Beworwaiy alc Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 23, 1898. aroma am —" om FARM NOTES. —Laurel Green is another new fraud, not because it is absolutely worthless, but becauce it is of very low grade and is put out with unfounded claims. It appears to be a mixture of Paris green, blue stone and and line. —Currants thrive in the cold sections of this country, and require but little labor and care compared with some crops, yet they are rarely seen on farms. The currant gives good returns when well treated and markets are never overstocked. —Do not reduce the food because of a scarcity, but buy bran and linseed meal, Economy in the saving of food means a loss in the product. Food brought on the farm is not only an addition to the raw material to be utilized, but increases the manure heap. —Top dressing in the fall is an excellent way to treat the wheat and to preserve the manure from loss. Wheat land that has been plowed in the fall is loose and the rains carry the soluble portions of the ma- nure down instead of allowing them to wash off the surface, the roots of wheat (or other fall crop) following the plant food and absorbing it. —Slug Shot, so largely advertised, con- tains less than 20 per cent of arsenic and a little copper oxide. Paris green, the stand- ard insecticide, contains about 54 or 55 per cent of arsenic and sells a retail for about 20 centsa pound. One cent a pound would be about a fair price for these cheap frauds that are put out with wonderfully high sounding praises. —A new insecticide has been advertised under the name of Bug Death, and great claims are made for it also as a fertilizer. It is composed of the oxides of zine, lead and iron, and has a trace of potash. These substances have little or no value as insec- ticides, and the potash is the only element of value as a fertilizer that it contains. Jug Death is a fraud. —It has been demonstrated that a cow will eat as much as 75 pounds of green food in one day. This appears as a large quantity, but such cows are also producers of more milk than cows which eat but lit- tle. It is of no advantage to have what is termed a ‘‘light feeder,’” as it is impossible for a cow to yield milk in large quantities unless she consumes sufficient food from which to produce the milk. —When the crops are removed from the garden, burn the ground over so as to de- stroy weeds and seeds. It may then be plowed and seeded to rye, if not too late in the season at the time, the rye to be plow- ed under in thespring. The object should be to avoid having weeds in a garden so as to render the work less difficult during the busy season, and if this matter is care- tully attended to there will he no weeds to kill in two or three seasons. —XKeep the stock off the pasture and spread manure over the surface, so as to pro- tect during the winter and give the grass a good start early in the spring. Those who manage to have good pastures allow the grass to grow late in the years and broad- cast with manure after the frost appears. In the spring the land is harrowed, so as to fine up the manure, and wood ashes applied. In this manner a good sward is maintained for many years. Some pastures are crop- ped too closely. —Such implements as harvesters and hay loaders are costly, and too much care cannot be given them when they are out of use. All machines, implements and tools should be thoroughly cleaned when at the end of the season, wiped dry and oiled, and placed under shelter. It will not do to store them under an open shed, as storms may beat in, but they must be put away in good condition ready for use, and ex- amined several times during the winter. —Concentrating the manure on a small area may appear as a waste, but results have always been in favor of so doing. The Massachusetts Board of Agriculture calls attention to the fact that the keeper of a livery stable applied the manure from 15 horses on an acre and a half of land for several years and harvested two and three crops of hay each year, the aggregate being seven and a half tons every season, or more than three times as much as the land would have produced without such treatment. —If eggs were sold by the pound there would be more care given the fowls and a greater interest taken in the breeds of poultry. The best hens are not al ways the ones that lay the largest number of eggs, though they may give a greater profit un- der the present system of selling. A hen that lays ten dozen eggs a year, weighing 12 eggs to the pound, does not perform as much service as one that lays nine dozens weighing eight to the pound. Selling by weight would enable the hens that lay few- er but larger eggs, to give the greater profit. —Butterine cannot compete with good butter. There is no such thing as medium butter. If it is not choice it deserves no place in the market. Much of the butter sold is unfit for use, and the cause is ignor- ance in making it. In Europedairy schools have been established for many years, the result being a rapid advance in the methods of butter-making. In this country dairy school are beginning to be established and are well attended. Butter making begins when the milk is drawn from the udder, the strictest cleanliness being observed. Filth and carelessness being obs tacles in the way of good butter. —The question of whether artificial ferti- lizers should be used with manure can be settled only by farmers in their individual capacity. Much depends on the kind of crop that is to occupy the land and the fer- tility of the soil. If corn is to be grown next spring it will do no harm to mix bone meal with the manure and apply both to- gether, but if the land is to be given up to some leguminous crop the use of phosphate will not be necessary in the fall, as an acidulated phosphate in the spring will be suitable. Corn being a gross feeding plant will allow no kind of material to escape that can be utilized as plant food, and it is therefore serviceable in enabling the farmer to give to the soil many waste substances that would be too slow in decomposition for some other crops. All potash com- pounds should be applied very early in the spring (as soon as the land is plowed), but such materials as nitrate of soda may be delayed a few weeks longer. A mixture of land plaster and sulphate of potash will prove of benefit to clover early in the spring nitrogen not being essential, but the nitro- gen that may be applied will prove of much benefit to the wheat. Manure, how- ever, is the most serviceable of all, because it is subject to less loss, and as it slowly becomes available it supplies plant food until late in the year. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. The textiles destined for winter wear are lighter and thinner than they have been for years. This is largely owing to the popu- larity of the new shaped skirts, heavy goods only being suitable for perfectly plain skirts. Plain effects are in the lead of the vogue, stripes will he seen occasionally, but figured stuffs will not be de riguer at all. Drap amazone, drap-cachemire, taupe- linette, a smooth surfaced moleskin, cache- mire-veloute, popelaine de laine, popelaine de soie and a new rep showing an uneven surface of one fine and one coarse rib al- ternately are among the most favored of the new fabrics for fall and winter. In shades, gray, from palest pearl color for house wear to thunder cloud for the street, will retain its popularity. Some new effects in platine and nickel shades are beautifully soft. Green will also be much in evidence for smart costumes. In regard to the fashioning of gowns, the Dewey flounce may be safely predicted to last through the entire winter and no woman’s wardrobe will be complete with- out at least two skirts made after this model. Another decided novelty in skirts has a very deep yoke descending from the waist to the knee and having absolutely no fulness, the gathers or plaits being re- placed by darts at the waistline. From this yoke descends a flounce or crosswise band with pipings of satin or embroidery. Whether this audacious innovation is too radical to bea success remains to be proven of the advent of cooler weather. In Paris the Empire model has many partisans, as has also the Princess robe. Both will be worn to a greater degree there than here. So far our American women have given these scant favor, but Dame Fashion predicts they will ‘‘go’’ before the winter is over. The shape of all the ad- vance models of capes leads one to suppose that we are to have a transition to the time of Empress Eugenie and have very sloping shoulder effects. This is borne out by a new shaped yoke seen on a smart gown for early fall wear. It did not terminate at the top of the shoulder, but descended over the arm in a straight line with the breast. There will be a perfect craze for decoration, that will not confine itself to the bodice and skirt alone, but will extend to capes, coats, pelerines and fur garments. The shapes in fall hats have a decided tendency toward the small sizes. The broad-brimmed hat will be entirely passe. The Tyrolean or Alpine shape in various modifications will continue to he la mode for utility wear. The fancy toque and the sailor in felt, beaver or velvet will be the two leading models for dressy hats. The last will be so elaborately trimmed and bent into so many fashions that its name is really all of the sailor effect left it. Mil- liners are inclining toward putting strings on the toques, an effect which has been out for several seasons—but this will hardly meet with popular approval. Velvet wings, with the tips bent downward, spangled and jetted, palettes, torsades, couteaux and rosettes of velvet or taffeta will all be much used for hat garniture. Tucking, milliners’ folds and rows of galloon or ribbon trim many of the new lignt-wool gowns for general wear. These are all simple modes of garnishing a dress ; none the less are they really desirable from a decorative point of view, and to all pres- ent appearances are likely to be as popular this autumn as they have been for several seasons past. Young women with slim waists draw the wide black Liberty satin sashes twice around the body knot the streamers once and pin with a jeweled brooch. The knot may be placed at any point on the waist line. The novelty in umbrella heads has taken a step toward reviving the old style of hammered silver in pompadour designs of various round-shaped heads. These are mounted on hard wood, and are both ar- tistic and attractive. The cyclists have a new form of jacket, with a yoke piece strapped into the back like a Russian coat, while others are cut only with a cape over the shoulder, down which the rains runs off the figure in a very acceptable manner. There are a good many occasions in the country where, cycling or non-cycling, such garments are sorely needed. Coat bodices differing from the skirt are now being worn, or the coat and skirt cor- respond and there are revers, vest and cen- tre skirt panel of different material. The cloth coat and plaid skirt make an un- doubtedly chic combination and many serges and self-colored skirts have plaid linings, the plaid showing again as vest or yoke and in the hat. A costume of this type, with cape lined plaid to match, makes a charming costume for country or seaside wear and both cape and hat are useful with other gowns. If Parisian styles catch on here this win- ter coats will be very diversified aud those for late autumn wear have rounded fronts and long tails, the front shorter and giving the pouched effect, although not actually full, but standing out either with trim- mings or revers. Many of the coats with very tiny basques have longer fronts, fall- ing straight, and we shall probably see the smarter coats trimmed with frills, as these are already shown in Paris. How to prepare autumn leaves for win- ter Decoration.—On a fine dry day gather the leaves as soon as they have turned brown, and cut the stalks as long as pos- sible. Paint them all over with clear pic- ture varnish, stalks and all. Tie a piece of cotton round the stalks in a loop, by which suspend them until they are quite dry ; when the varnish is quite dry and bard they may be packed away in a box between sheets of tissue paper until re- quired for use. They look very pretty ar- ranged in vases with red berries, grass or everlastiLg flowers. Care of Umbrellas.—After using an um- brella on a wet day never leave it open to dry, as it causes the silk to crack ; but stand the umbrella with the handle down- wards in a tin bath to drain, and when nearly dry open for a few minutes. To take out paint Marks.—Paint marks upon woolen materials may be removed by applying a little turpentine, the smell of which may be quickly dissipated by hang- ing the articles upon a line in the air or near the fire. Gort the Suit She Wanted. “I dida’t quite know what my hus- band’s attitude would be on the bathing suit question,’’ said the Juno-like girl who was only married last fall, to some of her married women friends before she went away to the beach, ‘‘and so I thought I'd just try him. Some men are so funny about women’s bathing suits, you know. I hate a baggy old bathing suit with no style about it, but I didn’t want to buy one that George would not like. SoI bor- rowed Mrs. Annual Leave’s. Mrs. An- nual Leave is very strict in her ideas, you know, and her bathing suit is a fright. It is trimmed nice enough, but the—well, it is long, you know, and baggy and full of draw strings and all that kind of foolish- ness. So a couple of nights ago, while George was going over his outing shirts and things I put this bathing suit on. Then I went into the room where George was packing. ‘‘How do you like my bathing suit? I asked him. ‘“You ought to have seen the funny in- spection he gave me. ‘Do you call that shroud a bathing suit?’ he finally asked me. And do you think you're going into the water ‘with me with a hay-bag thing like that on you? For if you do, you're mixed, that’s all. Why didn’t you get one with a train to it while you were about it? You look like a pap- poose with that thing on. You're all swaddled up. You don’t belong to any nunnery yet awhile, you know. Just you run down town to-morrow and change that thing. It may be all right for my grand- mother out in Iowa, but it don’t go for you, and you hear me. Why, you'd get the laugh if you wore that. What's the use of being built the right way if you’re going to make a show of yourself in a rig like that ?’ “Well, I didn’t say anything, but yes- terday I went down and got just the kind of a bathing suit I wanted, and when I put it on last night and showed it to George he said I looked like one of the colored sup- plement pictures in it, and that it was all right, all right. Before I was married you all told me that men were such queer, con- trary things, but I don’t believe they are at all.”’— Washington Post. She Was High Toned. On the platform in front of a store in a Nebraska town was a kerosene barrel with one of the heads knocked out, and the big grease spot on the platform and on the ground beneath showed that the contents of the barrel had been wasted. ‘‘Had an accident ?’’ I queried of the mer- chant at his door. ‘No, not exactly an accident,’’ he slow- ly replied. ‘Then the out ?’’ ‘No, it didn’t exactly fall out.” Down at the far end of the platform a woman sat on a salt barrel, smoking a pipe and trotting her foot. As I looked at her the merchant softly said : “Don’t say anything to get her excited.’ ‘‘Has she been excited ?”’ ‘‘I should say she had! She’s the wife of the county clerk, and as I was busy and couldn’t wait on her for a box of baking powder the minute she came in, she pranced out here and knocked in the head of that barrel. She’s the only high-toned woman we've got around here and I’ve got to knuckle to her or she’ll scatter that salt all over creation !”’ Corn Bread in the South. head of the barrel fell The way corn bread is prepared in the South placesjit among the dainties, toa man who loves good things, and if people do not grow fat and large on it the reason is not forthcoming. For breakfast, besides the biscuits, there is set near the head of the family a plate upholding a thin square of egg bread, with a crust as brown as oysters fried in the French market at New Orleans. At noon there is nothing that goes so well with turnips green and jowl, and later with beans and well-done cabbage, as the corn pone—brittle of crust and with a crumb that melts in the mouth. For the evening meal—it’s supper and not dinner in the country—one’s mouth is set to wa- tering as soon as he approaches the table by a stack of steaming and buttered corn batter cakes. Why shouldn’t one grow robust when such things tempt in abund- ance? The old ‘“‘cullud gemmen’ was showing a kind appreciation when he en- thusiastically exclaimed : “Yeh, dey’s many things ter make a pusson feel happy an’ ‘tented ober yondah in Canaan, but ef I can dess alles have some er de brown corn bread Lucindy cooks w’en I crosses the Jurdon dat wiil be good ernuft foh me !”? New Advertisements, OR RENT.—A good brick house with all modern improvements located on east Linn street, one of the most pleasant parts of the town, can be rented cheap by applying to 43-7-tf HAMILT N OTTO. 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. Bicycles. 1 %® 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 $19.95 and $22.50, to be paid for after received. If you will cut this notice out and send to SEARS, Rog- BUCK & Co., Chicago, they will send you their 1898 bieyele catalogue and full particulars. 34-27-3m 000 BICYCLES. All makes and models, must be closed out at once. New '97 models, guaranteed, $3.75 to $18; shopworn and used wheel, $3 to $12; swell '08 models, $13 to $35. Great factory clearing 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 wheel to rider agents. Write at once for our spee- ial offer. P. H. MEAD & PRENTISS, 43-26-13t Chicago, Ill, Roofing. Now IS THE TIME TO EXAMINE 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 ove repaired I am equipped to give you the best at reasonable rices. The Celebrated Courtright T'in Shingles and all kinds of tin and iron roofing. W. H. MILLER, 42-38 Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA. | 41-48 Fine Groceries New Advertisements. "Whiskey. W RIT IN PARTITION. PRICE LIST To the heirs and legal representatives of George Wert of Penn township, Centre county, Pa., de- ceased: Sarah Breon and John H. Breon, her husband, Millheim, Pa, ; Mary Grimes, widow, fesiding in Penn township, Centre county, Pa.; Emma Keen and Alfred Keen, her husband, Penn township, Centre county, Pa. Take notice that in pursuance of an order of the Orphan's Court of Centre county, Pennsylva- nia, a writ in partition has been issued from said court to the Sheriff of said county, returnable on Monday the 28th day of Nov., 1898, and that an inquest will be held for the purpose of making par- tition of the real estate of said decedent on MONDAY, OCTOBER 10th, 1898, at 8.30 a. m,, at the late residence of the deceased, at which time and place you ean be present if you see proper : All that certain messuage, tenement, and tract of land situate in Penn townshi , County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, on the Turnpike road leading from Coburn to Millheim, which said land is described as follows : On the north by lands of John Brant and Wm. Smith ; on the east by lands of Adam Bartges ; on the south by lands of Samuel Ard and Jonathan Dinges; on the east by lands of Francis Long and Reed Alexander; containing eighty-four 184) acres more or less, and having thereon erected a frame dwelling house; frame barn and out- buildings, E¥copting, however, a lot granted and conveyed to the School District of Penn town- ship, and rights of way granted and conveyed to John Long and Mary Grimes, respectively. W. M. CRONISTER, Sheriff's office, 43-35 Sheriff. RIT PARTITION. To the heirs and legal representatives of Hugh M. Knox, Benner township, Centre county, Penn- sylvania, deceased : Eliza Knox widow, resid i Benner township ; Mary Knox, residing in Benner township, Elizabeth "Shope and James Shope, her husband Fayette county, Pa., P. O. address; John Knox, Monticello, Minn. ; Dr. Samuel Knox, Homeworth, Columbian county, Ohio, James Knox, Benner township, Centre county, Pa, ; David Knox, Benner township, Cen- tre county, Pa. ; Rachel Knox, Harrisburg, Dau- phin county, Pa.; Emma Knox, Benner town- ship, Centre county, Pa. Take notice that” in pursuance of an order of the Orphan's Court of Centre county, Pennsyl- vania, a writ in parition has been issued from said court to the Sheriff of said county, returnable on Monday, the 26th day of November, 1898, and that an inquest be held for the purpose of making partition of the real estate of Dar decedent ON SATURDAY OCTOBER 8th, 1898, at 9:30 a. m. at the late residence of the deceased, at which time and place you can he present if you see proper : All those two certain messages, tenements and tracts of land situate in the Township of Ben- ner, County of Centre and State of Penn’a. bound- ed and described as,follows, to wit : The one thereof beginning at post at corner of line of right of way of Bellefonte Central Railroad and lands of William Witmer, thence along lands of Wm. Witmer north 26 degrees 45 minutes west 19 perches to post; thence north 66 degrees 45 Immutes east 28 perches to post at public road ; thence along said public road north 33 degrees 45 minutes west 58.4 perches to stone in sai road ; thence further along said road north 25 degrees west 26 perches to stones; thence south 62 de- grees 45 minutes west 20 .5 perches to post along lands of Robert Glenn ; thence north 26 degrees 45 minutes west 61 perches to stones at public road; thence along said road south 62 de- grees 45 minutes west 20 perches to post; thence north 30 degrees 45 minutes west 6 perches to post; thence continuing along said road 59 degrees 30 minutes west 90 perches to stone; thence along lands of Mary Linn south 80 degrees 45 minutes west 14 perches to stone; thence along same south 26 degrees 45 minutes east 135 perches to stone ; thence south 3 degrees 15 minutes west 13 perches to post at north side of line of Bellefonte Central Railroad i thence by same north 62 degrees 15 minutes east 1.6 perches to post ; thence along lands of James Knox 2 degrees east 14 perches to post; thence by same 21 degrees west 9.9 ea to post; thence bv same north 62 degrees east 20 perches to post; thence by same south 28 degrees east 16 perches to poss thence by same south 62 degrees west 3 perches to post: thence by same south 28 degrees est 5.6 perches to the north line of Belle- fonte Central Railroad ; the by same north 62 de- Frese 15 niinutes east 32 perches to post; thence y same north 70 degrees east 55.4 perches to post and place of beginning. Containing 120 acres and 7 perches neat measure. Thereon erected a two story frame dwelling house and barn, the same being a portion of the lands devis- ed to Hugh M. Knox by the last will and testa- ment of Galbraith Knox, (Will Book “B” page 66) and a portion also of the same being the same [remises conveyed by Jane C. Knox to Hugh M. nox by Deed dated March 19th, 1855 and re corded in Deed Book *‘S'’ page 289. The other thereof beginning at white oak stum it ‘being the corner of Mary Linn and Bodell lands; thence by said Bodell south 26 degrees 45 minutes east 61 perches to post; thence by lands of Joseph Wilson and E. C. Humes estate, north 64 degrees 15 minutes east 134 perches to post; thence by lands of Wm. Witmer, north 26 de- gree 45 minutes west 88 perches to post on south side of Bellefonte Central Railroad ; thence by same south 70 degrees west 55.4 perches to post; thence by same south 62 degrees 15 minutes west 60 perches to post; thence by lands of Mary Linn south 3 degrees 15 minutes west 35 perches to white oak stump, the place of beginning. Con- taining 74 acres, 117 perches without buildings, well timbered. The said lands being also of those devised by Galbraith Knox to Hugh M. Knox and also of lands conveyed by Jane C. Knox to said Hugh M. Knox. W. M. CRONISTER, Sheriff’s Office, Sheriff. Bellefonte, Sept 8th, "08. 34-35 Meat Markert. GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, poor, thin or gristly meats. I use only the LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fresh- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where. I always have —DRESSED POULTRY,— (ame in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. Try My Shop. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte. 43-3%-1y Jewelry. N EWEST NOVELTIES BELTS, HAT PINS. SHIRT WAIST SETS, Ftc., in Gold and Sterling Silver. QUALITY HIGH. PRICES LOW. — [0] — F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, High St. BELLEFONTE, PA 43-27-3m OF THE Prominent Physicians have recommended it for over thirty years as the best Whiskey F for the sick. Age alone controls the price. Black label full quart - $1.00 Green 5 “ - L25 Yellow 2 se =.= 1.50 Perfection (12 years old) - 2.00 Pints 50, 60 and T5cts. Halt Pints 25 cents. On sale at D. C. KELLER, Haacs HorkL, F BELLEFONTE, PA. Eye Glasses. F O~Y UP-TO-DATE METHODS WHEN YOU BUY F 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 rope erly adjuste worth of your money. THE MOST F 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. 308 Market Street, FRANK GALBRAITH’S JEWELRY STORE, No Charge for Examination. EYE GLASSES and that you haye received the HELPLESS MAN H. E. HERMAN & CO., Ltd. Williamsport, Pa. WILL VISIT BELLEFONTE, PA. ——AT— BUSH HOUSE BLOCK. TUESDAY, SEPT. 20TH. 43-25-1y B Plumbing etc. (\HoosE YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. Judge of our ability as you 3 judged of his—by the work 3 already done. ! C Many very particular — R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t Hardware. De YOU NEED and if not satisfied bring it back and 43-13 BELLEFONTE, PA. FINE GROCERIES. CELEBRATED F BAILEY PURE RYE. ine Teas, Fine Coffees, Fine Spices, ine Syrups, Fine Fruits, Fine Confectionery, Fine Cheese, Fine Canned Goods, Fine Syrups, ine Dried Fruits, Fine Hams, ine Bacon, Fine Olives, ine Pickles, Fine Sardines, . Fine Oil, ine Ketchups, Fine Oranges, Fine Lemons, Fine Bananas, But all these can talk for them- selves if you give them a fair chance. NEW FISH, right 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, onsomme, Mulligatawney, people have judged us in Tomato, Chicken, Gumbo, this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers. Queensware, Enameled Ware, Tin Ware, Brooms and Brushes. ‘Best place to bring your produce and best place to buy your goods. SECHLER & CO. 421 BELLEFONTE, PA. erm Saddlery. EAZOR OR POCKET KNIFE? We have the finest line in “town, g3-000 HARNESS, $5,000 $5,000 ——WORTH OF—— HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES, BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Etc. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. To-day Prices have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 33-37 BELLEFONTE, PA. BUY ONE, Insurance. A CCIDENT TRY IT. wane dEALTH INSURANCE. get another. If If If if If If If he Ca IRVIN’S CASH HARDWARE, 42-19-1-y. THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO- CIATION WILL PAY YOU disabled by an accident $30 to $100 per month you lose two limbs, $208 to $5,000, you lose your eye sight, $208 to $5,000, you lose one limb, $83 to $2,000, In are ill $40 per month, illed, will pay your heirs, $208 to £5,000, 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 alth association in the United States. It has $6,000.00 cash deposits with the States of lifornia 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, San Francisco, Cal,