AERIS sem RE Ci CR Et McCalmont & Co. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. French models show much fuller skirts. . Many of them being mounted in small Bellefonte, Pa., December 7. 1900. FARM NOTES, —Hens' nests ought not to be nailed to the wall, but made: easily and quickly detachable, so as to clean them Two large round-headed screws are often. placed in the wall, and two holes aré bored with a bit’in the box to receive them. With a jackknife a slot is cut up from each hole, into which the necks of ‘the screws fit, holding the mest firmly. It can be de- tached instantly. The height from the floor at which nests should be placed ‘must be determined in part by the size of the breed, as Brahams and Cochins need lower neste than Leg- horns and other lighter breeds. But this should be borne ‘in mind that the nest should be as high as possible, to make a visit to it on the part of fowls, ex- eept for business purposes not at all likely. If conveniently low a hen will jump apin- to a nest and begin to scratch in the hay as she would in the litter on the floor. ' In this ‘way eggs are often broken, and the egg eating habit acquired. —Clover seems to be the plant that poultry delight most to indulge in. It eontains elements for the growth of hone, feathers and muscle in young stock. and production of eggs with hens. It is excel lent for hens during molting, making them more able to stand the strain on their sys- tem. Care and attention should be given to the caring of clover ; to much exposure to the sun should be avoided. The object in view is to keep the green leaf in its nat- ural state as long as possible. Clover or clover rowen should be cut when just be- ginning to bloom, or just before this time, when there is a profusion of tender green leaves. In curing the clover, I would put it up in piles of good sized bunches, and allow it to go through a curing or sweating process, opening it a little each day, and turning the whole pile completely over, so as to dry the bottom, which gathers moist- ure from the ground. I would cover at night and during a rainstorm. Clover that is cured in the shade will best retain its flavor. It may require several days or a week to put it in condition to go to the barn; this depends much on the weather. —The question of the best manner of the storage of the apple crop will soon be up for consideration. © The department of ag: riculture has been collecting some informa- tion upon this subject and concludes that a vast quantity of apples spoil every year simply through eareléssuess or improper storage. ; The storing of fronit- under dwelling houses is not recommended. A certain amount of decay is inevitable and the rot- ting Iruit becomes a propagating place for disease germs which permeate the rooms above. A pit or eave, if properly constructed, will keep apples very satisfactorily and has the advantage of being the least costly of any possible storage construction. * Sach a cave, as described by the department, is usually built into a hillside sloping toward the north, so that the entrance is protected from the southwest winds that prevail dar- ing the summer and autumn. In’ moist soils the cave must be walled, in dry soils no. walls are required. . Upright posts along the sides support the top, which is made of poles ; over the poles is a layer of coarse hay, and over the hay, soil to the depth of two feet. Several flues are made for ventilation. Such a cave may be built any desired dimensions; some are being planned with doors in each end and large enough for a wagon through them. The best system ‘of ventilation and the most even and desirable temperature can be maintained by use of an underground ven- tilation pipe leading from an opening in the floor of the cave to similar openings on the snrface of the ground several rods away. The pipe should = be large enough to provide sufficient air for the cave, and should have valves at each opening to reg- ulate the supply. The air in passing through the pipe is cooled in summer and warmed in winter, aud thus brought to near the proper, temperature for good re- sults in keeping fruit. To complete the system several flues should reach through the top of the cave to the open air above. The sum of the capacities” of these flues should at least be equal to ‘the capacity of the ventilator leading into the cave. —1I will never believe that the demand for immense weights ‘required by the standard ‘and turkey raisers .is wise. I have lost the heaviest turkeys I ever owned simply. from being overfat, and I do not feed very much for flesh either. It is not untisdal for me to losé sales because I can- not quote as heavy weights as ‘are demand- ed, yet I have as large ‘turkeys as any fan- cier. 1-sold a lady a young tom last spring which weighed without being fat: tened 32 pounds. A few days ago she wrote asking if I did not send her an old tom, not in the spirit’ of Somplainh, but the tom ir so large that she thin be 2 years instead of one year old. I know overfat stock is not good for breeding pur- poses, and so does every one who has given the subject any careful attention, yet a turkey must weigh so many pounds re- gardless of consequences. If the woald-be- purchaser would be satisfied ‘with 'stand- ard weights, then there would be some reason in the demands, but I have often received inquires in November for young toms weighing 30 pounds or over. Now, everybody with common sense knows or should be tanght that in this climate it is almost impossible to make a young tom weigh 30 pounds in November or even De- eember, and that to do so is an injury to breeding qualities. to 18 pounds rather than one heavier. The overlarge hen does not lay so many eggs, nor are those she does lay so fertile. This year one of my turkeys laid over 70 eggs. I have forgotten the exact number | but there can be no mistake about it, as 1 pus ber on the farm with another pullet. The other died and this one laid over 70 eggs. Of course she was not allowed to sis. She weighed 15 pounds in February and now she is one of the largest hens I hav ‘he must © From January to March young toms may weigh from 28° to 32 pounds: withont any special effort at: fattening them. I prefer a pallet from 16, loose pleats at the back, the full part ex- tending half around the waist. White mohair is one of the favorite stuffs of the fall for indoor wear both for waists and whole gowns. Either lapped or stitched seams are equally comme il faut for the seams of coats and the skirts of tailor gowns. : Muffs imported from Paris agree with ours in being enormously large, but are canoe shaped instead of being the large round kind. Gold braid is not as much used on any- thing as bullion thread. : This is very nar- row, comes on great. spools and is slip- stitched on the edge of fabrics. Flowers are more fashionable for trim- ming hats this winter than feathers. When staying with friends, take care not to let your entertainers become weary of your society. Absent yourself from them every day for a time, either retiring to your own room, imagining an errand if you have it or not, or in some way or other taking yourself off, so that the family may have the refreshment of solitude and leis- ure for their particular work. Above all, don’t let your face wear a ‘‘What next ?”’ expression, as if you were constantly ex- pecting to be entertained in some way or another. = A hostess should not be expected to cater for the whole of the amusement and occupation of the guest, who ought to have resources enough in herself to be able to adapt herself to the life of the housebold without being bored or finding the time havg heavily. The culture and training of the voice is one of the best means of promoting the { general health. This is due mainly to the formation of correct habits of breathing. One cannot sing or speak well without un- derstanding the action of the lungs. These ‘have been likened, in their importance and use to the vocal cords, to the bellows of the organ. The lungs are never emptied of air in breathing. In ordinary breath- ing very little of the air which fills them is displaced, in forced expiration, such as: | accompanies singing, the old .‘‘residual air,’’ as it is called, is forced out, and re- placed by fresh air. This in turn stimu- lates the circulation, and thus the whole processes of the body are helped and vital- ized. : ‘The greatest injury is done to the deli- cate mechanism of the larynx by frequent colds. The vocal cords are thickened and inflamed, and sometimes injured beyond repair by these repeated: inflammations, many of which occur in childhood. One should not be overwhimsical about draughts, but it is true that they are in- jurious to the vocal cords. The latter are also very stisceptible to the'evil influences: of irritating conditions. Air laden with impurities, such as smoke or dust, passing through the narrow passage formed by the vocal cords, leaves its deleterious impress upon them. ‘She is just the most wonderful woman I ever saw,’’ said the speaker. ‘‘Why, she does every bit of her own work, and her house is spotless from cellar to garret. I never, saw such honsekeeping iu all my life. I keep two servants myself and I can’t begin to keep up to her standard. She does a'l her own sewing ; she and her children #:¢ always exquisitely dressed,and there isn’t a more stylish-looking woman on the street than she is. It’s a standing wonder to me how she does it all.”’ A wonderful woman ? Yes, indeed. And there are so many of these women nowadays that they are fast ceasing to be wonderful. You find them in every town, on every street, in every social circle and—in every graveyard their names are chiseled on tombstones, and lit- tle children come often to lay flowers on ‘‘mamma’s grave.” They are the women who are trying to do the impossible; try- ing to make the silk purse out of the sow’s ears ; trying to bridge the forty-foot chasm. with the swenty-foot. pole; trying to make both ends meet when they never were intended to meet ; trying to conform to. the requirements of society ; burning the candle at hoth ends; going the pace that kills ; using up their vital forces, and dying twenty-five years too soon. : The really wonderful woman to-day ‘is ' the woman who takes things easy. She is not known among her neighbors as a model | housekeeper, but she takes a complete | bath, a long walk and a long nap every day. She isnot always exquisitely dressed and she frequently wears the same bonnet and wrap two seasons, but she keeps two servants and éinploys seamstress twice a year to help with the sewing. ‘Her ‘chil- dren do not look like walking fashion lates, but they are healthy and happy. She is. not renowned. for charitable work or club work or missionary work ; but, on the | other hand, she never has nervous prostra- | tion or headaches or backaches, and people tell her she looks as young as she looked the day she was married. Her name is seldom seen in the society columns of the newspapers, but the neighbors declare she reads and studies almest as much as she did when she was in college. She never | embroidered a centrepiece or made a Bat- | tenburg table cover in her life ; but then she doesn’t wear glasses, and her eyes have the sparkle of a happy school girl's. She is a comfortable sort of a person to live with, and her husband sits down and smokes whenever he pleases with a freedom’ that makes him the envy of his friends. She isn’t doing anything at all remarkable and the neighbors think ber rather ‘‘shift- less!’ on the whole. But she is getting a vass amount of good out of life as she goes along, ‘and she is destined to live to a green old age and be a shining example of com: mon sense to her children, grand children and great-grandchildren. : ‘Every one has grown a little weary of 'blue and pink and lavender for the aftet- | noons, so it behooves the woman without, munch money to follow the lead of the great dressmakers and get afternoon and evening gowns in colors that have not been ever owned weighing 24 to 25 pounds. 'L| sommon for years, such as maize, tomato did not keep her for her size, but for her pink and sea green. blood and made a special mating with a | * Each of these colors is trimmed only in tom from my first prize birds, thinking the from the parental side, but the mother has eclipsed all expec- tation, though they do often fall short of it. I can generally tell how a tom will de- velop, but sometimes the largest pullets do young would get ‘size not make the largest hens, Result—A Wedding. He—What do youn think is the most ap- white, touched off by gold or silver. ' There is no use standing out against the metal trimmings. © Youn must have them to be in the fashion. You will stand back and say that you ara afraid to use them be- cause they will soon be too common or simply denying yourself'a very pretty and becoming tonch on your gown, while the rest of the world is indulging in it. —— Salt thenm, with its burning, sting- propriate name for a girl ? ing sensation, is due to poor blood and is " She—That depends upon the girl. Your { oured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, the great name would suit me all right. blood purifier. = Lid is Sn sma pms pppoe Their Search Rewarded. . An Unusual Money Find in the Town of Huntingdon, Will Aid in Settling an Estate. Officers of the Law Search the Residence of John Cochran, Who Died in October, 1899, and Secure $18.805 in Green- backs .Was in Half Bushel Measure. " An unusal money find, that will tend to expedite the settlement of an estate, was made at Huntingdon Saturday afternoon. John Cochran, guitean old citizen, died in an unpretentious home on Cherry alley in that place in October, 1899. Letters of ad- ministration were granted to John G. Simpson ‘and since that time an effort has been made to’ settle the estate. The dead about 60 years—and one son and two daughters to his: first . wife. It was the general - opinion among all the friends of the dead man that he was of con- siderable nioney yet at the time of the legal appraisement the personality only aggrega- ted $50 and this the widow was awarded as a portion of her:legal right by. which:she is entitled to $300 of the personal estate of a deceased hushand. shared in the belief that. his father always kept considerable money about home, and as a legal heir he concurred in the opinion of the administrator that an effort should be made to secure the cash. The adminis- trator accordingly adopted the plan of hav- ing a legal search made of the premises and. ‘Friday afternoon . Officers Westbrooke, De- Forrest, Lamberson and Hallman, armed with such a warrant, entered upon the task. Messrs Westbrook and DeForrest conducted the search in the lower portion of the house while the other officers operat- ed on the second floor. The search proceeded but a short time when Officer DeForrest discovered a pecu- liar looking bundle at the bottom of a half bushel measure. A careful inspection re- vealed the presence of eighteen neatly tied packages of greenbacks and a $5 bill. A count of the greenbacks revealed the start- ling information that their money value agregated $1,805. Then came word from the officers on the second floor that they had unearthed $30 in gold and a small amount of change in an old chest. With these discoveries the search was ended and the money giveu to the administrator. In the final distribution of the funds up- wards of $800 will be returned to the wid- ow as her legal proportion. It is fortunate for her that the robbers who have been operating with a high band 'in that town for a couple of weeks past had no knowl- edge of the valuable contents of her humble household. “i The Health of the Pope. The Rev. Father Lacombe, who returned from Rome a short time ago, was in Mon- treal recently on his way to his mission field in the Canadian northwest. When told by a reporter that alarming news had been received from Rome regarding the pope’s condition, Father Lacombe said : “Yes, the ‘end is very near. The: holy father’s health was very poor when I saw him a few weeks ago. He received me as usual and questioned me concerning my mission, in which he seemed to take a great interest, but I could not help ob- serving that a great change had taken place since last I saw him, ‘‘He appeared thin and emaciated and his voice had a hollow ring. He was very feeble—so feeble in fact that he could not move without assistance. The audience continued for upward of a quarter of an hour and at its conclusion the holy father blessed me and those whom I might bless on my return. As he left the andience chamber I felt that I had seen the pope for the last time.”’ Read Your Home Paper. The local paper should he found in every home. No children should grow up ignorant who can be taught to appreciate the home paper. It is said to be the stepping stone of intelligence in all those matters not to be learned in books. Give your children a foreign paper which contains not one word ahout any person, place or thing, which they ever saw or perhaps ever heard of, and how could you expect them to be in- terested ? Bu let them have the home paper and read of people whom they meet and of places with which they are familiar, and soon an interest is awakened which in- creases with every arrival of the local paper. Thus a habit of reading is formed and those children wiil read the papers all their lives and become intelligent men and women, a credit to. their ancestors, strong in the knowledge of the world as it is to-day. . : The Average Girl. The average girl in the coarse of time ‘marries, says a thoughtful writer. And she doesn’t marry a millionaire; she mar- ‘ries a man who goes out six days in a week digging for his six dollars. Tt isthe wife's part of the partnership to save it for him. But if she doesn’t know housekeeping ‘further than bakers’ bread and fried beef- steak, the chances are the family will al- ways be poor, that the man will quit shav- ing more than once a week and the girl will slomick around in a wrapper, and the dirty-faced kids will go ragged and sick; that the doctor will take all the money the grocer leaves. And that the love dream will soon be over and the devil will be sit- ting beside the 98-cent alarm clock hold- ing his sides and langhing at what a pud- ding he has got. ¢ error rrr Three Pairs of Twins in 4 Years. Falls Creek has a happy father who has broken all previous records, so far as the knowledge of the Herald goes. T. C. Russell, an employee of the tannery at that place, is the name of the person referred to and he is the father of three pairs of twins, all of which have come along since 1896. In 1896, Mr. Russell became the father of a pair of boys and he was very much elated over the fact. . In 1898 twins came again to grace his household and this time it was a boy and a girl, and to make the matter /| complete the other day his wife again pre- sented him with a pair of boys. If there is anything in the world to equal this we would like to hear from it. ia ET — my heart ache,” writes L. C. Overstreet, of Elgin, Tenn., to hear my wife cough until it seemed her weak and sore lun would collapse. Good doctors said she was so far gone with Conspmption that no medicine or earthly help conld save her, but a'fiiend recommended Dr. King’s New Discovery and persistent use of this excel- lent medicine saved ber life. It’s abso- lutely gnaranteed for Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis, Asthma and all Throat and Lu diseases. 50c. and $1.00 at Green’s. Trial bottles free. ; ~——There is certainly something of ex- quisite kindness and thoughtful benevo- lence in that rarest of gifts—fine breed- ing. . man’s survivors. are his:second wife—aged | ‘Saw DEATH NEAR. —Tt often made | Sues for Breach of Promise, | ‘A breach of promise suit was instituted | at Huntingdon Saturd i Keim, of Elk Lick, Somerset county, against Professor I. Harvey Brumbangh, acting president of Juniata college, which has created something of a sensation in the pa ; leading social and literary circles. Dam- : 0 ages in the’ sum of $25,000 are claimed and the interests of the plaintiff are being look- ed after by Attorneys H. H. Waite, of Huntingdon, and J. A. Berkey, of Somer- get. Burned While Cleaning Gloves. Miss Blanche Fritz, daugkier of Dr. H. M.. Fritz, of Quincy, Tioga county was frightfully burned on the neck and arms, Saturday, while cleaning her gloves with She _ held : the gloves on her hands over a hot stove to dry them, when suddenly the gasoline ignited, the flames: spreading to her dress. But for the prompt assistance of her parents she would have been burned to death. She will recover. Robert Cochran, a son of the decedent, : gasoline. face." ——Some men: are. such deep thinkers that their thoughts never get to the sur- ——That the chronic ‘borower doesn’t make friends as easily as he breaks them. BUCHANAN Micu,, 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 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 ay, by Miss Cora A. a mn, lace of coffee, she finds Faxxie WitLians., | 4418-3m id ———————— Silverware. | V[CALMONT R02. 0 ——HAVE THE— ! LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } 0 sessssesesnssssnsaneane Sessssssssasur estas sassabastanasasaa 0 RR prin; oH T CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a dol farmer. The more conservative farmer wants to see the goods before he buys, and buy where he cam 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 : lar to the + 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. aE MOST POPULAR OF ALL 45-43 — GIFTS . Articles not alone beautiful, but useful and dur« able, make the most sensible gift. These good features, together with a moderate price, make the genuine #1847 ROGERS BROS.’ SPOONS, KNIVES, FORKS, ETC. an ideal Holiday gift. They are made in a great variety of shapes, sizes and designs, handsomely packed in lined cases, and vary in price from 25c. 10 $3.50. * Your dealer can supply you. Ask for +1847" goods. Write us for our handsome cata- logue No. 100 to aid you in making selections. INTERNATIONAL SILVER CO. Successor to MERIDEN BRITANNIA CO., Meriden, Conn. «1847 - ROGERS BROS.” “SILVER PLATE THAT WEARS.” Dr. Stites. les, w FANT BV TMT EVEL OHV LV A WAV AV AV AVA LVL AV AVA CLAY (ONE COLD AFTER ANOTHER! a WHAT DOES IT MEAN? CATARRH, PURE AND SIMPLE CONSUMPTION BEG There is Death in the Air for Those with Weak Lungs NESS. who Brave the Dangers of Cold Weather. the New Scientific Treatment For Conghs, Ca- tarrh, Consumption and Diseases of the Respiratory Organs. THE COOL WEATHER Has brought its usual crop of ecatarrh, grippe coughs, sore throats, etc., etc. It means death tothousands. ~~ : tena dra For those disorders are but forerunners of . - death-deali dep ST disease fe 2 {43 It is a now, sient c System of ‘medicine, the result of modern medica si i. ‘and’ solute “annihilator ‘of the deadly disease consumption. 3 i ): new treatment for ‘this terrible 3 is a lifesboat of hope for those in‘despair: '«: ‘discoveries—a positive erm: <0 red ERd TI § 3 ’ fy i 1t has cured dangerous Throat and Lung Troub- hich the ‘sufferers ‘thought were. proof against medicine. 37a Niall VERGE 2 tis thecold weather ‘antidote. What it has done is you'll let it. _ EAR, NOSE, THROAT Offices, No. 21 North Allegheny street, Bellefonte, Pa. CONSULTATION Hours : LATA TATA TA TA TA TAA TL TMT New Treatment. . North Allegheny street, truly deserves its name | ing and spitting, dropping of mueus in the th was tak Que. a - sense of smell. In my case Dr. St the full merit of dis) at ¢ for to-day 1 hear as ol as’ ‘My he r act I fn fre rate a around, and express my gratitude to the fDr.in J the foregoing lines, and wishing all sufferers to: p at least investigate the value of this great discov- g. Bellefonte, ‘a. proof of what it will do—for yon—if IT IS SIMPLE AND Effective, easy and pleasant to take. Modern science reduced to a nutshell. one Problem of disease prevention solved. administered by DR o TES. No {grions medication, NO PAINFUL OPERATIVE : tment, no acid sprays, vo caustic burnings, rimenting. no 2xpe: Deafness, all forms of Catarrh, Asthma, oes as + broaght health to thousands who were ‘weak, Ys successfully treated. ‘Phe New system sickly, pale, thin, and, therefore, open to samption infection, if not infected. 'DR.'J. K. STITES, SCIENTIST A Well Known Young Man of Bellefonte . Speaks in Glowing Terms of Dr. Stites’ “Phe New Treatment given by Dr. Stites, No. 21, for 1 have never seen or heard of Ansthing like’ it. It is not only new, but it is'the true and sure: treatment for all catarrhalfdisease. For some- time I had been among. the listiof sufferers of this direful disease, Was troubled greatly with cough, : | was getti This alarmed me “very much, also the fact that I. began losing my tes has proved nd New Treatment, hear, ad is clear ‘smell returning, and in ery before giving themselves up as incurable. y iho 2 . Respe full EOE Wa © ot wn bi pl 3 | 8. M. ROBERTS. i NO INCURABLE CASES TAKEN. INS WITH LUNG WEAK- "AND LUNG would ever wish to dl Ing Bicely, mY sense of, pes fact I nr AND EXAMINATION FREE. 9a m., to 12. 1to5 p. mand 70 8 p.m. "Weak Lungs Made Strong aud Proof Against Danger by RRH of the Head, Nose and Throat ab- solutely gered and the poisons of the. disease Lomp etely eliminated from the Siem by treat- ment in- con- ABV A/V LY AVAL VATA CLT LV ~vr LMM DSVAN MSV MSV MSDS MSV AVAVAV AV LV A WMV MV DVM MV LVL BVM 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 earth where one ean do better than at McCALMONT & COS. . BELLEFONTE, PA Rubber Tires. - Juenrn TIRES. At the Carriage Shops of 8. A. McQuis- tion: & Co., the place to have your Car- Jiages aad Buggies fitted with the cele- TH! iw 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 applied with a steel band instead of the old way with the wire which cut the Rubber thereby loosenin, allowing it to jump out of the ‘channel. We would be pleased to have you call ex- amine and be convinced, that we have no* only THE BEST TIRE but also : THE BEST WAY of fastening the same. us prepared to do ALL KINDS OF REPAIRING, in our line of business with neatness and dispatch. New Top Buggies on hand. Home made and 2 second hand Top Bug- gies, good onesat a low price. Telephone No. 1393. MeQUISTION & CO. North Thomas St. Bellefonte, Sprinklers Etc. the tire and You will also fina 44-34tf WA TAT LAT ATV AV LT. VW ATER THE GRASS ! Water your lawn, And make it grow— Any old fool will Tell you go. 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, 2. . BELLEFONTE, PA, GE THE " BEST MEATS. © You save nothing by buyin r, thin of gristly meats. Tase daly the. LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and st ny customers with the fresh- est, piv Rr Post blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else- where, ra Ae Atay I always have 3 —=DRESSED POULTRY,~— Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. Try My Shop. 43-34-1y “i PL. BEEZER. ; wd 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 eattle, sheep and calves are to be had. Serge (1s -WE BUY ONLY THE BEST {and we sell only that which is good = We don’t romise to give it aval, but we will furnish you D 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 & KREANER, Bush House Block BELLEPONTE, Pa. 44-18