Bellefonte, Pa., September 7, 1900. ES AST, el FARM NOTES. —Do not fail to wash the udder just be- fore milking; it is a great help in obtaining pure milk. From an apparently clean, but unwashed udder over 2,000 bacteria will fall in the milk pail, while if washed less than 100 will fall. —Plant Hollyhock seed by the end of August or the first of September and pot the plants about the last of January. Keep in a cool, dry pit the remainder of the win- ter and set out in early spring, In this way hollyhock pests will be largely avoid- ed. —The horse chestnutand Norway maple are clean, healthy trees, and in every way suitable for planting near the house. The sugar, maple and pine oak are also very fine and somewhat more rapid growers than two former. Plant erther ‘in the fall or early spring. —To remove stones by dynamite the best method is to dig down on one side and bore or punch a hole under the stone. Place the charge against the other side of the stone. Fill up the hole and tap care- fully with a broomstick. To remove the top of a large stone two or three feet deep in the ground place the load on top of stone and cover with sand or dirt a foot or so deep. Use 40 or 50 per cent dynamite. —Fowls will often do well ona small place for several years then fall off and become unprofitable just as the owner thinks he has learned it all. The usual reason is either that the stock has become ran out hy too much con- finement, or that the fowls have used up some of the things about the place which they need. They have killed out the grass used up all the sharp gravel, or perhaps the soil had become infested with disease or the coops with lice. Remedy is to note condi- tions, supply what is needed and introduce . fresh stock. ' —FEven among the best breeds of live stock some individuals will be more valu- able for certain uses than others, and those with the highest records may not display their best pointe of excellence until select- ed for breeding. This is evidenced by the wonderful running horses of half a century ago—Lexington and Glencoe. The first held the four mile record for over twenty years, while the latter was one of the fleet- est in England, being imported into this country. Neither left a son that was a successful sire, but the daughters of both were dams of the best horses of their day, and their descendants are the leaders of the turf in both countries at the present time, there heing but few Derby winners that have not descended from Glencoe. Among cattle the same has occurred. Jupiter, Rioter, Stoke Pogis, Coomassie, Eurotus and other individuals founded families of Jerseys that have made that breed famous, yet there were hundreds of Jerseys in ex- jstence and the breed had already establish- lished its claim as ranking high for produc: ing butter. Any breed will lose its prestige if the selection of the best individuals is not strictly adhered to; and all breeders rely more upon the exploits of certain members of their herds or flocks than upon the whole, for, no matter how careful the breeder may be, or how judiciously he may mate his animals, he will have some that will fall below the standard of excellence. —At the great show and auction sale held at Kansas City last year upwards of five hundred head of cattle from the finest herds in the world were entered for exhibi- tion and for sale. A visitor gives the fol- lowing account of the careful methods used in preparing the cattle for the show ring. After their trip on the cars, many having come hundreds of miles, they are more or less soiled by the accumulation of dust and dirt on the skin. The 'stockyard stables are provided with large wash rooms, well supplied with brushes, scrubbers, scrapers, rubbers, cloths, and soap, though many of the more prominent breeders will use noth- ing but their own brushes, ete. The ani- mals are first well curried, then all the loose dust and hair is brushed out with a fine bristle brush. Then they are copiously lathered from head to foot with warm wa- ter and soap. When carefully scrubbed they are rinsed with clean water, scraped, and rubbed dry with linen cloths. The horns are polished by first scraping the rough loose horn with glass; they are then sand papered and rubbed with emery pow- der until they glisten like burnished brass, after which they are protected by flannel- lined leather covers made expressly for each individual. When the polished horns need cleaning it is done with soap on a damp cloth; then they are polished with a strip of almost dry flannel on which soap has been rabbed. When the toilet is com- plete they are blanketed with flannel lined made to order canvass blankets and placed in roomy box stalls, knee deep in clean straw. : —One of the most successful growers of celery gives this method of cultivating and preparing it for market as follows: The Golden Self Blanching celery grows upright and we didn’t touch it with our hands in banking. We first loosened the soil with the plow, threw the dirt as high as possi- ble, then a few days later finished witha shovel. We banked three rows at a time, then a week later three more, and thus had a succession. It needs to be sold as soon as bleached, orit will rustand decay. ‘We commenced selling by October 11th and sold about one row a week. On November 10th and 11th put all the celery left unsold into the cellar, packing the bleached in a wide bed as close er as it conld be packed. The unbleached we packed in beds about 3 feet wide and 18 feet long, with a little sand "on the roots. We used 10 inch hemlock boards for the sides. This celery will need watering about twice, for which I had a funnel made with a mouth about afoot wide and a long spout, so that the water can be poured in and carried to the roots without wetting the foliage. We keep the cellar open night and day as long as it is safe, only closing at the approach of severe weather. I expect to bave all celery sold or in condition to sell by New Year’s. Another authority on celery growing says : ‘‘For watering young celery before the leaves begin to spread I have a hose made out of denim. I purchased several yards of it, cut it into strips and stitched them into a hose about 1} inches in diame- ter and closed at one end. Ilay the hose along the bed between two rows of celery, having fastened one end to the water pipe. Then start the water and let it ran. e hose fills up and the water weeps out in small drops: The advantage of this plan is that the water comes so quietly and gradu- ally the ground does not bake after being watered. It also moistens the bed evenly along the whole row at once. I tried mus- lin, but it is too porous and leaks the water out too fast. The denim is just right. If the hose is opened at the lower end it will carry water anywhere, as it leaks only un- der pressure.” FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Don’t expose your neck and arms in thin materials except in the evening. Blood will tell—therefore it is unwise to confide a secret to your relatives Don’t wear a sailor hat on the back of your head or on the tip of your nose. None but five year old can do that. Today a shaped ruffle has all the style about it that it had three years ago; it is deep or shallow; it is tucked or plain; it is trimmed or just hemmed; but it is on al- most every gown in some shape. It goes well in any material; it is as shape- ly in broadcloth as in swiss. The old-fash- ioned cloth gown, with its plain facing, has almost entirely given way to the one with the shaped ruffle. The woman who is slender and tall finds an 18-inch roffle a good thing to cut off her height and give width around the knees; the short, stout woman finds the 10-inch shaped ruffle gives a good flare and does not leave her hips the largest circumference there is about her. The only rival to the cut flounce is the vertically tucked one, and this won’t doon cloth gowns. It is the fashion of the sum- mer and will tell only on winter house gowns. So integral a part of a gown has the shap- ed ruffle become that it no longer confines itself to the bottom of the skirt. It edges a stock collar, finishes a sleeve, takes the place of lace around a sailor collar. It has pushed out the plain cuff on the shirtwaist. The latest way of using it is in a group of eight. Each one is three inches wide, and the eight are put at the bottom of a skirt, slightly overlapping each other, and graduated upward in the back. They are used this way on a French fou- lard of topaz color, with a black square at large intervals. Each ruffle is edged with a narrow piping of black liberty satin. Heading the top ruffle isa cord covered with satin. I can remember perfectly well when these skirts ruffled above the knees, were consid- ered beautiful. Last year we would have held up our hands in horror at such a fash- ion; how many of us are eager for a chance to break the long lines from hip to foot. Let the woman who is stout and short, read about this fashion—and forget it. It is not for her. The vertically tucked ruffles are hers to have and to hold; but a fashion that adds to rotundity and decreases height, such as these other ruffies do, is to be overlooked by her forever. If she wears a shaped ruffle at all it mus only be one, and that not over ten inches deep. For the woman who must remodel, noth- ing isso satisfactory as the shaped ruffle for length; and nothing so satisfactory for breadth as the inverted box pleat at the seams. The inverted box pleat comes as a boon to all these skirts that are too narrow and which need the great sweep at the foot that fashion demands now adays. If you have any house gowns for this winter made by the old narrow pattern it is very easy to match the predominating color in crepe de chine, liberty silk or plain China silk and put in these inverted box pleats. If you have a black skirt that has no flare around the bottom, get black taffeta or grosgrain and make the pleats of it. If the seam does not need to be opened furth- er than the knees a knife pleating of the proper depth may be inserted and give the same effect. One touch on the shaped rufiles that is gaining instead of decreasing in popularity is the stitching. Five eight and ten rows are sometimes used. On the smallest cut flounce that serves for a cuff rows of stitch- ing are used. The pretty touch of this is that we are allowed to use contrasting threads. This line of thread is sometimes the only note of color on an otherwise plain gown. Women ou the quest for beanty perbaps do not realize that one rousing headache will knock a whole day from their lives. There are several kinds of this distressing ailment--common bilious headache, brain headache brought on by overwork, neural- gio ache brought on by a cold, and various serious headaches which precede different illnesses such as fevers. For bilious headaches open air exercise is the cure, and if that is impossible, gym- nastic work and singing are the next best. In every day life we do not properly at- tend to our respiration. If one observes closely she will see that singers are young- er, fresher and prettier for their years than women who have no voice. The inflation of the lungs isa life giving exercise that affects the whole system. Fifteen minutes singing the scales would ward of many a headache arising from sluggish liver. Brain fatigue induces a headache that is unbecoming, for it takes at least three days to recover one’s looks after an attack of it. Vary your occupation, and do something that can be classed as manual labor. Diet also should be chosen with a view of the demands on the sysiem made by the brain. A woman has not the vitality to be beaun- tiful without the necessary food to keep up the circulation of the blood and the healtl of the tissues. To eat wisely is the hardest thing possible for a grown up person to learn. And it is exactly the lack of this which destroys good looks the soonest. Father Time is out of the running when compared with lobster salad, hot breads and too many sweet. ! It is doubtful if diplomats are having much more difficulty with the Chinese tan- gle than are tailors just at this moment with the question of the fall tailor suit. The head of the tailoring department of one of the city’s largest stores was asked: “What will be the leading style in the fall tailor suit ?”’. ‘‘That is. what I want to find out myself,”’ was the instant reply. “Last week our cutter said ‘short coats.’ This week he changed to long ones, and 80 it goes. J 1 The verdict at another leading tailor establishment is for the pouch front Eton. This fits the figure snugly all over, and has the long waisted effect in the front. Another verdict of one whose business it is to guide the fashions was that the short jacket both loose and tight fitting, would be the popular model, though Etons, of course; would have some following. : An- other predicted continued popularity of the Eton. ‘It will bea tight fitting affair, with Medici collar,” he said. ‘‘The skirt will -show from seven to ten gores, give flare at the bottom, and inverted pleat at back.”’ aa : On the skirt all seem to agree, and the coat will probably be a matter of individual taste, with the tendency toward snug, tight fitting, Etons. Persistence. The quality which counts for more than intelligence or talent in the accomplish- ment of a purpose, is persistence. The aims of young men are various, but what- ever their aim may be it may be described in the one word—snccess; and success can- not be achieved except by persistent labor. It is perhaps for this reason that people who are accounted dull sometimes outstrip those who are credited with high intelli- gence or talent. It is the old story of the tortoise and the hare applied to humanity. The persistent plodder reaches the end of his journey before his rival who is fleeter of foot, but inconsistent. The dullard is not necessarily persistent; but the bright, intelligent man is almost always of a high- ly nervous temperament, impatient and inconstant. The dullard has a hard time mastering his lessons, but he holds on to that which he has learned, and in the course of time may become learned. The bright boy picks up knowledge withont an effort and parts with it as readily. In the course of his school days he may stand high in his class without obtaining that useful training of the mental faculties which en- ables one to make sustained efforts. Thus it is that in the real world which lies be- yond the school house the bright student frequently fails to realize the expectations of his teachers, while some unnoticed pupil in the last form carries off the honors in the struggle for place. The winner, wheth- er talented or dull, always possesses the needed quality, persistence. Whatever his aim may be, he keeps it constantly before his mind, permitting no diversions. The dull man may require ten years to reach a point which his talented comrade could at- tain in two,but if the latter should abandon his purpose at the end of six months or a year and so continue vacillating, now with this purpose, now with another,the dullard would arrive first at his destination. Wheth- er it is wise to confine one’s self to a spe- cialty, to become the slave to a single pur- pose, may be questioned, but there can be no doubt that this is the surest way of win- ning success. The volatile man of talent can scarcely realize the volume of work that may be accomplished by daily and persistent labor in the course of a few years, nor has he any conception of the educational or training value of such per- sistent application. In the days of ap- prentices long years of service prepared boys to do their tasks mechanically, al- most without thought. The skilled me- chanic does not need to look at his tools while he is working. Persistent practice has made him an automatum. He hits his chisel squarely on the head or files flat and true while turning to converse with a friend. No amount of talent will enable him to do this. To acquire such skill he must practice persistently for years. The same principle holds good in callings that are not mechanical. It is persistent study and practice rather than talent that makes the successful merchant, or banker, or pro- fessional man. There is no royal road to success in any calling. Talent, quick in- telligence, the ability to learn new lessons without study, are qualities much to be desired, but they cannot altogether take the place of persistence, which in the long run serves as a useful substitute for abili- Hes generally reckoned to be of a higher order. Peach Short Cake. Sift into a bowl a quart of flour, a tea- spoonful of salt and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder; then work through the flour half a cup of butter. When the mix- ture is in little globules pour in enough rich cream to make a dough soft enough to lift with a spoon, but not stiff enough to roll out. Butter two good-sized round pie pans and divide the dough between them, smoothing it over with a knife, so that it it distributed evenly in the pan. Then bake these two cakes in a rather quick oven till a golden brown. While they are baking prepare the peaches to put between the layers of the cake; sweeten the fruit well,and when the cakes are done let them cool a little. Then split them in halves with a keen knife blade, butter the inside of each layer, put a layer, buttered side up, an a large plate and cover it with the prepared peaches. Repeat the process un- til all the layers are on, then on the top layer place peaches cut in halves. Sprinkle them with fine sugar, and as soon as the cake is cold serve it with a pitcher of rich cream. Race Horses Burned to Death. Shortly after the beginning of the racing in the closing day of the grand circuit meeting at Narragansett park in Rhode Island, Friday afternoon, fire broke out in one of the stables near the three quarter turn and with great rapidity destroyed three stables, a number of cattle sheds and burned to death four race horses. Several strings of other horses were gotten out safe- iy. The horses destroyed comprised three in the string controlled by B Simon, of London, Ont. The Ace, with a record of 2:05}, and valued at $4,000; Maud K., a green mare without a record and valued at $1,000; Acman Jim, with a record of 2:163 and valued at $1,600, and Charles A. Gnier’s brown mare, Wilrissa, valued at $1,500, were the animals destroyed. Simon own- ed The Ace and Maud K., and handled Ackman Jim for Isaac Battenbury, of Clin- ton, Ont., to whom Simon sold this horse a year ago. Loss on the building amounts to $6,000. Treasure Steamer in Port. Ohio Arrives From Nome With $2,000,000 in Gold on Board. * SEATTLE, Aug. 27.—The steamship Ohio has arrived from Nome with 332 passenge and treasure estimated at $2, a assengers ,000. About one-third of the gold came from Nome. The Klondike contributed the halance. The steamer South Portland arrived last Bight with $40,000 in Gold from Nome and 113 passengers. : 3 Fell Heir to $12,000. Miss Lizzie Berwick, whose parents re- side at Winburne, and who has been live ing at Williamsport as a domestic,has been informed that her grandmother died at Glasgow, Scotland, recently, and willed her $12,000. Miss Berwick is 20 years old. She will go to Glasgow in October, and after spending some time there will return to this country. —— ~——She was a bride of only three short months, but she had her troubles, and naturally made a confidant of her mother, “My dear child,” said the mother, “If you would have neither eyes nor ears when your husband comes home late from the club, you might be happier.” ‘‘Perbaps s0,’’ answered the young wife, with an air of weariness,” ‘‘but what am I to do with my nose.”’ : ——— When you say your blood is impure and appetite poor you are admitting your ‘need of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Begin taking it at once. Courting Declared a Crime. The city council of Peru, Ill., has just passed this ordinance : ‘Whoever shall congregate on any of the streets in the city of Peru for the purpose of courting, making love, or spooning,shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. and shall be fined not less than $3 or more than $100 for each offense.”’ Mayor Hoerner says: ‘‘I do not oppose courtship when it is conducted in an ordi- pary manner. But when it is carried on indiscriminately and in public, I believe it, like all other nuisances, ‘should be abat- ed. Peru citizens shall no longer be an- noyed by love sick and sentimental per- sons if it is in the power of myself and the council to prevent it. ‘Fourth street, the city’s main thorough- fare, after 9 p. m. is sickening. "Women and their sweethearts have claimed the street for their own, and as soon as dark- ness falls swarm so thickly in its busiest half mile that no unattached citizen dare walk there for fear of colliding with them.”’ Heirs of Crossing Victims Sue. Twelve suits, aggregating $200,000, were begun in the Northampton county courts Saturday against the Lehigh & New Eng- land railroad company, by relatives of the victims of the Benningers crossing horror, near Slatington, on the night of Sunday, Aug. 12th last. A party was returning from a funeral when the coach on which they were riding was struck by a Lehigh & New England passenger train and 15 of the occupants of the coach were killed out- right or fatally injured. Additional suits will, it is understood, be begun later. 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 Arnie Salve is the best in the world. Same for Burns, Skin Eruption and Piles. 25 ots. a box. Cure gnaranteed. Sold by F. P. Green, draggist. Washington, D. C. Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y.: Gentlemen :—Our family realize so much from the use of GRAIN-O that I feel I must say a word to induce others to use it. If Pople are interest- ed in their health and the welfare of their chil- dren they will use no other beverage. I have used them all, but GRAIN-O I have found superior to any, for the reason that it is solid grain. wy for health, C. F. MyEgs. 5. Business Notice. Castoria Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FLETCHER. In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought msm we Castoria. A ST O BR I A cC AS TO RBR'I A C A 8 T 0 R-I.A C A 8. T 0: RB:lI. A C A: 8S T O. BR. 1 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 Diarrhea and Wind Colie. - It re- lieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipa- tion and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea--The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS. I EEE Restaurant. 0 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, opposite the Bush House, where good, clean, tasty meals can be had at all hours. Oyster: and Game in season, rns, DO YOU PLAY POOL? 1f you do, you will find excellent Pool and Billard tables, in connec- tion with the Restaurant. DO YOU USE BOTTLED BEER? If you do, Anderson is the man to supply you. He is the only licensed wholesale dealer in the town, and supplies only the best and purest brands. Will fill orders from out of town, promptly and carefully, either by the keg or in bottles. Address JOHN ANDERSON: 44-28-6m lefonte, Pa WHY TRY TO ‘STICK with something that don’t stick © Buy MAJOR’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. MAJOR'S RUBBER and MAJOR'S LEATHER Two separate cements—the best. Insist on having them, ESTABLISHED 1876. 15 and 25 cents per bottle at all druggists. MAJOR CEMENT Co., New York City. 45-10-2y McCalmont & Co. V[FALMONT & CO.— amr am, oO earth where one can do better than at 44-19-3m spm— Green’s Pharmacy. Oensivesrss aseesspresysteenanie LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } sesssssssesssesssssensissaccans 0 ———HAVE THE—— yeisduviitiecrisraese seesesressD PS esses ssesssssssesssesrsesnerenet 0 rn [I rr 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 McCALMONT & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA | Rubber Tires. Bicol ise. cotton 8c cnt fly lil you TAKE al NO CHANCES —IN USING— “CYDONINE”’ ge tle atl F lh for chapped hands, lips and face and for use after shaving. It COSTS ONLY 15 CENTS ST ith and our guarantee, ‘Your money if not satisfied,” goes with it. Try AROMATIC TOOTH WASH price 25¢c. has no superior atany = price. Give these articles a trial. Full Line of HOT WATER BOTTLES from 85¢c. to $1.25. conti wg Tg gt - . GREEN'S PHARMACY, 3 Higu STREET, a egg 4 BELLEFONTE, - PA 2 44261y : pg S poe Silverware. THE MARK OF Q UALITY On Silver ! Plate can only be determined after long ears of actual service un- ess you purchase ware bearing a well known trade-mark. For over half a century Spoons, Forks, ete., stamped «1847 ROGERS BROS.” Have been in use and giv- en perfect satisfaction. They are sold by leading dealers everywhere. For catalogue No. 100, of new designs send to the mak- ers THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER CO. MEeripeN, Conn. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE i REMEMBER 1847. 45-35-1t ES spasm Plumbing etc. JRUBBER TIRES. : | At the Carriage Shops of S. A. McQuis- tion & Co., the place to have your Car- fiages 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 a; plied 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. You will also fina 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 Sprinklers Etc. 44-34tf . YY 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. YOUR ; PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. Judge of our ability as you judged of his—by the work already done, | Many very particular people have judged us in this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers. Tre R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny 8St., PPLLEEONTE, PA. 42-43 Money to Loan. ONEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, Att'y at Law. 45-14-1yr. GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, noor, thin or gristly meats. I use only the LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and Supbly ny customers with the fresh- est, cheicest; best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no. higher than poorer meats are else- where. ay : 4 [ always have —DRESSED POULTRY,— 4 Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. Try My SHor. 43-34-Iy P. L. BEEZER. | QAVE IN | YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use: poor meat, or pay exorbitant pre s for tender, juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here- abouts, because good cattle, sheep and calves are to be had. 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 §0oD. T, at prices that you have paid elsewhere for very poor. ——GIVE US A TRIAL— have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea- son) than have been furnished you. GETTIG & KREAMER, ? Bush House Block BELLEFONTE, PA. 18 High Street, Bellefonte. andsee if you don’t save in the long run and
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers