Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 10, 1900, Image 3

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    Dewar facia,
Bellefonte, Pa., August 10 1900.
RETA.
FARM NOTES.
—Qats, potatoes and buckwheat have
been found by some of the experimenters
to thrive better tuan wheat or clover on
recently reclaimed bogs.
—Ducks grow very rapidly. If the busi-
ness of raising them is gone into system-
atically and advantage is taken of the good
points, money can be made quickly.
—Nearly all crop bound fowls can trace
their trouble to the lack of gravel or sharp,
gritty material as well as to fibrous sub-
stances, such as potato and apple parings
or blades of grass. :
— American apples shown at the Paris
exposition are reported to be vastly su-
perior in both size and color to those of
other nations. Our handsome red apple
has no foreign equivalent.
—Shade in summer will add to the milk
yield, and if this cannot be supplied by
trees it will pay to build an open shed on
high ground where the cows can obtain
relief from the blazing summer sun and
where if there is a breeze they will get the
benefit from it.
— Difficult as is the lesson, itis never-
theless true that profit in raising broilers
or first-class roosters comes only to him
who uses pure bred males, broad, deep, full
breasted birds, vellow in skin and legs.
The scraggy little barnyard hen, with a
mongrel male as the sire of her chicks, is
incapable of producing a chick that will
reach three pounds weight long before it
has matured, at which period of its exis-
tence it ceases to be a ‘‘broiler.”’ It is
the use of good breeders that gives success
and profit. ;
—It is neither profitable nor always en-
tirely safe to keep great numbers of hogs
together. Besides the liability to disease
getting among them, there is always a cer-
tainty that tbe stronger will crowd the
weaker from their feeding places, so that
the inequality in size will increase instead
of decrease. In every litter there are al-
ways one or two weaklings that were born
runts, and unless given a better chance
than their fellows they will always remain
runts. | The best way to manage this is
when the pigs are 7 or 8 weeks old, take
out the stronger ones and wean them, giv-
ing them plenty of the best food that can
be got to make growth. Then the runts
left to suckle the sow alone will in two or
three weeks mare take a start that may
make them as good as the others,so that in
later life they can be fed together. No other
feed without the sow’s milk will do this,
though such other, feed should be: given:
and the pigs be encouraged to eat all they
can be made to eat.
—A crop of rye on the land is beneficial
even if it 1s never harvested. When rye is
seeded down in the fall it necessitates the
destruction of many young weeds, and as
the rye takes possession of the land it
destroys all young weeds that appear later.
If used as a green crop for cattle in late
fall and early spring it makes sufficient
growth after the stock has been removed
to provide a green manurial crop for corn,
thus adding to the top-soil plant food
gathered from the sub-soil and made avail-
able. Rye also covers the soil in winter
and protects it, assisting to prevent loss of
the fertilizing elements, and.as it is bardy,
it can endure the coldest winters. Asa
weed destroyer .it excels all late crops, does
not exhaust the land when grown as a
green manurial crop, occupies the land at
a season of the year when many other crops
cannot be grown, and costs less in propor-
tion to advantages derived therefrom than
anything else grown on the farm.
—The arrangement of the crops so as to
secure a system of rotation that will not
only make the land better every year, but
also enable it to produce larger crops, has
been studied by scientists and practical ag-
riculturists for centuries, but owing to the
variable conditions affecting soils it has
been impossible to formulate any system
that is applicable to all farms. Even when
some farmer learns exactly what his farm
demands. and how to conduct rotation of
crops to the best advantage, his plans may
be changed by his location. If he is an
Eastern farmer,and his land is well adopted
to wheat, he may be forced to abandon
wheat by reason of Western competition,
and resort to some other crop that gives a
larger profit in his local or nearest mark-
ets. But all farmers admit that the only
correct mode of farming is to rotate the
crops, and also that the growing of grain
year after year on the same plot is liable to
reduce the productive capacity of the land
in time unless by the expenditure of a
large sum for fertilizers. = Whether fer-
tilizérs are used or not the land will always
gain by rotation, as rotation permits of the
formation of humus and increases the
moisture. Rotation also prevents soil ex-
haustion by balancing the plant foods re-
moved and permits of drawing on the al-
most inexhaustible stores of the subsoil for
the dormant plant foods, which may be
brought to the surface and used for the
production of large crops. Every farmer,
however, must judge for himself of the re-
quirements of his soil and rotate according
to conditions affecting his land’ and lo-
eality.’’ LB tio an
No farm will prove remunerative that
does not produce grass, for the reason that
although grass removes plant food yet it is
a covering for the land and demands plant
foods that are not fully suited to the pro-
duction of grain. All grass lands are
benefited by lime, hence the farmer who
intends to make grass a crop must first
lime his land. If this is done in: connec-
tion with the growing of green manurial
crops the result will, be more. satisfactpry.
It is usual to grow corn, wheat, and clover
in the way of rotation, but a three years’
rotation will noi give as good results as to
take more time. Those who have studied
the matter suggest corn, oats, wheat, clover
and oloyer the fifth year. The land is
“therefore in clover three years; that is, the
first year when sowed on wheat, the sec-
ond Jo when cut as hay, and the third
‘when left on the land to be used for pas-
ture oras a covering.’ "If the hay crops are
cut at the right time, and the clover not
allowed to produce Seed, thats will be, gen,
siderable pasturage the third year, but i
allowed to produce seed the plants will
then have accomplished their object. The
fifth year crop (clover) is beneficial more
as a fallow, or rest, and the land will gain
in nitrogen as well as increase in humus
and general fertility. The manure made
on the farm should be used only on the
corn land in the spring. By “so dc
every field will be manured once in five
years, as corn will only he grown on the
same field’ once in that period of time.
‘Grain will occupy the land three years,
giving two years to clover, though really
clover and wheat will always occupy the
land together a portion of the time.
By so doing
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
Mildew should be carefully wacched for
during the hot, humid weather. It is the
most obstinate of all defilements to get rid
of. Preveation is far better than a cure.
Do not allow garments to remain in a
damp or wet condition over night. To re-
move mildew mix equal parts of powdered
borax and starch, and half as much salt,
moisten the whole with lemon juice.
Spread the mixture on the spot and place
the garment in the snn on the grass. Renew
the mixture every morning until the stain
is gone.
In spite of the outcry against high, tight
collars, which, so the wise ones said, yel-
lowed the throat,interfered with the grace-
ful carriage of the head and spoiled the
artistic effect of a whole costtme. those
collars are as high as ever.
Women wha hesitated at the begiuning
of the season, and even asked timidly for
low collars, have now come boldly forth
either gazing over linen battlements, with
wired collars of the dress material grazing
their ears or with a yard or two of ribbon
swathed about the throat, which was to be
free as air this summer.
To be sure, the ‘‘twice-around’ tie of
lawn or other equally thin material has
been added unto us, as well as the lace
adorned collar, but, alas! these are prone
to wilt, like the hopes of youth, on hot
days. And so the average woman com-
plains, but complaints and tries to wear col-
lars as high as those of the human gazelle
across the way, and nobedy can tell wheth-
er the uncomfortable fashion has its root
in an idea of universal becomingness or the
dislike of some fashion leader to display a
lean and wrinkled throat.
A tour of the summer resorts impresses
the traveler with the fact that golf, or
rainy-day skirts and costumes, are worn
by many women who know next to noth-
ing of golf, and when old Sol is doing his
very strongest shining. Aft the resorts, on
the trains, and in the large cities, they are
worn by women of all sizes, ages and com-
plexions, of all kinds of stuffs,both woolen
and cotton, for all times and all places.
The latest models are only open on one
side, and many have a stitched band on
this side that goes quite down to the bot-
tom of the skirt. The mermaid back to
the skirt worn last summer is quite passe
this season, nor is the single box-pleat in-
roduced in the late winter and early
spring so comme il faut as the inverted
pleat back. Neither too wide nor too nar-
row around the bottom is fashion’s edict.
From two and a-half to three and a-half
yards being the correct form. The pocket
at the right side for the golf ball, hand-
kerchief, etc., appears on some, especially
for the golf devotee, but it is so unhecom-
ing to the figure that the majority of the
skirts for ordinary wear are without it. Of
course, they are one and all machine
stitched around the bottom.
A very dark iron-gray in Oxford suiting
is far and away the most popular for gen-
eral wear with shirt-waists, etc. Very
dark blues are also much liked, and for
young, slight women, a light gray is quite
becoming. - This last is' especially striking
when worn with the fashionable English
‘pink’? (bright scarlet) golf jacket,
Smart linen golf suits and rainy-day
skirts are now seen on warm midsummer
days, when even the lightest weight cloth
would be uncomfortable. Blue linen in
various shades, the natural linen tint, and
white pique, are most stylish, and duck is
used to a degree, but onlyina very light
weight, as it is a trifle heavy in weight.
These suits are made usually with shirt
waist, or ~emi-jacket bodiees, but not with
a regular coat shape, as they are intended
for very warm weather. When an extra
garment is needed the ‘‘pink'’ is slipped
on.
White shirt waists are the fad of the
summer, and are considered the correct
form to accompany the short skirts. The
“Ladysmith?” hat has superseded the ‘sun
bonnet for summer outing wear, as being
lighter in weight and so much more com-
fortably cool. The outing shoe is just the
same as last year, wide sole, round toe and
flat heel.
If you wish to have a gray nun’s veiling
or cashmere that will be suitable for dress
occasions all the winter through cut a cir-
cular skirt of the gray shaped out in large
curves at the bottom; put a shaped ‘raffle
into these curves as deep as the knees:
Tuck the rufile vertically, stitching the
tucks with white silk thread. Put three
small tucks around the ruffle at top of
hem. This curved effect in a deep ruffle
is one of the very new effects on skirts. It
is finished at the top with a small cord
covered with the cloth.
Tuck the bodice all over. Make lingerie
tucks, about an inch apart. Fit the back
into the belt without fulness, and make
the fronts slightly fall. ¥ arising aiid
: Get some very narrow Honiton braid and
apply it on the left side of each tuck.
Make a sailor collar, with ends that
come to the bust of the material, finely
tucked. Do not stitch the tucks quite to
the hem, and finish the collar with three
rows of white Honiton braid. Do not put f
a chemisette in, as you can wear the dress
be‘ter in winter without one. Rs
"Fasten the ends of the collar at the bust
with’ a 'four-in-hand knot of accordion-
pleated gray chiffon. ; vit 17 iin
Put knife-pleatings of chiffon at the
wrist, and lace the sleeves up the back
seam with tiny white linen buttons and
loops of white silk cord. Make a stock
collar of folded gray chiffon, without stif-
fening or lining, simply feather-boned.
Run stripes of the Honiton braid around it.
The ubiquitous ‘‘American dentist,’
held in the highest esteem the world over
for superior professional skill, has already
hung out her shingle in Manila, and is
finding abundant demand for her services.
Dr. Anna M. Sawyer, of New York, is the
woman who has taken the initiative in this
instance. da Hari
Summer hats for the most part set well
off the head, and frequently the trimming
is a wreath of flowers. These flower-crown-
ed hats are seen in all shapes. for, what
ever the shape, the flower wreath is always
fashionable and dispenses with any other
trimming. A variation of this idea isa
half-wreath that tumbles over the brim on
the hair. ~~ Cd a
For some reason ostrich feathers, that
suddenly disappeared with the spring, re:
turned with the midsammer, and now
there are picture hats loaded with them.
Many hats of broad brims are bent in all
possible ways. ae. 1807 !
sirisninin
An idea which Paris has sent over to us
in a few new Suiziue} gowns is the lingerie
method of running ribbon through cloth.
For instance, a pale blue crepe de chine
had as its entire trimming 3-inch wide dark
blue ribbon ran through the cloth. The
skirt was cut with a shaped ruffle, and
down each seam the cloth had been worked
into huge buttonholes and the velvet rib-
bon run in and out through them as throa-
gh beading. The ends of the velvet hung
in tabs over the ruffle.
Dishes Prepared from Green Corn.
CORN OMELET.
Cut and scrape the pulp from. boiled
corn, of which use one-half cupful to three
eggs, one-half teaspoonful of salt, a little
pepper, and one teaspoonful of butter cat
into bits. Beat together well and cook as
a plain omelet.
CORN PUDDING.
Twelve ears of corn, four eggs, a gener-
ous pint and a half of milk, a generous
teaspoonful of salt, four tablespoonfuls of
sugar. Grate the corn, beat the eggs with
a spoon, and mix all the ingredients to-
gether. Butter a deep pudding dish and
pour in the mixture. Bake slowly two
hours. When the corn is old it will take
one quart of milk. If very young one pint
of milk will be sufficient.
CORN OYSTERS.
Half grate on a rather fine grater eight
ears of corn that is neither young nor very
old, scraping out all the remaining pulp
from the hulls on the cob. And to this
the beaten yolks of two eggs, one level tea-
spoonful of salt, one-fourth as much pep-
per. and the whites of the eggs beaten to a
stiff froth. Fry in little cakes shaped like
oysters in a spider in lard hot emough not
to soak into the batter readily. If the corn
is watery and the cakes spread too much
add cracker dust,to make the batter stiffer.
Use neither milk nor flour.
CREAMED CORN.
Cut the corn from half a dozen ears, or
better still, scrape it, using the black of
the knife. Mix with the corn one-half cup
of bread crumbs. Beat one egg thorough-
ly and mix it with one tablespoonful of
butter, reduced to a cream, and a teaspoon-
ful of sugar. Add one-balf cup of milk
and salt and pepper. Add this mixture
to the corn and erumbs, mix well together
and pnt into one large or individuat bak-
ing dishes; add a layer of seasoned crumbs
and bake twerty minutes.
CORN FRITTERS.
Before grating the corn from the cob, in
making fritters, run the point of a sharp
knife the length of the cob through every
row of kernels. Then grate the tops from
the kernels and press out the pulp remain-
ing on the cob with the hack of the knife.
To two cupfuls of corn add the well-beaten
yolks of two eggs, one cupful of milk, one
cupful of flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt
and one saltspoonful of pepper. Beat the
mixture thoroughly. Then stir in the
stiffly beaten whites of the eggs and one
teaspoonful of baking powder. Fry by
spoonful on griddle or in deep fat.
CORN WAFFLES.
One pint of sifted flour, milk enough to
make a thin batter, two eggs beaten very
light, a tablespoonful of melted butter and
a little salt. Gradually mix the milk with
the flour until there is a smooth paste; then
add the salt and butter, and lastly the eggs
and a cupful of grated corn. Have waffle
irons hot, and butter them well, or grease
with lard. Pour in enough of the batter
to cover the iron, and put the other side
gently down upon it. Keep over the fire
about half a minute; then turn over, and
let the other side remain on the fire the
same time.
Remarkable Case of Vindication.
One of the most remarkable cases of the
vindication of an innocent man after the
lapse of many years has just occurred fin
Lancaster county. Fifty years ago a man
named Riteer was convicted of theft and
served a year's imprisonment. Ritter as-
serted his innocence at the time and up to
the day of his death. He reared a family
angl his descendants still live in Lancaster
and are highly respected. A few days ago
the article which Ritter was charged with
having stolen was found on: the premises
from which it is alleged he had taken it.
Thus after fifty years, and a quarter of a
century after his death, the proof of his in-
nocence appears.
He May Call on You.
A new fakir is abroad in the rural re-
gions. He drives through the country and
sells soap worth five dollars a box, which
sum includes the price of forty yards of
carpet, ‘selected from samples which he has
in his wagon. He takes the five dollars,
leaves the hox of soap, promises to deliver
the carpet of the selected sample within a
week and drives away. The soap is worth
probable fifty cents. It stays with the pur-
chaser. The carpet is worth probably fif-
teen dollars, but it stays with the fakir
and has not yet been delivered to a single
victim. Farm families should be on their
guard against this new fakir and against all
other fakirs, . is Th
The Patriarch Business in Turkey.
In the village of Bodra a Turk named
Ismail. aged 120 years, is in such good
health that he frequently walks to Bartin,
six hours’ distance, to sell eggs, for he is a
poultry farmer. He has had thirty-four
wives; the last of whom he married only a
ew days ago. ' The bride'is sixty years his
junior, and the marriage was celebrated
with . moch solemnity, to the sound of
drums and fifes and of volleys from fire-
arms. The whole village was en fete.
The wedding procession included all the
male progency of the patriarch bride-
groom, consisting of 140 sons, grandsons
and great grandsons. The number, of fe-
male progeny is not stated.
. Hard on the Timber.
. Ownazrs of Logs and Rafts Losing Heavily.
The timbermen of Clearfield, are very
gloomy over the present condition of the
affairs. . Much of the timber that was left
in the bed of the streams when the water
went down is going to wreck on account of
being bumped against the stones. :
© The timber that is lying in the mount-
ains connot be transported to the railroads
without great expense, and the owners are
still hopefully waiting for the freshets that
don’t come. The timbermen state that
never in their recollection has the river
been as low for go long a time as this year.
——7Yes, the world owes youa living
provided you are willing to’ get down and
work for it, but under no other conditions.
You may play tramp and beg ‘‘band outs’
or live or your father-in-law. or convert a
public office into a Pirate snap or, worse,
steal your living by beating your way
through life, and the world owes you noth-
ing but a hole in the ground and the re-
conversion of the elements of which your
worthless carcass is composed into some
‘more useful form of animal or vegetable
hte, Ht
~——Remember this: No other medicine
has such a record of cures as Hood's Sarsa-
parilla. When you want a good medicine,
get Hood's. :
Banana Trade.
Forty one Steamers Chartered to Carry the Fruit.
Few people realize the extent of the
banana trade or what it costs to supply the
demand for the tropical fruit which has be-
come so popular.
idea of the trade when it is stated ‘that
shipping circles were startled last Saturday
by the fact that forty one steamers were
chartered for the West India fruit trade
between Philadelphia and West India and
South American ports. Thirty four of these
charters were renewels of previously exist-
ing - contracts, but the remainder were
charters of bulky vessels, which were re-
quired to meet the exigencies of the local
market.
These vessels have been chartered almost
entirely for the banana trade, about seven-
ty five per cent. of which comes to Phila-
delphia. The other destination assigned
to them are New York, Baltimore and Bos-
ton.
The explanation of the extraordinary
number of charters is the need of transpor-
tation of an unusually large crop of bana-
nas, which seems to have been anticipated
by an unprecedented demand in the local
markets. The import of the fruit from
Cuba, Honduras, Costa Rica, San Domin-
go and other southern regions this year
has heen far above the average, and
the demands of the trade have impell-
ed the importers to engage the service of
extra steamers.
It HELPED WIN BATTLES.—Twenty-
nine officers and men wrote from the Front
to say that for Scratches, Bruises, Cuts,
Wounds, Sore Feet and Stiff Joints, Buck-
len’s Arnic Salve is the best in the world.
Same for Burns, Skin Eruption and Piles
25 cts. a box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by
F. P. Green, draggist.
The Oldest Bank.
The Bank of England is 306 years old.
The bank of Venice is the oldest in the
the world, having been organized in 1157.
This would make it 743 years old.
Business Notice.
Castoria
Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FiErcHER.
In use for more than thirty years, and
The Kind You have Always Bought
David City, Neb., April 1, 1900
Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y.:
Gentlemen :—I must say in regard to GRAIN-O
that there is nothing better or healthier. We
have used it for years. My brother was a great
coffee drinker. He was taken sick and the doe-
tor said coffee was the cause of it, and told us to
use GRAIN-O. We got a package but did not
like it at first, but now would not be without it.
My brother has been well ever since we started
to use it. Yours truly, Larue SocHoR.
45-27
Castoria.
ca ABUIRIT TG Qe LRAT A
Cc C AS oT 0 RTA
C A 8 7.0 R.°L A
C AS. T O RY A
c A RT GURIT A
ccc :
For Infants and Children
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
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 Bewels,
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.
A ————————————————————————————
‘Restaurant.
De YOU GET
HUNGRY ?
Of course you do. Every body
‘does. But every body does not
know that the place to satisfy that
hunger when in Bellefonte is at
Anderson's Restaurant, oppositéthe
Bush House, where good, clean,
tasty mesls ean be had at all hours.
Oyster: 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 YOUIDSE + Foden 4 Hin Bhs vob
BOTTLED BEER? wil i
if, Jou do, Anderson is the man to
supply you, He is the only licensed
wholssale dealer J; the sown, and
supplies only the best and res:
} Pads, Will fill orders from 4) 5
: town, promptly and carefully, either
by the keg or in bottles. Address
JOHN ANDERSON,
44-28-6m ® Bellefonte, Pa
ged
1 WHY 2athis
TRY
STICK : he
with something that
don’t stick - Buy :
V4JOK'S CEMENT-—
"You know it sticks. Nothing breaks away |
from it. Stick to MAJOR'S CEMENT. Buy
once, you will buy forever. There is nothing
as good ; don’t believe the substituter. ]
1 magor's RUBBER And MAJOR'S LEATHER ©
Two separate cements—the hest. Insist on
having them.
ESTABLISHED 1876.
15 and 25 cents per bottle at all druggists.
MAJOR CEMENT Co., New York City.
45-10-2y
Ts
Our readers can form an |
NJ cCAIMONT & CO.
earth where one can do better than at
44-19-3m
Green’s Pharmacy.
tneatlls, linens. ort cnt 8c ca cE ct cant. crt fT
You TAKE
{ NO CHANCES
f —IN USING—
5
4 “CYDONINE”
4
3 for chapped hands, lips and face
5 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 25c. has no superior atany =
price. Give these articles a trial. :
Full Line of
HOT WATER BOTTLES
from 85c. to $1.25.
wong
A
2 GREEN’S PHARMACY, L
HicH STREET, : t
i BELLEFONTE, - PA. ;
+ 42ely i i
i
Silverware.
JK NIFE, FORK AND
: SPOON EXPERIENCE.
Over half a century of it is
one of the reasons
why gecods
stamped
«1847
ROGERS BROS.”
the product of this long experience are
best, They are gold by leading
dealers. For catalogue No. 100
explainiag points of interest
to buyers, address the
makers
THE INTERNATIONAL
SILVER €0.
i : Muiioi, Coss.
JAKE NO SUBSTITUTE REMEMBER 1847.
1
_ Plumbing ete.
eeessnee tastes nnastss. sesenatanaattre RRR RIttn nation
1
eg i
* (CHoosE i
YOUR i
~~ PLUMBER - 1a
_ chose your doctor—for ef- = i
fectiveness of work rather :
than for lowness of price. i
Judge of otir ability as you i
. judged of his—by the work. .&
already done.
‘Many “very particular P00
people have judged us in \
{this way, and have chosen: i
us as their plumbers,
§ wi id a BARRETT
R. J. SCHAD & BRO.
No. 6 N. Allegheny St.,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
2-43-61 aiid id J i Boi
© eesassesssssntnansaisranes
t
~. Money to Loan.
M ONEY TO LOAN on good security
and houses for rent.
J. M. KEICHLINE,
Att'y at Law,
4514-137.
= | have better
McCalmont & Co.
TART TT Y TT
0
———HAVE THE———"
Qin asnd ecessernrenrconusiirisitssnanuniorassnsissanss 0
{ - LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE }
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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 wel}
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
McCALMONT & CO’S.
BELLEFONTE, PA
Rubber Tires.
Eee IN BELLEFONTE.
| At the Carriage Shops of 8. A. McQuis-
) tion & Co., the place to have your Cars
riages and Buggies fitted with the cele-
brated
MORGAN & WRIGHT
SOLID RUBBER TIRES.
We have become 20 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
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 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 Bugeios on hand.
Home made and 2 second hand Top Bug-
gies, good onesat a low price.
Telephone No. 1393.
7 McQUISTION & CO.
North Thomas St. Bellefonte,
i Sprinklers : Etc.
You will also fina
44-34tf
YY 2TER ‘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
g Have sold you a “sprinkle.”
SPRINKLERS and GARDEN HOSE p
teh liThe best in the Land, © 10 1
——LAWN MOWERS, TOO—
Fine, sharp, strong and Light.
POTTER & HOY,
45-11-1y BELLEFONTE, PA,
. Meat Markets,
GE
MEST NpRys aes sit ti gad bingds
An You save nothing by buying, poor, thin
orgristly meats. | I'use only the 4
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and supply my customers with the fresh-
est, choicest, best blood aud muscle mak
ing Steaks and Roasts. ‘My prices a
no higher than poorer meats are else-
WH OT inmates mitt
) I always have
| DRESSED POULTRY,—
‘ ‘Game in season, and any kinds of good
|: eats you want. i: iii da vial
ne Tey My Soe.
334ly coh PU LUBEEZER,
ChE High Street, Bellefonte.
AYE IN i [oii oti
T YOUR MEAT BILLS.
There is no reason why you should use poor
“/imeat, or’ pay ‘exorbitant ‘prices for tender,
. juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here-
‘abouts, because good cattle, sheep and calves
;..ave tobe had. 11 luo Erehy ; pale
io WE BUY ONLY THE BEST"
: and we selt only that whieh 1s got We Joie
prom 0 give itigway, but we will furnish you
“&50D MEAT, at hikes eat you have oatd
"elsewhere for very poor. «+ 11 ‘
1 —=—=GIVE US A TRIAL
and see if yon don’t save in the long run and
t ¥ eats, Poultry and ns (in sea~
--son) than have been furnished you. He!
GETTIG & KREAMER,
Bush House Block
itl
BELLEFONTE, PA.
44-18