Demon atc Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 8, 1899. FARM NOTES. —The cow will pay for what she receives, but she will not give something for noth- ing. She may be well bred and capable of sroducing an unusual quantity of milk and butter, but she will not do so unless she is iberally supplied with the raw materials suitable for her purpose. —Grain and vegetable foods are nourish- ing and contain more of the elements to supply the wants of human beings than does animal food. The mineral matter, protein, fat, sugar and starch can be found in all vegetable substances, while meat is sometimes deficient in both the fat, starch and mineral substances. Horses perform heavy labor on corn, oats, hay and grass, and even the meats are produced from vege- table substances. —Corn cobs are not valued by farmers as they should be, yet they are exceedingly rich in potash, and it will pay an enter- prising farmer to buy them for fuel, the ashes to be saved. Corn husks are used in the manufacture of beds, being sent to market in bales. They must be clean and bright, and must be harvested before they are damaged by wet weather. Corn stalks are shredded and sold in bales in some sec- tions, where hay or bedding is scarce. — Careful stacking saves much loss of hay and straw. But few farmers stack their hay, preferring to put it away in the mow, but straw is usually left outside. There is some skill required in stacking straw so as to pretect it, and it is more valuable if bright and clean. Cattle will pick over the straw even when well supplied with hay, and they will eat a large proportion of clean straw when they will not touch that which has become wet and mouldy. —Good grooming is important in mak- ing a horse’s coat shine? using the brush vigorously. Begin feeding a handful of linseed meal night and morning, mixing it with a little bran or cornmeal, increasing the allowance daily until a pint is used. It will loosen the skin and greatly benefit the animal in many ways. Should it prove too laxative reduce the quantity. Linseed meal may be given to all horses regularly twice a week with advantage. —Nature restores soils to fertility by covering them. The barren soil will in time support some kind of plant life, and each year will witness more plants and greater growth. The leaves of trees fall to the ground and serve to cover the soil, and in every case where growth can be secured there is no bare soil. It is when the ground is covered that the formation of humus oc- curs and the covering protects the soil from loss of plant food from rains, while the roots convert the mineral substances of the subsoil into soluble matter. —Ammonia is much lighter than the air and rises. It contains a large proportion of hydrogen, the lightest of all substances, as well as nitrogen. Ammonia results from the decay or fermentation of the substances in the manure, and it is seldom that it is not present in the heap. Cold water ab- sorbs it, and when the odor of ammonia is easily noticed it will not be a mistake to force a crowbar into the heap in several places, and pour cold water into the holes, or the heap should be over-hanled and plenty of absorbent material added. —The advertised ‘‘lice killers’’ used for destroying lice on poultry are made prin- cipally with naphthaline as the main sub- stance. Dissolve as much naphthaline in a gallon of kerosene as it will take up, then add a gill of crude carbolic acid two gills of gas tar and a quart of crude petroleum. When wanted for use paint it on the roots or wherever lice may appear. The naph- thaline evaporatesand penetrates the feath- ers of the fowls while they are on the roost, destroying the large body lice as well as the small mites. The cost is but a small sum. —Dairymen who desire cows to remain in flow of milk begin with them early. It is claimed that a cow with her first and second calves should be milked up to with- in a month of the time of the birth of the third calf. After that she will be a per- sistent milker. All habits of cows are fixed when they are young. The kind treatment of the heifer influences her disposition when she becomes a cow and the surround- ings also affect the animal in many respects. Some cows when removed to another locali- ty become discontented and do not fulfill expectations or prove as valuable as before. —The admonition frequently given to clean the fence corners from weeds and rubbish may be repeated at this season, as the weeds have been touched by frost and are dead and dry. They should be cleared out and burned. Sometimes the work can be done with a rake. Later in the season, when the snow covers the ground, it may be more difficult to collect rubbish and burn it. All material on the farm that has no value should be consumed, as by consigning such to the flames many insects will be destroyed. Rubbish and dead weeds make excellent harboring places for field mice. . —Every consumer of honey ought to know that all pure extracted honey granu- lates and becomes a waxy mass resembling lard in cold weather. It granulates early in autumn after taken from the hives on the approach of cool weather and remains so ever afterward unless it is heated up nearly to the boiling point, when it returns again to liquid. Glucose and other syrups used to adulterate honey do not thus granulate, but remain liquid, and all such found on the market and offered for honey may be looked upon with suspicion. The masses of the people have the mistaken idea just the reverse of this and form their conclusions that the purely liquid article is the pure honey and that the granulated article is some kind of sugar. —There is mote poor cheese on the mar- ket than can be sold, yet the demand for a full-cream cheese is greater than the sup- ply. If any one wishes to know how cheese sells it is only necessary to visit any reli- able merchant, and it will be noticed that there is a wide difference between good and inferior cheeses go far as the prices are con- cerned. Filled cheese has greatly injured the cheese industry, but there are excellent openings for farmers to co-operate in mak- ing cheese of the best quality. The milk must not be skimmed from oue milking, the next milking to be left untouched, but the whole milk from all the milkings should be used. Taking time to properly cure the cheese is another point. The de- sire to hurry cheese to market is one of the causes of lack of quality. The European fancy cheeses brought to this market owe their excellence to being well cured, and they bring high prices. Much of the cheap cheese is unfit for consumption, being in- digestible because lacking in fat and also being too ‘‘green.’’ Cheese is salable every month in the year, and it is sometimes difficult to get a first-class article. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. The fashion of stitched bands that was eagerly adopted by many women last win- ter seems to have redoubled in value in- stead of losing. The most elegant frocks this winter show this manner of trimming on everything. Circular flounces on the foundation skirts instead of having tucks have two or three graduated bands from an eighth of an inch to an inch wide, holding four or five bands of stitching. The newest idea is to trim chiffon bodices, and even those of Liberty silk and satin, with bands of stitched cloth. For instance, Isaw a white chiffon bodice made over pale green Liberty satin. Down the front went seven rows of pale green broadcloth cut half inch wide and stitched down three times with white silk thread. These bands graduated to a point at the girdle. There were three more bands down the middle of the back. The cloth was satin faced broad- cloth of the thinnest texture. The white cloth and white flannel waists, with a colored dot or stripe, are just now in marked favor. Those described a month ago as models from the other side have been copied, and now waists of wool in regular shirt waist style can be purchased at any of the best dry goods houses. These fit perfectly, and they are at once neat,dainty, serviceable and becoming; and, being sim- ply made, are easily cleaned. Table linen should be ironed when quite damp and ironed with a very hot and very heavy iron. Embroideries should be ironed on a thin, smooth surface over thick flannel, and on- ly on the wrong side. Linen may be made beautifully white by the use of a little refined borax in the water instead of using a washing fluid. The black velvet ribbon stock and bow with long ends is the most prominent fad on the streets. It takes two yards of rib- bon, and the number 12 size is the most popular. It is wound around the neck twice, with a very small bow at the throat and very long ends. The cross piece at the neck usually holds a fancy jeweled brooch. Another black velvet ribbon faucy is to wear with any light tinted stock a very narrow velvet. This is about half an inch wide, and is worn at the foot of the stock and simply crossed and fastened with a lit- tle brooch in front. The contrast with the lighter colors is very pretty. The best skirt of to-day which seems probable to last until next winter has a box plait down the middle of the back. It fits very snugly around the hips, the box plait is stiched down to give a flat appearance at the back and the skirt flares from the knees. 1t is long in front and at the sides and dips from eight to fifteen inches in the back. Ten inches is the medium which most dressmakers use for a standard on cloth gowns. House gowns are made with the full fifteen inches. Either five or three- gored pattern is good form, but for any- thing except a walking gown a three-gored is preferred. If it is a walking gown the lining is made with it. If it is a more elaborate frock the lining is made separate. No stiffening is used at the bottom. Shaped ruffles are still in evidence, but are worn more as a foundation for a tunic than on a plain skirt. All seams are still strap- ped or ornamented with a design. The authoritative tone that the majority of young women take with their mothers nowadays is not precisely an indication of good breeding; but then good breeding seems to be rapidly going out of fashion, complains a woman of the world. A few relics of it are still left, just enough to show how delightful a thing it was. A really courteous man is now described as being ‘‘of the old school.”” A really high-bred woman ia called ‘‘old-fashioned.’’ Nobody would like to see children go hack to thestilted stiffness of the days when they called their parents ‘‘Sir”’ and ‘‘Madam.’’ But their present demeanor is the reverse of polite or gentle, and reflects but little credit on themselves or on those who have brought them up. The mothers seem to get accustomed to this kind of brusquerie from their daughters, and do not preceive its effect upon people who hear and see it for the first time. But men notice it. Only last week a young man said to me at a dinner party : “I wish my brother was here. He’s rath- er gone on Miss Bengaline; but he’d have changed his mind if he’d heard her snub her poor old father as she did just now.”’ ‘Girls do nowadays,’ I said. “Nice girls don’t,”’ said he. ‘‘There’s Miss Marguerite. She adores her mother, and watches her to see if she wants any- thing, and waits on her, eye and hand and foot. She’s the girl for me.” From Paris comes the news. ‘‘One very rarely sees an overskirt on the new fall gowns in Paris, and the best tailors and dressmakers are making none at all. The new skirts are made very simply and plain- ly and are noticeable for their perfect lines and folds.” It has been whispered that many of the graceful, lithe figures of society owe their of corsets. Whether this be true or not, it is a fact thatsome one is wearing the dainty little satin girdles and very low cut bone- less bodices which one sees displayed in the corset shops. Rather to our discomfort we find, that this year, fashion has decreed that large granny muffs are to be used by well-dress- ed women. Those of us who have the or- dinary fur muff look at it with despair, wondering how it can be enlarged so as to make it up to date. Take the lining out of your muff and cut it down the center, making of it two bands. Mount these on your muff, making the center part of drawn velvet with large double frills of the same on either side of the muff. A knot of lace on the top of the muff and a large bunch of violets nestling among it will complete the muff and make it absolutely up todate. If you wear white gloves much line your muff with white glace silk, for this will not soil your gloves as the ordinary colored lining will do. Large frills on either side of a muff are extremely fashionable. Some have the further addition of lace inside them. A muff of this kind with a velvet toque to match is exceedingly smart. A leading tailor is making a special- ty of cream cloth coats, cut only a few inches below the waist, with sable collar and revers, and red cloth coats trimmed with white fur. The contrasts are very smart, and both red and white are to be much patronized daring the winter. beauty and suppleness to the abandonment | - Choice Recipes. Virginia Cream Sherbet—Three pints of water, juice of four lemons, and one cup of sugar mixed together. Beat to a froth the whites of three eggs, one half-pint sweet cream and one ounce of sugar. When stiff mix with the water and lemon juice and freeze. Oranges or oranges and lemons may be used instead of lemons alone. Spanish Fudge—One cup of cream (or cream and milk), two cups of light brown sugar, one teaspoonful of vanilla, butter size of small walnut, one half cup chopped English walnuts. Dissolve sugar in the cream by boiling ; add butter ; when this begins to thicken pour in the vanilla and chopped nuts; stir constantly and when the ‘‘fudge’’ begins to cream pour in but- tered tin ; cut when cold. These fudges need not be boiled as long as the chocolate. To make double the quantity I wounld ad- vise making two batches instead of one. The result is a finer grain. Turkey Filled With Oysters—Put in the frying pan over a clear fire a teaspoonful of butter. Heat until slightly brown, then cut into it a small onion. Stir until the union is nicely fried. Add to it two cup- fuls of bread crumbs and stir until well mixed. Chop fine a teaspoonful of parsley a bay leaf, a sprinkle of cayenne pepper and a teaspoonful of salt. Drain the juice from twenty-five oysters and add them to the bread crumbs. Fill the turkey and roast. The same recipe may be used for a turkey that is to be boiled. Chestnuts make a delicious stuffing for roast turkey. They should be boiled and the skin re- moved and the chestnuts mashed with but- ter. Whole chestnuts should also be used in thickening the gravy. Chocolate Cake—Half cup butter. One cup sugar. Half cup milk. Two cups flour, Two eggs. One and a half teaspoons baking powder, mix all together. Take half cake chocolate. Half cup milk. One cup sugar. Yolks of two eggs and cook these ingre- dients until the thickness of cream, when cool. Flavor with vanilla and add half cup flour and one and a half teaspoons baking powder. Mix all together and bake in three layers. Put together with boiled icing, using the whites of the two eggs. RECIPE 2. Dissolve two ounces chocolate in five tea- spoons boiling water. Cream, half cup butter. One and a half cups cugar. Yolks of four eggs, beat all thoroughly, then add chocolate. Half cap sweet milk. One and three-quarters cups flour. Two teaspoons vanilla, beat the whites of the four eggs to a stiff froth, stir careful- ly into the mixture. Bake in three layers. Put together with boiled icing. A Bean that Sows Its Own Seed. A curious fruit has been discovered growing wild in Batavia. It is a bean re- sembling a cigar in form and color, though it is only an inch long. What makes it interesting is the way in which it scatters seeds. If one of the little fruits be thrown into water it will rest quietly on the sur- face from two to five minutes, then it will explode, hurling its contents into the air like a small torpedo. Usually it splits open lengthwise. It it is left to ripen on the plant the opening is sudden, and accom- panied with a slight noise, though much less than when it has been placed in water. The curious property in exploding helps the little plant in the dissemination of its seeds, which otherwise would have only a poor chance on account of unfavorable con- ditions of its habitat. ——The Medical Record gives the follow- ing ‘‘more or less good advice to doctors’’— and sounds as though it might also be good for their patients: ‘‘Drink less, breathe more ; eat less, chew more ; ride less, walk more ; clothe less, bathe more ; worry less, work more ; waste less, give more ; write less, read more; preach less, practice more.”’ A KEEN CLEAR BRAIN.—Your best feel- ings, your social position or business suc- cess depend largely on the perfect action of your stomach and liver. Dr. Kings’s New Life Pills give increased strength, a keen, clear brain, high ambition. A 25 cent box will make you feel likea new being. Sold by F. Potts Green, druggist. ——James Loyd, a prosperous citizen of Troup county, Ga., still in perfect health, was photographed the other day in the midst of a group of children, grand- children and great-grand children, number- ing 57 in all. Seven grandchildren were unable to be present at the family re- union. ——Mrs. Newlywed—Let’s toss up to see whether I get a new hat or you get a new coat, Mr. Newlywed—But I don’t want a new coat. Mrs. Newlywed—Well, then, if you win you can let me have your chance. --—What are you going to be when you are a man, Tommy 277 Mong “I’m goin’ to work till I get enough money to buy a candy store, an’ then I won’t do a thing ! ~——Mrs. Buggins—The clock is begin- ning to look very shabby. Mr. Buggins—Yes; it does show the rav- ages of time. --—Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Business Notice. Castoria Bears the signature of Cnas. H. FLETCHER. In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought What Do the Children Drink ? Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you tried the new food drink called GRAIN-0? It is de- licious and nourishing and takes the place of cof- fee. The more GRAIN-O you give the children the more health you distribute through their sys- tems, GRAIN-O is made of pure grains, and when properly prepared tastes like the choice grades of coffee but costs about 1{ as much. All grocers sell it. 15c. and 25c. 43-50-17 McCalmont & Co. Castoria. Age A cC A817" 0 RIL A C A'8''T?T OF 1 4 C 4°97, 0 EB I.A c A'S To BH IA ccc For Infants and Children BEARS THE SIGNATURE 0 THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGH1 In Use For Over 30 Years. cccc A S T 0O R I A C A S T oO. 8B 1. .A Cc A S P 0 Ril A Cc A S P 9. Ri. L 4A C A S T oh .5 1. A ccc A S T 0 B® _ 1. A 43-37-1y The Centaur Co., New York City. NJ CALMONT & CO.—m— 0 ——HAVE THE—— ES ee ets beateats nn 0 er’ ere ee? { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE (Qrrreernrennenesannastottatciiiians sessereses sessssesnsnserens 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 WHAT WE FURNISH : LIME—For Plastering or for Land. COAL—Both Anthracite and Bituminous. WOOD—Cut to the Stove Length or in the Cord. FARM IMPLEMENTS of Every Description. FERTILIZER—The Best Grades. PLASTER—Both Dark and Light. PHOSPHATE—The Very Best. SEEDS—Of all Kinds. WAGONS, Buggies and Sleighs. In fact anything the Farmer or Builder Needs. 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 & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA 44-19-3m a — — Fine Groceries Money to Loan. 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 prices. Estimates on new work gladly fur- nished, 42-38 ——— Prospectus. The best of all children’s magazines.—London Spectator. QT. NICHOLAS juan FOR YOUNG FOLKS. A Monthly Magazine Edited by Mary Mapes Dodge. FOR 1900 A splendid Program of Art, Literature and Fun. Ten Long Stories, by Ruth MecEnery Stuart Mary Mapes Dodge, Elizabeth B. Custer and other writers. Each Complete in One Number. A Serial Story by the author of “Master Skylark,’ a tale of Old New York. A Serial Story by the author of ‘Denise and Ned Toodles,” a capital story for girls, A Serial Story of Athletics. A Serial Story for Little Children. Stories ol Railroad Life. An Important Historical Serial of Colonial Life in America by Elbridge S. Brooks, author of “The Century Book of the American Revo- lution,” ete. Theodore Roosevelt, Governor of New York and Colonel of the “Rough Riders,” promises to contribute a paper on * What America Expects of Her Boys.” Ian Maclaren, John Burroughs, and many other well-known writers will contribute. Nature and Science for Young Folks will soon be begun as a new department. St. Nicholas League. Badge and Membership free. Send for instruction leaflet. Fun and Frolic, both in rhyme, stories, pictures and puzzles, will be, as always, a striking char- acteristic of St. Nicholas. EVERYTHING ILLUSTRATED. A FREE SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST. November begins the new volume. Price $3.00. All dealers and agents take subscriptions, or remittance may be made direct to the publishers. THE CENTURY CO. 44-44 Union Square, New York. TE CENTURY MAGAZINE IN 1900 NOVELTY IN LITERARY, AND ART FEATURES. PRINTING IN COLOR. THE BEST ILLUSTRATIONS, with Cole’s Engravings and Castaigne’s Drawings. A NEW AND SUPERBLY ILLUSTRATED. LIFE OF CROMWELL By the Right Hon. John Morley, M. P. ra: conductors of The Century take especial pleasure in announcing this as the leading historical serial of the magazine in 1900. No man is more eormpstent than John Morley, who was selected by Mr. Gladstone’s family to write the biography of Gladstone, to treat Crom- well in the spirit of the end of the nineteenth century. THE ILLUSTRATIONS will be remarkable, Besides original drawings, there will be valuable unpublishe ortraits lent by Her Majesty the Queen, and by the owners of the greatest Cromwell collections. Other features include : ERNEST SETON-THOMPSON’S “Biography of a Grizzly,” delightfully illustrated by the artist-author,—the longest and most im- portant literary work of the author ot “Wild Ani- m “own.” PARIS, ILLUSTRATED BY CASTAIGNE. A series of papers for the Exposition year, by Richard Whiteing, author of “No. 5 John Street.” splendidly illustrated with more than sixt; Picufes by the famous artist Castaigne, includ- ng views of the Paris Exposition. LONDON, ILLUSTRATED BY PHIL. MAY. A series of Peper on the East End of London by Sir Walter Besant, with pictures by Phil May and Joseph Pennell. SAILING ALONE AROUND THE WORLD. The record of a voyage of 46,000 miles undertaken single-handed and alone in a 40-foot boat. A most delightful Biography of the sea. THE AUTHOR OF ‘HUGH WYNNE,” Dr. 8. Weir Mitchell, will furnish a short serial of remarkable psychological interest, “The Auto- biography of of Quack®’ and there will be short stories by all the leading writers. A CHARTER FROM MARK TWAIN'S ABANDONED AUTOBIOGRAPHY. LITERARY REMINISCENCES. Familiar accounts of Tennsyson, Browning, Low- ell, Emerson, Bryant, Whittier, and Holmes. IMPORTANT PAPERS. By Governor Theodore Roosevelt, President Eliot of Harvard University, Thomas Bailey Aldrich, Woodrow Wilson, John Burroughs, and others. AMERICAN SECRET HISTORY. A series of papers of commanding interest. THE ART WORK OF THE CENTURY. It is everywhere conceded that Tne Century has led the world in art. Timothy Cole’s unique and beautiful wood blocks will continue to be a feat- ure, with the work of many other engravers who have made the American school famous. The fine half-tone plates—reengraved by wood en- gravers—for which the magazine is distinguish- ed, will appear with new methods of printing and illustrating. Begin new subscriptions with November Price $4.00 a year. Subscribe through dealers or remit to the publishers. THE CENTURY CO., UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK. “4-4 som—— Pree GROCERIES......... M ONEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, 44-14-1yr*. Att'y at Law. ARE CONDUCIVE —10— Roofing. GOOD HEALTH NV 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. If you need a new one or an old one repaired I am equipped to give you the best at reasonable poeen, The Celebrated Courtright ONLY THE PUREST AND FRESHEST GOODS are to be had at in Shingles and all kinds of tin and iron roofing. SECHLER & CO’S BELLEFONTE, PA. W. H. MILLER, 42-38 Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA. Herman & Co. Fine Teas, Fine Coffees, Fine Spices, Fine Syrups, Fine Fruits, Fine Confectianery, { HE TRUE Fine Cheese, Fine Syrups, Fine Ham, Fine Olives, Fine Sardines, Fine Ketchups, Fine Lemons, Fine Canned Goods, Fine Eried Fruits, Fine Bacon, Fine Pickles, Fine Oil, Fine Oranges, Fine Bananas. SUCCESS are the thousands of people who have had their eyes properly fitted by our specialist. The eyes of the public have been opened to the fact that the word OPTICIAN means something different than the ordinary man who sells}spec- tacles. This is why our specialist is more successful than the majority of others. He is a graduate of one of the largest optical institutes in the United States. His knowledge and experience is at your command. Call and see him. Consultation free. FRANK GALBRAITH’S, JEWELER, ——BELLEFONTE, PA. TUESDAY, DEC. 12th, 1899, But all these can talk for themselves if you give them a fair chance. NEW FISH, H. E. HERMAN & CO., Bright Handsome New Mackeral, Ciscoes,} : New Caught Lake Fish, Herring, Consultation Free. 44-19-1y ‘White Fish, Lake Trout, — — Wax Candles. SHADOW New Mapl Sugar and Syrup, AND —— LIGHT Fine CannedSoups, Bouillion, Oxtail, Mock Turtle, Blend ose souy and play most effectively over a fes- Yogerstia, Con fois, tive scene on thrown by Mulligatawney, Tomato, waxen candles. Chicken, Gumbo, The light that heightens : beauty’s charm, that gives the finished touch to the drawing room or dining sibs room, is the mellow glow of Queensware, Enameled Ware, Tin Ware, Brooms and Brushes. BANQUET WAX CANDLES, Sold in all colors and shades to harmonize with any interior hangings or decorations. Best place to bring your produce and best place to buy’your goods. Manufactured by STANDARD OIL CO. For sale everywhere. 39-37-1y SECHLER & CO. ETI ART ANT or En ITT 421 BELLEFONTE, PA. Jewelry. Insurance. OLIDAY GIFTS. Aten Foley Gra —AND— HEALTH —— INSURANCE. 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For particulars address J. L. M. SHETTERLEY, UMBRELLAS AND POCKET BOOKS. ee [ ©] ee F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, Secretary and General Manager, 42-19-1-y. San Francisco,Cal, | 41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE PA,