Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, April 05, 1901, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -
Bellefonte, Pa., April 5, I[90L
FARM NOTES.
—Norway’s sprace, or Scotch, pine, if
planted for wind-brakes, will not only
prove hardy and entail bat little labor, but
will also be ornamental. Evergreens add
largely to the value of a farm.
—One of the most convenient remedies
for cuts, strains, sores, ete., is crude petr-
eleum. A bottle of this substance should
be kept in every barn or stable, and in a
convenient place, so as to use ib freely
when occasion requires.
—Tt is suggested as a preventative of lice
that a piece of burlap sacking be tacked on
the roosts and saturated with kerosene.
This ought to work good, and should be of
especial value during the summer months
when lice are so troublesome.
—Watch the feed racks and see that
everything is eaten clean within two hours
from feeding time. For rough feed the
greater variety the better. Good clover
hay is the best, and bright corn fodder
next. Timothy cut when in early bloom
is also excellent.
—But few farms contain quince trees.
One or two quince trees will be found
valuable for a family. The quince tree is
a great feeder and requires cultivation, as
it soon shows the effects of neglect. In
the markets there is seldom a full supply
of quinces, and they bring good prices.
—Farly cabbage plants may beset out
as soon as frost is out of the ground. The
cabbage is a hardy plant and will stand
cold nights. For a garden there should be
early, medium and late cabbage, and the
ground cannot be too rich for them. One
point in connection with growing them is
that they thrive with frequent hoeing, even
when the ground is clean. The cabbage is
also a gross feeder, and will not grow to
large size unless plenty of manure is ap-
plied to the soil.
— After fruit trees come in bearing the
best fertilizer is some form of potash.
Wood ashes cannot be excelled for fruit
trees, as they also contain large propor-
tions of lime. Orchards that are in grass
should be plowed occasionally, and some
kind of hoe crop grown therein, in order to
keep the ground clean and loosen the soil,
but the land should be heavily manured,
or fertilizer liberally applied, as the soil
cannot provide for two crops—iruit and
grass, or grain—without an abundauce of
plant food.
—Beets, carrots and parsnips should be
seeded as soon as the ground is sufficiently
warm, as they require plenty of time for
growth and are hardier than beans or to-
matoes. The seed should not be covered
more than half an inch deep, and a little
roller should pass over the rows after seed-
ing in order to firm the earth. Use plenty
of seed, and then thin out the plants after
they attain sufficient growth. Give plenty
of room between the plants in order to
use the hoe. For the table there should
be early and late sowings of beets.
—Farmers do not always devote their
labor in the best direction. A garden may
be expensive if not carefully attended to,
as the weeds soon take possession. The
receipts from a garden may also be less
than the cost of the product, but the sea-
son, kind of crops grown and rainfall affect
the results. There is one point in favor
of a garden, however, which cannot be dis-
regarded, which is that the farmer can
never buy as good fruits and vegetables ag
he can grow. No vegetables shipped to
the farm can possibly be as fresh as those
taken from the garden and used immediate-
ly.
—Early potatoes should be of a variety
that will come early. While the yield of
the crop is important, yet the crop that
gets into market a week sooner than usual
will bring 100 per ceni. more in price.
Seedsmen offer new varieties every year,
but some of them are claimed to be ‘‘the
earliest’’ that it ‘is impossible to make a
selection. There are, however, well-know
early varieties that have been tested, and
they should be given the preference until
something better hasjbeen tried in a limited
way. Use seed from some point North,
and use whole seed or such as has been cut
into large pieces. Early potatoes should
receive plenty of rotted manure as well as
fertilizer, and they should be kept clear of
weeds and grass from the start.
—Fowls will pick any green plant or
sprout that comes early in the year, as
they have heen deprived of green food dur-
ing the long winter period, and this pro-
pensity has made it appear as though fowls
did great damage in gardens. Assoon as
grass becomes plentiful the hens may be
allowed to run at large in the garden, and
they will perform excellent service in seek-
ing insects, worms, etc. It is true that
when young plants are just coming through
the ground, and are juicy and tender, the
hens will eat some of them, but as soon as
the leaves become tongh the preference
will be for young weeds and grass. An
experiment made by turning fowls into a
lot of cow peas resulted in the fowls eating
only the young weeds that came up. They
will, however, eat ripe tomatoes.
—The season for the application of fer-
tilizers is at hand, and much depends upon
the judgment of the farmer in selecting the
kinds required. No farmer who is unac-
quainted with the requirements of crops or
the nature of fertilizers should attempt to
purchase for himself without the advice of
some experienced person or through con-
sultation with some reliable. dealer or
manufacturer. Manufacturers who have
reputations to sustain will gladly advise
each and every farmer in regard to pur-
chases, as it does not pay the manufacturer
if the.-farmer buys some particnlar brand
that is unsuitable for the crop to be grown.
It is possible that there are persons who
will sell the farmer anything that he de-
mands, whether adapted for the purpose
desired or not, if a sale can be made, but
such persons do not engage in a legitimate
business, and injure their trade as well as
create distrnst of fertilizers; but the manu-
facturers of fertilizers have been placed
under strict laws that protect the farmers,
every purchaser baviog the privilege of
forwarding samples to the State chemist for
his examination. Dealers are usually well
known in their communities, and their
trade depends upon the patronage of the
farmers. At the present time the farmer
is safe in buying fertilizers of any reliable
party, as he will receive just what he or-
ders; but the main point in the procure-
ment of fertilizers is that a large number
of farmers do not know what they want
for their land and crops, which is a diffi-
culty that must be met by the manufac-
turer as well as the farmer.
——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN.
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
All the jacket sleeves flare at the hand.
White will be the favorite of all colors
for summer. :
Clinging woolen
pleated, are the craze.
Liven sheeting makes splendid shirt-
waists. $1 a yard—a yard’s enough.
It’s a jacket year.
Scarcely any tan shoes will be worn—
and no high tan shoes.
Striped foulards are good in Paris.
Box-pleated jackets of nun’s-veiling are
said to be coming in.
stuffs, tucked and
Nothing is more important for the fash-
ionable woman than the acquiring of the
dip at the waistline. This leads toa care-
ful consideration of every point in dress so
that this much desired effect may be gain-
ed. It has been the aim to make belts
that will give the dip, and as all sorts of
belts are made, it only remains for each
woman to select the belt suited to her
need. To keep pace with the changes of
fashion there has been a belt brought out
with coat-tail backs,and this may be added
to any bodice in need of a touch to bring it
up to date.
One very handsome one is of black and
gold. The belt is of black velvet decorated
with narrow gold braid and the coat-tails
are square pieces of cloth of gold bound
with black velvet, two little rosettes of
baby ribbon being placed at the waist-
me. . Ai
The girl who wears an up-to-date coiffure
wears a curl, not right in the middle of
her forehead, but lying gracefully upon
her snowy shoulder, as Janice Meredith
wore hers. g
In fact, this ringlet is known as the Jan-
ice Meredith, though it doesnt’t owe all of
its popularity to that interesting heroine,
who acts the part, having done much to
make it coveted of women.
In order to make it effective the curl
must be long and loose, not at all of the
sausage order—unless 1t’s a hologna sausage
—and the hair must be knotted low on the
neck to permit the ringlet to lie gracefully
on the shoulder. And here’s a tip for the
maids who are about to essay this method
of hair-dressing : Scorn not to make a lib-
eral use of your hand-mirror, for while the
front view is ofttimes as fascinating as pos-
sible, the back is frequently more curious
than beautiful.
Most of the ringlets, to give away a se-
cret of the prison-house, are store ones,
since one’s own tresses, with a depravity
peculiar to inanimate things generally, re-
fuse to hang gracefully where they're told,
but stray into unwonted places.
False ones are more amenable to reason,
and this is why the Janice Meredith curl
seldom grows on the head to which it is at-
tached, but is secured by pins in the most
commonplace manner imaginable.
The Russian blouse suit will be the
ultra-fashionable summer model for little
Miss as well as for her small brother. It
appears in a variety of fabrics and in all
the popular colors, in serges, cheviots, pop-
lins and mohairs for spring, and on the
days when the roses bloom and the sun
rains his fiery rays an rural lanes and sea
beach little Lady Dainty will wear a Rus-
sian suit of linen or pique. Russian frocks
of hoth plain and flowered pique are
shown, tastefully trimmed with pique em-
broidery and tiny pearl buttons. This
will be a *‘white summer,’’ and the Rus-
sian blouse suits of white serge are allur-
ing examples of up-to-date frock beauty.
The dresses of linen and gingham for
morning wear, and the more elaborate
creations of urgandie and dotted Swieses,
elaborated with tuckings, shirrings and
edgings of lace, suggest unlimited possibil-
ities for the stylish appareling of this sum-
mer’s small belles.
Paquin determinedly adheres to his lik-
ing for gathered and pleated skirts, and
two-thirds of the models he has thus far
designated for gowns of airy summer fab-
ric are made with hip-yoke skirts, with
full circular or gored breadth velonrs ad-
justed to the lower edge of theyoke by fine
close French shirring, accordion pleating
kilts or smocking. Some of these skirts
are formed of alternate rows of insertion
and equally wide bands of the dress fabric,
either in vertical or horizontal lines, reach-
ing its entire length ; others have a wide
hem at the foot of the skirt, hemstitched
at the top, or at. the. bottom of the skirt
bas in-set V-shaped trimmings of fan
pleatings and lace.
0dd black skirts are being made with
either, five seven or nine gores, the num-
ber of them depending upon the fabric and
upon the figure. Made with an inverted
box plait, they are still both fathionable
and popular. The new skirts are made
with a drop skirt lining and trimmed on
the outside with either ten-inch circular
flounces or circnlar ruffles headed by shap-
ed bands stitched several times.
There is no real standard of beauty un-
less we except the lines for which aun artist
looks. We are not all artists, and we judge
of beauty by our own ideals.
Nevertheless there is one standard
which we all recognize—that of good
health. It shines in the eye, glows in the
cheek, reddens the lip and quickens the
step. It also makes one at peace with the
world, for indeed, as a rule the tempera-
ment is simply a matter of the liver. A
torpid liver will in time spoil the temper
of an angel, says the Woman's Home Com-
panion.
How many women drink enough water ?
Very few, indeed, and no wonder they
have dried-up, wrinkled faces and figures !
And yet every woman can have a water-
cureat home.
The first thing after rising in the morn-
ing the teeth should be brushed and one
or two glassfuls of water drank. IE the
liver needs stimulating the water should
be hot and a little salt added. Drink fre-
quently between meals, but never while
eating. Fully a pint of water should be
wake before breakfast and on retiring at
night.
A simple and lovely Easter table may
have for a centre piece a low mound of grow-
ing crocuses—nothing ould be prettier
than the effect the delicate spring-like
lilac, yellow and white blossoms give, and
it s¢ one which it is safe to say will be new
to your guests as a table decoration,
says Harper's Bazar. 1f the flowers are
not to be had roots and all, they may be
stuck one by one in a bed of moss, with a
border of delicate ferns hiding the edge of
the basket or dish. If you use candles,
they should be light yellow with lavender
shades ; the bonbons in your little dishes
should be yellow and lavender, or, instead,
you may have ribbon candy in the two
shades. The cards may be decorated with
a sketch of a crocus, a yellow one on one
and a lavender one on the next.
The People of the Mikado Itching to
Get Into a Fight With Russia.
—— $
No Reason to Fear the Result. Will Object to'Russia
Endeavoring to Get the Necessary Signatures to
the Manchurian Agreement— Situation Complicat-
ed.
LoNDON. April 1st.—The Chinese Min-
ister, Sir Chih Chen Lo Feng Lub, called
at the foreign office today and urged the
British government to bring pressure to
bear in order to prevent Russia from secur-
ing the necessary signatures of the Man-
churian agreement. The foreign office is
still in the dark tonight as to whether the
agreement will be signed or allowed to
lapse when the time expires, March 26.
The officials of the Japanese legation are
inclined to believe Russia will succeed in
getting the necessary signatures. The situ-
ation is still more complicated owing to the
fact, ascertained by a representative of the
Associated Press today, that there are two
secret treaties, one of which is to be signed
at St. Petersburg, dealing with Russian
military control of Manchuria and another
to be signed at Pekin dealing with her
civil power.
The Chinese appeals for support have
failed to produce any remonstrance from
Great Britain or apparently from any other
power to St. Petersburg, for Russia persist-
ently adhered to her contention that the
secret agreement concerns no one except
herself and China. On this ground Great
Britain’s request for copies of the agree-
ment was abruptly declined.
It is explained at the foreign office here
that it would be a dangerous and useless
breach of diplomatic procedure to endeavor
to enter upon expostulations with Russia
which would only be based upon informa-
tion supplied by the Chinese. In other
words the copies of treaties and alleged
modifications of them recently given to the
powers by the Chinese are worthless docu-
ments and will remain such until Russia
herself chooses to communicate the text of
the actual treaties and modifications.
In the absence of the Japanese minister
in London. Baron Hayashi, Mr. Matsui,
first secretary of the Japanese legation, who
was interviewed this afternoon by a repre-
sentative of the Associated Press, made a
comprehensive statement of the issues in-
volved. He said :
“‘Russia’s insistence, China's helpless-
ness and the probable victory of Russian
diplomacy tomorrow will bring us to the
brink of a dangerous situation in which
none of the powers is so deeply concerned
as Japan. Even if the secret treaties have
been modified, as is alleged, the changes
are so trifling as to make the documents |.
thoroughly objectionable to Japan.
‘Assuming that China signs the treaties,
I suppose Great Britain, Germany and the
United States will protest to Russia. But
that is about as far as they will go and
about as much as they will get. With
Japan it is a matter of fighting. The ques-
tion is whether we are to fight Russia now
or fight her later on. She has no right to
Manchuria and if she secures Manchuria
she will be on the way to securing Corea.
“Our government, I believe, is seriously
considering the crisis. Its eyes are wide
open and it will not be driven to precipitate
action by the jingoists of Japan, who are
openly clamoring for immediate war. Yet,
if it sees that war is unavoidable it will not
hesitate to strike. Japan has no reason to
be afraid as to the result. Many reasons
occur to the average Japanese mind in
favor of forcing at the present moment a
struggle which must come eventually. The
chief reason against so doing is the fact
that Japan is just beginning a new in-
dustrial era, which would be temporarily
killed should we endeavor by force of arms
to prevent Russian encroachments.
“It we follow the lead of other powers
and don’t threaten hostilities we realize
that we must sit down tamely and see any
other nation step in and make treaties
similar to those which China seems to be
on the verge of signing with Russia. This
would mean the partition of the Chinese
Empire and the end of the ‘‘open door.”
If we opposed it, we naturally think we
would have the moral support of the United
States, which has been the champion of
these principles, and also of Great Britain
and Germany.’
A RacING ROARING Froop—washed
down a telegraph line . which Chas. C. El-
lis, of Lisbon, Ia., had to repair. “Stand -
ing waist deep in icy water,”’ he writes,
gave me a terrible cold and cough. It
grew worse daily. Finally the best doctors
in Oakland, Neb., Sioux City and Omaha
said I had consumption and could not live.
Then I began using Dr. King’s New Dis-
covery and was wholly cured by six bot-
tles.”’ Positively guaranteed for coughs,
colds and all throat and lang troubles by
F. P. Green, price 50 cts.
Books, Magazines, Etc.
An intimate and entertaining budget of ‘Per-
sonal Reminiscences of Queen Victoria” will ap-
pear in the April Century. It is anonymous,
neither the nationality nor the sex of the writer
being revealed, the only clew to his or her iden-
tity being this statement: “I saw her (the
Queen) constantly in the summer of 1886, during
my: four weeks’ peep into English court life,
while temporarily forming a part of the suite of
an Illustrious Personage, a guest of the Queen’s
at Osborne House.” In this tresh revelation of
her character and habits, Her Majesty appears as
a very human and very interesting person.
A great advance has been made by engineering
skill in the cutting of tunnels. “In the construc-
tion of the St. Simplon tunnel in the Alps,” says
Everybody's Magazine, “the longest yet started,
drills of about the diameter of one's fist are used.
With them holes about a yard deep are bored in-
to the rock, which are charged with dynamite
cartridges, the cartridges being then exploded
by electricity. When the laborers return they
find a whited chaos of pulverization, which they
set to work to square into the ordered course of
the tunnel. Each drill has a solid steel shank or
stem, which is turned by powerful machines
sending water against it under a pressure of one
hundred and fifty atmospheres. The irresistible
force of the water, which is projected by an in-.
genious mechanism behind the drill, gives the
steel point a rapid and terrible rotary motion,
and very quickly the rock is pierced. To pre-
vent heat from the great friction, a con-
stan stream of water is sent through the
tubular drill. Both time and labor are saved by
an electric crane at the mouth of the tunnel,
which unloads the cars of debris automatically.
Nearly three thousand men are employed at each
end of the tunnel, and these men are divided into
three shifts of eight hours each, go that the work
goes on night and day. To overcome the intense
subterranean heat, for the temperature increases
one degree centigrade for each thirty-three
metres (about one hundred feet,) there is for-
tunately the late discovery of liquid air. But
even under these improved conditions, the labor-
ers on coming out would sufter from the abrupt
change if they were not compelled to take grad-
ed shower-baths along the way to the mouth of
the tunnel. At the last station they put on other
clothes and leave their working garments behind,
to be cleaned and disinfected by steam, and kept
ready for them when they return."
‘| on Wednesday the 17th. day of April, A.D.,
e
"Tis Easy 70 FEEL GooD.—Countless
thousands have found a blessing to the
body in Dr. King’s New Life Pills, which
positively cure constipation, sick headache,
dizziness, jaundice, malaria, hay fever,
ague and all liver and stomach troubles.
Purely vegetable ; never gripe or weaken.
Only 25 cts. at Green’s drug store.
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 k 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 u
ly. We use a package o
am ten years old.
45-26
coffee drinking entire.
Grain-O every week. I
Yours respectfully,
Faxyie WiLLiams,
Business Notice.
Castoria
CASTORIA
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
—— ————
Money to Loan.
ONEY TO LOAN on good security
and houses for rent.
J. M. KEICHLINE,
45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law.
McCalmont & Co.
VI CCALMONT & CO.
——HAVE THE——
Ouiidinn fesiassisnvairaeisesen
tasisasessististinystizestasasis 0
——
: { LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE }
O ssssssnensnnes sessnasenne sevens
Ney’
atin,
seescs sseseessrsictsancasacsenen()
. > en | IN eee
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 yon 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 on
earth where one can do better than at
46-1
McCALMONT & CO’S.
BELLEFONTE, PA
smn
Castoria.
Real Estate.
ceeceece
; C
A
AA
A A
A A
C AAAAAA
Cc C A A
cceceee A A
8888888
8 8
T
Pp
T
7
In
S
SSS88
8
8 8
SSSSSSS
TTTTTTT
‘T
00000 RRRRR
0 0" R R
R
RRRR
R I
R
III
II
C00
=
0
0 R
0 R
0 Oo R
00000 R
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for
over 30 years,
has borne the signature of
and has been made under his
CHAS. H. FLETCHER. personal supervision since its
infancy. Allow no one to de-
ceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-
good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the
heaith of Infants and Children—Experience against Experi-
ment.
WHAT IS
CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric,
Drops and Soothing Syrups.
neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its
age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverish-
ness.
It is Pleasant® It contains
It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teeth-
ing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimi-
lates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving
healthy and natural sleep.
Mother's Friend.
The Children’s Panacea—The
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
«CHAS: HoFLETCHER.
THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
IN
46-4-13
New Ad vertisements.
OTICE.—Notice is hereby given that
1, the undersigned, have this 14th day of
March 1901 purchased at Sherift's Sale all the
farm implements, live ‘stock, household and
kitchen furniture late belonging to Sinus Stamm,
Anna Stamm and William Stamm in Spring Top
and have left the same in the possession of the
said Sinus Stamm, all persons are hereby notified
not to purchase or meddle with the same or they
will be dealt with aceording to law, ‘as the same
belongs to me. . H. FRY. .
46-11-4t Pine Grove Mills, Pa.
JPARDON NOTICE. Wg, :
Commonwealth ) Inthe Court of Quarter Ses.
sions of the Peace in and.
for the county of Centre,
No. 9, Aug. Sessions, :
Charge, Arson. Prosecutor, W. F.' Wo:
Aug, 25th, 1897, defendant convicted of attempt to
burn the Armory, etc.
Nov. 1st, 1897,
vs
James Cornelly
‘defendant sentenced to pay A
fine of $1, the costs of prosecution, and to under-
go imprisonment in the western penitentiary by
separate and solitary confinement for a period of
five years and six months, ;
Notice is hereby given that an application will
be made to the Board of Pardons. at Harrisbu
at 10 o'clock, a. m. for ‘pardon of the
TAYLOR & JOHNSTON,
ORVIS, BOWER & ORVIS.
Attys. for Applicant.
James Cornelly.
April 1st, 1901,
RIT IN PARTITION.—To the heirs
and legal representatives ‘of David D.
Shope late of Boggs township, deceased.
Take notice that in pursuance of an order of
the Orphan’s Court of Centre county, Pennsylva-
nid a writ in partition has been issued from
court to the Sheriff of said county, returna-
ble on Monday the 320d day of April, 1901, and.
e
that an inquest be held for the purpose of making
partition of the real estate of said decedent on
MONDAY, APRIL 8th, 1901,
at 9:30 a. wm.
at the residence of the deceased, at which time
and place 2 you can be present if you see proper,
Lueinda P. Demell and Wm. Demell, Warren,
Pa., A. W. Shope and Carrie his wife, Warren, Pa.,
J. B. Shope and Maggie M. his wife, Cato, Pa., T
Al
1., Shope and Carrie his wife, Graysville, Ohio, H.
W. Shope and Turah his wife, Friendsville, Md,,
U. G. Shope and Tillie his wife; Sisterville, West
Va., Madella Bullock and Edward Bullock, Miles-
bur, Pa., Mertie E. Rittenger and Chas. Ritteng-
er, Sunbury, Pa., Clementine Murray and Wm.
Murray, Sunbury, Pa., Fountain C. Shope and Ef-
fie his wife, Sunbury Bari
All that certain tract of land situate in Boggs
township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounded
and described as follows : Beginning at
Public road Jeading up Holt’s Hollow on line of J.
Kephart, Thence by said Kephart south 22° de-
grees west 23 rods to Pine Stump, thence hy Jand
of Mr. Geo. Noll south 42 degrees east 36.5 rods,
thence by land of same south 19 degrees east, 12.7
rods, thence by same south 28 ‘degrees east 12.7,
thence by same south 18 degrees 15' minutes east
31.56 rods to road thence by same porth 81 Jegrees
15 minutes east 10.5 rods, onde hy land of H. H.
Harshberger north 21 degrees west42 rods, thence
by same north 68 degrees 10 rods. to centre of
Public road, thence by same road north 20 degrees
west 10 rods, thence by same. north 34 degrees
west 30 rods, thence by same north 38 degrees
west 31.2 rods to place of beginning. Containing
Sherift's Office
10 acres and 24 rods. s
“CYRUS BRUNGART,
Bellefunte, Pa., March 13, 1901
re,’
190
said Sold everywhere in cans—all sizes. Made by
int in.
46-11-36 Sheriff,
Harness Oil.
J URERA
HARNESS
OIL.
3
A good looking horse and poor
looking harness is the worst
+ kind of a combination
—— EUREKA HARNESS OIL.—
not only makes the harness and
the horse look better, but makes
the leather soft and pliable, puts
it in condition to last—twice as
long as it ordinarily would.
pera at : STANDARD OIL CO.
GIVE
YOUR
HORSE 4
CHANCE!
: 39-37-1y
Prospectus.
THE NEW YORK WORLD.
THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION.
Almost a Daily at the price of a Weekly.
The presidential campaign is over but the
world goes on just the same and it is full of
news. To learn this news, just as it is—
promptly and impartially—all that you have
to do is to look in the columns of the Thrice-
a-Week edition of The New York) World
which comes to the subscriber 156 times a
year.
The Thrice-a-Weelk’s World's diligence as a
publisher of first news has given a circula-
tion wherever the English language is spok-
en—and you want it.
The Thrice-a-Week World's regular sub-
scription price is only $1.00 per year, We of-
‘fer this great newspaper and the WATCHMAN
together ‘one year for 81.05.
Joux C. MILLER.
res.
J. Tuomas Mircuery, Treas.
Ret ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE
COMPANY
Snes F Honseume
CENTRE COUNTY
EpMuNp BLANCHARD,
Sec'y.
Real Estate and Conveyancing.
Valuable Town and Country property
for sale or rent.
Properties cared for and rents collected
Loans Negotiated.
Titles Examined.
Certified Abstracts of Title furnished
upon application.
If you have a Farm or Town property
or sale or rent place it in our
hands.
ou wish to buy or rent a Farm or
ouse consult us.
If
If you wish to borrow money call
on us.
Is your title clear? It is to your inter-
est to know. It is our’s to assure
you.
Office Room 3, Bush Arcade,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Telephone connections
.
45-47-1y
Green’s Pharmacy.
Wri 80s. ec Ee 0c ac fc
TT
()THER HEADS
allt,
snail
lh
MAY ACHE,
but yours needn’t after the hint we
give you here. Green's Headache
Cure always cures headache. It
cures any kind of headache.
More than that, it relieves sleep-
lessness, melancholy or dejection.
tit tcl. ots... fl,
m
Hits
tif
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. F
;
GREEN'S PHARMACY, i
' Hig STREET, id
§
BELLEFONTE, - PA. 8
44-26-1y io
F
£
:
rg TR Rg 1
Meat Markets.
G** THE
BEST MEATS.
You save nothing by buyin, 1, thin
or gristly ter Phise the ?
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and supply ny customers with the fresh-
est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak-
ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are
no higher than poorer meats are eise-
where.
I always have
——DRESSED POULTRY,—
Game in season, and any kinds of good
meats you want.
Try My Suor:
P. L. BEEZER.
High Street, Bellefonte.
43-34-1y
AVE IN
YOUR MEAT BILLS.
There is no reason why you should use poor
meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender,
juicy steaks. Good meat is abundant here-
abouts, because good cattle, sheep and calves
are to be had.
WE BUY ONLY THE BEST
and we sell only that which is good. We don’t
romise i it Away, but we will furnish you
v 800D MEAT, at prices 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.
GETTIG & KREAMER,
| BruugroxtE, Pa.
43-18
Bush House Block