Bellefonte, Pa., October 19, 1900. A US SSW morn oc FARM NOTES. —When all kinds of crops are used for stock instead of depending mostly upon grain and hay it gives the farmer more ad- vantages, as he will not have his entire crop ruined by drought. —As soon as the ground is frozen burn the old strawberry beds over. It will do no harm to the plants, while weeds and seeds wiil be conrfamed to ashes and re- turned to the soils, so far as their mineral elements are concerned. In the spring the strawberry plant will shoot out with bet- ter foliage and grow more rapidly by rea- son of the burning over of the rows. —Sometimes maggots or lice injure young trees at the roots, peach and plum trees being more frequently attacked than other kinds. Remove the earth, so as to expose as much of the roots as possible,and saturate the earth at the roots with soap- suds and then scatter a pound of kainit on the roots before returning the earth to its place. The trees will not be injured and the parasites will be destroyed. —The garden plot for strawberries should be plowed or spaded now, left rongh, and well covered with fine rianure. The frost will still further pulverize the manure, and in the spring the ground should be spaded again and the rake used to get it in fine condition, the plants being set out in April, if possible. With this treatment a plot of one-eighth of an acre of ground in strawberries will produce sufficient for a regular supply for a large family. —My method has been to place the squashes upon shelves in a well ventilated cellar, says a correspondent of Orange Judd Farmer. The shelves are four feet wide next to the sides of the cellar. The re- maining ones are six feet wide, with alley on each side. The first shelf is six inches from the floor, and then they are two feet apart until the ceiling is reached. I use 2 by 4 inch studding for uprights and cross- pieces and 1 by 6 inch strips for bottom of shelves. One of these strips is sufficient for the side. The uprights should be placed four feet apart, as the load they have to sustain is considerable. The temperature should be as high as possible without using artificial heat and interfering with good ventilation. This is best accomplished by keeping the cellar closed on very cold days and particularly during periods of foggy and rainy weather. Choose the bright days for opening during the middle of the day. With the best of conditions and best of care there is quite a loss, and more depends upon time and manner of gathering crop than all else. Because the squash has a hard shell and does not show the effects of a slight frost it is often left too long on the vine. I plan to gather them just before the first frost. This can usually be ac- complished if I am ready to put all my help to work as soon as I think a frost is on the way. I pick them and place in piles about six rods apart, covering them with their own vines. © As the weather be- comes colder I draw them on a truck wagon, with springs and hay rack with about six inches of marsh hay on that. I handle them as carefully as possible, loading only three or four deep on the wagon and carry- ing them into the cellar in baskets and placing on shelves two deep. Iam careful to sort them, using the soft and bruised ones for feed or selling them for immediate consumption. —--One of the best permanent pastures is that where orcbard grass is grown. Orchard grass is a perennial, lasting, under favor- able conditions, for many years. It is somewhat coarse when given opportunity to grow with abundance of room. One objection to it is its tendency to grow in bunches or tufts. If sown by itself it will be very bunchy. It is better to sow it in a mixture designed for permaneni pasture rather than for a hay crop. It is among the first grasses to start growth in spring, and will continue growth until late fall. It should never be sown on grounds in- tended for lawns, as it shoots up rapidly, and before the main portion of the grass requires cutting the orchard grassis up beyond the reach of the lawn mower. The place where orchard grass is most valuable is in shady woodland pastures. It will grow in the shade where nearly all other grasses will fail. Orchard grass weighs 14 pounds per hushel, aud when sown, alone from one to two bushels are usually sown. One bushel of pure orchard grass seed sown on an acre would, if evenly dis- tributed, put 186 seeds upon every square foot. One and one-half bushels per acre sown in early spring and lightly covered by a weeder, will probably be as satis- factory as heavier seeding. As a mixture of seeds for permanent pasture we would recommend the following in preference to orchard grass alone: Red clover, six pounds; Alsike clover, four pounds; Ken- tucky blue grass, three and one-half pounds; orchard grass, three and one-half pounds; meadow fescue, three and onme- half pounds; red-top, three and one-half pounds; timothy, five pounds. The orchard grass compares very favorably with timothy hay. To secure best results in its feeding it would be better’ combined with clo- ver, which comes more nearly to what is known as a balanced ration. —The saving in the food of live stock in winter allowe the farmer to either sell more produce from the farm or keep more stock. During the winter season, when - erops are not on the fields and do not need attention, the farmer has to be idle ‘at times and thus allows his labor to be lost, because 1t cannot be applied with profit. 1f labor could be bestowed on the prepara- tion of ‘food for stock, in order to make the foods more valuable and also more rel- ished, there would be sufficient saving to pay for the labor, while there would also be a more rapid increase in ‘the weight of the animals or production of milk and but- ter. Every farmer who takes advantage of 3 Jabor saving implement reduces the cost ‘of his products, and it may be claimed that new implements are being introduced so rapidly that many farmers are not aware of what is occurring, one of the latest be- ing a machine that cuts up corn fodder and shells and grinds the-eorn at one operation. Farmers do not pay sufficient attention to root crops. It is much easier to grow 10 acres of turnips or carrots at the present day, with the aid of seed drills, wheel hoes, digwers and weeders, than one acre half a century ago. Every farmer knows that there is no winter food superior to carrots for horses and cows, yet if one farm in a hundred can be found upon which carrots were grown this year in order to ‘provide an unlimited supply in this sec- sion it will be more than the average here- tofore; yet from 300 to 800 bushels of carrots can be grown on an acre of land, _ acoording to soil and circumstances, ‘and ~ they are valuable for all classes of stock. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. The more children are coddled to keep them from catching cold the more apt they are to catch cold. The proper course to take is to clothe children warmly, provide good, stout shoes, and turn them loose in the open air. Let them go, rain or shine, cold or warm: let them have the open air every day. Such children are far less liable to catch cold. And their bed room window should be open every night, win- ter and summer, in such a way as to avoid a direct draft upon them while they are sleeping. Cleanliness is hext to godliness—that’s been impressed upon us from childhood’s hours with so much energy that some- times we're in danger of over-doing it and becoming so abnormally neat thata suf- fering family prays long and earnestly that the afflicted one may have a change of heart in this direction. A young woman known to the writer belongs to this abnormally tidy class. Does one of her relatives place a receipted bill for an instant on the corner of the mantelpiece when she’s around itis re- moved instanter, and either carefully pigeon-holed where it will never be found until house cleaning day rolls around again, or else torn into bits and burned i another leave a book in a handy spot for a moment and turn his head, when he looks again, presto! the volume has been closed and stands neatly among its fellows in the bookcase, whence it must be brought by its irritated reader. One may be so cleanly as to make other people ungodly, and a house an uncom- fortable and unattractive place-—it is to such a one that this little preachment is addressed. Fancy covers for washstand and bureau have gone ont to a great extent. Fine white figured damask with deep hem- stitched hem is used on the handsomest furniture. White lace in the heavy quali- ties, such as Honiton and Renaissance is used entirely plain over a pastel color of China silk to match the room. White Swiss, with a deep hem, finished at top with lace beading through which colored ribbon is run, laid over sateen or silk in a light shade, is the most elaborate used. Long pin-cushions, covered with an em- broidered pieced and edged with ruffles of footing are put on them. The simple rules for a bed room are that a white or brass bed is used instead of wood ; shams have given place to large pil- lows with deep hem and monogram on case; dark furniture is used instead of light; colored cretoune spreads are put all over the bed and hang to the floor; win- dows have double curtains, the thin ones hanging only to the window sill and per- fectly straight, the cretonne ones banging to the floor at the side, also straight. An exquisite young woman is she whose dress and hair and skin indicate the most scrupulous attention to the daily toilette. We have learned that bathing and rubbing and care for personal cleanliness, the nicety which distinguishes the lady, and adorns her for her station, are the handmaids not of health alone, but of beauty, and where is the young girl who despises beauty ? For the business girl, for the girl whose daily employment is close and confining, nothing can be hetter than thatshe emulate the dainty girl in her every day care of her dress and appearance and in frequent cleansing of the skin by thorough bathing and vigorous friction, and by keeping her- self and all her belongings as dainty as she possibly can. One may keep one’s rooms sweet with the fragrance of violets all winter by set- ting little bowls of powdered orris root about in them. The orris root should be renewed once or twice a month and the bowls washed whenever it is changed. Danity Japanese bowls and quaint dishes and vases make the best receptacles and it is wise to cover them during the night to preserve the sweeting of the powder. By banging sachets of orris root in the ward- robe one’s garments will be given an eva- sive and charming fragrance. Everybody knows her—the woman who is dependent upon her relatives, and who continually stirs up strife under the roof which shelters her. She feels her de- pendence keenly, in spite of the fact that she is welcome to a share of everything of which her friends may happen to be ed; and yet she is always hopefully looking for slights. She wears the martyr’s smile, especially when visitors are present, and she continually takes up the gage of battle when it has not been thrown. She has confidants, and by and by they begin to show coolness towards the various mem- bers of the family. And yet they are in- nocent of any act of offense. She is merely morbid and unhappy, tilting at family windmills and always he- lieving herself worsted. It never occurs to her that she,is dependent th ough no fault of the friends upon whom she is depen- dent. She is merely unhappy, filled with a sense of her own obligations and unwill- ing to acknowledge them. In other words, she is not generous enough to be grateful. It requires a much finer mind to accept a favor than it'does to grant ore. The small mind resents its obligations; the great one is simply, dignifiedly grateful for them. It is a small return for the sacrifice made by those who will ingly receive another under their roof to sit a watchful critic there. And the wom- an who allows herself to become such a critic is laying up stores of unbappiness for herself and all with whom she comes into contact. ‘Why not look through rose- colored glasses rather than blue ones, and try to become to one’s life-long hosts a blessing, rather than an enemy in dis- guise ? : : There are some lovely evening dresses now on exhibition, and they are very beautiful and so filmy and ethereal that the young lady who is so fortunate as to be able to buy one is to be envied, or at least imitated. 'We can all follow alead- er when we know the original idea, and so I shall here give a detailed description of the prettiest and also the most costly. If silk muslin is thought too expensive, the dress would be quite pretty enongh to set a dozen hearts aflame made in soft mull, A gown of silk muslin would make a aty- lish evening dress lined with aslip of faint pink taffeta. The skirt made with a demi- train, and around the bottom seven nar- row flounces—to be accurate, each two and a half inches wide—and these overlap each other so only one and a half inches of each show except the top one, and this but an inch and a half wide. Each one of these very full ruffles and ‘the hems are all. bor- dered with a line of pale pink baby rib- ‘bon, and six rows were sewed flat on the skirt above the ruffles. There is another series of ruffles of silk mull, and these are set on the silk lining, and they uphold the skirt ruffles and made a fluff that is beaun- A Welcome Announcement. tiful to see. The waist is just the dear old baby shape, but around the neck there is a quantity of ruffles so that the wearer would seem to be rising out of a great big dish of pink ice cream. The sleeves are mere puffs, and the narrow pink ribbon is put wherever it could be put with ad- vantage. There are many families in this county who are raising bright, intelligent children without the much needed musical educa- tion,not knowing that they can purchase a piauo and educate their ehildren within their income. F. A. North & Co., the well known piano and organ dealers of Phila., who have recently placed a number of their excellent instruments in Bellefonte have pianos for both the rich and poor. They Sponges, a Form of Jelly Made With Juices and | bave new upright pianos at prices ranging Gelatine. from $135 up to $550 and will arrange with ; any honest family such payments as they Among simple, wholesome summer des- | can afford. You can pay as low as 10 dollars serts few things are more generally liked | gown and six dollars monthly, ona new than those which consists principally of a | upright ‘piano, and organs at five dollars mixture of fruit juices and gelatine, of | gown and three dollars monthly. At such which a few examples are here given : prices and easy terms every family in Cen- Apple Sauce.—Bake five or six large ap- | tre county should have an instrument and ples and pulp them through a masher. | educate their children in music, which is Dissolve an ounce of gelatine and three or | the life of any home. Tt also keeps your four ounces of sugar in 1} of water over | children off the streets. We would advise the fire, adding to this a little lemon juice | you to notify this firm at once and see for to acidulate it pleasantly, then stir it t0 | yourself. Their address is F. A. North, the puree of apples and when it is all cool | & Co., 1308 Chestnut street, Philadelphi aod early setung whisk itil Stiff. with | tke best known firm in the 2 Phlladciphis, the whites of two eggs previously beaten | 45-38-4¢ to a stiff froth. Mold and set as before. Banana Sponge.—Peel and pound toa smooth pulp six or more nice ripe bananas, add to them three or four ounces of sugar, A train from Watsontown on the Cen- the juice of half a lemon, an ounce of gela- | tral Pennsylvania and Western railroad tine and rather more than 1} pints of cold | ran into a tree which had fallen across the water. Stir over the fire till it boils and | track near Jersey Town Friday and the the sugar and gelatin are all perfectly dis- | engine and two freight cars went over a solved, then lift it off the fire and leave it | high embankment. Fortunately, the au- till nearly set aud cold, when yon whisk | tomatic brakes set, halting the passenger into it the stiffy whipped whites of two | car on the verge of the embankment, thus eggs and mold as before. saving the lives of twenty passengers, al- Peach Sponge.—If made with fresh fruit, | though all were badly shaken up. The you pulp sufficient ripe peaches to produce | engineer and firemen jumped just as the a pint of pulp and mix this with rather | engine took the plunge and saved their more than a pint of strong sugar and water | lives. { syrup in- which you have dissolved an sr—— ounce of gelatine. When this is cold or| ___ you have read of the cures by Hood’s nearly so, whisk into it the stiffly whisked | gareaparilla, and you should have perfect whites of three or more eggs and mold as | oonfidence in its ‘merit, It will do youn before. good. Sponges can be made from almost every kind of fruit either by utilizing the juice or the fruit pulp. Morover, if preferred milk or cream may be used to dis- ‘‘Marse Jim, is you gwine ter run fer solve the gelatine instead of water. Indeed | any office dis year ?”’ some cooks uee half the quantity of liquid ‘Oh, yes: I’m in the race.”’ given to dissolve the gelatine, making up “Well, suh, dat bein de case, ef you the required amount with stiffly whipped | could manage ter drap a $5 bill som’er’s fresh cream. In such cases, however, it is | roun’ heah whilst I ain’t lookin’. I wuz better to lesson the quantity of gelatine | thinkin’ dat mebbe I could find it !”’ considerably. say by a io) third. ana then eter tet not to attempt to mold the sponge, but to in q Ty serve it piled up on a glass dish or in long Jos CouLpN'T HAVE ST00D IT—If he'd fluted wineglasses; a most attractive ar- had Itching Piles, They're terribly an- rangement. noying ; but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve will cure the worst case of piles on earth. It ee has cured thousands. For Injuries, Pains Returned Home Rich. oF Bodily Eruptions it’s the best salve in ‘ ; Jondike a Poor Boy and | the World. Price 25¢. a hox. Cure guar- West ivorala au Went to Klondi ga Poot Soyo autesd. Sold by, F. Potts Green, druog- gists. Handy Desserts. Engine Over the Embankment. Out for Business. CUMBERLAND, Md., Oct. 14.—James Adams has created a sensation at Berkley David City. N ; . pid Cit] b., April 1, 1900 Springs, W. Va. He went to the Klon- Genesee Pure Food De i gr 0% dike region three years ago a poor boy and | Gentlemen :—I must say in regard to GRAIN-O has returned home a millionaire. When {hat Were o3 hothing better 8.5 Healthier. he > 3 int Vv it for years. y othe a grea the Berkley Springs train pulled into the coffee drinker. He was taken sick and the doc- station with a special car attached the vil- | tor said coffee was the cause of if, and told us to lagers crowded around it, expecting to see nee CRAIN U We got 3 Package bit Jie no 3 i 3 a rs ut now wou no e WwW ut it. some railroad magnates alight, and their My brother has been well ever since we started surprise can be better imagined than de- | to use it. Yours truly, Larvuie SocHor. scribed when their old friend Adams step- | 45-27 McCalmont & Co. MCALyorRT & co, —— 0 ——HAVE THE—— EAL A A aan 0 Se LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE Jr Drrstin rtp stiobissovis rit asairnionss shaver isees o IR 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 gnarantee 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 oun. earth where one can do better than at McCALMONT & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA tn sm asta Rubber Tires, 44-19-3m Silverware. Rueoee TIRES. At the Carriage Shops of S. A. McQuis- tion & Co., the place to have your Car- Faget and Buggies fitted with the ‘cele- rate i “$QILVER PLATE THAT WEARS.” MORGAN & WRIGHT SOLID RUBBER TIRES. . : We have become so favorably impress- ed with these tires and have such confi- «1847 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 on Spoons, Forks, etc., isa guar- TROUBLE, EXPENSE antee of quality the world over. and time if not more, of shipping them The prefix—1847—insures the gen- away. to have the work done. The tires jine Rogers quality. For sale by are applied with a steel band instead of leading dealers everywhere. Send the old way with the wire which cut the for catalogue No. 100 to Rubber thereby loosening the tire and ’ allowing it to jump out of the channel. i We would be pleased to have you call ex- amine and be convinced, that we have no* The trade mark ROGERS BROS.” THE INTERNATIONAL only SILVER CO. THE BEST TIRE but also MeripeN, Conn. 45-31-1t | THE BEST WAY of fastening the same. You will also fina us prepared to do ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING, ped out and told them the story of his —— - in our line of business with neatness and great luck in his search for gold. He gave his father $20,000 and then de- Dr. Stites. dispatch. New Top Buggies on hand. Home made and 2 second hand Top Bug- gies, good onesat a low price. posited about $100,000 in the bank. He had come in a special ear from Detroit at a cost of $500 a day. r Adams had persuaded James Smith and George Siler to go to the Klondike with him. They could not stand the climate . 1 and had to return poorer than when they Peoct ORS’ MISTAKE! went. On that account Adams says he is going to take them in as partners and give i them an interest in his mining claims, which he says are worth $5,000,000. He will return in the spring to look after his claims. Farmers Met With Terrible Accident. Fort PALIN, N.Y., Oct. 14.—Yesterday at Palatine, as James G. De Wandelaer, a farmer, and his hired man, James Cook were hauling corn stalks from the field, the horses became frightened and ran away. They dashed directly towards the barn, SCIENCE HAS TRIUMPHED. and before De Wandelaer and Cook could | ¢atarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Throat and Lung leap from the load the entrance was reach- | Diseases can be cured. i Dr. Stites, the great specialist, is daily demon- ed and the two men, standing erect, strating the truth of his statement by the almost crashed against the upper portion of the | miraculous results of the New Treatment. entrance with terrific force and both were hurled from the load. Cook was killed in- stantly and De Wandelaer was seriously injured, probably fatally. S—— Raised $50,000 tor Mission Work. NEW YORK, Oct. 14—The Rev. Albert B. Simpson, president of the Christian Missionary Alliance, to-day preached his annual missionary sermon at the Gospel Tabernacle, and as a result over $50,000 in cash, pledges and property were realized for the support of the mission and mission work of the alliance. W. E. Blackstone participated in the services. The sermon and the offering was the closing chapter of the seventeenth annual convention of the alliance. associated with that languid tired feeling. For the Relief of Galveston. GALVESTON, Oct. 14.—Morgan Seely, treasurer of the Galveston relief fund, ac- knowledges receipts of contributions from October 1st to 12th inclusive amounting to $198,552. This includes $125,000 received through Governor Sayers and $21,621 re- ceived through Mayor Jones. Amount previously acknowledged was $781,043, making the total to date $979,595. be cured. treatment or not. A Separate Name For Twins. FESS AT mp—ld } i.e Biggs—‘‘ What do you call your twins?’ BRONCHITIS AND ASTHMA OFTEN CONSUMPTION. DR. J. K. STITES, Offices, No. 21 Noith Allegheny street, Bellefonte, Penn’a. EAR, NOSE, THROAT AND LUNG SPECIALIST Maoy patients treating for consumption are really only suffering from catarrhal bronchitis, a cold on the chest that goes down on’ the lungs and becomes chronic m—— only from neglect, a hacking cough, a slight shortness of breath, spitting up mucus, sumption, but if they only would take DR. STITES' NEW TREATMENT in which the healing oils are applied by inhalation directly into the tubes of the lungs, and not fill the stomach fall of raedicines which does them more harm than good, they could Tn a short time winter will set in 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 month of the NEW TREATMENT at this season may save you much suf- fering and doctor bills during the fast approaching winter. No trouble to examine you and tell yon the probabilities in your case, whether you take Telephone No. I393. McQUISTION & CO. 44-24tf Sprinklers Etc. WA TA TA TA TAT AT ATS WATER THE GRASS ! MISTAKEN FOR 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, Whean Potter & Hoy Have sold you a “sprinkle.” THE WONDERFUL NEW TREATMENT Kills the Catarrh Microbes as soon as it reaches them. Asthma, Bronchitis and many stomach troubles are caused by the venomous Catarrh germs, and as soon as they are destroyed all other troubles gradually disappear. SPRINKLERS and GARDEN HOSE The best in the Land. ——LAWN MOWERS, TOO—- Fine, sharp, strong and Light: 3 These cases are often mistaken for con- POTTER & HOY, 45-11-19 BELLEFONTE, PA. Meat Markets. G*T THE BEST MEATS. © You si thi by buying, , thi EE i a an Diggs— “Henrietta.” _ Biggs—*‘But that’s only one.name.” —*‘Yes, bat we divided it between them. We call the boy Henri and the girl Etta. See?” er A Strenuons Activity. ““The room was torn up as if some ter- rible struggle had taken place there.’’ ‘Well, that doesn’t necessarily imply deadly combat; maybe some man was | flannel underwear.” { — ——Forty-five Pullman cars and 200 day coaches are required on the main line of the Pennsylvania railroad between do not cough any at all, Johnstown, Pa. A SUFFERER FROM ASTHMA TESTIFIES TO THE GOOD THE NEW TREATMENT HAS DONE FOR HER. Dear Sie.—It has been two months since I commenced to take your treatment, and I' hardly know liow to express my gratitude for the won- derful curative powers of your remedies. I had been a sufferer of that dread disease asthma for years and had tried a great many doctors and they said they could not do anything for me. While in Bellefonte this summer I saw your ad- i dythes Papers and I thou, ht 1 Lou nls 5 J AY Ti Saat? 0 and see you and shall never re , for be- merely trying to get into his last year’s Ao treatment I could not lie i } down at night and "could not sleep, for I would have to cough the ‘whole night and gasp for breath, but now I can go to bed and sleep and will do as 1 did and be cured. t ! i Hespootflly, LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and SUppIy customers with the fresh- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where. Gil i I always have ——DRESSED POULTRY,— Game in season, ard any kinds of good meats you want. Try My Suor. ! P. L.. BEEZER. # High Street, Bellefonte. 43-34-1y QAVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poor meat, or pay Srohitan, prices: for tender, juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here- I hope all that read this rs. JOHN HUSS. Pittsburg and Philadelphia for through service alone. : wr : " BisMARK’S IRoN NERVE.—Was the re- sult of his splendid health. Indomitable will and tremendous energy are not found where Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bow- els are out of order. If you want these nalities and the success they bring, use . King’s New Life Pills. Only 25 cents at Green’s drug store. ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. CONSULTATION AND PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION FREE. Hours: 9 a. ", {ol2. 1 10.6.9 mn. and 740 8 p.m. NO INCURABLE CASES TAKEN. abouts, because good cattle, sheep and calves i are to be had. i fg § ECR REY WE BUY ONLY THE BEST “and we sell only that which. We don’t And we Se Oy ET fiviel. ve i romise to give it awa; ou - Soon MEAT, at ces ' 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. La GETTIG & i . Bush House Bl sid] BELLEFONTE, PA. 44-18 North Thomas St. Bellefoate,
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