Bellefonte, Pa., July 20 1900. P.M Ml ———————————————— FARM NOTES. It is safe to assume that a large major- ity of farmers who sell milk will affirm that it does not pay to raise a calf, as the milk is too valuable to be used for that purpose. Of course, this claim depends on what farmers receive for the milk, but hundreds of them do not receive as much as three centa per quart. In order to test the ad- vantages of feeding milk to calves, by com- parison, and also whether the raising of calves to be retained as cows or sold as young steers will prove profitable on all farms, the Kansas State Agricultural Col- lege made some experiments, which are published in a large bulletin, but which are given here in more condensed form. The calves nsed were not selected as to breeds, and when six months old—wean- ing time—the heifers weighed 375 pounds each and the steers 383 pounds each. This is equal to two pounds per day for each calf from birth to 6 months old, which is rapid gain. Six calves were fed creamery skim milk and made an average gain on each feed of 250 pounds each. Seven calves were fed on hand separator milk and gain- ed 251 pounds while on such food. The calves fed on creamery skim milk consumed 2497 pounds each (about two pounds make one quart, ) and the others consumed 2504 pounds each of hand separator milk. This is remarkable showing, as the cream- ery milk contained 10 to 12 per cent. of water added to the process of sterilizing. The milk was sterilized as it was found that by so doing there was less liability to scours, and by care in having all utensils clean, giving mild at the proper tempera- ture, and not overfeeding, it was found not difficult to raise calves. THE METHOD OF MANAGEMENT. The calves up to the age of 6 months were fed on a variety and kept until year- lings. The milk diet ceased when they were 6 months old. At first they remained with the cows until 4 days old, then given nothing for 25 hours (so as to have them hungry) and the first week each calf was given 10 pounds of warm whole milk a day—four pounds in the morning, two at noon and four at night. The second. week the amount was also 10 pounds, but given in two meals, five in the morning and five at night. When 3 weeks old the calf was put on skim milk: * At ‘the first feed of skim milk one pint was given; at the sec- ond feed a half pint more was added, and at night a quart was allowed. As the skim milk was increased the whole milk was decreased, the change being made at the rate of ‘half “a pint each meal. The quantity of skim'milk was slowly increased as the calf could take it. At the end of a month from the time the calf was taken from the cow the daily amount given was usually from six to seven qnarts; at 2 months, nine quarts, and finally reached ten to twelve quarts per day. It was all that the calves could eat and all that they required, as the gains in weight showed. All milk was fed warm—from 95 to 100 de- grees—a thermometer being used. The milk was always fresh and sweet, and ster- ilized. The milk was fed in tin pails, which were carefully scrubbed and cleaned as well as scalded after using. Four of the calves were fed flax seed meal. a table- spoonful per calf at first, gradually in-. creased to half a pound per day until the calves were four months old. It was placed in a tin pail, boiling water poured on (only a little, and the flaxseed formed a jelly, which was given with the skim milk. Four were fed calf meal. When two weeks old all were fed Kafir cornmeal (all that they could eat up clean, )2-months’ old calves consuming two pounds each per day. It was given dry, never with the milk. They were also allowed hay and other foods. THE COST AND GAIN. The station report says: “The 13 cows while on skim milk, gained 3260 pounds. They were fed: Skim milk, 32,511 pounds; Kafir cornmeal, 3467 pounds; cornmeal, 1872 pounds; soy-bean meal, 109 pounds; mixed hay, 466 pound, and green alfalfa, 407 pounds. Kafir cornmeal was fed to all the calves for the first month, and we found it superior to any other grain. After the calves became older cornmeal was used | whenever it was more convenient to get it than the Kafir corn. As before stated, we found that the Kafir cornmeal caused too great a gain with the heifer calves, and we were obliged to substitue bran, soy-bean and oli meals, ground oats and jthe other feeds mentioned. Our records of gains sade aud feeds consumed shows that to smake I00 pounds of gain in this experi- jment there ‘was fed: skim-milk, 997 pounds; grain197 pounds; hay, 14 pounds; green alfalfa, 12 pounds. * Valuing skim milk at 15 cents per 100 pounds, grain at one half cent a pound, hay at $3 a ton, reasonable prices on Kansas farms, 100 pounds of gain on these skim milk calves 008 $2.50. The 13 calves, while on skim milk, made an average daily gain of 22.8 | PO! pounds. It required two hours a day to Teed and care for them. At 12} cents per hour this would cost: 25 cents a day. This would make the cost of labor $1.10 per 100 pounds gain. ~ Did it pay us to milk? The calves made as good gains as they would if we had let them run with the cows. The :$3.60, cost of 100 pounds gain, was the ad- «ditional cost caused by milking, and must be deducted from the amount received from ithe sale of the milk. Nine hundred and ‘ninety-seven pounds of skim milk were re- «quired for each 100 pounds of gain. We sold 45.7 pounds of butter fat from the whole milk needed to make this amount of skim milk. The creamery paid an av- erage of 15 cents a pound for the butter fat, ing 45.7 pounds worth $6.86. De- ducting $3.60 from this, we have $3.26 left as the returns for the labor of milking and delivering 1100. pounds of milk to the creamery. If all the calves had been in- tended for beef, we could have fed Kafir corn as the only grain and increased the gain. ; ; ‘‘As yearlings the four steer calves weigh- ed an average of 724 pounds each when one year old, and che nine heifer calves weigh- ed an average of 564 pounds each at one year old. The heaviest steer weighed 810 pounds. The calves were all from scrub cows, and for this class of cattle show good weights. From weaning to a year old the steers made an average gain of 341 pounds each, an average of 1.89 pounds each per day. The steers were not pushed but were fed to make good growth. The feed was Kafir corngrain, cornfodder, sor- gum hay and alfalfa hay. The heifers were intended for the dairy. They were given the same kinds of feed as the steers, but much less in quantity, as we wanted to keep them from the habit of putting on fat. The nine heifers made an average gain of 189 pounds each from weanieg un- til a year old, an average of one pound of _gain a day each.” FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. A lady was watching a potter at his work whose one foot was kept with ‘‘never slackening speed turning his swift wheel round,”’ while the other rested patiently on the ground. When the lady said to him. in a sympathizing tone, “How tired your foot must be !’’ the man raised his eyes and said : ‘No. ma’am; it isn’t the foot that works that’s tired; it’s the foot that stands.’”” That's it. If you want to keep your strength, use it; if you want to get tired, do nothing. It is the last man to go for a helping hand for any new undertaking who has plenty of time on his hands. Itis the man and woman who are doing most who are always willing to do a little more. No waist but has its little coat, and this is supplied with a bolero front, consisting merely of a curve of lace sewed to the arm holes and appliqued to the bodice. They are making these summer waists with little bolero coats, one over the other until three deep, all of lace and each a little longer than the last, but none meeting in front and none touching the belt in the back. Such charming little lace coats, you enjoy touching them and fingering their delicate patterns. It is only a short time since it was con- sidered the worst of bad taste to wear a transparent yoke. This season nearly all the bodices are made in that way. One of the debutantes at the President’s reception thie other day wore a yoke so deep and so transparent as to be almost startling. The yokes continue to increase in depth and, as they grow no thicker, they become more startling. Believe not the rumors that yokes will be short and built of heavy vel- vets. On the contrary their style is al- ready decided upon; gauze, lace and the thinnest of sheer materials being used for these yokes. The very latest is the Roberts waist which may, in time, became as fashionable as the Garibaldi was twenty-five years ago. The Roberts is a blouse with tucked front set in like a vest. From the arm seams come two broad pieces which are tied upon the bust in a big bow with long ends. The waist may be made of pink lawn, the tucked vest of white sheer goods, while coming from each arm, are two very long streamers of the thinnest linen, with the ends bordered with lace. These materials are ordinarily in the Roberts waist. The word ‘‘spinster,’”’ now the legal des- ignation of an unmarried woman, had its origin in the fact that in the medieval times spinning was her special employment. Spinning was one of the first works which the lady of the castles taught her demoi- selles. All the illumined manuscripts which have come down to us, illustrating the domestic life of the middle ages, show us “the lady spinning.”’ ‘‘the lady carding wool,” “the lady at the loom.”” Every important household bad its spinning wheels and its looms. The fancy fitted belts, the corselet and the sash belt have the one point in common. The belt-must dip in front, pointing a cou- ple of inches below the waist. It doesn’t seem to matter how high the corselet rises toward the chin. There is no diminution of the binding injuction. All draped belts and waist bands must dip down in front. The aim is to give each woman a long waisted air. There is a taste for morning ginghams in ox-blood and white fine check this summer" Sometime=< you see the gorgeous color com- bined with pale blue. It is extremely smart for a summer dress and should be made up quite simply, the skirt plain, so that it may be Jungered in the home tubs. The bodice must be cut longer in the waist than seems necessary at first, because the gingham will shrink a little the first time it is washed. Have bands of all over white insertion to trim the bodice. A yoke or guimpe is very good style if it is becom- ing to you. Have black taffeta ribbon for your waistband, with pretty clasps, to use it as a belt, or ribbon enough for the loops and bows of a made bow at the waist. A black hat or a burnt straw looks well with an ox-blood gingham. The color being pronounced a gay hat is not desirable. The little white turnover bands still hold their place in the popular favor for wear with simple gowns or shirt waists. No fashion is so sensible nor so comfortable as this, serving, as it does, the two pur- poses of preserving the ribbon or silk collar and giving the touch of white, which is most becoming to almost every woman. They come with either the straight Swiss band or the shaped and buttonholed one, innumerable varieties. They are most simple to make at home, too, of any left- over bits of pretty insertion or edging, or 58 4he four corners of a pretty handker- chief. tig CC —— One of the most fetching and prettiest ints about the new wash dresses is the smart little bolero jacket that is the adjunct of so many of them. This bolero is to be worn with skirts of pique, or similar ma- terial, and is usually made of pique or in any of the heavier wash fabrics. It has the short sleeve necessary to the latest mode now, extending half way between the wrist and the elbow. Below this, from the half arm to the wrist, the shirtwaist that is worn underneath the bolero shows in the now very fashionable lingerie effect. na Fichus, after the Marie Antoinette style, are so carefully draped that they never render their wearers liable to the charge of being round shouldered, are worn with near- ly all gowns of thin material. These with the black sash aud wide brimmed, flower- Tcathed hat create a decidedly picturesque toilette. 2 re. All the causes which fend to make women thin may be removed, but yon may as well place quicksilver in the hands of a nervous woman and expect it to remain perfectly quiet by commanding her to be quiet, as to remove nervousness from the frail woman by acquainting her with the thonsand and one things that canse it. She will say: *‘I know that but it is my nature to go, £0, go, always with every nerve tense, as if I had to accomplish everything in the next minute.” 3 To all these nervous women, if yon will not let go, then give nature a chance to strengthen you while you sleep in other words take some nourishing food just before you retire; not strong, indigestible foods. but a slice or two of whole wheat bread and butter, or hot milk, or pared apples, or even some cereal. While you sleep, diges- tion, absorption, and assimilation take place, and you, will awaken with a refresh- ed feeling and some reserve power; at least the torn-down tissues of the day will have been repaired. A Great Wheat Profits in Oklahoma. The Miller Family Ranch—Harvesting by Night. Four years ago—without a dollar and in debt. To-day worth $100,000 in cash. That is the record made by one family in wheat-raising in Oklahoma. A fortune of $100,000 in four years. Half of that money they have in cash in the bank there. They will net the other half in cash with- in two weeks for the 150,000 bushels of wheat they are now harvesting. The Miller family operated 101 Ranch, nine miles southwest of there. The ranch has 40,000 acres of land that is divided in half by the Salt Fork River. Of this land 6,000 acres are in wheat, 1,100 in corn, 200 in oats, 600 in sorgum, 1,200 in hay, and 1,100 in watermelons and muskmel- ons. On this ranch is one wheat field of 2,250 acres, three miles long and two and one-half miles broad, a solid wheat field, without a fence or a road through it. The harvest on this ranch began last week. Twenty-five reaping machines be- gan at once, working in a row one after the other. The first swath cut was five miles long, around one wheat field. The reapers cut and bind 600 acres a day. A harvest of 150,000 bushels of wheat will be gathered. It will be sold from the thresh- er in the field for cash, all except 5,000 bushels, which has been sold for seed at 30 cents a bushel more than the regular market price of ordinary wheat. Mr. Miller contracted Saturday to sell the first 10,000 bushels threshed at 25 cents a bushel, regardless of quality. If the Miller famiiy get 40 cents a bush- el for their wheat and fair prices for their other crops and their live stock they will make in clear profit this year $75,000. The harvesting on the 101 Ranch goes along night and day from the beginning til it is ended, without interruption, ex- cept for rains or heavy dews. Friday night twenty-three binders and a gang of shockers worked till the breakfast bell rang; the 150 men work in shifts. Four cooks prepare and serve seven different meals each day to different gangs. On this ranch $40,000 was paid in wages last year and $50,000 will be paid this year. There will be used 15,000 pounds of bind- ing twine this year. The rental paid to the Ponca Indians for the leases on the lands is $10,000 a year, and the lease has five years more to run. The Millers are bonded with the government for $30,000 as a guarantee for payment for the rental. Each member of the Miller family has a particular branch of the work todo. In harvest time there is a foreman for each gang of shockers. There is a superintend- ent of the binders, who is on horseback and rides up and down the line to make repairs and give advice. A water wagon follows the gangs. One wagon i3 kept busy carrying binding twine to the fields.. One man is kept busy repairing harness. Three blacksmiths are at work all the time. One man cultivates the thirty acres of vegetables that are grown to help feed the men on the ranch. : On this ranch 8,000 acres of wheat alone will be sowed this fall. If good crops con- tinue the operators on ranch 101 will have $1,000,000 profits when their lease expires at the end of five years. : Think Two Horses Committed Suicide. A team of horses belonging to William Hill were drowned shortly after 4 o'clock Monday morning in the river at the foot of Butler street, Cincinnati. It looked like a clear case of suicide. Thomas Nuskey, the driver, who lives at Webb alley and Park street, drove up to the Louisville & Nashville depot at the hour mentioned to get some freight. He left the team standing while he went inside. The horses after he had left turned and started straight for the bluff that overlooks the Ohio river at this point. Upon reach- ing the edge they kept right on plunging over the side and down into the water. They struck the water and floated fifty feet from shore, where both horses were drown- ed. The team was a quite one, used to steam engines and railroad cars, and the driver is at a loss to know what caused them to go over the hill. Fruit Drink. Required: Half a pound each of straw- berries, currants and raspberries. One breakfastcuptul of sieved icing sugar. One quart of boiling water. The juice of two lemons. r al pai] Stalk and clean the fruit. Then mash it finely to pulp in a bowl. After rubbing the sugar through a hair sieve, mix it with the fruit. Add the lemon juice. Next pour over the water, and allow it to stan for gnite twelve hours. wit ws Strain off and well ice. It is then ready for use. . To Account for the Color. An inquisitive small boy was watching an old colored woman trying to put her baby to sleep. f ; ih ‘‘Auntie,’’ said he, ‘‘did you raise that baby on the bottle ?’’ 1 “Yes I raised The old woman replied : dis chile on de bottle.”’ ; The little boy thought deeply for some minutes, and then remarked : ‘‘Auntie, was it an ink bottle ?’” ———Dicipline is the best thing that can befall a small boy. The earlier in his jour- ney through the world it begins the better will it be for the man who is ‘presently to be evolved from the boy. Itis not neces- sary to be brutal in the enforcement of dis- cipline, There are men and women in the world today who obey the commands of | their old parents asswiftly and as implicit- ly as they did in their childhood. They could do nothing else. It is no hardship for them to obey; it would be a hardship to disobey, because it would involve the breaking of a life Jong habit. On the oth- er hand ‘the secret of the multiplied mis- fortunes of others is to be discovered in the fact that they have never been taught to obey. Discipline they knew not in youth, and thus it happens that the stern and im- plazable hand of fate is bringing to them in their adult years that experience which wise home training would have enabled them to escape. It is not kindness toa lad to permit him to have his own way—it is the worst of cruelties. 0 EATING AND SLEEPING.—Food supplies the substance for repairing the wastes of the body, and gives strength. Sleep af- fords tbe opportunity for these repairs to be made. Both are necessary to health. If you can’t eat and sleep, take Hood's Sars- aparilla. It creates a good appetite and tones the digestive organs, and gives sweet, restful sleep to childhood. Be sure to get Hood’s. Si Biliousness is cured by Hood’s Pills, 25 cents. -.=—In Vienna, telephone booths are fur nished with napkins bearing the inscrip tion, ‘‘Wipe, if you please." The napkins are changed frequently, and this undoubt- edly serves to keep the mouthpieces of the transmitters in good sanitary condition. “I Forgive Youn.” Message of a Dying Wife to Woman Who Murdered Her. Clara Wiley and Olin Castle were mar- ried at Eldorado, Kan., four weeks ago and on Wednesday the bride was buried. Their little home was an unusually happy one until June 22nd, when Miss Jessie Morri- son, who was madly in love with the hus- band, entered the house and cut the throat of the bride with a.razor. After a struggle for life of eighteen days, during which she displayed wonderful for- titude, Mrs. Castle died. She wrote good- by messages to her friends and one to Miss Morrison, who is in jail saying, ‘‘I forgive Jou; the Lord will forgive you if you ask im. WAS 1T A MIRACLE.—*‘The marvelous cure of Mrs. Rena J. Stout of Consump- tion has created intense excitement in Cam- mack, Ind.” writes Marion Stuart, a lead- ing druggist of Muncie, Ind. She only weighed 90 pounds when her doctor in Yorktown said she must soon die. Then she began to use Dr. King’s New Discov- ery and gained 37 pounds in weight and was ‘completely cured.”” It has cured thousands of hopeless cases, and is positive- ly guaranteed to cureall Throat, Chest and Lung diseases. 50c and $1.00. Trial bot- tles free at F. P. Green’s drug store. — Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. Books, Magazines, Etc. This presidential campaign will be one of the most exciting the country has ever seen, Penn- sylvania is in the position of'a spectator. Her great Republican majority is as sure for McKinley and Roosevelt in 1900 as it was for McKinley and Hobart in 1896. Nevertheless the people of this State will feel the keenest interest in the progress of the battle in those sections of the Union where the result is thought to be doubtful. The North American will meet the demands of this natural interest by placing in the field correspondents of national reputation, who will be under instrue- tions not to be partisan, but to tell the exact truth about the situation as they see it in its shifting phrases. The Democrats of the middle West, and even of New York, strange as it may seem to Pennsyl- vania Republicans, are not wtthout hope of the election of Bryan. They have a good deal to say for themselves, and they have writers who can say it well. As The North American is a news- paper and not an old fashioned organ, it will give space during the campaign to the Democratic side from the pens of the leaders and conspicuous journalists. Republicanism is not intelligently served by ignoring the best though arrayed against it. The news has a right to publication, and facts are not obliterated because party organs choose to be studiously blind to them. "McKinley and Roosevelt-and the fundamental principles and general policies of the Republican party will have throughout the canvass no more energetic supporter than The North American, but its opinions will be found in their proper place—the editorial page In its news columns The North American will print the news uncolored The Democrais will be as well served there as the Republicans. Because of this broad policy of fairness, we are confident that The North Ameriean’s superiority as a newspaper for the next four months will be _as visible to everybody as it has been during the presence of the Nationol Republican Convention in Philadelpl.a. , Business Notice. Castoria "Bears the signature of Citas. H. Frercurs, In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought 4 GosHEN, ILL. Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y. : Dear Sirs :—Some days since a package of your GRAIN-O preparation was left at my office. I took it home and gave it a trial, and I have to say I was very much pleased with it, asa substitute for coffee. , We have always used the best Java and Mocha in our family, but Iam free to say I like the GRAIN-O as well as the best coffee 1 ever drank. Respectfully yours, 45-26, A. C. Jackson, M. D. ' Castoria. fay HCY Al BT O. Bol A «CC A;:8:.T O00 R I A Cc A 8 TO IB «ILA C 1 AES PHO 0R nilecA C. A: 8: T O-RilvA ccc : i For Infants and Children BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF { CHAS. H' FLETCHER. | THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGH1 In Use For Over 80 Years. cccce A Ss T OR I '7A Cc A 8 7 Oliv Bir ila A C. A 84.7 0: R I A C A 8S T ORB I. A Cc 212A 8 T a I A cece A Bir oO .R 1 4A 4337-1y The Centaur Co., New York City. Pure Beer. PrNE PURE VOLKS-BREW EXPORT LAGER BEER. The purest and most healthy drink you can get. Home-made-guaranteed pure, and furnish ed at the Bellefonte Brewery. NO DRUGS, NO DOCTORING. It is Shsolulely Pure and because itis so, itis the only kind of beer you should use. MATTHEWS VOLK, 45-5-1y Proprietor Bellefonte Brewery. McCalmont & Co. NV] CaLMONT & CO. —— 0 HAVE THE—— 0). cssinisneisesiinisstosransrenassonnrarsasrerssstsarnsatesaes 0 —— — { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } Qe SEE E I EN aa reser tetra rates atasiasssenasstas stants anERES 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 44-19-3m Money to Loan. MoxEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, 45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law, Herman & Co. "ree TRUE SUCCESS are the thousands of people who have had their eyes properly fitted by our specialist. The Sxes of the public have been opened to the fact that the word OPTICIAN means something different than the ordinary man who sells|spec- toeles. This is why our specialist is more successful than the majority of others. He is a graduate of one of the jargest Sptical 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. JULY 25th and 26th, 1900 H. E. HERMAN & CO., Consultation Free. 44-19-1y Flour and Feed. PHEENIX MILLING Co. edad Manufacturers of...... SPRING AND WITH WHEAT ' FLOUR AND FEED. BRANDS SUPERLATIVE, FANCY PATENT, FINEST, WHITE STAR. — es . We make a specialty of exchanging Wheat and other grain with farmers. i (ein Grain stored free of charge, protected ’ against loss by fire, PH(ENIX MILLING CO, 44-37-1y _ Brrigronte, Pa. TTY er vv — ve YW" | Green's Pharmacy. 551 i 7 OU TAKE Ip NO CHANCES f : : —IN USING— 3 | “CYDONINE” b : for chapped hands, lips and face and for use after shaving. ' It “ COSTS ONLY 15 CENTS and our guarantee, “Your money if not satisfied,” goes with it. Try AROMATIC TOOTH WASH price 25¢. has no superior atany price. Give these articles a trial. Full Line of HOT WATER BOTTLES from 85c. to $1.25. GREEN’S PHARMACY, Hien STREET, BELLEFONTE, - 44-26-1y PA. al et ee ct, ect ct rE cll 0 Pg ge Sg gy Pe {Cee ies 2 ¥ Sg gy McCALMONT & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA ' | Rubber Tires. JFOUND IN BELLEFONTE. | At the Carriage Shops of 8. A. McQuis- \ tion & Co., the place to have your Car- Jiages and Buggies fitted with the cele- rate MORGAN & WRIGHT SOLID RUBBER TIRES. We have become so favorably impress- ed with these tires and have such confi- 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 SAVING THE TROUBLE, EXPENSE and time if not more, of shipping them away to have the work done. The tires are ap lied with ‘a steel band instead of tha old way with the wire which cut the Rubber thereby loosening the tire and allowing it to i out of the channel: We would be pleased to have you call ex- amine and be convinced, that we have no* only THE BEST TIRE but also 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 ones at a low. price. Telephone No. 1393. McQUISTION & CO. North Thomas St. Bellefonte, You will also fina 44-34tf Sprinklers Etc. VV ATER THE GRASS ! * Water your lawn, And make it grow— Any old fool will Tell you so. But you're up to date And on to the wrinkle, When Potter & Hoy Have sold you a “sprinkle.” SPRINKLERS and GARDEN HOSE The best in the Land, —LAWN MOWERS, TOO— Fine, sharp, strong and Light. POTTER & HOY, % BELLEFONTE, PA. Meat Markets. (GET THE BEST MEATS. : You save nothing by buyin per, thin ..1. or gristly rE Tose Ye the ; # LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply Inyoustomets with the fresh- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are 30 higher than poorer meats are else- where. Nea SHU Pah die I always have’ —~——DRESSED POULTRY,— Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. : Try My Swoe. : P. L. BEEZER. 43-3¢-1y E ' High Street, Bellefonte. AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. | There is no reason why you should use poor meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender, juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here- abouts, because good cattle, sheep and calves are to be had. ais ' WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sell only that which is good. We don’t romise to give it away, but we will furnish you §00D MEAT, at prices that you have paid elsewhere for very poor. ——GIVE US A TRIAL— and see if you don’t save in the long run and have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea~ son) than have been furnished you. - GETTIG & KREAMER, Bush House Block BELLEFONTE, Pa. 44-18
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers