EE : 8 Pemocuic; atc Bellefonte, Pa., January 25, 1901. FARM NOTES. — Until within a few years it. has been the prevailing custom in Huron county, 0., to follow corn with oats, the oats with wheat and then seed to timothy and clover; but now many sow their corn ground to wheat, following with a second crop of wheat to get the ground in good shape for seeding. More would follow this rotation if they didn’t object to sowing wheat after wheat, and, while it issomewhat risky, where a stiff sod is turned under forcorn, and wheat sown in the stubble and well-rotted sod turned up for the second crop of wheat, the result is often a better crop than the first. I have found that by using a disk harrow to fit corn ground for wheat, straddling each row and then rolling down in the spring, a reasonably smooth surface for a meadow can be obtained. I mowed such a meadow this year, and no one would know by riding a mower over it that ib had been seeded after corn-stubble wheat. It had been rolled both last spring and this, last spring to get the corn-stubble out of the way of the binder, and this spring to farther smooth and fit the field for mowing. To get rid of the corn stubble the first season, roll on a dry day and when the ground is dry and it is surprising how few will be left standing. There will be a few corn-stubble raked up in the hay, but very few, aud this is abousthe only objection to seeding after corn-stubble. To prepare corn ground for wheat I put 13 rows of corn in one row of shocks, cut the three middle rows and lay them down in the standing corn, then fit the ground and sow this strip, which is just wide enough for one round of the drill ; then, with a jack to shock up by the remaining five rows on each side and set on the ground already sown ; thus the stalks will have to be carried but little way, and then a perfect stand of wheat will be secured except right under the shock. There is no cheaper way of growing wheat, and as good crops as I ever raised were grown in this way, and for the last three seasons I have seeded the ground with excellent results. —There is going on in the West a ‘‘bat- tle of the breeds,”’ and the war is con- ducted so bitterly by those engaged as to render it disagreeable on the part of judges at the live stock shows and fairs to make awards. The contest for superiority is be- tween the breeders of the Galloways, Here- fords, Shorthorns and Angus—all beef- producing breeds—and so close are these breeds in public favor that to attempt to select ‘‘the best” would be to undertake almost an impossibility. This battle for supremacy in the West also concerns East- ern farmers, for itis to this struggle for the best that is due the monopoly of the East- ern markets by the great packing houses, which could never have competed with oar Eastern butchers but for the fact that they supplied beef of superior and uniform qual- ity, and this quality could never have been secured if the breed had not been consid- ered by the Western farmer as of equal importance as the feed. It is an example showing the triumph of the breeds, and the farmer who considers one breed as good . as another, if given plenty of feed, may sneer at the ‘‘fancy farmer’’ and leave him to his fate, but it is the ‘‘fancy farmer’ who has gone to the front in supplying the world with meat, and he is also taking the lead in otherdirections. The breed is con- sidered of so much value in the West that at the shows and fairs some particular ani- mal will bave hundreds of friends inter- ested in its success if it is a superior repre- sentative of sonie breed that is extensively used. The feed is considered but secondary to the breed, for until the breed came to .the front feed alone did not enable West- ern farmers to make cattle pay. While the breeds mentioned are capable of producing individuals that attain great weights, yet at the fat stock shows and fairs the largest animal may not win. Af- ter the prizes are awarded the butchers come in, and every prize winner in each class is killed and cut up. This is the .main test, and it is often surprising to find that the sweepstakes steer, which secured all the ribbons on foot, is far below some other after being chopped up on the block. The blood from the throat is caught in a vessel, and every portion of each animal is weighed—sides, tallow, liver, blood, ete., a careful examination being made of the “ripeness’’ of the meat, the relative pro- portion of lean and fat, the prospective steaks that can be cut and the value of all the parts, not excepting the offal. In the East such close competition is unknown. Then there is the competition in gain ac- cording to the amount of food consumed and age. At one of the large fat stock shows the average weight of all steers be- tween 1 and 2 years old was 1376 pounds each for 652 days of age, being a gain in weight per day of 2.12 poauds, one steer gaining 2.60 pounds per day. The average weight of steers between 3 and 4 years was 2086 pounds for 1341 days. The average weight of the carcasses of the dressed steers, that is, in’ proportion to gross weight, was about 68 per cent. These steers were fed for market, but grades, though treated and fed the same as the pure breeds, id not come up to the weights nor equal the latter in quality of meat, though they were excellent. This same thing nappens every year, and at several | large shows, It is educating the Western farmer and making his hold on the Eastern meat market stronger every year. i The Eastern farmer has every advantage. His markets are almost at his door,and the |’ butchers are willing and anxious to buy in order to cut loose from the Western mon- opoly. It isthe Western farmer, with the beef breeds, not the packer only, who has secured the Eastern markets, and the Western farmer began under less favorable conditions than the farmer in the East, as the long-horn steer was his only founda- tion, ‘upon which he improved. = It may be claimed that the Western farmer has cheap- er corn, but in the East the farmers waste much of the corn crop by not having ani- mals to utilize the fodder, or they permit it to be destroyed in the fields. The real cause of the loss of the markets by the Eastern farmer is the fact that he still uses the scrub bull. He destroys his calves at birth, instead of making choice beef of them at 2 years old. The calf that will in two pounds a day until 2 years old will give ‘a good profit to the owner, and where the farmer has a large number of cows he can no doubt make grade calves reach a thousand pounds at 2 years old and ‘they will bring more than the regular quo- ‘tations in market. (Whenever a lot of such cattle are sent East the butchers struggle and compete to secure them, sometimes paying more than they are worth because they advertise their husiness, but the beef cattle found on the farms of the East, as a FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Chocolate and Cocoa Fudge—Twocups of granulated sugar, one cup of milk, two squares of chocolate, one heaping teaspoon- ful of cocoa, butter the size of an egg. Boil sugar, milk, cocoa and chocolate to- gether 10 minutes ; add butter and cook until candy hardens when tried in cold water. Take from the fire and add one- half teaspoonful of vanilla. Pour into buttered pans to harden. There are two pure white fabrics in the race for shirt-waist favor, the French brilliants and the white ginghams. Exactly like a satin-striped taffeta are the French brilliants, the satin stripes be- ing mostly a sixteenth ofan inch apart, more or less. These cost 55 cents a yard Outside their beauty the chief charm of the white ginghams is the fact that they will not muss like lawn or nainsook. What figure they show is in cord effect : and double cross cords which form attrae- tive little plaids. Womankind has not been slow to recognize the value of decided- ly high-class offerings. Delicacy, light weight, and transpar- ency, distinguish the smartest new wool- en stuffs for spring. Nothing will be to light to please fashion’s fancy. The thin- ner the fabric the more stylish. Feather light veilings that can be tucked, shirred, plaited or puffed over silk linings, will be the top notch of style. After thisalbatross, very thin grenadines in silk and wool mix- tures, satiny surfaced wool crepes, plain and mixed effects in transparent canvases, showing the silken lining underneath, corded and striped fancy woolen goods, some few of them chenille, dotted, are the range of the spring ideas that may be spoken of positively at the present time. It is now an assured fact that novelty soft transparent woolen materials will be most smiled upon by Madame La Mode, the coming season. Just what colors, or tints she may deign to favor, cannot be foretold 80 positively. As far as can be determined, however, it looks as if the tan shades will retain its vogue for both silk and wool, with navies, browns, grays and a few heli- otrope effects following in the order nam- ed. Some light greens with an Empire tinge, old rose and cardinal will be very fashionable also.’ There never was a style that shaped the forehead as well as the overhanging one. The pompadonr is no longer the favorite mode—that is, the pompadour wich ite inner roll and its high stuffed front. On the contrary, the pompadour has fallen a little, and its place has been taken by the low or pillow puff, which isa puff that can be pulled down jn front with the fingers. In this way the forehead can be raised or lowered, shaped or unshaped,and made or made over, to suit the owner. Advance fashion advices are to the effect that the simplicity that has always been considered the best form in a tailor-made and which has been prevailing the past winter, will be retained the coming spring. There will, however, be a trifle less lean- ing, as far as cut is concerned, to the ex- treme English severity, with the French chic or grace more in evidence. The skirts will still be very tight fitting around the hips and over the front gore, but several of the advance models show much added fullness in the back, particu- larly well toward the bottom, where some fall into quite deep pleats. There isn’t the slightest ‘approach to stiffness, how- ever, as the most desirable new linings in use are very soft silk, first, or next an ex- ceedingly soft alpaca, while the only inter- lining appearing is hardly more than a band about the bottom of a new soft mus- lin that seems ideal. This latter is claim- ed to combine consistency, suppleness and imperviousness to dampness. ‘While the perfectly plain tailored skirt is first and foremost, the most desirable and most strictly tailor-made, yet for less conservative women slight differences from these extremely simple lines are made. A Watteau-like back, with a large double pleat, is observed on some of tnese less conservative models, only a little more spreading and with the pleats laid less carefully over each other. A new idea is to have a narrow inverted pleat in the cen- tre of the back with a tiny group of finely set gathers on either side. This effect is quite new and insures a very graceful fall for the skirt. One is struck with the idea ‘when viewing it how pretty it would be for wash gowns. In jackets, present indications point to a tight fitting double-breasted Eton model, with the L’Aiglon collar, the generally adopted favorite. They open high upon the bosom with a turned down collar that is notched and has small, narrow, pointed or square revers to frame the opening. A notch in the centre of the back is a feature added to some of the collars to give variety. . Sleeves still continue quite long and quite close fitting, and while the Pingat sleeve, or a bell-shaped bottom, may be seen on less exclusive tailor-mades, just the plain stitched wrist, or a tiny rever ‘matching the collar, only a trifle broader, will be the preferred wrist finish. The skirt with the high back is to-day the most exciting feature of fashion. It appeared last month on two or three im- ported gowns and then the home dress- maker started in to accomplish it, “And if youn think it is an easy thing to -accomplish just try it. Its very much worse than achieving the low point in front because you could cut your skirt out yourself in front and bring the belt down over it. But its quite an- Seber thing to shape the skirt up in the It is useless to question the fact that the ‘best method of gettin ‘belt is by wearing the blouse over the skirt, then putting the girdle on the lower edge of this. This means that the blouse must be lined and boned, bat all of .them are ‘now, except the flannel ones. But this is nseless unless the skirt goes up to the belt in the back; and right. here don’t make the mistake of trying to pull a skirt that is cut low in the back, up to a high point on the waist so that the belt ‘will cover it. Hit La Fort will shorten the skirt in the mid- dle of the back, making it hang in a very ungainly way, and it will canse the skirt to Bt wretchedly over the hips and at the placket. / If the skirt is cut so short at the waist- line in the back that it will not, submit to being pinned up on the waist or brought up by the inside belt of a blouse, wear the belt down to the skirt, make it quite wide, and then shape it down in front. This gives it the effect you desire. To do this the belt must be pinned securely in the back at top and bottom, and for this use slender ornamental pins, for obtrusive buckles will not curve into the figure and give a bad line. ‘ Tbe very fashionable thing is this heart- rule, are not desirable in comparison with Western beef. AS sata shaped buckle dlaced either up or down or across, bus they are ha:d to find. EE Ps this carve in the |, Senators Elected. The following United States Senators have been elected : George F. Hoar, Mass. ; James MeMillan, Michigan, and Wm. P. Frye, Maine. Ex-Senator Fred. T. DuBois was elected in Idaho to succeed Shoup ; in Colorado Thomas M. Patterson was chosen to succeed Wolcott, and Harry E. Burn- ham, of New Hampshire, was elected to succeed Chandler. In Montana William A. Clark was elected Senator by a majority of 10 votes. Ninety-three votes were cast Clark receiv- ing 57. _ A ballot was taken in the Nebraska Leg- Islatare for two Senators, but without re- sult. Had Tested Her. Briggs—That medium doesn’t know a thing when she’s in a trace. Briggs— What makes you think so? Griggs—Because the other day I tried to Business Notice. Castoria When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clpng to Castoria When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. 46-4-27 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 1 was very much pleased with it, asa substitute for coffee. We have always used the best Java and Mocha in our family, but I am free to say I like the GRAIN-O as well as the best coffee 1 McCalmont & Co. MM CALMONT & CO.—————— ———HAVE THE—— © cis. soto ennai nainnussnst ir ssinnsussnpsesserarserns Sesivey 0 N—— Nyt { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE } 0 eee aas setts seats setesietetsetisetsentsnesessntietesssasannnies 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 know steal away in the middle of one—without | ever drank. Respectfully Jours, the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them paying. — Detroit Free Press. 45-26. A. C. Jackson, M. D. SEE WHAT WE FURNISH : = — Say . LIME—For Plastering or for Land. Castoria. COAL—Both Anthracite and Bituminous. WOOD—Cut to the Stove Length or in the Cord. ; FARM IMPLEMENTS of Every Description. a oor, FERTILIZER—The Best Grades. C A §88888S TTTITTT 00000 RRRRR 1111 A PLASTER—Both Dark and Light. : x 4 S 8 T 2 > B 2 B : Fg A PHOSPHATE—The Very Best. C A A 88988 7 0 0 RRRRR ir A SEEDS—Of all Kinds. 0 4 Shan 7 34 Ss E Ba 4 Aaadan WAGONS, Buggies and Sleighs. cCcece tA A SSSSSSS is 00000 R R HI: A A 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 1 earth where one A better than at oY » jo; 29 Piste oa The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been McCALMONT & CO’S. in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of 46-1 BELLEFONTE, PA : EE EE TT STAs. and has been made under his TTT CHAS. H. FLETCHER. personal supervision since its Harn Oil infancy. Allow no one to de- iid ? Real Estate, ceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as- good” are but Experiments that trifie with and endanger the JorN C. MILLER. Epyauxp BLANCHARD. heaith of Infants and Children—Experience against Experi- J Pres. Mivchnss. Teas Sec’y. ment. : ! = REAL ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE UREKA t WHAT IS CASTORIA E go¥PANY HARNESS ed OF mie Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, OIL. CENTRE COUNTY Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverish- A good looking horse and poor Real Estate and Conveyancing ness. . It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teeth- looking harness is the worst : : and | Lh Valuable Town and Country property ing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimi- kind of a combination. for sale or rent. lates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving : Properties cared for and re ESS T nts collected healthy ‘and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The EUREKA HARN OIL Loans Negotiated di Mother's Friend. not only makes the harness and Titles Examined 3 the horse look better, but makes Cortited Abst : ¢ ik 3 ok the leather soft and pliable, puts ified Abstracts of Title furnished GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS gir token a upon application. : long as it ordinarily would. If you have a Farm or Town property : or sale or rent place it in our Bears the Signature of Sold everywhere in cans—all sizes. Made by hands. STANDARD OIL CO. If you wish to buy or rent a Farm or CHAS. H. FLETCHER. GIVE Suse consult us, YOUR It Jou wish to borrow money call THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT HORSE A Is your title clear? It is to your inter- : CHANCE! i est to know. It is our’s to assure In Use For Over 30 Years. td you. Office Room 3, Bush Arcade, L y THE CENATURY COMPANY; 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. 46-4-13 45-47-1y BE LE ine connections eee] Emer III, Button that Top Button. Dr. Stites. : Green’s Pharmacy. One of the Best Rules for Guarding Against Catch- ing Cold. “There are thousan ds of suggestions of- 2 ; 5 A Wt. OE As, cf tf fered to prevent one from taking cold,” J)ELAY IS DANGEROUS 4 sat said a physician at the Pennsylvania Hos- < 8 pital, but for a man who is going in and 4 i out of doors all day long I know of no bet- ; QHER HEADS E ter one to remember than the top button. 3 E It seems a small detail, but if attention . : : were paid to it more than half the men NATURE NEVER CURES CHRONIC DISEASES. 4 MAY ACHE ; who are now suffering from colds in some 1 ) \ form or other would never have them ts 4 : at all. £ i “For instance, when a man goes. into a store or an office intending to remain for a minute or two only, he does not take off his overcoat, although it is generally necessary for him to unbutton it. In nine cases out of ten when he goes out on the street again he neglects to button the top button of his overcoat until a chilly feeling at the chest warns him that he is making a mistake. - Many men walk along the street with the collar of their coat turned up to protect the back of their neck, but seem to think that there is no danger at all in leaving it unbuttoned all the way down. take. 3 “Even with men in office buildings, passing from one floor to another—just a short ride in the elevator it is an excellent plan to button the top button of the coat. A change of temperature, no matter how coat is not buttoned all the way down, see that the top button is all right. The trite head cool and the feet warm rule, is an ex- cellent one, but to prevent taking cold I should make the top-button rule of impor- tance for men constantly going in an out of heated buildings to the street. Women are more careful about this precaution than men. Youseldom see a woman come out of a store, even to cross a pavement-to take a car, unless she is well wrapped up about the chest.” ; —“Yon are looking handsome to- night, Miss Flite,’’ Bagster remarked in the pauses of the dance. 0 £50 “80 Mr. Smythe told me a few minutes ago.”’ _ Bagster, only remembering that Smythe is his hated rival : ‘‘Well, you ‘wouldn’t believe anything that ‘chump said, would you.” GET at ah se— Found It Was Late. : Kitty—This is a very pretty little thing ; shall Ising it? « ° Tom—Oh, yes, if you like. I was just going anyway. A DEEP MYSTERY.—It is a mystery why women endure Backache, Headache, Sleeplessness, Melancholy, Fainting and Dizzy Spells when thousands have proven that Electric Bitters will cure such troub- les. “I have suffered for years with kid- ney trouble,’ writes Mrs. Phoebe Cherley, of Paterson, Ia., ‘and a lame back pained me so I could not dress myself, but Electric Bitters wholly cured me, and, although 73 years old, I now am able to do all my own housework.”” It overcomes Constipation, imuroysel A pyetise, gives perfect health. ‘On y vy 50cts. at Green's drug store. | " : than men. Tt gets along very the hump provided by ‘nature, but if men want to get along in this world they have to hump themselves: | It you wish to cure scrof They could not make a more serious mis- slight attacks the chest first. Even if the | ——In one sense a camel is better off |’ well with |" : 1a or salt]. ‘theum permanently, ‘take Hood’s Sarsapa- | rilla. It expels all impurities’ from the If you have any chronic form of disease do not expect to get rid of it without any treatment, for, if nature has allowed your disease to become chronie, it is proof positive that she has been unable to overcome and throw it off, and that through proper remedies, nature must be aided in the work, or you will carry the disease to the grave; or, more likely, it will be the means of carrying you there before your time. Delays are danger- ous, where there is nothing to be gained. This is particularly applicable to Diseases of the Air Passages, such as Bronchitis, Asthma, Chronic Coughs; why carry [them or let them hasten you to your grave? Late Discoveries and Modern Methods. The most remarkable cures are effected by the New Treatment. Wonderful, almost DR: JK. Miraculous Results are Obtained by a Modern Scientist. Story of Two Decades of Study and Experiment and a record of Phenome- nal Success. Hundreds of grateful patients. STITES, Offices, No. 21 North Allegheny street, Bellefonte, Pa. Dr. Stites, the Eminent Specialist, is now Demonstrating in Bellefonte the Success of "the New Treatment for Deafness and Catarrh. Rl Until within a very few ears diseases of the eye and ear have baffled the most learned men of medicine. Iv is within'the range of the present generation to remember when there was little or no hope for the person whose sight or hearin bad become impaired by age or disease. B thanks to the untiring efforts of men who have devoted their lives to study and research, these conditions no longer exist. Like the advance in electrical science, so has wonderful progress been made in eye and ear Ss ry; and ‘to-day diseases that less than a score of years ago were pronounced incurable yield at the han of the adept surgeon to the work ‘of a few moments, a few hours, or possibly treatment for a few weeks. . The best part of Dr. Stites’ life has been spent in the active practice of medicine, with frequent periods of study and research in the best medical colleges, posi uate schools and hospitals in the world, thus ever keeping in touch with the progress. in medical science. Always ready to earn, he does not scorn to accept new truths | trom other men, but he has contributed his share and more to the store of knowledge. His crown- ing success, his last and greatest ‘achievement, is his New Treatment for Catarrh and Deafness. It has now been thoroughly tested, and the results have even exceeded the discoverer’'s most san- nine expectations. Cures have been effected in ases of years’ standing—in some: instances where persons well advanced in years had been afflicted since childhood—in cases that had been given up as hopeless. 3! That these facts have become known is evi- denced by the number of afflicted persons who daily throng the parlors of this stinguished physician. No. 21, N. Allegheny St. The Doc- tor has already effected many cures. He has ful- y established the genuineness of his claims for the NEW TREATMENT. Catarrh of the oad, ly cured, and the poisons of the disease com- pletely eliminated from the system by the New and Better Treatment administered by Dr. Stites. No fnjurious Medication, no Painful Operative Treatment, no Acid Sprays no Caustic Burnings, no Experimenting. Deafness, All forms of Catarrh, Asthma diseases | of the Stomach successfully treated. ‘Patients treated at their homes just as success- fully as at the office. eee. Until he Began - The disease frc past 12 years, findin treatments and reme: ‘that national comp! x frequent cou toms, * heari) _rapidl od ineffectual, un: gan this New TreaTM ‘commend him to all m SS 1 For the Past 12 Years Had Suffered From Catarrh Deafness and Throat Trouble, Finding no Relief the New Treatment, given by Dr. from which I have suftered for the no relief from numerous ies which I have tried, is laint_Catarrh, hawking, ting, taking cold continually, until they chronic, dropping of mucus hing, these and various other symp- caused me untold ng became very much i worse, I spent sleep! great desl of money) All efforts to get well prov- 1ntil I went to Dr, St Res, 50 1 1 5 friends as well as ext. To-day sufferers of Catarrhal Bhi for I have improv. “rapidly that Iam most grateful. £a50 8 ip al cold since taking the New TREAT- spit- came in the throat causing misery. In time my paired and I grew ess nights (and a be- adly re- to all I have vi i a soundly all night long, this is I 4 ks loop to ail despairing Goes Re- spectfully. 8. 8. CRAFT, Moshanon, Pa.’ Lt v eee CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION FREE. Hours: 9a. mm. to 12. 1to5 p. m.and7t0 8 p.m. NO INCURABLE CASES TAKEN. Nose and Throat absolute: | but yours needn't after the hint we give you here. Green’s Headache 2 Cure always cures headache. It cures any kind of headache. More than that, it relieves sleep- lessness, melancholy or dejection. Can't harm you, no matter how long you continue them, if you follow strictly the directions. It is worth something to have on hand a remedy that so quickly and safely cures pain. PRICE 25 CENTS. 5 =z i i : : £ z z GREEN’S PHARMACY, y 4 Hicn STREET, } i : ¢ 4 BELLEFONTE, - PA. i £ 4261y or : i } : J } Wg GI al er ie A SE Te. ‘Meat Markets. GE THE _ BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buyin Tr, thin or gristly = Xe nly the ? LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fresh- est, chotoest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are 4 higher than poorer meats are else- where. ; bi I always have '.. —DRESSED POULTRY,— Game in season, and any kinds of good - meats you want. i Try My SHop. 43-3¢-Iy 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- abot ‘because good cattle, sheep and calves are : WE BUY ONLY THE BEST and we sell only that which is good = We don't promise to give it away, but we will furnish you D 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 ee er Heats, Poultey and Game (in sea- son) than have been furnished you. ih = GETTIG &¥ KEREAMER, BELLEFONTE, PA. Bush House Block: 44-18 r
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers