Demorliy fat Bellefonte, Pa., Sept. 22, 1899. FARM NOTES. —Cut away the tops of the asparagus and when dry burn the bed over, so as to destroy insects. Then cover heavily with -esh stable manure that is free from litter 1d allow it to remain until next spring. —TLe best food for ducks and geese after ~rass disappears is a mess of cooked tur- nips, thickened with bran, twice a day. If the cooking is objectionable the turnips may be sliced with a root cutter and the bran sprinkled over them. Ducks and geese prefer bulky food and require but little grain when not laying. —Colts that are foaled in the fall will entail less cost than those that come in the spring, as the mares will not be taken to the fields for work at this season. When spring comes the colts will be weaned and can then be put upon pasture, leaving the mares ready for service in the fields. As soon as the colts will eat give them ground oats in addition to the supply of milk from the dams. —The use of ground bone in the poultry yard should be encouraged. With ground bone in reach of the poultry, there is no danger of the egg-eating habit assuming large proportions, and it is doubtful if the habit will be practiced at all, where ground bone is accessible. We have noticed that when the fowls are thus supplied they even lose their liking for broken egg shells, which is certainly an indication that ground bone is effective. . —O0ld strawberry beds may be burned over as soon as the leaves die off, and by so doing many of the seeds of weeds will be consumed. The bed should then be mulch- ed by covering with manure or straw, but the mulch need not be applied until cold weather comes. If the old bed is full of weeds it will not yield satisfactorily next year, and to burn it over will be an im- provement in many respects. —If pure, unleached wood ashes could be obtained plentifully, and at a moderate cost, they would give perhaps more satis- factory results than the salts of potash, as the ashes contain lime in its best form, and serve well as a precaution against the at- tacks of some kinds of insects. They can be used without liability of injury on all kinds of crops if broadcasted over the soil, as many as 150 bushels per acre not being considered excessive on certain seils, and they make a better fertilizer for clover than barn yard manure. For fruit trees ashes cannot be excelled. —Growers of peaches are using cow peas in the orchards. The vines shade the land and may be turned under when the pods are nearly ripe or may remain as a mulch in winter. It is more profitable to use the vines for food for cattle, but at the same time, if a mulch is required, it is well to grow the mulch, especially when alegumin- ous plant answers so well. One advantage in growing the cow pea is that it is almost asure crop, and lime or wood ashes may be used as a fertilizer with it. The peach orchard will in no manner be injured by growing the cow pea as long as the land is given the benefit of the crop as manure and by plowing under. —The lawn can be improved at this sea- son either by raking it over until the soil is loosened and sowing seed on the bare places or by transplanting sed. If sod is used the spots on which the sod is placed should first be deeply spaded, so as to break up the hard soil below the surface. Lay the sod and trample it down well. If there is a vacant spot no larger than the hand place a piece of sod on it. By thus patch- ing the lawn much time will be saved in the spring, as the fall-planted sod will grow out as early next year as that which was already on the lawn, and it will be- come thicker in the summer. These state roads vary in width being 6 to 12 yards, the average width being 7} yards. The average cost per mile is $10,- 000. For every mile and a half of com- pleted road a roadkeeper is engaged who receives wages varying from $125 to $200 per year. His duties are to mend all small ruts, to brush the road in dry weather or scrape it in wet at least once a week; also to keep the footpaths, ditches and every- thing pertaining to the road in a most per- fect condition, which duties occupy him a avout six hours per day throughout the year. Special rewards are given to those who are most painstaking. For every 50 miles of road there is an overseer, with a salary of from $400 to $500, whose duty it is to watch over his piece of road; report as to repairs continually. For each county there is a state (road engineer) inspector, who reports finally to the superintendent of roads in the ministry of the interior. The inspector’s salary ranges from $700 to $1,000. —From Stuttgart. Germany, a corre- spondent of the Haven Register, who has made a study of the road system of that country, sends the following results of his observation : All roads, excepting those streets that, are within towns, are divided into classes —viz, state and county roads. The state roads are the most important thorough- fares, connecting the larger towns with one another, and are built and maintained en- tirely by the central government. The county roads are those which, connecting the smaller villages, are built by the coun- ty with state assistance up to two-thirds of their cost, but thereafter are entirely main- tained by the county. The general way of building is about the same for both classes of roads, except that on state roads, which have the heaviest traffic, the best of material is used without regard to cost, so to say; whereas, on the county roads material from local quarries is frequently used. The traces and level- ing for a new road heing completed—the maximum grade allowed is 6 per cent, though in some unavoidable cases it can rise to 9 per cent—the ground is excavated in the desired macadamization width to the depth of 14 inches. Herein are planted the rough quarry foundation stones, rising from the sides to the middle, so that the arch of the completed road shall be one- fortieth of its width. Upon this foundation crushed basalt or granite in pieces of a cubic inch is strewn to a depth of from four to five inches, upon which, as top dressing, shell lime is liberally strewn before and during the wet pressing by the steam roller. The roadbed being socompleted, a gravel footpath of about 14 yards in width is made on one or both sides of the road. Along- side of these paths runs a ditch as deep as the roadbed, which receives the water from the road through gullies at short intervals. A fruit, generally apple, tree, being now planted at every 12 wvards. or 100 yards, and with the milestones, the road is entirely finished. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Not many students of sociology pursue their studies in the practical manner of Miss Annie Marion McLean. She is a young woman who has just accepted a chair ‘in the department of sociology at Royal Victoria College, Montreal, after holding a fellowship in the same science for several vears at the University of Chicago. In order to thoroughly understand the condi- tion of women and children employed in the large department stores, she joined the ranks of the retail clerks during the rush of the holiday trade last Christmas time. She became No. 424 in one of the cheaper shops of Chicago, sold toys from eight in the morning to ten at night, and crept wearily home to a $2.50 boarding house. If you want good lemon cream mix two tablespoonfuls of arrowroot with a little cold water, then mix it with a pint of boil- ing water, the juice of two lemons and a cupful of sugar. Boil for five minutes. Take the arrowroot fiom the fire, stir in the beaten up yolks of two eggs, and put the mixture in a mold to set. Turn out and serve with the whites beaten to a stiff froth with castor sugar as a garnish. For late summer and fall wear black silk coats are the thing. They are wonderfully pretty, especially with light dresses, and not very expensive at the present price of silk. Dressmakers have been trying for a long time to make the silk coat popular, but it has never been accorded the recog- nition it deserves. I have an idea that it is about to score a triumph. Nothing could be prettier than a gray skirt of the new slate shade which is coming into fash- ion and one of these black silk coats. The skirt must not have a touch of lace about it, but it may be trimmed to similate a tunic or made into two skirts, the upper cat in fishtail points. A white waist, as dressy as you please, may accompany the costume, and a hat in any degree of gor- geousness. Suddenly green —dark green-—has become one of the most fashionable colors for cos- tumes. Being adopted so late in the sum- mer season indicates that it will be one of the shades favored for the ensuing fall and in all probability winter. It is at present much seen in transparent fabrics, worn over a silk lining of the same color. The shade preferred is of the blottle green or the new fuchsia green. It is a color which has been somewhat put aside of late, and has, therefore, all the more chance of main- taining the favor which it already attains. For fall wear. Sheath and habit skirts still in high favor. An unusually attrac- tive array of plaids for skirts to be worn with plain bodices. No colors too bright, nor combinations too gaudy, seemingly, for the newest golf capes. Cotton shirt waists of cotton corduroy, colored French piques and heavy linen duck, to be worn throughout the winter. A dark traveling gown made with a sty- lish coat or Eton jacket and a plain skirt, braided if you wish, will be the most sty- lish traveling gown for an October wed- ding. You may wear this gown all the rest of the season, and it is the only thing that every bride is traveling in. It should be well made and of a medium dark color, such as blue serge, that will stand a sea- son’s wear. Do not get it of gray or of cadet blue. The skirt should be lined with dark blue silk and the jacket may be made over white ‘satin, for this latter lining is to be fashionable this winter. You shou!d wear a pretty silk shirt waist under this. or one of wash flannel, with a silk strip in it, or a dark blue taffeta with a red polka dot or pin stripe would be very stylish, with a dark blue silk ribbon and alittle white muslin turn over at the top. These, with a small blue or black toque or simple walking hat, will make any wom- an well-dressed for the train, or anywhere else, in fact. The autumn stock is in no way connect- ed with the gown. It is made of white material, generally thin pique, and is so fitted to the neck that it hooks in the back above a tiny cape of the white pique which falls around the neck, making a narrow yoke. The shirt waist, or bodice, is low- necked and is filled in by this pique yoke. You get the idea? Why not adopt it? Cut away the soiled collars from your summer lawns and cambrics, your ginghams and even your taffetas; and fill the places with small pique yokes. which look so remark- ably well, set inside the waist in this fash- ion. As for waists, the blouse style is little seen; nevertheless with the exception of tailor-mades there are few darts used, the fullness thus produced being retained by the band of the skirt or by the new girdle which now accompanies many dresses. These are broad, loose, and are jeweled or beaded, and fasten at the back beneath two clasps, continue to foliow the waist as far as the hips, then descend to the front in a point about six inches helow the waist. This is the Sarah Bernhardt effect, and al- lows the robe to be cut loose, the weight of the beaded and fringed girdle retain- ing the slight fullness in place. This style relieves the pit of the stomach from pres- sure and is hygienic as well as gracefu.l The present sheath shape of skirts is singularly adapted to plaids, which are again much in evidence on the counters of our hest retail stores. The softer colorings, such as brown, dark gray, and a dull red crossed by lines of coloring only a trifle lighter or darker than the background, will be given the preference and take the lead in all soft long-haired goods. The bright Highland plaids will no doubt find great favor with young women; they are high- priced, however, which will somewhat re- strict their popularity. The craving for something to drink is strong during sickness, and the nurse is often at a loss to give the patient that which will quench the thirst and yet not prove injurious. In all cases the doctor's opinion must be asked as to the advisabil- ity and the manner of satisfying a pa- tient’s craving, but the following recipes given by Woman’s Life will afford a choice: In any illness. except diarrhoea, barley water is a soothing and refreshing drink if properly made. The primary causz of its dislike by the sick is the in- efficient washing of the barley before it is boiled. Put an ounce of pearl barley in a basin, fill up with cold water, allow it to stand e minute or two, and then carefully pour off the water. Repeat this operation three times, and you will then have got rid of several impurities that too often are boiled with the barley and render the drink distasteful. When cleansed in this way put the barley into a saucepan with a quart of water, sugar to taste, and a few drops of essence of lemon. Boil until it is of the required consistency. Do not over-sweeten or it will not be liked. Crop Averages. | September Report as Given Out by the Department i of Agriculture. ; WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—The September report of the statistician of the Department of Agriculture shows the following averages | of condition on September 1st : Corn, 85.2, wheat, 70.9; oats, 87.2; rye, 82.0; buck- wheat, 75.2; potatoes, 86.3; harley, 86.7. There was a decline in the average con- | dition of corn during August amounting to 4.7 points, but the condition on Sept. 1st was still 1.0 points higher than on Sep- tember 1st, 1898, 5.9 points higher than at the corresponding date in 1887, and 2.9 points above the .mean of the September averages for the last ten years. The condition of winter and spring wheat consolidated is 70.9, as compared with 68.7 on Sept. 1st, 1898, 85.7 at the correspond- ing date in 1897, and 82.5 the mean of Sept. averages for the last ten years. The condition on the first of the present month was the lowest September condition in twenty years. The reports from the prin- cipal winter wheat States are, with the ex- ception of Kansas and Missouri, slightly better than on July 1st, but in the spring wheat States there has been a decline of 3 points in North Dakota, 2 in South Dakota, 12 in Minnesota, 16 in Iowa and 11 in Ne- braska. The Department will make no quantative estimate of the wheat crop, pending a revis- ion of the acreage figures in the northwest and on the Pacific slope. Bogert Jury Could not Agree. The Vote Stood Ten for Acquittal to Two for Convic- tion. WILLIAMSPORT, Pa., Sept. 16.—After 42 hours’ deliberation the jury in the case of former postmaster Bogert, of Wilkes- barre, charged with opening letters, was discharged by Judge Buffington this morn- ing. On each of the last ten ballots, it is said, the jury stood ten for acquittal and two for conviction. In discharging the jury Judge Buffington said : “In face of the farcical exhibition just concluded at Ren- nes, it is refreshing to note that an Ameri- can jury would, at the end of a hard week’s work, and when all wanted to get home, give careful attention to an important case and remain as long as necessary to do this.”’ Union County Fair. Reduced Rates Via Pennsylvania Railroad. For the benefit of persons desiring to at- tend the Union county fair, to be held at Brook park, near Lewisburg, Pa., Sept. 26th, 27th, 28th and 29th, the Pennsyl- vania railroad company will sell excursion tickets to Brook park on September 26th, 27th, 28th, and 29th, valid to return until Sept. 30th, inclusive, at rate of single fare for the round trip (no less rate than 25 cents. ) : Special trains will be run Thursday, Sep- tember 28th, and on Friday, September 29th, as follows: Leave Mifflinburg 12:00 noon, Vicksburg 12:08 p. m., Biehl 12:13 p. m.; arrive Brook park 12:18 p. m. Re- turning, leave Brook park for Bellefonte and intermediate stations at 5:45 p. m. Special trains will also be run on Thurs- day and Friday, September 28th and 29th, between Lewisburg and Brook park every half hour from 9:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. All regular trains will stop at Brook park during the fair. For time of regular trains consult time-tables. . ‘I am so ambitious,’’ said the egotistical man, ‘‘that someday you may see me bring the earth home.”’ ‘‘If you bring it on your feet,’’ cautioned his meek wife, ‘‘don’t forget that the door mat stands in the vestibule, and that the last time these halls were scrubbed I did it myself.”” Chicago *‘News.” ——Prosperity. has struck a snag in Johnstown. The Cambria steel company on Saturday announced a reduction of from 70 to 80 per cent. in the wages of the men employed in the structural department. This is the biggest wage cut on record, and a general strike is threatened. BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.—The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chap- ped bands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. Potts Green. ——Queen Victoria has announced to Viscount Peel, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the National Portrait gallery, her decision to present to the gallery asa national possession a portrait of herself. in the robes worn at her coronation. ——DRobert R. Stuyvesant, of New York, has just sold a plot of ground which has been owned by the Stuyvesant family for 216 years. It was purchased directly from the Indians by Peter Stuyvesant, Governor of New Amsterdam. -—-Sir Edmund Antrobus, owner of the estate upon which Stonehenge stands, has offered the land to the British government for 125,000 pounds. ——Miss Ann Klumke, who inherits all of the property of the late Rosa Bonheur, is a California woman, and a painter of | prices. Estimates on new work gladly fur- note. nished. 42-38 EE ————— LI ———— — OTR Niagara Falls Excursions. Low-rate Vacation Trips via Pennsylvania Railroad. September 7th and 21st and October 5th and 19th are the dates of the remaining railroad popular ten-day excursions to Nia- gara Falls from Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington and intermediate points. Excursion tickets, good for return pas- sage on any regular, exclusive of limited express trains, within ten days, will be sold at $9.50 from Altoona and Harrisbury; $6.00 from Sunbury and Wilkesbarre; $5.75 from Williamsport; and at proportionate rates from other points. A stop over will be made at Buffalo Rochester,Canandaigua, and Watkins within the limit returning. A special train of Pullman parlor cars and day coaches will be run with each ex- cursion. An extra charge will be made for parlor seats. An experienced tourist agent and chaper- one will accompany each excursion. Tickets for a side trip to the Thousand Islands (Alexandria Bay) will be sold from Rochester in connection with excursions of September 7th and 21st, good to return to Rochester or to Canandaigua via Syracuse within five days, at rate of $5.50. Tickets for a side trip to Toronto will be sold at Niagara Falls for $1.90 on Septem- ber 23rd. In connection with excursion of September 7th, tickets will be sold to To- ronto and return at reduced rates, account Toronto fair. For pamphlets giving full information and hotels. and for time of connecting trains, apply to nearest ticket agent or ad- dress Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general pas- senger agent, Broad street station, Phila- delphia. 44-33-5t To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet. 44-6m ——Sir Thomas J. Lipton says he owes his business success to his commercial train- ing in America. Try Grain=0? Try Grajn-0 ! Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. - The children may drink it with- out injury as well as the adult. All who try it like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most dolicate stomach receives it with- out distress. 14 the price of coftee- 15¢c. and 25cts per package. Sold by all grocers. 43-50-17 Business Notice. Castoria Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FLETCHER. In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought Castoria. AS TT 0 RBR'1T A cC AS TT O BR 1 A Cc A 8S TT. 0 BR 1 A Cc AS T OO BT A c A'8 T 0 B 1.4 cece The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has-been made under his personal supervision for. over 30 years. Allow jno one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘““Just-as-good” are but Ex- periments, and endanger the health of Children— Experience against Experiment WHAT IS CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Cas- tor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neith- er Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It. destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It re- lieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipa- tion and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving ;healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—-The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS. The Centaur Company, New York City. Roofing. A LEAKING ROOF IS A PESKY NUISANCE. W. H Miller, Allegheny Street, Bellefonte, Pa., puts on new or repairs old slate roofs at the lowest Montgomery Ward & Co. ‘VV HOLESALE PRICES TO CONSUMERS - prices is sk A book of 1,000 pages, you eat and us THE BOOK IS F copy, all charges prepaid. MONTGOMERY 111 to 120 Michigan Ave., How we sell goods to consumers at wholesale OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE Sertusirbeass and BUYERS’ GUIDE and 60,000 descriptions of the things It costs 72 cents a copy to print and send it. We want you to have one. Send 15 cents to partly pay postage or expressage, and we'll send you a CHICAGO. 1 4-32 ....... Originators of the Mail Order Business 10wn in 16,000 illustrations, e and wear. REE TO YOU WARD & CO. Cor. Madison Street, McCalmont & Co. VJ ¢CALMONT & CO.—m8m — 0 ——HAVE THE—— iss erie ets ce sr irrt sae eesanre sa seninstanaasennett 0 Sms remmed VE rt { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } (Or errrrrrrenreteesentstttitiiiinetinsiiterstttestesenasossnans 0 CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a dollar to the farmer. The more conservative farmer wants to see the goods before he buys, and buy where he can get repairs when needed, for he knows that the best machinery will wear out in time. Goods well bought is money saved. Money saved is money earned. Buy from the largest house, biggest stock lowest prices ; where the guarantee is as good as a bond ; where you can sell your corn, oats, wheat hay and straw for cash, at the highest market prices, and get time on what you buy. All who know the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them. SEE HOW THE PRICES RUN : Sisal Binder TWIRe, Per IW. usciiicnmmiinnmiissiniiinimmsicsmiroids 10c. Standard “ s€ fe Hoty 10c. Manilla $¢ $ o «2 le] 5-Tooth Cultivator........ .$ 1.95. 16-Tooth Perry Harrows.. 7.00. 12-inch Cut Lawn Mowers 2.25. Top Bugey................... 29.50. Open Buggy... 24.50. With Long-distance Axles, extra...... 1.50. South Carolina Rock Phosphate, per ton...............eeevveeeerireereennns wevien inks 12.00. MecCalmont & Co’s Champion Ammoniated Bone Super Phosphate....... 25.00. The man who pays for what he gets wants the best his money will buy. There is no place on earth where one can do better than at McCALMONT & COS. 44-19-3m BELLEFONTE, PA Fine Groceries New Advertisements. Preze GROCERIES......... MV] ONEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. ARE CONDUCIVE GOOD HEALTH ONLY THE PUREST AND FRESHEST GOODS are to be had at SECHLER & CO’S BELLEFONTE, PA. Fine Teas, Fine Spices, Fine Fruits, Fine Cheese, Fine Syrups, Fine Ham, Fine Olives, Fine Sardines, Fine Ketchups, Fine Lemons, Fine Coffees, Fine Syrups, Fine Confectianery, Fine Canned Goods, Fine Eried Fruits, Fine Bacon, Fine Pickles, Fine Oil, Fine Oranges, Fine Bananas. But all these can talk for themselves if you give them a fair chance. NEW FISH, Bright Handsome New Mackeral, Ciscoes,? New Caught Lake Fish, Herring, White Fish, Lake Trout, New Mapl Sugar and Syrup, Fine CannedSoups, Bouillion, Oxtail, Mock Turtle, Vegetable, Consomme, Mulligatawney, Tomato, Chicken, Gumbo, Queensware, Enameled Ware, Tin Ware, and Brushes. Brooms Best place to bring your produce and best place to buy your goods. SECHLER & CO. 42-1 BELLEFONTE, PA. Insurance. /\\ CCIDENT es 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, If 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 $2.26 i 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, J. M. KEICHLINE, 44-14-1yr*, Att'y at Law. Roofing. N°V 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 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. Herman & Co. NOTICE ! DEFECTIVE - EYES Can be made to see perfectly and the trouble entirely removed vy prop- erly fitted glasses. Our specialist isa graduate and fully qualified in his pro- ession. His knowledge and experi- Snce is at your command. He will e at FRANK GALBRAITH'’S, JEWELER, —BELLEFONTE, PA.—— TUESDAY, OCT. 3rd, 1899, H. E. HERMAN & CO., Consultation Free. 44-19-1y Wax Candles. HADOW AND LIGHT Blend most softly and play most effectively over a fes- tive scene when thrown by waxen candles. The light that heightens beauty’s charm, that gives the finished touch to the drawing room or dining room, is the mellow glow of BANQUET WAX CANDLES, Sold in all colors and shades to harmonize with any interior hangings or decorations. Manufactured by STANDARD OIL CO. For sale everywhere. 39-37-1y ; -—e Jewelry. \ N EDDING GIFTS. ——STERLING SILVER— is. the most appropriate thing to give. It is useful, has beauty, and lasts a life time. OUR STOCK INCLUDES EVERYTHING for the table, and prices are very little more than is asked for the plated ware. COME AND LOOK AT IT. | (3 ] en F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, 41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE, PA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers