves,
or, to make it plainer, they accept the
services of those who have a faculty for
local leadership and pay them well for
protecting them when nominations are
made. Thus, between the thieves who
want to buy legislation and the thieves
who desire to sell it and the panders
who go between them taking toll from
each, the legislatures of the greater
states sometimes become the mere prop-
erty of the trusts.
Of course bribery is a felony in those
who give and those who take, and in
those who are mere promoters of it, but
justice is blind, and great and wealthy
rogues are seldom pestered about such
little peccadillos as bribing legislators.
It was not in the mouth of Jack Cade,
but in that of the broken old King Lear,
that the great master put these words:
‘Plate sin with gold, and the strong
lance of justice hurtless breaks; clothe
it in rags, a pygmy straw will pierce
167
In our time the robbers who steal our
legislators in order to make them steal
from the people for them are not satis-
fied with getting away the mere plun-
der. They boldly tell us that it is good
for us to be robbed, and that we do not
understand our interests if we oppose
it. The great trusts assure us that they
shower benefits upon the people. They
say that competition is not ‘‘the life of
trade,’’ as we had supposed, and that if
it prevents monopoly it does the public
great harm. Monopoly—the name of
which has been the synonym for the
spoliation of the many by a favored few
from the time of the Tudors—now
thrusts itself into the public view as a
public benefactor. Trusts bring down
the price of goods, we are told, and we
are asked to remember how much dear-
er every commodity was before they en-
tered upon their philanthropic career.
Syndicates are steadily at work consol-
idating additional enterprises. The
tendency is to have one railroad compa-
ny in the United States that shall em-
brace them all, one telegraph company,
one steel and iron manufacturing com-
pany, one brewing company, and so on.
The Whisky trust, the Cordage trust,
the Beef trust, the Flour trust and the
Coal trust are all at work, each to ab-
sorb all the interests kindred to its own
in order that there may be no competi-
tion. They say these consolidations
largely reduce the number of people
who have to be employed, reduce the
number of officers and their expenses,
and the dear people are told that they
receive the benefits of all these reduc-
tions. ;
Railroad traffic associations march up
to congress and demand the removal of
all limits upon railroad pooling. They
say that reasonable prices for interstate
transportation should not be an object
of solicitude on the part of the federal
government, and that states which cre-
ate railroad corporations and confer
upon them the sovereign right of emi-
nent domain to condemn roadways
ought not to regulate their dealings
with the public. Dividends for the rail-
road and ‘‘the public be damned’ is
declared to be the law of the railroad
business.
Monopoly enriches the stockholders
at the expense of the public, while com-
petition insures fair rates. So said the
railroad kings themselves 20 years ago
when they were opposing legislative
regulations of fares and freights. ‘‘Leave
us alone,’ they said. ‘“We cannot op-
press the public because competition be-
tween ourselves will restrain us.’ New
they reverse all this as above described.
Pools take the place of competition in
transportation rates, and trust combina-
tions take the place of competition in
trade.
It costs a great deal of money for the
trusts to maintain their power in our
state legislatures and in congress. Leg-
islation comes high, but they must have
it. They have lobby chiefs all over the
country who do their bidding. The
people need not be told how these
leeches eat the public substance through
manipulation of state and city govern-
ments. They not only take what is in
sight; but, under the guise of prosecut-
ing public works, they issue’ bonds at
will, which consume the earnings of
the people, visiting the indifference and
imbecility of the fathers of today upon
their children to the third and fourth
generations.
Once on a Time.
Mr. McKinley once condemned the
lemonetization of silver. This was be-
ore he fell into Hanna’s hands.
Wolcott's Failure.
The public will doubtless be thunder-
struck at the news that Senator Wol-
cott’s bimatallic mission has failed. It
was understood that he would effect
free coinage as soon as he had seen a
few more crowned heads.
Medical.
Medical.
New Advertisements.
A FEARFUL EXPERIENCE
A POSTMASTER LOSES THE USE OF HIS LEGS AND ARMS.
Edwin R. Tripp, of Middlefield Centre, Meets a Hazardous Encounter
Which Renders Him Helpless.
From Otsego Republican, Cooperstown, N. Y.
Mr. Edwin R. Tripp, the postmaster at Middle-
field Centre, N. Y., recently had a dangerous ex-
perience which left him in a helpless state. His
system was so much shattered that it was feared
he might never recover.
In an interview with a reporter of the Republi-
can, regarding this experience which had attract-
ed considerable attention, Mr. Tripp stated :
“In March, 1892, I was taken with what I after-
ward learned was locomotor ataxia, and was un-
able to walk, and I kept getting worse until I lost
the use of my arms. I doctored with two skillful
doctors but received no benefit, and also used a
galvanic battery but kept getting worse and the
doctors told me they could do no more. This was
in May and June, 1892. I gave up all hope of ever
having the use of my limbs again, and did not ex-
pect to live very long. I was unable to dress or
undress myself, and could not get around the
house unless I was moved in a chair.
“I think it was in June that I read of the case
of a man in Saratoga Co., N.Y., who was taken
very much as myself. He had taken Dr. Wil-
liam’s Pink Pills for Pale people which contained
in a condensed form. all the elements necessary
to give new life and richness to the blood and re-
stores shattered nerves, and had been cured by
their use.
“I learned that the pills were prepared by the
Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schneetady,
N. Y., and only cost 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 at any druggist’s and sent for two boxes.
I used the pills faithfully and they gave me an ap-
petite. I then sent for four more boxes and he-
fore I had taken all of them my feet and legs
which had been cold began to get warm.
“I was a member of the Town Board that sum-
mer and had to be carried and put into a wagon
to go to the meetings, and in fact was helpless, as
my neighbors know. In August I could walk
around the house by pushing a chair. I kept get-
ting better and managed to move around more,
until election time that year, I walked with a cane
to the polls, a short distance from my jhome. I
continued to take Dr. William’s Pink Pills for
Pale People until I had taken eighteen boxes. I
could then get around, and to-day walk to the
post office and back, a distance of one-quarter of
a mile, three times a day, and attend to my
duties as postmaster.
“In the spring of 1892 I was elected town clerk
which office I held for three years, I had previous-
ly been a justice of the peace for thirty-two years.
I am now 70 years of age, and have lived in this
town for about forty-six years. For nearly fifty
years I worked at the blacksmith’s trade. I am
able to do work in my garden now, and saw some
of my wood. I consider that my restoration to
health is due to the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People.
Epwix R. Trirp.”
Subscribed and sworn to before me this 23rd
day of June, 1897.
Hoyer Hanan, Notary Public.
THE TRUE REMEDY'—W. M. Repine,
editor Tiskilwa, Ill., Chief, says: ‘‘We
won’t keep house without Dr. King’s New
Discovery for Constipation, Coughs and
Colds. Experimented with many others,
but never got the true remedy until we
used Dr. King’s New Discovery. No other
remedy can take its place in our home, as
in it we have a certain and sure cure for
Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, ete.” It
is idle to experiment with other remedies,
even if they are urged on you as just as
good as Dr. King’s New Discovery. They
are not as good, because this remedy has a
record of cures and besides is guaranteed.
It never fails to satisfy. Trial bottles free
at F. Potts Green’s Drug Store.
Castoria.
A'S T om 1A
C C 4 & 70 BD I Af
C A 8." o Bn 1 XX
e A.§5 T 0 BR 1 A
C A 8 7 0 B 1 A
CCC
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
DO NOT BE IMPOSED UPON, BUT INSIST
UPON HAVING CASTORIA, AND SEE THAT
THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
CHAS. H. FLETCHER
IS ON THE WRAPPER. WE SHALL PRO
TECT OURSELVES AND THE PUBLIC AT
ALL HAZARDS.
A 8% TT 0. RB: 1 A
C C A S$ T 0. BT RA
C A 8 To BB 7 A
oe A817 0 BR TA
A 8.7
dnd 0 RI A
THE CENTAUR CO.,
41-15-1m 77 Murray St., N. Y.
New Advertisements.
We areselling a good grade of tea—green
—black or mixed at 28cts per. Ib. Try it.
SECHLER & CO.
New Advertisements.
JBWARD McGUINESS,
TAILOR.
Second floor Lyon & Co., Store Building,
Allegheny St.
A Full Line of Fall and Winter Suit-
ings is Now Being Shown to Purchasers of
Fine Clothing.
554 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
2-7-1y
A CCIDENT
—AND—
HEALTH
INSURANCE.
THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO-
CIATION
WILL PAY YOU
If disabled by an accident $30 to $100 per month
If you lose two limbs, $208 to £5,000,
If you lose your eye sight, $208 to $5,000,
If you lose one limb, $83 to $2,000,
If you are ill $40 per month,
It killed, will pay your heirs, $208 to $5,000,
If you die from natural cause, $100.
IF INSURED,
You cannot lose all your income when you are sick
or disabled by accident.
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 deposits 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,
Secretary and General Manager,
42-19-1-y. San Francisco, Cal.
puss, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS,
BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS.
SECHLER & CO.
Insurance. Insurance.
To 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 o 0 0 0 0
i |
| A LETTER THAT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF !! |.
Qi
lo] PLEASANT Gap, Pa., Aug. 14, 1897. i
|
2) MR. J. EDW. LAWRENCE, je
Ly Manager Union Mutual Life Insurance Co. Bellefonte, Pa. |
le Dear Sir .— 2
a) I acknowledge the receipt this day of the Union Mutual |
i : |e
| Lite Insurance Company of Portland, Maine, for two thousand |
lol dollars ($2,000) in payment of the death claim of my brother’s
life, the late Dr. S. E. Noll. I wish to thank you for the |
1°] prompt and business like manner that you and your company |e
(0! have shown in the settlement of this claim
My brother was insured in March, 1897, and died the following |.
o July, he had paid but $48.16 for which I am this day handed
| $2,000. Thanking you again for your kindness, E
° I am, sincerely yours,
| WM. H. NOLL, |e
» Administrator. |
[120m |
o 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o |
WwW ANTED - TRUSTWORTHY AND
ACTIVE gentlemen or ladies to travel
for responsible, established houses in Pennsylva-
nia Monthly $65.00 and expenses. Position
steady. Reference. Enclose self - addressed
stamped envelope. The Dominion Company,
Dept., Y Chicago. 42-35-4m.
WE BUY AND SELL.
We have sold five large Clover Hullers within
the last ten days: one to Millheim, one to Centre
Hall, one to Oak Hall and two to Bellefonte, and
N the last of the week, rubbing and cleaning
Clover Seed will be booming in Centre county.
We also can furnish a first class wind mill, with
thirty-six riddles and seives for cleaning farm
seeds. Orders taken for riddles and seives for
other wind mills.
We have a few of the Dildine Adjustable Seed
Seives for sale—the last that are in the market.
We will buy Clover Seed, clean seed, when
farmers are ready to sell, including wheat and
other grains and farm products.
UP TO DATE DAIRYING SUPPLIES.
The De Laval Cream Separator was the Favorite
Cream Separator shown at the Granger's picnic,
where the sample Baby Separator was sold.
We keep instock butter workers, Babcock’s
Milk Testers, Dairy Thermometers, Creamers,
Churns and all other dairy fixtures, including
parchment paper for wrapping butter.
HOUSEHOLD FIXTURES AND
MACHINES.
Clothes Wringers, Washing Machines, Re-
frigerators, Step Ladders, Baskets in great va-
riety, including the best make of sewing ma-
chines, which we sell at prices ranging from
$12.50 to $25.00 each. Those in want of sewing
machines will protect their own interests, as well
as save money by calling on us.
BUGGIES AND SPRING WAGONS,
We are agents for the Columbus Buggy Co.—
the finest make of buggies, surries and carria ges
in the market for the least money—hand made
goods. Other makes of buggies and carriages of
best quality and lowest prices.
SEWING
SLEIGHS AND SLEDS.
Binghamton sleighs and cutters, the finest in
the world. Boy's cutters and flyers. Farm and
lumber sleds to suit buyers.
BUILDER'S SUPPLIES.
Fireand Red Brick, flag stones, lime, roofing
paper, plastering hair, sand and Victor Patent
Wall Plaster, including Caleined Plaster. Logan
and Rosendale Hydraulic Cements in quantities
to suit buyers,
42-11-1y McCALMONT & CO.
Bellefonte, Pa.
SHORTLIDGE & CO.
State College, Pa.
(FOLD ! GOLD!! GOLD!!!
We have secured valuable claims in the
FAMOUS GOLD FIELDS OF ALASKA.
Hon. Chas. D. Rogers, of Juneau, Clerk of the
U. 8. District Court of Alaska, has staked out
claims for this company in the Sheep Creek Ba-
sin and Whale Bay Perris of Alaska,
NORTH-AMERICAN MINING & DEVELOP-
ING: COMPANY.
Capital, £5,000,000. Shares, 81 each.
FULL PAID AND NON-ASSESSABLE.
THIS COMPANY GIVES THE POOR MAN A
CHANCE AS WELL AS THE RICH.
NOW 1S THE TIME!
To invest your money. $1.00 will buy one
share of stock. Invest now before our
stock advances in price. Not less than five
shares will be sold. We have the best
known men in American as Directors in
this Company. Therefore your money is
as safe with us as with your bank. Send
money by postotfice order, or registered
mail, and you will receive stock by return
mail.
North-American Mining and Developing
Company, Juneau, Alaska. Write for pros-
pectus to the
NORTH-AMERICAN MINING
AND DEVELOPING COMPANY.
23 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK, U. S. A.
Agents wanted everywhere to sell our stock.
42-33-20.
ST LOUIS & SAN FRANCISCO R. R.
(FRISCO LINE)
BETWEEN
——ST. LOUIS—
AND—
SPRINGFIELD
JOPLIN PITTSBURC
WICHITA
EUREKA SPRINGS
Ft. SMITH PARIS
DALLAS
SAN ANTONIO
HOUSTON
GALVESTON
Solid Vestibuled Trains with Pullman sleepers
and reclining chair cars. Harvey dining halls.
Maps, time tables and full information furnish-
ed upon application to
0. M. CONLEY,
Gen’] Agent,
GEO. T. NICHOLSON
Gen’l Pass'r Agent,
Pi118BURG, PA. St. Louis, Mo
Saddlery.
§;7.000 $5,000 $5,000
—WORTH OF——
HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS,
SADDLES,
BRIDLES,
PLAIN HARNESS,
FINE HARNESS,
BLANKETS,
WHIPS, Etc.
All combined in an immense Stock of Fine
Saddlery.
sesase NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS......
To-day Prices
have Dropped
THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE
COLLARS IN THE COUNTY.
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
33-37 BELLEFONTE, PA.
A