yor fic lat | SOR AND ABOUT WOMEN, Business Notice. Restaurant. McCalmont & Co. entartalic Mrs. Caroline Stannard Tilton, widow of BD ——reO Frederick W. Tilton, of New Orleans, has DP YOU GET M e¢CALMONT & CO.———— 0 == ———— | given $50,000 to the Tulane University, of Bellefonte, Pa., April 27, 1900. Louisiana, for the purpose of erecting a li- Castoria HUNGRY ? AVE THE brary building to be known as the F. W. da ~ | Tilton Memorial Library. Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FLETCHER. hil course you do. Every body 0). coiesurrasesisivinstaresiinsarniearierrarraninershsnsnivsonie Oo —The rule of evaporating the inferior fruit may save loss of fruit, but such fruit reduces prices. Only choice fruit should be evaporated if it is to sell at choice prices. Evaporating inferior fruit does not hide its imperfections. — For late crops manure the ground now and work it into the soil. The ground will be all the better by so doing, and the rains will dissolve the plant food of the manure, which will beabsorbed by the soil. When the seed is planted the plant food will be ready and in excellent form for the plants. —Put out the young strawberry plants If I might dress an old lady, in the days when her once thick hair has fallen out and waned to a scanty thinness. so that her parting is wide, her side locks straggly and poor, and her knot at the back a mere microscopic wad, writes Margaret E. Sang- ster in Collier's Weekly, I would first of all put on her head a beautifying cap. Uni- versally at one time as the headgear of an elderly gentlewoman, this useful and orna- mental article of attire has quite gone out, so that she is exceptional, who, though past 90, acknowledges her need of some- thing soft, sheer and white to veil the de- nuded head and lend grace and to drop in In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought Does Coffee Agree With You? 1f not, drink Grain-O—made from pure grains. A lady writes: “The first time I made Grain-O I did not like it but after using it for one week nothing would induce me to go back to coftee.” It nourishes and feeds the system. The children can drink it freely with great benefit. It is the strengthening substance of pure grains. Get a package to-day from your grocer, follow the di- rections in making it and you will have a de- licious and healthful table beverage for old and But every body does not ‘know that the place to satisfy that hunger when in Bellefonte is at Anderson’s Restaurant, opposite the Bush House, where good, clean, tasty meals can be had at all hours. Oysters and Game in season. DO YOU PLAY POOL ? If you do, you will find excellent Pool and Billard tables, in connec- tion with the Restaurant. DO YOU USE BOTTLED BEER? { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } mem, —_—IN— 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. bought is money saved. Goods well 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 & y 5 iapha is ar hroat y . 1c. and 25c. 44-50. for next year’s crop. Every garden can Siaphzons tissue around her throat and | young. I5c. and 25c : 10900 do. Ait toe vidi SEE WHAT WE SiaS ite. afford space for strawberries, even if but a spon He. itteresting. b supply you. He is the only ed few rows. Be sure and get the plants of aces are generally interesting, be- Castoria. w olesale dealer in the town, and LIME—For Plastering or for Land. . 3 cg Ls & y .e supplies only the best d Ss the staminate and pistillate varieties or us Dey an Sole St iuli of cuamsere: ) FDL. Will All orders 2nd Dutes) COAL—Both Anthracite and Bituminous. there will be no fruit. A hundred plants, €lr une lines and crossing 3R/c8 are town, promptly and carefully, either WOOD—Cut to the Stove Length or in the Cord. if the rows are allowed to mat, may pro- | not blemishes, rather the opposite. But A 8S TT 0 BR YI A by the keg or in bottles. Address FARM IMPLEMENTS £ Eve ei: duce a thousand before next spring. the complexion in age has usually lost its C C A ST O R I A JOHN ANDERSON, of Every Description. Sama pristine freshness and it requires something | C A 8S 7 0B 12a 44-28-6m Bellefonte, Pa FERTILIZER—The Best Grades. —As to the indications when a bearing | Jike lace to set it off. A cap, too, givesa| ( 28 YY 08 'LT aA - PLASTER—Both Dark and Light. orchard needs stimulating the eminent | Jittle additional height to a figure no long- C A'S T og wii Roofing. PHOSPHATE—The Very Best, pomologist Dr. W ardner said, When the | o; erect as in youth. The objection to caps ccc SEEDS—Of all Kinds, growth of the terminal branches fails to make an annual extension of at least one foot in length, the tree should be stimulat- ed by manuring the land and giving it thorough cultivation.” —Salsify or vegetable oyster, it not ex- tensively grown, but those who know the value of the plant as an addition to the garden crops neveromit it. The same may be mentioned of okra. The salsify seed should be put in as soon as the ground is warm and the plants kept clean. Salsify is very hardy and will remain in the ground all winter without injury. is a twofold one. They are costly, and they |. cannot be worn under a bonnet, and must therefore be carried about wherever one goes. But an umbrella is an incumbrance and so, for that matter, is a shawl strap. A homely old woman may be transformed toan impressive and elegant one by the adoption of a cap as part of her toilette. Then, in her costume the old lady should sedulously avoid whatever is too juvenile for her years. Rich dark materials should compose her gowns. A fleecy shawl is not to be despised by her, and, having decided upon a style, she should adhere to it, and be as resolved as ever an old fashioned 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 ;no 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 Nov IS THE TIME TO EXAMINE YOUR ROOF. During the Rough Weather that will be experienced from now until Spring vou 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 rices. The Celebrated Courtright Tin Shingles and all kinds of tin and iron roofing. W. H. MILLER, 42-38 Allegheny St. BELLEFONTE, PA. 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. earth where one can do better than at 44-19-3m There is no place on McCALMONT & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA Money to Loan. Rubber Tires. M ONEY TO LOAN and houses for rent. good security JFOUND IN BELLEFONTE. J. M. KEICHLINE, ¥ Ap iimbes ta . wo : ine Td-Tork ) pi At the Carriage Shops of S. A. MecQuis- —Among fine wax snap beans for home | prjeng or a Lady Abbess to dictate to her Castoria is a harmless substitute for Cas mm IIL Iye* AHyalaw, tion & Co., the place to have on use a leading place is claimed for the sad- | qressmaker and to submit to no dictation tor, OF, Paregetie; Drops and: Soothing be Oil Pe = Tisges and Buggies fitted with ‘the celo: dle back wax. The pods are tender and | from her, One gracious dame, alive to the Spriups. JsisPlessent: levontemensin. arness > Herman & Co. heated . des . 8 ad y : 3 3 ! YW stringless, round smooth and fleshy. The importance ofa queenly state in her cos- er Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic MORGAN & WRIGHT meat is solidly joined between the beans. tume, wears black silk, with a slight train, substance, Its age is its guarantee. It { SOLID RUBBER TIRES. It is recommended not to plant them until | , 490 very simply with garniture of lace, destroys Worms and lias Feverishness. fae TRUE We have become so favorably impress- nights are warm, as they are more tender | 5,3 over her high tortoise shell falls a scarf It cures Dinrrhes and Wind Colic, IGve- ed with these tires and have such confi- than green podded varieties, though the plants are vigorous and prolific. —During the spring high winds frequent- ly prevail, and it is a risk then to keep also of lace, which is in its rich drapery, a foil to her white hair. One sometimes hears the question asked lieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipa- tion and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bewels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Yueeka SUCCESS are the thousands of people who have had their eyes properly fitted by our dence in them, that we have purchased the necessary tools for fitting them to wheels. We can fit them to your old wheels or furnish new ones, as you may desire, at a price 3 Children’s Panacea—-The Mother's Friend. HARNESS specialist. The eyes of the public have SAVING THE trees or plants above ground ; that is. to | whether it is best to have a gown made up been opened to the fact that the word TROUBLE. EXPENSE expose their roots, as they quickly dry if | ith the skirt stitched dewn to the lining, OIL. OPTICIAN meany something different : i the wind reaches them. Keep the roots wet and under shelter, or put the trees or plants in the ground as soon as it can be done. An hour’s exposure may cause fail- ure with a young tree. —1It is not desirable to plant seeds of seam for seam, or to have a ‘‘drop skirt’’ over a lining underskirt. Itdependssome- what on the mater al used. For a crepon or grenadine, the silk under-petticoat does best instead of a full lined skirt. These skirts may be worn a great deal, but they The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. A good looking horse and poor looking harness is the worst kind of a combination than the ordinary man who sellsispec- tacles. others. This is why our specialist is more successful than the majority of He is a graduate of one of the largest optical institutes in the United States. is knowledge and experience is at your command. Call and see him. Consultation free. and time if not more, of shipping them away to have the work done. The tires are applied with a steel band instead of the old way with the wire which cut the Rubber thereby loosening the tire and allowing it to jump out of the channel. We would be pleased to have you call ex- amine and be convinced, that we have not : IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS. only regets ; d is not | are not subjected to the rough wear and : : IT ’ Tepetwnles soo ny Mon is pot tear of a 31 traveling dress or street The Centaur Company, New York City. ——EUREKA HARNESS OIL.L— FRANK GALBRAITH’S, JEWELER, THE BEST TIRE re ) A competent authority avers that BELLEFONTE, PA. but also minate. Such crops as beans, melons, squashes and egg plants will not endure even cold nights. Get the tomato plants well grown, in stocky form, and have them ready for transplanting as soon as the ground is warm and danger from frost has passed. —Young celery plants should be started. gown. the tailor gown will last longer if the material be basted and stitched to the lin- ing ‘‘seam for seam,’”’ whether taffeta or cambric be used for the purpose. A gown worn in traveling gets some rough usage, and therefore should be well made, and firmly lined. The ‘‘seam to seam,’’ meth- Pure Beer. eh PURE VOLKS-BREW not only makes the harness and the horse look better, but makes the leather soft and pliable, puts it in condition to last—twice as long as it ordinarily would. Sold everywhere in cans—all sizes. Made by STANDARD OIL CO. TUESDAY, MAY 1st, 1900, H. E. HERMAN & CO., Consultation Free. 44-19-1y Flour and Feed. THE BEST WAY of fastening the same. us prepared to do ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING, in our line of business with neatness and dispatch. New Top Buggies on hand. Home made and 2 second hand Top Bug- gies, good onesat a low price. You will also find a od of lining askirt certainly keeps the cloth EXPORT LAGER BEER. GIVE Telephone No. I393. Sow the seed in rows, one foot apart, and | prom, drooping and sagging. YOUR McQUISTION & CO transplant when the plants are three inches B e = 44-34tf North Thomas St. Bellefonte, high, placing them four inches apart in the =r ; ; HORSE A row. The soil for celery should be very | The tailor and walkingskirts will barely | ne purest and most healthy drink you can | CHANCE! rich and also rather moist than dry. A special liquid fertilizer for celery is soap- suds, but an abundance of manure or mixed fertilizer should also be used. It is very important that the rows be kept clean and the plants watered during a dry period. —One of the best guides in the planting of garden seeds is to do so when the apple trees are in bloom. Peas, however, may be planted in April, but when the apple trees are in blossom it is then safe to put in the seeds of the tender plants. Much depends upon the soil. If it is plowed or spaded deep, and then worked fine with tbe harrow and rake, the air takes in the warmth and the soil becomes warm much sooner than when it is given careless preparation. —Garden seeds are usually planted too deep. Small seeds require just enough covering to give them moisture and dark- ness. The soil should be very fine so as to contain no lumps. Some seeds, however, such as peas and beans, should be planted deep and the ground rolled over them. Pressing the earth on seeds hastens germi- nation, and it also increases the chance for the seeds of weeds, but if the rows are made straight it will not be difficult to keep down the weeds until the crop gets well started. —When pigs are fed milk freely, corn- meal may be fed as the grain ration, giving one pound of meal to each eight pounds of sweep the ground, and the long trains have entirely passed away with the habit and close fitting backs. Butcher’s linen is used for some of the new shirt waists. It has one great advan- tage, the more it is laundered the better it looks. The Saint Cecelia neck is the name ap- plied to the bodices cut out about the throat on Raphael models or a la Vierge. The decolletage is very slight, but it adds to the comfort as well as to the beauty of a bodice intended for hot weather wear. A band of black velvet ora simple necklace is intended to be worn with such a waist. The Saint Cecelia neck is the popular mod- el for a house gown this season. Of course no one would dream of wearing such a bod- ice out of the house. Alas, poor femininity ! Just as she gets her Easter costume completed, with a box pleat in the back—as she thinks the latest and most correct thing—the autocrats of fashion come forward and say that the box pleat has been so generally adopted that it has lost its exclusiveness, and therefore, its desirability, and that the tucked back is much newer and smarter. This back has three-eighth-inch tucks on each side of the centre of the back, stitched down for about five inches, and then allowed to hang full. 45-5-3m get. Home-made-guaranteed pure, and furnish ed at the Bellefonte Brewery. NO DRUGS, NO DOCTORING. It is absolutely Pure and because it is so, itis the only kind of beer you should use. MATTHEWS VOLK, Proprietor Bellefonte Brewery. Jewelry. SQ EASONABLE SELLERS. We have still many novel- ties left from the Holiday season and are ready with numberless suggestions for useful and DECORATIVE ARTICLES IN 39-37-1y Fine Groceries PURE GROCERIES......... ARE CONDUCIVE —T0— 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 Coffees, Fine Syrups, Fine Confectianery, Fine Canned Goods, Fine Oil, PEE MILLING CO. SPRING AND WINTER WHEAT FLOUR AND FEED. BRANDS SUPERLATIVE, FANCY PATENT, FINEST, WHITE STAR. We make a specialty of exchanging Wheat and other grain with farmers. — Grain stored free of charge, protected against loss by fire. Shoes Etc Geo. T. Bush, A C HEVERLY, racy ARE HERE FOR SPRING. voee TH Lense WALKOVERS FOR THE MEN Price $3.50 A $5.00 value in every pair. Hundreds who have been waiting on them are pleased. They have the style. Come in any leather. They are like wearing old shoes for fit —WE GET 1200 PAIRS OF THEM.— Don’t be misled by others adver- tising they have $3.00 shoes just as good for they haven't even 5.00 shoes that will be near as good. For the Ladies THE ‘“SARACENS”’ and the famous ae i i i DIAM ATCHE, : : : mile Ground. ants or wheat, hiddlngs | Forelt material, ciepe do chine, si silks | DIAMONDS, mA, Sen Dc OT are also excellent food for pigs = in same larly favor od, but the b ox pleat skirt may Fine Ham, Fine Bacon, ’ relation to milk. The selection should de- A : Fine Olives, Fine Pickles, a1, : from SUA ta SLAY wee the leader? pend partly upon cost. As the pigs grow find consolation in the fact that for heavier |. FANCY CLOCKS, JEWELERY |Finesgurdmes, PH@ENIX MILLING CO. older the proportion of grain to milk may be gradually increased. The total food daily will be an increasing quantity as the pigs grow and must be determined by the appetite and condition of the animals. Either sweet or sour milk may be fed to young pigs. ‘we prefer the sweet, espec- ially in those cases where a swill barrel is in use, in which the milk ferments even to putrefaction. —What farmers can do by co-opera- tion in the matter of road making is inter- estingly told by a Michigan correspondent of the Orange Judd Farmer. It is a sandy country where the correspondent lives, and the roads were generally poor throughout the year. The town was poor also, and re- fused to improve the highways. Then the farmers decided to help themselves. About five years ago twenty-five of them came to- gether and offered to haul marl one day free if the township would allow them to take the marl from its bed. The township was willing, and about twenty-five men volun- teered to shovel and level the marl, and so the first half mile was laid. That road proved to be such a success that the next year another half mile was put down. This marl packed down so hard and made such an excellent bed for gravel that the farmers donated $225 and labor for about one-quarter mile of gravel. This being put on in what was always a wet place, it was spread about eight inches thick. Next goods that style will still be much seen. Besides, the box pleats has not been in vogue for so long, and so many of the East- er gowns have been made with it, that even if this tucked back is a newer model, it will likely continue for some time. Two good washing fluid recipes: Soak the clothes over night in cold water; for boiling, add two tablespoonfuls each of borax and concentrated lye to three pints of water, together with one half bar of soap dissolved. Put in the clothes, boil fifteen minutes, take out, rubslightly where need- ed rinse, blue, and hang out. This method gives nice clean clothes without much work. Dissolve one pound of potash in five quarts cold, soft water, add two ounces each salts of tartar and liquid ammonia, bottle and cork tightly. Soak clothes over night or half an hour in the morning. Rub soap on all soiled places, then put them on to boil for a few minutes, first adding one cup of the washing fluid. Stir or poke the clothes often, suds and rinse in two waters. SPREADS LIKE WILD-FIRE.—When things are ‘‘the best’’ they become the best selling. Abraham Hare, a leading druggist, of Belle- ville, O., writes: ‘Electric Bitters are the best selling bitters I have handled in 20 years. You know why? Most diseases be- gin in disorders of stomach, liver, kidneys 41-46 SILVERWARE, ETC. UMBRELLAS AND POCKET BOOKS. —[0]— F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, High St. BELLEFONTE PA Plumbing etc. £uo0tE YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- Fine Ketchups, Fine Lemons, Fine Oranges, Fine Bananas. But all these can talk for themselves if you give them a fair chance. NEW FISH, Bright Handsome New Mackeral, New Caught Lake Fish, White Fish, Ciscoes, Herring, Lake Trout, New Maple Sugar and Syrup, Fine CannedSoups, Oxtail, Vegetable, Mulligatawney, Chicken, Bouillion, Mock Turtle, Consomme, Tomato, Gumbo, 44-37-1y ‘ > q > q b 4 » 4 > 4 > 4 : d : BELLEFONTE, Pa. SANA VATA VA VA VA VATA VATA TA AT AVA ATLA TA TS Green’s Pharmacy. IX 0U TAKE { NO CHANCES 3 —IN USING— ‘“‘CYDONINE”’ worst hrc A cnt nc for chapped hands, lips and face and for use after shaving. COSTS ONLY 15 CENTS It and our guarantee, “Your money « if not satisfied,” goes with it. Try AROMATIC TOOTH WASH 2 price 25¢c. has no superior atany price. Give these articles a trial. Full Line of nj ng gs ye a gg gy pe 0 POWERS SHOE CO. Bush Arcade, BELLEFONTE, PA P. S. Free Shines to our Customers. 43-48-6m Insurance. “A SCIDERT —AND— HEALTH INSURANCE. THE FIDELITY MUTUAL AID ASSO- CIATION WILL PAY YOU If disabled by an accident $30 to $100 per month If you lose two limbs, $208 to £5,000, If you lose your eye sight, $208 to $5,000, Queensware, wi Enameled Ware, “ If you lose one limb, $83 to $2,000, Brooms 5 HOT WATER BOTTLES i I 3 oe 3 $40 per month, es $0 35.00 i 5 illed, will pay your heirs, o $5 from 8c. to §1.25. If you die fds natural cause, $100. A fectiveness of work rather i than for lowness of price. Tin Ware, Judge of our ability as you and Brushes. £ judged of his—by the work 3 already done. : bowels, blood and nerves. Electric Bitters tones up the stomach, regulates liver, kid- neys and bowels, purifies the blood, strength- ens the nerves, hence it cures multitudes of maladies. It builds up the entire system. year $250 was collected, and about one-half mile was put down, spreading this only about four inches. This year only $100 was collected, but a quarter-mile strip was i jm IF INSURED, put down, finishing the mile started five years before. Besides this, about a half mile of marl was put down ready for gravel Puts new life and vigor into any weak, sick- ly, run-down man or woman. Price 50c. Many very particular people have judged us in ng Sa You cannot lose all your income when you are sick a : 4 # | or disabled by accident. next fall. This action of the farmers stir- | S0/d bY F. P. Green Druggist. this way, an] have chosen : [| * Absolute" protection at a cost of $1.00 to $2.25 red up the townspeople at large, and now SE————— us as their plumbers. Best place to bring your produce and best place | | # | per month. the iA has offered to raise $600 for gravel Rhode Island’s New Capital. to buylyour goods. z GREEN’S PHARMACY 7 The hasty Mutual Aid association js pre. if the farmers will furnish the oh to i . ? E I Te Staten, Silent 0 1 s : i F . spread it. That they will do willingly.— Rhode Island is the smallest State in the R. J. SCHAD & BRO Hien STREET, ¥ It has $6,000.00 cash deposits with the States of Pp . y BY: | Union in area, and its entire population is No. oN, Alleghoms Sh. : 5 | Cslioris and Missoari, Shieh Yozether, with aa II : . . gneny St. i g ampie reserve iund an arge assets, make To Cure Lagrippe in Two Days. I Dat ob he SS pA 10.43, SELLEFONTE, PA. : “oly EILgrONY Ps F Soriifente an absolute guarantee of the solidity of iis : rs : -43- : L . Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. | State capitol which is exceeded in cost by P For particulars address All druggists refund the money if it fails | the capitols of few States, and which good 3 : ' : s : s : F J. L. M. SHETTERLEY to cure. E. W. Grove's signature on every | judges declare is equaled by none in archi- oo i SECHLER & CO. i Secraiary nnd Gants) Mepigor™ box. 25c. 41-6m. tectural beauty. 42-1 BELLEFONTE, PA, | ‘spre greene sgoe--wge sg ogee agp 7 42-19-1-y. San Franciso, Cal,