Denar lata Bellefonte, Pa., September 28, 1900. EE. FARM NOTES, —Trees should be set out about as deep as they stood in the nursery and the manure should be spread on the surface of the ground around the tree and not close to the roots in the ground. Spread the roots out, so as to give more room, and to permit of better bracing of the tree. as the tree with copious roots when set out will thrive much better than one with cramped roots. —Colic seems to prevail with horses that are at work more than with those that are jdle. The reason is that the digestive organs of horses at work are not as respon- sive as when idle. The occurrence of colic is sometimes due to lack of time given for digestion. The stomach of a tired or warm horse is in no condition to receive food, hence the necessity of a short rest or delay before feeding. —Attention of farmers and all others who make cider or other vinegars is called to the fact that before offering the same for sale they are compelled by law to mark on each head of cask, barrel or keg, or if sold in other packages, each containing such vinegar, the name and residence of the manufactory, together with the brand, cider vinegar. Farmers will do well to preserve this for future use. —Eight gallons of water per day is the average quantity required for a cow, and the milk given is about eighty-seven per cent. water. In some pastures there is no water, the cows being supplied night and morning, which force each cow to drink four gallons at a time in order to be sup- plied. As the cow does not know that she must drink four gallons, she may use less, and she will reduce her milk supply ac- cordingly. —1It is merely a matter of feeding and cultivating. Put back the barnyard ma- nure, rotate the crops, cultivate throughly, and the secret of success is yours. The more we use our land the more productive it becomes, because by constant stirring and cultivaing we improve the mechanical conditions of the soil, so that it is better fitted to furnish the right conditions for seeds and growing plants The more the soil is cultivated the easier it is for the moisture to penetrate it, and the under- ground springs prove a source of perennial moisture for the plants when the air around is dry and parching. —It is a good plan for all apiarists to put their name and address on all pack- ages of nice honey, either in combs or ex- tracted. A rubber stamp, with plain let- ters three-eighths of an inch high, is best to mark sections, but bottles or cans of ex- tracted honey must have a printed label pasted on. The marking of first class honey or good goods of any kind isa help to everybody who handles it. If the job- ber has any fault to find he can easily trace it to the producer. If the grocer likes it he will be apt to remember the name and buy some more of it, while the con- sumer will do the same. —At this season some of the hens will become broody, and it may not be desir- able to raise chicks. To ‘‘break up’ a sitter make a lath coop, with lath top, sides and bottom. Place a brick, or block, at each corner, so as to raise it from the ground. Pat the broody hens in this coop, and as they will feel the cold air under them if they attempt to sit they will soon cease, as a hen will not sit if she does not feel the warmth under her. This plan dif- fers from the many cruel methods of break- ing sitters. Another method if there are two yards is to place the sitter from one yard into the other. Being a stranger in the flock she will not be allowed to indulge her propensity, but will be kept moving. —One tablespoonful of gasoline and four ounces of sweet milk well shaken together is a good dose for stomach worm in sheep weighing anywhere from 60 to 100 pounds. The quantity of milk may be reduced or increased lightly - without detrimental re- sults. Each sheep or lamb should be set on his rump and so held that he will not struggle, while the dose is given as a drench, and his head should not be thrown farther back than the natural position while standing. Treatment should never be given on a full stomach, but only after 12 to 18 hours’ fasting, and neither water nor food should be given inside of two hours after giving the medicine. This treatment is recommended by the Ohio station. If you are producing a superior article in quality, marking it and selecting a reliable jobber and sticking by him, it will be a profitable undertaking, but it won’t pay to change jobbers every year or to put your name on anything but a good grade of honey. The ground is taken by jobbers that they do not want the honey stamped, because putting the producer’s name on it leads the retailer to deal direct with the producer to the demoralization of the market. They should more truthfully say, to the loss of their profit. Manufac- turers of clothing, of wagons, fancy but- ter and many ether lines of goods put their name on the goods, and the jobber is help- ed thereby. Darlington butter brings 75 cents per pound because it is Darlington butter. If Tom Jones take extra pains in handling the carload of fine honey which he produces every year there is no harm in letting the people know that it is Tom: Jones’ honey and that it is worth 1 cent per pound more because it is as represent- ed.—American Agriculturist. : —1If the experienced breeder of pure- bred stock is compelled to continually se- lect and breed from the best sires and dams it shonld be more important for. the farmer not only to improve with pure-bred sires but to use only the best to be obtain- ed. But the majority of farmers are dis- posed to purchase the ‘‘culls’” 'of the breed- er for breeding purposes and are disap- poimed if they do not secure good seaults. t is never profitable to use an inferior ani- inal for any purpose, more especially when grading up a herd or flock, as the better the sire the greater his influence. Worth-~| less sires shonld rather be avoided, as they entail loss of time, labor and money. The male is “half the lierd,’” and every young animal partakes of his characteristics, their value depending upon the excellence of the . sire, and the advancement of the herd is in exact ratio with the influence of that parent. Pedigree is a safeguard and pro- | tection, but pedigree alone is not to be relied upon. The form, disposition, health and other indications must assist in selec- tion, but as some sires can give no evi- dence of their value until tried the pedi- gree should never be overlooked; as it points out the several families among breeds that have excelled and also the best | individuals among those families. Every farmer should endeavor to bea breeder and also to breed to a standard of “excel- FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Mrs. Phoebe Hearst bas established a school at Berkley for the young women of the University of California. It is called ‘the Academy of Lost Arts’’ and gives in- struction in sewing and other domestic oc- cupations. Twenty cents an hour will be paid for plain sewing, but as the skill of the worker increases the amount of pay will increase. Women who sit with their legs crossed, to sew or read or to hold the baby, are not aware that they are inviting serious physic- al ailments, but it is true, nevertheless. When a man crosses his legs he places the ankle of one limb across the knee of the other, and rests it lightly there. A wom- an,more modest and restricted in her move- ments, rests the entire weight of one limb on the upper part of the other, and this pressure upon the sensitive nerves and cords, if indulged in for continued lengths of time, as is often done by ladies who sew or embroider, will produce disease. Sciatica, neuralgia and other serious troubles fre- quently result from this simple cause. The muscles and nerves in the upper portion of a woman’s leg are extremely sensitive, and become deranged if they are overtasked in the manner referred to. Embroidered collars of white lawn are still worn over the top of dainty silk neck- bands so as to protect the edge from the inevitable soil of close contact with the throat in warm weather. Some women prefer a narrow band of white silk or even white velvet cut in the bias. This is bast- ed into the top of the collar, and is pre- ferred to the great number of women to whom a narrow band of linen is intensely unbecoming. There is something nnnatu- rally prim about the narrow bank of hem- stitched linen. Bands of silk often look better than the plain turnovers. A revival of red is predicted for fall and winter, broadcloth and camel’s hair taking the lead. The most pronounced innova- tion in skirts is the introduction of the front panel in lace, braiding or embroidery. We are also promised shorter skirts, wider hatbrims and sleeves showing plainer and closer on the shoulder, and bigger and fuller at the waist. Golf capes for autumn wear show vivid colors and have grown decidedly in length. Many are finished with bands of stitched leather or a deep fringe. The golf girl has fads that are all her own. of buckles especially made for her after her own design to fasten said cape and belt. The small velvet Eton has made its ap- pearance. It is just as neat as its silken relative and is trimmed with silk in some manner. A little velvet Eton made for the troussean of Miss Mabel McKinley is long enough to cover the belt in the back; the front is waist length, but is loose. It is cut away and quite departs from the conventional straight lines of the Etons; yet it is longer than a bolero. The back of the jacket is a mass of black taffeta applique,the design being small flowers and leaves. There are many noticeable changes as far as sleeves are concerned. In fact, the plain dress sleeve of last seasou is decid- edly conspicuous by its absence. The bell sleeve, the bishop and the Roxane sleeves are seen on all garments, whether dresses or wraps. Even the new Eton jackets have fancy sleeves—the bishop in most cases being the favored model. ‘People who have the care of little chil- dren vary in opinion as to the best means of punishing them, for even the best of lit- tle people need correction at times. The mother is without doubt the person to whom this duty belongs. and it is her paramount duty to see that itis never deputed to any one who will frighten the child. Nurses who are properly enough forbidden to administer corporeal punish- ment are very apt to fall back on some such methods if not carefully warned against them and due supervision exercised to see that the admonitions are not neg- lected. It is true, perhaps, that the im- aginary person who was supposed to be al- ways coming after naughty children—the bogeyman, in fact, of our own childish days—is a being of the past. But he has many relations closely resembling him, and on so important a matters mothers ought to be watchful. If a child is constitutionally nervous it is no cause to think that it can be made different by force. Argument, too, in many cases, only intensifies the terrors which children often feel if left alone in the dark, and gives definite ex- pression. to fears which are pure- ly imaginary. Many people argue that a child who is afraid to be left alone or to go into a dark room ought to be made to do either of these things in order to find out that no harm will come to him. Now, children are seldom really afraid unless they have been made so, and it is a curious fact that the most timid child shrinks from disclosing his fears to any one. In sucha case some one has certainly warned him to disclose the reason of his alarm. Very often it is the simplest thing which has tain conditions. : One of the artistic home decorator’s un~ written laws is always to bave one centre rug in the dining-room large enough to hold the chairs comfortably when people | are seated at the table. A number of small | rugs dispersed at intervals may be per-|. missible in other rooms, but not in the dining-room. Brass nails and sockets now' come for fastening rugs to the floor, and these are often used. Strips of lead fast- ened in an invisible facing underneath is another way of preventing rugs from curl: ing up or slipping on a polished floor. Plain Willing throw out pictures better, but not so new or fashionable ‘as other kinds, Burlaps in green or dark reddish shades of brown in heraldic designs. are very smart for the library. Up-and- down stripes in a paper are considered very, stylish. ‘A dade of dark green velour paper running up about four feet, with a large rose design abave, is one of the newest and most charming effects for parlor paper. ' The yellow so much used in old colonial mansions are great favoritesjust at present for covering dining room walls, as they bring out the blue and whit for dining room decoration. B ite grou ds predominate in bed-room oor boudoir papers. ckles are guite strikingly t not up an down; that is, arge across, b they are very low and broad. Many hand- some ones aregeen, some in openwork de- lence by selecting the best to be obtained of any breed. ; signs, others in enamels. Many of the handsomest in openwork gold and silver SS RRR SR Ps much of her whole physical structure can: She has a set | that worse things will happen if he dares | been made to appear so terrible under cer- t | Exposition pers patterned after those | china, the present craze | 000, | No boiling! No baking! seemingly form an incongruous combina- tion with the narrow belts they adorn (for even many of the wide belts are pulled down almost nothingness in a point in front), so massive are they in design. Dog Saved His Master. Intended Murder Frustrated by the Animal’s Help. A Desperate Battie With a Burglar in the Early Morning Resul ts in His Capture. George W. Seitzer, a dairyman, residing four miles north of Williamsport, had a thrilling battle with a man whom he found in his barnyard at 2 o'clock Saturday morning. Had it not been for Seitzer’s dog the dairyman would probably have been slain. He finally felled his adversary by the blow of a hammer and the dog held him down. THE DOG TO THE RESCUE. Seitzer heard somebody trying to get in- to his house at 2 o'clock. While investi- gating he was confronted by a man, who with a hammer, struck him on the head, and a desperatestruggle ensued. At every opportunity Seitzer’s dog bit and tore his master’s adversary. Finally the stranger ed to whisper that he would give up and Seitzer released his hold. Upon re- gaining his feet the stranger grasped a club and renewed the attack. The dog sprung on his back as he lifted the cudgel to strike the almost exhausted dairyman. : BURGLAR FELLED TO THE GROUND. But Seitzer defended himself with the hammer, that he had wrenched from the fellow, and with this he delivered a blow that felled him, and the dog fastened his teeth into the now unconscious man’s neck, while Seitzer fell exhausted on the ground. By this time Seitzer’s son had heard the dog’s barking and came upon the scene with a lantern. The strang- er, his clothing in shreds from the dog’s attack and blood gushing from a wound on the forehead, was driven to the City Hall, and given into the custody of the police, who identified him as George B. Smith, a carpenter of that city. He was held in $1,000 bail for court. After Dowieite Elders. A Mob at Mansfield, Ohio, Covers Two With Tar. MANSFIELD, O., September 24.—A mob formed Snnday and the Dowieite olders, Ephraim Bassinger, of Bluffton, and Silas Moot, of Lima, were its victims. The two elders came in on an Erie train unknown to the authorities. They were recognized by a small crowd at the depot which refus- to let them enter a cab, then followed them up then surrounded them near the centre of the city. They were then taken by the mob to the Richland buggy works, where Bassinger disrobed but the crowd tore Moot’s. clothing from his body as he refused to disrobe himself. A paint buek- et and a brush were then secured and a smoke stack varnish, a tar-like substance, was dumped over them from head to foot. It was matted in their hair and no part of their bodies escaped but their faces. - Their bodies were then partly covered with their clothing and the elders were then marched to the home of E. H. Liby, a follower here, who was driven out of the city last Saturday. There they promised not to return to Mansfield, but later they said they agreed nof to return unless Overseer Piper ordered them to come. They were then marched to the city prison and locked up. By applica- tions of lard and benzine the black varnish was cut, and after new outfits of clothing were furnished they were deported on a Pennsylvania train at noon. Lovers are United After Many Years. Pretty Romance of Forty-four Years Standing Ended in Marriage of David R. Hosterman and Mary Herpst. A pretty little romance was enacted at Oil City Saturday morning, when David R. Hosterman, of Springfield, O., and Miss Mary Herpst, of Oil City, were united in marriage at the bride’s home. Forty-four years ago Miss Herpst was a bright young school girl, living at Shippensville, and Mr. Hosterman was a school teacher, with his future ahead of him and his fortune to make. The young couple became engaged, there was a lovers’ quarrel, and they separated and went their wsys. Miss Herpst re- mained true to her first and only love, while the young school teacher sought solace for a wounded heart in the pursuit of business. He married, but death came a few years ago and left him a widower. A year ago Mr. Hosterman wrote to post- master McKim, at Oil City, inquiring about the Herpst family,and the letter was turned over to Miss Herpst, who replied to it. When Mr. Hosterman learned that his former love had never married he lost no time in coming to Oil City, where the old ‘affection was renewed. : His proposal was accepted and the date of the marriage set for this month. . | : Stoc king Bank Went Up in Smoke. ' Out in Connellsville township in a lone- ly place lived *‘Daddy Lantz,” who had neither faith in banks nor insurance com- panies. He kept his money, amounting in all to $2,000, in a heavy sock. : He carried no insurance on the proper- y- . Saturday night neighbors saw a light streaming up from the house and dragged Lant out, nearly suffocated. The house was burned and it was with the greatest difficulty that he was restrained from leaping back into the seething flames to rescue his savings. th sma ‘Aeronaut Falls 1.000 Feet. sfoaky Frey — +4. Dropping on Telephone Wire from Bursted : Balloon, His Life. Was Saved. vol dg aur * | Saturday afternoon while Carl Bryan, an aeronant with a circus which has been ex- hibiting at Lancaster, was making an as- { cension at Ephrata his: balloon burst: ata | | height of about a thousand feet. The para- chute which he intended wing when a higher altitude was reached could not be opened until the man was within several hundred feet of the ground, and he finally | fell on some telephone wires. These broke |' | and he dropped to the ground, being in- jured about the hody and, legs, but not seriously. Sey ) ast Sm ——— hs Visited by 26,000,000 People.’ ‘The Paris Exposition managers ‘have made public the following figures of at- |. tendance up to September 15th: Over 26,- 000,000 arsons, including 8,000,000 on the free list, have visited the various side shows ; 26,000,000, including 7,000,000, free, bave visiced the Exposition proper. - gad aT IIe : What Shall We Have for Dessert? : 3 BaF Dado 20 BY TELE es in the family every day. This question: Let ne aes ig tly Try Jell-O, a delicious ‘and healthful desert. ared in two minutes. Add beiling water and t to cool. Flayors:—Lemon, Orange, Raspberry oerry YORt vour grotern 10 ee, 451 A PowpER MILL EXPLOSION—Removes everything in sight ; so do drastic mineral pills, but both are mighty dangerous. No need to dynamite your body when Dr. King’s New Life Pills do the work so easi- ly and perfectly Cures headache, consti- pation. Only 25 cents at F. P. Green's drug store. 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. Business Notice. Castoria Bears the signature of Cuas. H. Frercuee. In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought s—— Castoria. AS T ORT A «C AS 'T OR 1 A C AS TOR TA C A 8 T OR I A c A 8S T OO BR 1 a cco 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 ino 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 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 a —————————— McCalmont & Co. McalvonT & CO.———— 0 ~——HAVE THE—— 0. 1snverinsssanssinsseesivicssserrareiseivevensnnsntrsnransres 0 ——— — { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } 0 seessessussssssssssesesrssnssnnanats teessssasssesssssassensens 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 kuow 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 om earth where one can do better than at McCALMONT & CO’S. 44-19-3m BELLEFONTE, PA wa ss wm ——— | Rubber Tires. Silverware. | RUBBER TIRES. | At the Carriage Shops of S. A. McQuis- \ tion & Co., the place to have your Car- riages and Buggies fitted with the cele- $¢QILVER PLATE THAT WEARS.” brated 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 ® The trade mark «1847 ROGERS BROS.” 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* on Spoons, Forks, ete., is a guar- antee of quality the world over. The prefix—1847—insures the gen- uine Rogers quality. For sale by leading dealers everywhere. Send for catalogue No. 100 to THE INTERNATIONAL only SILVER CO. THE BEST TIRE MeripEN, CONN, but also 4s-31-1t | THE BEST WAY of fastening the same. You will also fina us prepared to do CHAS. H. FLETCHER. IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS. ee ——————— Dr. Stites. ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING, in our line of business with neatness and dispatch. New Top Buggies on hard. Home made and 2 second hand Top Bug- gies, good onesat a low price. Telephone No. 1393. JKILLED BY A SNEEZE AN SCIENCE HAS TRIUMPHED. Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Throat and. Lung Diseases can be cured. Dr. Stites, the great specialist, is daily: demon- strating the truth of his statement by the almost miraculous results of the New Treatment. OLD COLORED WOMAN To Most People This Seems a Remarkable Occurrence, But How Many Men, Women and Children Die Annually From a Neglected Little Sneeze. The New Treatment reaches the most obscure passages of the head, healing the Catarrh Ulcers and Running Sores, that the microbes have made. ; ‘germs, and as soon as they are destroyed all other DR. J. K. THE INEVITABLE RESULTS OF NEGLECTED COLDS. When persons contract a fresh cold, it at first attacks the ‘nostrils, causing frequent sneezing Then it spreads to the throat, and although they may apparently recover, throughout the whole winter they are more or less troubled, with cold or coughs, each succeeding one a trifle more severe than the first. In the warm summer months you may have a short respite from them, but each suceeeding winter finds the head and throat more tender. Then comes a tickling sensation, caus- ing coughing, hawking and spitting, particularly in the mornings ; the throat is filled with foul and deadly mucous, which passes into the stomach, causes untold suftering and distress. aif IN A SHORT TIME WINTER WILL SET IT with its usual large crop of coughs and colds, and | | : those who are suffering from Catarrhal diseases are in great danger. NOW IS THE TIME. One. GET THE month of the NEW TREATMENT AT THIS SEASON MAY SAVE YOU MUCH ‘SUFFERING "AND. DOCTOR BILLS DURING THE FAST APPOACHING WINTER. A 5 McQUISTION & CO. North Thomas St. Bellefonte, 44-34tf Sprinklers Etc. WATER 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.” OF DAWSON CITY. SPRINKLERS and GARDEN HOSE THE WONDERFUL NEW, TREATMENT i= Tie best in the Land. Kills the Catarrh Microbes as soon as Tt reaches them, Asthma, Bronchitis and many stomach troubles are caused by the venomous Catarrh ——LAWN MOWERS, TOO— troubles gradually disappear. fg LB Fine, sharp, strong and Light. STITES, POTTER & HOY, BELLEFONTE, PA. 45-11-1y Meat Markets. BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, r, thin or gristly meats. I use only the SEER BARI ONE ACR a | ered continuous hawking or spitting. Thanks to Dr. Stites for Another Patient Kindly Testifies in Her Own Words to the Good Dr.. Stites, H un aap te Done for Her. tilt " I have been a gréat sufferer of catarrh in my head and throat ever since I was a child. Iwas both- fy with hawking and spitting and dropping in the § was a great annoyance not only to myself but to those around me. Have been under Dr. Stites new treatment for three months ; have grontly, jmproved don’t scarcely have to do any more s LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, sas supply n Susiomete with fhe frach- est, choicest, | muscle mak- ing Steaks and Pod ay ‘prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where. i I always have , -——DRESSED POULTRY,—- Game in season, and any kinds of good back part of my throat. This NO INCURABLE _ CONSULTATION. AND PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION FREE. Hours: 9 a. m., to 12. 1105p. m. and 7 to 8 p.m. Offices, No. 21 North Allegheny street, Bellefonte, Penn’a. nd and eareful treatment. meats you want. MRS. J SMES ROWAN . Yes My Suop. Bea 4oR1 BPE i Beliafontersad Li ssonry P. L. BEEZER. 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 1 are to be had. bi tii rnd 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 -BooD MEAT, at prices ' that you have paid | elsewhere for very poor, , « —GIVE US A TRIAL— and see if you don’tsave in the long run and ‘have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea- son) than have been furnished you. - GETTIG & KREAMER, . Bush House Block CASES TAKEN. BELLEFONTE, PA. 418
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers