Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 05, 1898, Image 3

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    Bellefonte, Pa., August 5, 1298,
FARM NOTES.
—AS soon as the currants are gathered,
do not forget to give an application of bor-
deaux mixture if the leaf disease has been
prevalent in past years.
—To get rid of plantain improve the till-
age of the soil, practice a short rotation, give
clean culture in hoed crops, and seed
thickly whether wheat, oats or grass seeds
are used. Specifically, it may be said that
where a field has become seriously infested
with plantain, it might be a good plan to
adopt for a time a two-year-rotation. Sow
to wheat or rye in the fall and add six
quarts of timothy seed, and in the spring
sow at least four quarts of cloverseed per
acre. Mow the land but once and plow it
soon after the hay has heen removed and
before the plantain has thrown up seed-
stalks. Give the field a short fallow until
fall, resow again with wheat or rye, and
grass seeds as before. In duetime, take off
another crop of hay and replow for fall
grain. Few plantains can stand this
double dose of hot plowshares.
—When the crop has been picked from
the raspberry and blackberry canes it is
seldom that any work is hestowed on the
canes until next year. Considering the
neglect given blackberry and raspherry
canes in late summer they pay well in
comparison with other crops. If fruit
growers will cultivate the canes and clean
the ground well of weeds and grass as soon
as the berry harvest is over, and apply
fertilizer on the land, the effect of the
good treatment will be apparent the follow-
ing year. Weeds and grass rob the canes,
and when it is considered that with the
canes producing crops for several years in
succession and weeds and grass taking pos-
session between the rows the land becomes
exhausted, it is small wonder that the
crops fall off and the canes die out.
—An old strawberry bed, which has be-
come full of weeds in the rows, can be
made serviceable for next year by cutting
down the weeds with a scythe or lawn
mower. Rake the weeds off and chop out
all of the old plants, leaving runners about
a foot apart in the rows, and hoe between
the plants, as well as cultivate well be-
tween the rows. The object should be to
have the ground deep, soft and perfectly
clean of grass and weeds. The runners
(which should be those sent out from the
parent plants of last spring) will send out
runners this year (if they are not already
doing so), and form a new matted row.
Keep the rows clean and use fertilizer
liberally. applying it to the plants on the
sides of the rows and working it well into
the soil. Such a bed will be a new one,
and if well managed may prove equal to
one made last spring.
—How are the chicks? If they are dying
or seem drooping, examine very closely for
lice. If lice are found, and there is not
much doubt but that they will be, dust with
good insect powder and also dust the
mother. Dust her extra well under the
wings and around the vent. Rub coal oil
on her legs. If they are scaly a few appli-
cations will clean them, and ‘if smooth it
will prevent the hen or chicks from having
scaly legs. It is best for all reasons to
dust the hen and chicks at roosting time
and sprinkle coal oil on the under side of
the coop. Sprinkle enough so that it will
smell quite strong. Sprinkle with oil
twice a week ; it is much cheaper than
having lice.
See that they have access to a good dust
bath. Sawdust mixed with the fine dust
is a great help. It will work into the skin
better, and enables the hen to shake the
lice off when she shakes herself after the
bath. If no lice or signs of lice, i. e., nits,
are seen and the chicks are ailing, you
have surely neglected to provide ‘‘teeth’’
for the little things. Mix some sharp sand
in their breakfast, and have a dish or hoard
of grit, pounded dishes and small gravel in
their coop. Of course you don’t feed your
chicks in their roosting room. There's not
much excuse to make a chicken dining
room in their bedroom. It’s too expensive
in the end. Move your roosting coop to
clean ground twice each week.
—When a shade is beneficial to the soil
it is usually accompanied with moisture,
else the improvement is due to something
which accompanies the shade, and not
to the shade itself, says the American
Farmer, thus, the soil under a house
improves because it is the resort of
animals of various kinds and their excreta,
or remains are deposited there. Again, the
soil under houses is usually protected from
washing away by rain, or the bleaching
out of its soluble substances. In such case
the only direct effect of the shade, appar-
ently, is the prevention of excessive heat-
ing of the soil by direct rays of the sun.
Certain volatile substances in the soil,
such as carbon of ammonia, which are
generated in soils where organic matter is
undergoing decay, are volatilized and
driven into the air by great heat. Whilst
the heat of the soil under a house seldom
reaches 90° Fahrenheit, that freely exposed
to the sun may reach 120°" or up-
ward. Ifa plank is laid on the ground
the conditions are quite different from the
case of a house. It shades the soil as the
house does, but, in addition, it prevents
the moisture and gases of the soil from
escaping. Although it cuts the soil off
from direct wetting by rain, its narrowness
allows the moisture from either side to dif-
fuse itself through the soil under the plank,
hence, such soil is usually damp; that
under the house is usually dry.
Again, insects, worms, etc., gather under
a plank and their excreta and remains ac-
cumulate there. Of course, the soil under
a plank is protected both from washing
and bleaching, and more or less saltpeter
is developed by nitrification. And finally
the heat of the sun is more or less cut off
from the soil ; but in this last respect the
soil under a house has the advantage of
that under a plank. Now, the shade of
trees, or a thick-growing crop like clover or
cow peas, differs from both of the above.
In the first place, these plants are con-
stantly pumping up water from the soil
and making it dry—the area involved is
too great to allow water from its sides to
diffuse through the soil under them. There
is no special collection of insects or other
animals under them to enrich the soil by
their excreta or debris. Chemical changes
in the soil can only take place if the pres-
ence of moisture is diminished or stopped.
The more prevention of excessive heat in
the soil, and consequent vaporizing and
escape of gaseous matter, seems to be the
only part taken by such shade in the im-
provement of soils. The improvement of
soils by the crops named is not due so much
to shade as to the collecting of nitrogen
from the air and contributing it to the soil
in their remains, Upon the whole, the
value of shade as an improver of soils is
either misinterpreted or overated.
When We Sleep.
We spend nearly one-third of our time in
bed. It is the place to which the most of
us are more constant than to any other.
People devote more time to getting the
worth of their money out of that piece of
furniture than to all the rest combined.
We recollect of seeing a bed not long ago
the sleeping record of which was estimated
at 50 years—that is 50 solid vears of 365
days each of the lifetimes of men and wo-
men had been spent reposing on it, during
a period of over a century. Its owner said
that he had spent at least 21 years of his
life on this same bed, he being a very old
man and having used it from boyhood.
Few of us, even though we are still young,
realize how much of our time is spent in
sleep and in bed. It is really a very im-
Dortant part of our life, and yet we know
very little about it and it puzzles us to tell
exactly what sleep is. Somehow or other,
we know not how, the belt that runs the
machinery of what we call our conscious-
ness is slipped off, the wheels cease to re-
volve and we are asleep.
Some ascribesleep to the emptying of the
blood vessels of the head ; some to a dis-
connection of some subtle current that runs
through the cells of the body ; some have
this theory and some have that, but, theory
or no theory, when we go to hed, when we
£0 to church and in many other occasions.
we suddenly lose ourselves. We go off
somewhere we know not where, and leave
our body warm and breathing, but with no
more consciousness of what is going on
around it than if it werea log. The whole
body knocks off a certain portion of its
work, the wires are grounded, the current
shut off and a sort of overhauling and re-
pairing takes place.
% %
We call it rest, but it is really a daily
oiling up of the machinery and the putting
of the apparatus in order. In order to do
this effectually, the thinking machine
must be stopped, or at least very much
slowed down; the tension of the wires
which carry the messages and transmit the
orders from the nerve centers must be re-
laxed, in order that the repairmen may
carry on their work unhindered. We sus-
pect that sometimes when we dream it is
merely due to the fact they are testing
some particular portion of the thousands of
lines which have to be kept in order, and
this tinkering causes us to imagine that we
are engaged 1n some action which those
particular nerves, in our waking hours, as-
sist in promoting. If we do not rest well
it is because these operations are hard to
carry on and because, by reason of some
unhealthy condition of the body some-
where, it is impossible for the repairmen to
work without a good deal of hammering
and adjusting.
Some people say that the amount of
sleep required is largely fixed by habit,
and cite the examples of many men who
have been able to keep in good health for
years with only two or three hours sleep
each day ; but most of us require so much
tinkering that seven or eight hours is none
too long for the process ; and if we have
less we come out of the repair shop in the
morning with the feeling that we are not
nearly up to the mark ; but when, on
awaking, we experience that delicious lan-
guor that causes us to feel that there’s no
place like bed, and as if we would like to
remain there permanently, it is a sign that
all the machinery has been well adjusted,
and that the repairmen have worked to the
best advantage.
#
In these times, when we turn night into
day by means of various brilliant artificial
lights, some of us sometimes begrudge the
time given to sleep; but in an era when
the means of banishing darkness were
crude and inefficient, by no means the
least office of sleep was in filling up in our
activities caused by the darkness. It not
only “knit up the ravelled sleeve of care,’
but it caused the long night to pass by ina
flash. In this respect it served the same
purpose as does the remarkable sleeping of
some of the animals and reptiles which,
when the winter comes, and when they
can no longer roam abroad and seek their
prey and food, never bother about the price
of provisions or ahout laying in a supply of
fuel, do not care for the cold and the snows
but just curl themselves up and go to sleep
and remain asleep for mouths until the
warm weather comes again, when they
wake up hungry and refreshed, ready for
business.
There is our familiar friend the ground-
hog, supposed to take charge of the weather
for a portion of the year. He sleeps snug-
ly in his burrow and he doesn’t know that
there is such a thing as water at all. The
female bear does the same and so do the
snake, the bat and the land turtle, and
Scores of others. Some of them even cease
to take the trouble to breathe during the
winter. Their plan seems to be an exceed-
ly convenient one, and could we adopt it
we would save lots of wear and tear, as
well as a vast amount in grocery bills, fuel
and clothing.
—
The Spanish Royal Standard.
The Spanish royal standard is most com-
plicated. The red and yellow of the Span-
ish flag is said to be derived from this oc-
currence : In 1378 Charles the Bold dipped
his fingers in the blood of Goeffrey, Count
of Barcelona, and drew them down the
count’s golden shield, in token of the ap-
preciation of the latter’s bravery. The
shield, so marked became the arms of Bar.
celona, which became part of Arragon,
and its arms were taken by that kingdom.
Now to the royal standard : In the first
quarter, or upper left hand part of the flag
are the arms of Leon and Castile, the lion
and the castle ; thesecond quarter is taken
‘up, one half by the arms of Arragon, one-
half by the arms of Sicily. The upper
third of the third quarter (directly under
the first) shows the Austrian colors, the
lower two-thirds is divided between the
flag of Burgundy and the Black lion of
Flanders ; the upper third of the fourth
quarter shows the chequers, another Bur-
gundian device, while the lower two-thirds
is shared by the red eagle of Antwerp and
the golden lion of Brabant, and on the top
of all this are twoshields, one showing the
Portuguese arms, the other the French fleur-
de-lis. Considerable of a flag that.
A CLEVER TRICK.—It certainly looks
like it, but there is really no trick about it,
Anybody can try it who has Lame Back
and Weak Kidneys, Malaria or nervous
troubles. We mean he can cure himself
right away by taking Electric Bitters,
This medicine tones up the whole system,
acts as a stimulant to Liver and Kidneys,
isa blood purifier and nerve tonic. Is
cures Constipation, Headache, Fainting
Spells, Sleeplessness and Melancholy. It
is purely vegetable, mild laxative, and re-
stores the system to its natural vigor. Try
Electric Bitters and be convinced that they
are a miracle worker. Every bottle guar-
anteed. Only 50c a hottle at F. Potts
Green’s drugstore,
Long-Lived Statesmen.
Despite the Mental Strain incident to High Place,
They Do Not Die Young.
During the last few months, since the
lamented death of Mr. Gladstone took
place, a common remark has been to the
effect that it is very wonderful that a man
who worked at such intense pressure all
through his life should live to the great
age of 88, or sixty-five years after first en-
tering upon his parliamentary career.
So toilsome is a statesman’s life, and
such a heavy strain does it put upon the
constitution that one would hardly con-
sider it conducive to a lengthy stay in the
world. Yet it is a remarkable fact that
statistics compiled from the lives of a dozen
of the most famous statesmen of modern
times show that they nearly all reached a
venerable age, and that some of the bright-
est stars among them lived the longest.
To begin with, take Lord John Russell,
whose brilliant career will never be for-
gotten. He died just twenty years ago at
the age of 85, and this was nearly
sixty-five years after he first entered Par-
liament as member for Tavistock. Both
these periods are second best records, in
regard to distinguished statesmen, Mr.
Gladstone's 88 and 65, respectively, coming
first.
Then there was Lord Palmerston who
died in 1865, at the age of R0, or fifty-eight
years after his parliamentary debut. The
Earl of Beaconsfield, Mr. Gladstone’s great
opponent, died at the age of 75, being forty-
three years after Maidstone returned him
for the first time.
The elder Pitt, Earl of Chatham, is one
of the most conspicuous figures in modern
history. Very early in his career he was
bequeathed £10,000 by the Duchess of
Marlborough in recognition of his talented
opposition to Sir Robert Walpole. He
died after being in Parliament forty-four
years.
The Earl of Derby entered Parliament at
the age of 21. and died at 70 ; Sir Robert
Peel began his parliamentary life at the
same age, but he died at 62 ; Sir Robert
Walpole died at 68; Lord North and
Richard Cobden both at 60, and George
Canning and Charles James Fox both at
57 ; the last named, it has to be remarked,
beingan M. P. when only 19. The younger
Pitt was 45 at his decease.
If we take the average of all the above,
including Mr. Gladstone, we find the
statesmen to enter Parliament at about 24
and to live about forty-four years after-
ward, dying at a little short of 62. Mr.
Gladstone's own figures are respectively
23, 65 and 88.
In the light of the above facts and figures
it is interesting to note that, of living
statesmen, Sir William Harcourt is 1;
Lord Salisbury. 68 ; Mr. Chamberlain, 62 ;
Lord Rosebery, 51 ; and Mr. Balfour, 49.
Lord Salisbury’s parliamentary career al-
ready extends over forty-five years.
AN EXPLANATION.—The reason for the
great popularity of Hood’s Sarsaparilla lies
in the fact that this medicine positively
cures. It is America’s Greatest Medicine,
and the American people have an abiding
confidence in its merits. They buy and
take it for simple as well as serious ail-
ments, confident that it will do them good.
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills. Mailed
for 25 cents hy C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell,
Mass.
New Advertisements.
Buggies, Wagons, Etc.
For SALE.—Top buggy almost new JARMERS BREAK THE BUGGY
Inquire of
W. P. HUMES,
43-25 Bellefonte,
MONOPOLY.
It is claimed that for years buggy manufactur-
ers have secured exorbitant prices for their goods
OR RENT.—A good brick house with | but recently, through the combined assistance of
all modern improvements located on east | the
Linn street, one of the most pleasant parts of the
town, can be rented cheap by applying to
a ; TON OTT gies,
43-7-tf HAMILTON OTTO. they
farmers of Iowa, Illinois and other states
Sears, Roesuck & Co., of Chicago, have got the
price of open Puggies down to $16.50; Top Bug-
$2279; Top Surries, $43.75 and upwards, and
are shipping them in immense numbers di-
rect to farmers in every state. They send an im-
ARNING NOTICE.—Ali persons are | mense Buggy Catalogue free, postpaid, to any one
hereby notified that the undersigned | who asks
or it. This certainly isa big victory
has purchased the following personal effects of | for the farmer, but a severe blow to the carriage
Amanda Courter, of Howard township, and left | man
same with her during his pleasure. And that the
public is warned against meddling with or any-
wise disturbing the following : 3 cows, 2 heifers, 2 Y
calves, 2 horses, 6 hogs, es wagon, buggy,
set single harness, set horse gears, plow, spring
tooth harrow, spike tooth harrow, shovel plow,
cultivator, cook stove, coal stove, 2 set chairs, 3
rockers, table, cupboard, 4 beds and bedding, 5
yds. carpet, bureau, sink, doughtray, clock, set
fly nets and poultry.
43-29-3t JOHN T. BAYLETS.
W. B. REEVE
TEACHER OF
PIPE ORGAN—PIANO— VOICE CUL-
TURE and HARMONY.
South Thomas St. - BELLEFONTE, PA.
18-1y%
J XECUTOR'S SALE!
The executors of the estate of Isaac Smith,
deceased will offer at Public Sale, at the Court
House, in Bellefonte, Pa., at one o'clock p. m., on
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24th, 1898.
$5,000.00 BONDS, State College Water Com-
pany.
The foregoing are fifty first mortage coupon
ifacturers and dealers, 43-27-3m
OU CAN BELIEVE IT.
McQUISTION SAYS ITS SO.
You'll be glad if, you do and
sorry if you dont take advan-
tage ot the special bargains he
is offering now in
sieten BUGGIES, WAGONS, ETC.
Preparatory to reducing his
stock to make room for his
winter stock of Sleds, Sleighs,
&e. Among others he has
5 second hand Buggies,
SRL *‘ Spring Wagons
that will almost be given away.
Don’t fail to remember this,
S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
BELLEFONTE, PA.
bonds, of #100 each, due — 5 per cent. interest,
payable sem-annualy in gold.
THOMAS FOSTER,
WILLIAM FOSTER
Jewelry.
43-28 ROBT. M. FOSTER.
Roofing.
N OW IS THE TIME TO EXAMINE IN EWEST NOVELTIES
YOUR ROOF.
During the Rough Weather that will be
experienced from now until Spring
you will have a chance to Examine
your Roof and see if it is in good
condition. Ifyou need a new one
or an old one repaired I am equipped
to give you the best at reasonable
rices. The Celebrated Courtright
in Shingles and all kinds of tin and
iron roofing.
W. H. MILLER,
42-38 Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA.
Whiskey.
PRICE LIST
OF THE
CELEBRATED
BAILEY PURE RYE.
Prominent Physicians have recommended | QUA
it for over thirty years as the best Whiskey
for the sick. Age alone controls the price.
Black label full quart - $1.00
Green ¢¢ id § - 1.25
Yellow ¢ $6 ¢ - = 150
Perfection (12 years old) - 200
Pints 50, 60 and 7scts.
Halt Pints 25 cents.
sesrennne IN.oeuaene
HAT PINS.
SHIRT WAIST SETS, Etc.,
in Gold and Sterling Silver.
LITY HIGH. PRICES LOW.
—[0]—
a i a On sale at
-—->ubscribe for the WATCHMAN. . © KELLER,
New ¥ Hines ih F. C. RICHARD’S SONS,
meni — a. PA [oan High St. BELLEFONTE, PA
y NT. S Bicycles. SE —————
REWERY FOR RENT.—The Belle .
fonte brewery is offered for rent. It is
in excellent running order, fully equipped for im-
mediate work and will be rented at a reasonable
price, by the year or for a term of years. Ap-
ply to MRS. L. HAAS,
43-28-tf. Bellefonte, Pa.
DMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE. — Let-
ters of administration on the estate of
Robt. J. Haynes, Jr., late of Snow Shoe, having
been granted to the undersigned he requests all
persons knowing themselves indebted to said es-
tate to make immediate payment and those hav-
ing claims against the same to present them
properly authenticated for settlement.
43-28-6t. JOSEPH GILLILAND,
Three Runs, Pa.
XECUTORS NOTICE.—Estate of John
T. Rountree letters testimentary on the
estate of John T. Rountree late of Bellefonte
Boro., Centre county Pennsylvania, deceased have
been granted to G. F. Musser, residing in said
borough to whom all persons indebted to same
estate are requested to make Payment and those
having claims or demands will make known the
same without delay.
G. F. MUSSER, Executor,
43-29-Gt
CLEMENT DALE, Att'y.
(CAUTION. —Whereas my son, Charles
/ T. Baylets, aged 15 years, five feet high
and weighing about 100 pounds, has left his home
without my consent, I hereby warn all persons
against harboring him, or giving him any-
thing on my account, as I will not be res onsible
for debts of his contraction, and will hi im any
wages due him. ‘
43-29-t3% JOHN T. BAYLETS.
UDITOR’S NOTICE.—In the Or-
phans’ Court of Centre county. In the
matter of the estate of Samuel Crawford, late of
Gregg township, deceased. The undersigned, an
auditor appointed by said Court to make distribu-
tion of the funds inthe hands of William Pealer,
the accountant of said decedent, will meet the
parties interested at his office in the borough of
Bellefonte, Pa., on Monday August 8th, 1898, at
10 o'clock a. m., when and where those who de-
sire may attend.
: S. D. RAY, Auditor.
43-27-3t.
N OTICE OF DISSOLUTION.—Notice
is hereby given that the partnership sub-
sisting between Thomas A. Shoemaker and J. L
Montgomery of Bellefonte, Penna., under the
firm name of the Bellefonte’ Fuel and Supply Co.,
was dissolved with 28th day of June A. D. 1898, by
mutual consent. All debts owing to the said
artnership are to be received fr said J. L.
Montgomery and all demands on the said partner-
ship are to be presented to him for payment.
THOMAS A. SHOEMAKER,
J. L. MONTGOMERY,
Bellefonte, July 28th, 1898,
43-29-3t
OTICE.—Notice is hereby given that
the following accounts will be presented
to the Court for confirmation on Wednesday the
24th day of August next and unless exceptions be
filed thereto on or before the second day of said
August term the same will be confirmed, to-wit:
the account of John Blanchard, assignee of Julia
D. Kitz and Julia D. Kitz, executrix of Wm. R.
Miller, Dec’d. The account of Wm. E. Irvin
committee of Aaron Smith, a lunatie, and the ac-
count of Hiram Shultz, committee of William
Jacobs, a lunatic, W. F. SMITH,
43-28 Prothonotary.
(PURT PROCLAMATION. — Whereas
the Honorable J. G. Love, Presider. J udge
of the Court of Common Pleas of the 49th . dieial
District, consisting of the county of Centre and
the Honorable Corlis Faulkner, Associate .J udge*
in Centre county, having issued their precept,
bearing date the 25th da of July '98 to me directed,
for holding a Court of” Oyer and Terminer an
General Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the
Peace in Bellefonte, for the county of Centre and
to commence on the 4th Monday of August being
the 22nd day of August 1898, and to continue one
week, notice is here TE om to the Coroner, Jus-
tices of the Peace, Aldermen and Constables of
said county of Centre, that they be then and there
in their proper Zersons, at 10 o'clock in the fore-
noon of the 22nd, with their records, inquisitions,
examinations, and their own remembrance, to do
those things which to their office appertains to be
done, and those who are bound in recognizances
to prosecute against the prisoners that are or shall
be in the jail of Centre county, be then and there
to prosechte against them as ‘shall be just.
riven under my hand, at Bellefonte, the 25th day
of July in the year of our Lord, 1898, and the
one hundred and twenty-first year of the inde-
pendence of the United States,
WwW. M. CRONISTER,
43-30-4t Sheriff
Sid BICYCLES DOWN TO $5.00.
New 1898 Model Ladies’ and Gents’ Bicycles are
now being sold on easy conditions, as low as $5.00;
others outright at $13.95, and high-grade at $19.93
and $22.50, to be paid for after received. If vou
will cut this notice out and send to Sears, Rok-
BUCK & Co., Chicago, they will send you their 1898
bicycle catalogue and full particulars. 34-27-3m
S 000 BICYCLES.
All makes and models, must be closed out at
once. New 97 models, guaranteed, $9.75 to $18;
shopworn and used wheel, 83 to $12; swell ’98
models, $13 to $35. Great factory Searing sale,
Shipped to any one on approval without advance
deposit. Handsome souvenir book free.
—EARN A BICYCLE—
by a little work for us. FREE USE of sample Y OU CAN DO BETTER
wheel to rider agents. Write at once for our spec-
ial offer.
P. H. MEAD & PRENTISS,
3-26-13t Chieago, Ill.
Eye Glasses.
Ory UP-TO-DATE METHODS
WHEN YOU BUY
EYE GLASSES
You want to consider several things besides the
csot. If you buy your glasses of us you may feel
sure that they are meant for your sight, are Drop:
erly adjusted and that you haye received the
worth of your money.
THE MOST
HELPLESS MAN
Is the one who breaks or loses his glasses. Should
you prefer a new pair we will guarantee to fit your
eyes with the finest glasses at prices satisfactory
for the best of goods.
H. E. HERMAN & CO., L’td.
308 Market Street, Williamsport, Pa.
WILL VISIT BELLEFONTE, PA.
en A Ton.
FRANK GALBRAITH'S JEWELRY STORE,
BUSH HOUSE BLOCK.
TUESDAY, AUG. 2xb.
No Charge for Examination. 13-25-1y
A ———
Plumbing etc.
. (QHOOSE
YOUR :
PLUMBER Li
as you
chose your doctor—for ef-
fectiveness of work rather
than for lowness of price.
Judge of our ability as you
judged of his—by the work
already dene.
Many very particular
people have judged us in
this way, and have chosen
us as their plumbers.
sensesnne
—
R. J. SCHAD & BRO. |
No. 6 N. Allegheny St., 3
BELLEFONTE, PA.
42-43-6t
43-13
nice A emai
IRVIN’S!
MASON’S GLASS J ARS,
Quarts n= 45cts.
Gallons - - 70 ¢¢
GOOD TIN CANS,
Everyone guaranteed
not to leak - 30cts. Doz.
ANOTHER LOT OF SCREEN DOORS
AT
T5cts.
WITH HINGES, KNOBS and LATCH.
IRVIN’S CASH HARDWARE,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Fine Groceries
FINE GROCERIES.
Fine Teas, Fine Coffees,
Fine Spices,
Fine Syrups, Fine Fruits,
Fine Confectionery,
Fine Cheese,
Fine Canned Goods,
Fine Syrups,
Fine Dried Fruits,
Fine Hams,
Fine Bacon,
Fine Olives,
Fine Pickles,
Fine Sardines,
Fine Oil,
Fine Ketchups,
Fine Oranges,
Fine Lemons,
Fine Bananas,
But all these can talk for them-
selves if you give them a fair chance.
NEW FISH,
Bright Handsome New Mackerel,
New Caught Lake Fish,
Ciscoes,
Herring,
White Fish.
Lake Trout,
New Maple Sugar and Syrup,
Fine Canned Soups,
Bouillon, Oxtail,
Mock Turtle,
Vegetable,
Consomme, Mulligatawney,
Chicken,
Tomato, Gumbo,
Queensware,
Enameled Ware,
Tin Ware,
Brooms and Brushes.
Best place to bring your produce
and best place to buy your goods.
SECHLER & CO.
42-1 BELLEFONTE, PA.
Saddlery.
Foo $5,000 $5,000
WORTH OF ———
HARNESS, HARNESS, HARN ESS,
SADDLES,
BRIDLES,
PLAIN HARNESS,
FINE HARNESS,
BLANKETS,
WHIPS, Ete.
All combined in an immense Stock of Fine
Saddlery.
eseee NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS...
a To-day Prices |
have Dropped
THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE
COLLARS IN THE COUNTY.
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
33-37 BELLEFONTE, PA.
Insurance.
A CCIDENT Ha
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 5 are ill $40 per month,
If illed, will pay your heirs, 8208 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 81.00 to $2.25
per month. y
The Fidelity Mutual Aid association is pre-
eminently the largest and strongest accident and
ealth 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,