Bellefonte, Pa., November 23. 1900. —~S7ao FARM NOTES. —T¢ is said that when a cow holds up her milk the udder should be bathed in warm water, as warin as can be used, which re- laxes the muscles, despite . the will of the cow. The remedy suggested isa simple and harmless one and worthy of a trial. ~—It is not difficult to keep sweet pota- toes in a cellar if it is dry and the temper- ature is kept uniform. Before placing the barrels away for winter the potatoes should be dry and clean, When packing them in barrels a close watch should be made in order to discover and throw ous any pota- toes showing the slightest taint of disease, as disease will attack all other potatoes in the barrel, —When coops containing fowls are sent to market there is often a loss, some of the fowls being dead, which is due to the coops being too deep, thus permitting the fowls to pile up on each other. To avoid this the coopsshould be of just sufficient height to enable the birds to stand up. Crowding too many in a coop is also another evil which causes loss and “which is costly to the shipper. —All refuse under trees and vines should now be raked up and burnt. Lime will be found beneficial if scattered freely over the surface of the ground, as it will destroy the spores of some fungi, but the use of Bor- deaux mixture is better. Much harm is sometimes done by not cleaning away the refuse, as diseases are propagated and spread in such materials. —Skim milk is as valuable for the pigs as that which contains the fat, provided cornmeal or linseed meal is added. All the hone and muscle producing elements are left in the skim milk, and the butter: fat removed can be easily supplied ata very small cost. It should befed while warm and fresh if a cream separator is used, and not as swill or sour milk. The day of the swill barrel has passed. —It I were planting trees for both honey and other uses, I would plant linden or ‘‘basswood,’’ as it usually is called, and also catalpa. The linden is very valuable for its white, fine grained wood, and as a shade tree, scarcely had an equal. The catalpa is noted for its everlasting posts, and in this regard it is said to have no equal. It also is a beautiful shade tree and both the foliage and the blossoms are very ornamental. —To make hens lay in winter they should have meat as well as grain. Too much corn or wheat retards laying, asthe hens become excessively fat and are then in no condition for producing eggs. If fowls are to be made fat they should be separated from the laying hens. Meat and ground bone are materials that serve to prompt egg production, because they supply sub- stances not so abundant in grains. An ounce of lean meat three times a week to each hen will be an inexpensive diet, as the production of eggs will largely increase by its use. Liver blood mixed with meal and the cheap portion of beef answer as well as the best, but the fat portions of the meat should be removed. The bones will supply lime for the egg shells. —To make an asparagus bed in the spring get two year old roots and place them three feet apart in the rows, the rows to be five feet apart. They will soon fill up all the spaces in the rows. The first work should be done now, if the ground can be worked. Make trenches three feet | deep. A trench 100 feet long will be suf- ficient to supply an ordinary family. Fill the trench with fresh horse manure, two feet deep, and scatter 50 pounds of bone meal and 50 pounds of sulphate of potash on the manure. Put on a few inches of dirt and trample the mass. Then add more dirt until within 18 inches of the top. Leave it until spring and set out the roots, covering them, which will leave them in the ground 18 inches helow the surface, filling up the surface. Soapsuds may be poured in the row from time to time dur- ing the winter. A row thus prepared will give cuttings for 25 years. 3 —Frequently a farmer may apply equal quantities of manure on two fields, side by side, with good results on one field and disappointment on the other. This is be- cause the manure on one field may be ten times more valuable than that on the oth- er, though the hulk of manure used on each was the same. Farmers look npon manure as complete plant food, and consider it bet- ter than fertilizers. They are correct to a certain extent, but everything depends up- on the quality of the manurs. Hundreds of-loads of manure are hauled and spread. on fields that do not contain sufficient actual plant food to pay for the labor of spreading. The condition of the manure, its availability and its proportion of plant food are points that are frequently over- looked. Great piles of straw or broken stalks over which the manure has been thrown may constitute bulk without value. Manure may assist the soil mechanically, and promote the formation of humus, but it is just as important for the farmer to have his manure in an available form as it is for him to select fertilizers with that ob- ject in view, and it is also necessary when manure 18 used for a crop that it contain the relative proportions of nitrogen, phos- phoric acid and potash r2quired for produc- ing the crop. . —Mixed fertilizers and mixed manure are side by side as far as their merits are concerned. It requires machinery, fine screens, drying houses and skill to iinti- mately and properly mix fertilizers, and labor and care must also be exercised with manure. It will not answer to simply use absorbents and allow manure to remain until it is wanted for nse, as some por- tions will be rotted, while others will have undergone no change . whatever. With ‘fire fanging’’ from excessive heating of the manure, the loss of ammonia, the un-/ even distribution of the manure and liquids with the coarse materials, and the changes of the manure itself consequent upon the changes of food toanimals, all tend to vary the manure greatly in composition and availability. = The farmer should begin at the starting of the heap and daily attend to the mixing of the substances, working the whole heap over- occasionally and en- deavoring to have it not only well ferment- ed with the least loss of volatile matter, but also to have it as intimately mixed and uniform in its quality as possible. If he accomplishes nothing more than the even distribution of his plant food over his fields it will be a great point gained, as thou- sands of loads are hauled to fields, each field receiving the same, when the manure itself is richer in some portions than in others. Well composted manure also gives the best results with fertilizers, and the proportions of plant food can then be bet- ter regulated. If the expense of so doing is greater the compensation will be better, with more profitable orops. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Something unique and decidedly pretty is the acorn curtain, and all it needs is a bushel or two of acorns,some waxed thread, aye, and a- good stock of patience. The acorns may be gathered now. The woods are full of them, and if there are little peo- ple in the house the gathering of the nuts will simply be play. After you have the quantity you desire string them on long threads the length of the door. Forty strings will fill an average door. Fasten them at one end to a cross piece that isnovel and pretty. It can be bought for a mere song), and the result isa portiere that is novel and pretty. It resembles somewhat the Japanese portieres. The same idea may be carried out with sea shells, but they must be uriform;and pref- erably the pink lined ones, which are not always easy to get. Of the habit shaped bodice one also saw numerous examples of broad pleated ‘basques reaching below the hips. No wom- an whois not extremely tall and extremely slender could wear such a garment to any advantage, and even for the tall and slen- der there are more graceful and more be- coming fashions. With regard to the question of sleeves, which is a burning one at the present moment, itis hard to make any decided deduction. Some of the sleeves are strikingly pretty ; the puff at the el- bow predominated, daintily arrang- ed. The lower portion of some had the soft mousseline pleating held down by cross strappings of black velvet; others showed a large puff beneath a short bell shaped sleeve, the mousseline finishing in a tight pleated cuff. There was a great many of the “‘‘manches pagodes,”’ whose name is doubtless intended as a compli- ment to the Boxers—that is, sleeves that are very flat from the shoulder to the el- bow, and then suddenly swell out to the extent of having quite a baggy appearance. But, on the other hand, one also saw a good many quite plain sleeves, and the lat- ter were in many instances sported by the very smartest of smart women. As to the hats, they are at this moment either very broad and flat toques, or large hats turned up at the side in Gainsborough style. Bright red toques are much worn with quiet and dark colored tailor made gowns. One feature of the present fashion is the presence on almost all the more elab- orate tailor made gowns of gold or silver trimmings. Little touches of this kind, when combined by a master hand, are very effective, but it is hard to know where if will all end when these effects which hith- erto have been so discreetly introduced be- come popular. If you want to be in possession of the very latest bit of chic, buy a white dress, lace preferably, and a few yards of cherry velvet ribbon. Not cerise, just plain Eng- lish cherry; exact, rich, ripe red of the fruit; besides, cerise degenerated into a weird, glaring shade never known to its beautiful namesake fruit. Put it round your waist, with long ends at the hack, and around your throat. And then make some novel twist or bow in your hair, or even your hat, and there you are. Sosays one whoknows. The skin of the upper parts of the arms is often rough and red, and therefore a source of annoyance to the owner. The arms should be bathed every night with hot water, to which a little ammonia has been added, and then well rubbed with a well soaped loofah. Dry thoroughly by rubbing h.rd with a towel, the object be- ing to set upa glow. Rough, red arms are generally caused by a poor circulation, and the rubbing will help to remedy this. The arms should never be allowed to become chilled, so that long woolen sleeves must be worn, and all tightness avoided around the armholes and wrists. When the arms have been dried, take a little glycerine and lemon juice; and with the palm of the hand rub it in; keep rub- bing until the skin no longer feels sticky. In the morning wash the arms again with hot water, soap and a loofah, and rinse in clear tepid water. Dry well, dust over with a good powder and give a final rub with a soft chamois leather. You do not walk right, girls. Some of you look as if you were about to pitch for- ward upon your noses ; the rest rear hack- ward in an odious way. Surely, you know | to walk well is to look ‘‘smart,’’ and to command regard of the right sort. Stand tall. Let vour shoulders alone. Hold in your abdomen, up your head, and walk with a swinging motion, using the hips as hinges. Take moderate, not long, steps. It is rather bard to have such ca- reens in your necks and arms like matched Lean poles. - Why do you? Perhaps you consider it your nature to be thin? You are in error. It may be you will always be slender—we hope so— but attenuation and that are different things. 7 Your food has a deal to do with your fig- ure, you know, and your nervesare little demons trying to spoil your beauty. Put them in their place as servants. It you will you may have a lovely round neck and plump arms to match. These you must work and eat for. I know you have no appetite to speak of. Get one. Ask your old doctor to rectify certain chronic mutinies in the interior depart- ment. He can tell you how, you must be honest and obey. : Then buckle on your fighting gear. Beauty is a talisman and worth winning. Control your nerves. Learn to sit down and rest when you feel tired. The time is not lost. 3 : y Your arms and neck ? Well, the exer- cises for them require no apparatus what- | *‘Flecking’’ the biceps—swing arms ever. low, then higher and highter, and faster and faster, upward and downward, out- ward and back—will set the blood mad with glee—i. e. circulation. Emptying the veins of old blood for fresh is the whole thing in a word or two. + The neck must he rounded by deep breathing exercises ( which also increase the bust) and moving the head slowly in every direction. Massage with one of the good creams composed of cucumber and lanoline—the first to whiten, the last fatten—will prove miraculous. If—if--you eat enough, and keep the sanitary parts straight. $ Drink as much milk as you can digest. Drink cocoa and buttermilk. Eat beef, rare, broiled or roasted ; mutton, eggs, fish, oatmeal perfectly cooked, ‘cream soups, puddings and vegetables. Salads, green plenty of fresh dressing; butter and fruits. Eat slowly. Exercise and bathe daily,and you will round out. Nobby fronts of lace to wear with the open fur-trimmed bolero are made on a strip of net fastening at the waist and the collar band to hook at the back. They are entirely of lace put on cascade fashion. Fishiology. An Interesting Entertainment With a Spice of Novelty. When the girisdecided upon making the entertainment ‘a fishing excursion,” says the Delineator, the first thing they under- took was to prepare a list of the finny tribe upon which to arrange a series of questions. A little thought and work with the dic- tionary showed that the list of familiar fishes was much longer than they had at first thought, and that a great variety of witty and puzzling questions could be asked about them. The complete list decided upon was as follows : 1. What fish is poor in health ? (Weak- fish.) 2. What fish belong properly to the millionaire? (Gold and silver fish.) 3. What fish shoumld shine among their fellows? (Star and sun fish.) 4, What fish should understand the secret of graceful motion ? ( Skate.) 5. What fish would conquer in a wrestling match ? (Mussel. ) 6. What fish would conquer in a duel of olden time? (Swordfish.) 7. What fish would be useful in a lum- beryard? (Sawfish.) 8. What fish has the name of one of Kipling’s characters? (Shad.) 9. What fish has the name of a charac- ter in Dicken’s works ? (Cauttle.) 10. What fish is found in every old bird-cage? (Perch. ) 11. What fish is given to melancholy ? (Bluefish.) 12. What fish is one pitch of a singer’s voice? (Bass.) 13. What fish is a cape on the New England coast ? (Cod. ) i 3. What fish is a fisherman ? (Angler sh. 15. What fish has the name of an obstrue- tion and a summons ? (Barbel.) 16. What fish would never win in an arganment ? (Flounder.) 17. What fish has a name composed of a young animal and a victim? (Lam- prey.) 18. What fish is also a disagreeable in- sect ? (Roach.) 19. What fish would make an attempf | at it, anyhow ? (Dab.) 20. What fish has a name meaning a locality, a spot? (Plaice.) 21. What fish does the pilot naturally dread ? (Rock.) 22. What fish has a name meaning to whip and complain? ( Whale.) 23. What fish is a whole world in itself? (Globe fish.) 24. What fish suggests a woman’s jew- elry ? (Herring.) 25. What fish is dishonest? (Shark.) 26. What fish is also a road ? (Pike.) 27. What fish might be used in the navy? (Torpedo.) 28. What fish ought to be heavy? (Tunny.) 29. What fish could take good aim ? ( Archer fish.) 30. What fish is always finding fault? (Carp.) 31. One fish was discarded because it— (Smelt. 32. What fish is apt to be puffed up? (Balloon fish.) 33. A toy aud a part of a fish make a fish? (Dolphin.) 34. What fish doesn’t need to swim ? (Flying fish.) The conundrums prepared, the next re- quisite was to have them appropriately ar- ranged in blank books with spaces oppo- site for the answers. For the leaves of these little books linen note-paper folded across was used. The covers were cut from pale-green cartridge paper, and upon each cover was pasted a spray of pressed seaweed collected during a summer vaca- tion at the seashore. All the backs had the same title as old Isaac Walton’s famous work—*‘The Compleat Angler’’—which was executed in India ink. The supper which had been prepared for the weary anglers after their work was finished consisted of fish only,but prepared in the most refreshing of ways. There were iced bullion and biscuits ; lobster and salmon salads with rolled bread-and- butter sandwiches, followed by ices, cakes and coffee. Souvenirs of the occasion ap- propriately took the form of candy boxes in the shape of fish filled with sweets. ASTOUNDING DISCOVERY.—From Coop- ersville, Mich., comes word a wonderful discovery of a pleasant tasting liquid that when used before retiring by any one ‘troubled with a bad cough always ensures a good night’s rest. ‘‘It will soon cure the cough too,” writes Mrs. S. Himel- burger, ‘‘for three generations of our fam- ily bave used Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption and never found it’s equal for Coughs and Colds.”’ It’s an unrivaled life-saver when used for desperate lung diseases. Guaranteed bottles 50c. and $1.00 at F'. P. Green's. Trial bottles free. His Dim Idea. A teacher was giving to her class an ex- ercise in spelling and defining words. ‘Thomas, ’’she said toa curly-headed lit- “tle boy, ‘‘spell ibex.”’ th “I-b-e-x.”” ‘“Correct. Define it.” © “An ibex,” answered Thomas, after a prolonged mental struggle, ‘is where you look in the back part of the book when you want to find anything’s that’s printed in the front part of the book.”’—Youth’s Com- panion. 7 ; ——Dyspepsia is difficult digestion, due to the absence of natural digestive fluids. Hood’s Sarsaparilla restores the digestive powers. _ BucnANAN Mich., May 22nd. Genesee Pure Food Co., Le Roy, N. Y., : Gentlemen =My mother has been a great coffee drinker and has found it very injurious. Having used several pack ages of your GRAIN-O, the drink that takes the place of coffee, she finds it much better for herself and for us children to drink. She has given up coffee drinking entire- ly. We use a package of Grain-O every week. I am ten years old. = Yours respectfully, 45-26 - Fan~ie WrLuiams, Business Notice. Castoria Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FLETCHER. In use for more than thirty years, and The Kind You have Always Bought supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Coynterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good’ aye 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 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. FERTILIZER—The earth where one can do better than at Castoria. McCalmont & Co. AS "T° '0 BRB I A ¢CALMONT & NR ¢cC 28790 :F1IiM 0 ® C A.§ T.0.B. 1. 4A C A 8S T.0.R I A ——HAVE THE— c AVS "IT" OVER IT A ccc Oiininis FRSEOR RE ER PEPE 10 Sreeeisereiieieeesiananae seinen 0 my’ mye For Infants and Children pm { LARGEST: FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } Pe The Kind You Have Always Bought has Oar erresr sasnsses ssssesene Beasssessssasssessrasessasanaanstad 0 horne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, / y and has been made under his personal peta Neer 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. 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 McCALMONT & CO’S. Dr. Stites. IN USE FOR OVER 30 YEARS. 44-19-3m BELLEFONTE, PA o_o i Ll i. SR p———— Silverware. Rubber Tires. RuseeR TIRES. Horivay GIFTS : At the Carriage Shops of S. A. McQuis- yon & oo he lace, go fare. your Sar riages an uggies fitted wit e cele- THAT LAST... .". brated Ca ; MORGAN & WRIGHT When SOLID RUBBER TIRES. you purchase a pres- We have become so favorably impress- ent, select something that ed with these tires and have such confi- : ed dence in them, that we have purchased will last, or the person receiving it the necessary tools for fitting them to is likely to soon forget the giver. Artis- wheels. We can fit them to your old tic designs, beautifully finished together Wheels or furnish new ones, as you may i tit : i esire, at a price with great wearing qualities are combinded in the 3 SAVING THE «1847 TROUBLE, EXPENSE and time if not more, of shipping them ROGERS BROS” away to have the work hie tires are i with a steel band instead of (REMEMBER 1847) the old way with the wire which cut the Rubber thereby loosening the tire and SPOONS, FORKS, KNIVES, Ete. allowing it to jump out of the channel. We would be pleased to have you call ex- The “1847” brand has a world-wide reputation amine and be convinced, that we have no* as “Silver Plate that Wears,” and is sold by only all leading dealers, Send to the makers for THE BEST TIRE beautifully illustrated catalogue No. 100. but also ’ THE BEST WAY INTERNATIONAL SILVER CO., of fastening the same. You will also fina us prepared to do # Successor to ; ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING, MERIDEN BRITANNIA CO., Meriden, Conn. in our line of business with neatness and dispatch. New Top Buggies on hand. 05-43 Home made and 2 second hand Top Bug- 5-43 wn gies, good onesat a low price. Telephone No. 1393. McQUISTION & CO. 44-34tf North Thomas St. Bellefonte, (OLD DANGER? CONSUMPTION BEGINS THE COOL WEATHER Has brought its usual crop of catarrh, grippe coughs, sore throats, etc., ete. It means death to thousands. For those disorders are but forerunners of death-dealing consumption. Dr. STITES’ new treatment for this terrible disease is a life-boat of hope for those in despair. It is a new, scientific system of medicine, the result of modern medical discoveries—a positive and absolute annihilator of the deadly disease erm. 1t has cured dangerous Throatand Lung Troub- les, which the sufferers thought were proof against medicine. : d It is the cold weather antidote. What it has done is a proof of what it will do—for you—if you'll let it. EAR, NOSE, THROAT Bronchial Troubles are not nearl physican is doing. ; : 'hose whose near ancestors have had Consu the seeds of consumption ea: ancestors have most to dread. and the general health be moment to awaken to a realization of the wasting fires of a fatal plague. Has Improved so Rapidly, that He Takes Pleasure in Recommending the New Treatment to Every- body. y I have improved so rapidly during the past month, under the care of Dr. Stites and his won- derful New Treatment, that I take pleasure in giving the following testimony that ull afflicted may know of the good work the New Treatment is doing in this community. I was all run down, being a sufferer from Catarrh, hawking and spit- ting all the time, with continued anhoymg drop- ing in the throat. My stomach was in a distress- ing condition and my head was completely stop- ped up. Al this is gone now. No more hawking nor spitting. Dropping in the throat stobped, and my stomach is in good condition, while my general health is also good. I think this re- markable cure results from only one month's treatment Respecifally, . T. ROAN, 109 E. Logan Street. Hours: 9 a. m., to 12. | fasten themselves. ¢ cause all cases of consumption, still it is Bronchial trouble that those who have. consumptive WITH LUNG WEAKNESS There is Death in the Air for Those With Weak Lungs Who Brave the Dangers of Cold Weather— Weak Lungs Made Strong and Proof Against Danger By the New Scientific Treatment for Catarrh, Consumption and Diseases of the Respiratory Organs. IT IS SIMPLE AND Effective, easy and pleasant to take. Modern science reduced to a nutshell. The Proplem of disease prevention solved. CATARRH of the Head, Nose and Throat ab- solutely cured and the poisons of the disease completely eliminated from the system by treat- ment administered by DR. STIT No in- urious medication, NO PAINFUL OPERATIVE reatment, no acid sprays, no caustic burnings, no ex erimegting in ny all forms of Catarrh, Asthma, ete. successfully treated. The New system has brought health to thousands who were weak, sickly, pale, thin, and, therefore, open to con- sumption infection, if not infected. DR. J. K. STITES, AND. LUNG SCIENTIST Offices, No. 21 North Allegheny street, Bellefonte, Penn’a. so prevalent in Southern climates as in the North. The reason for this is that in a mild climate the inflammation which causes the irritation in the Bronchial tibes is subdued more easily : hence the summer season, when nature is most ami- able, is the very best time to treat and cure Bronchial Troubles. 2 : 3 In the winter the physician is called upon to correct the evils which are still acting to in- crease the Bronchial Trouble. Inthe cold, raw, windy and disagreeable weather of fall, mid- winter and early spring, nature, instead of trying to free Bronchial PYSFY possible chance for them to become more diseased. 4 Inflammation, set up by colds in the head, irritated by dust and dirt borne by the winds, ex- tends into the Bronchial Tubes, adds to the existing trouble and tends to undo the good that the Tubes of the disease, offers ’ mption have cause to fear the disease, because While Branchial trouble alone dees not SOHSRIBILIvE parents Seqneatly hand down to their offspring weakened systems, upon which sily During the summer the bodily health usually improves to the point that the sufferer from Bronchitis finds that his trouble gets better during the warm months, for it is during the sum- mer that nature makes an effort to undo the evils which were produced during the winter. Dr. Stites has repeatedly urged all sufferers from Bronchial troubles to see to it that they take treatment at a time when nature offers no obstacles to the cure of the disease, and when the conditions of climate assist the doctor in. bringing about a cure. If the Bronchitis be cured brought up to the standard before another winter sets in, the dan- ger from Consumption will be so small as not to be worth considering. But, if the Bronchial Trouble be neglected, when the winter comes again, and the patient is shut up in the house, where he does not get a proper amount of fres! 3 orrifying fact that he has kindled in his body the air, he is liable at any NEW TESTIMONIALS. A Severe Case of Laryngitis Being Rapidly Cured by the New Treatment. and a great distress in my throat, coughin and spitting continually. Sometimes the cough was so bad that I had a Jaryxism of coughing every hour of the day, and could not sleep at night for violent and continued coughing. his made me miserable and wretched, treating with cur New Specialist, Dr. Stites, whose great New Treatment is doing wonders for me scarcely coughing now and am greatly improved all around. Feel very much encouraged, and take pleasure in adding my testimony to the many other grateful patients of Dr. Stites. Respectfully, .L. R. STOVER, / Aaronsburg. CONSULTATION AND PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION FREE. 1to5p.m. and? to 8 p.m. I have suffered for some time with Hoarseness | — until at length, began | Sprinklers Etc. Moz THE GRASS ! Water your lawn, And make it grow— Any old fool will Tell you =o, 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. 4 —LAWN MOWERS, TOO— Fine, sharp, strong and Light. POTTER & HOY, BELLEFONTE, PA. Meat Markets. Gr THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, poor, thin ‘or gristly meats. I use only the LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, RT est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts, My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where. . : A mA I always have ——DRESSED POULTRY,— Game in season, and any kinds of goed meats you want. Try My Sop. 43-3¢-1y P. L. BEEZER. QAVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS, meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender, juicy steaks. 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 uway, but we will furnish you §0op MEAT, at prices that you have paid: elsewhere for very poor. '—GIVE US A TRIAL— andsee if you don’t save in the long run and have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea- son) than have been furnished you. GETTIG & KREAMER, Bush House Block BELLEFONTE, Pa. 44-18 and supply Inyeusiomers with the fresh- High Street, Bellefonte. in There is no reason why you should use poor Good meat is abundant here-