Bellefonte, Pa.. April 12, 1901. FARM NOTES. —QOne or two rows of blackberries or raspberries may be grown between the trees of an orchard. At least one row should be used, as the small fruits will invite cul- tivation, which will benefit the trees as well as the canes. Enongh fertilizer should be applied, however, to afford plant food to both cropy, or the orchard will be injur- ed. — Seedsmen who recommend melons call attention to the shipping qualities of the varieties, For home use there is no melon that ean compare with the Kleckley, while the Emerald Gem is the best of the cantalopes, though neither variety will ship to market satisfactorily. One of the best to follow the Emerald Gem for a later "kind is the old Hackensack, both being planted at the same time. These varieties cannot be excelled for quality. —The cabbage worm is hatched from an egg layed by the white butterfly. Numer- ous remedies have been proposed, but the best method is to destroy as many of the butterflies as possible. Hot water, salt- petre, black pepper, ete., have not given satisfactory results. The kerosene emul- sion will prevent attack, but it leaves an odor on the cahbage. For a small patch insect powder is excellent, but it must be used frequently. Paris green is used, but consumers object, fearing its poisonous ef- fects, though it is claimed as a safe rem- edy. —Do not be in too great hurry to plant seeds in the garden. This is April, and several cold nights, with probable frosts, may putin an appearance. If the ground is cold the seeds may never come up, and in some cases the plants that appear may be checked when very young and never grow. As a rule, the plants that come up after the ground is warm, even if later than the earlier kinds in appearing, will overtake them and be the first to bear. A few very warm days will push them for- ward rapidly, and they reach the bearing stage early because they receive no check in growth at the start. —It is said that the grain weevil has a patural dislike to salt, and that wheat or other grain stored in salt sacks was not touched by them, while that in other sacks in the same pile was badly infested and virtually ruined by weevils. If this is true it would be a simple matter to dip all grain sacks in brine and dry them before using, or perhaps to surround the grain bins with salted sacks. It is an experiment worthy of trial in the grain growing regions. It is cheaper and as easily tried as the bisulphide of carbon treatment, and we think could not injure the grain for seed or any other purposes. The grain does not absorb the salt, but it stands as a fence around it to repel the weevil. —Many persons who have breeds of poultry that have given good results as layers are disappointed when such fowls are cooked for the table. There may be a de- ficiency of breast meat, and the flesh may not be tender or well flavored. The fact is that if one wishes a choice table fowl it must be produced for that purpose. The breed which excels for the table is the Dorking, the next the Game, and then fol- low the Houdan and other French breeds. The Houdan is crested and not as hardy as some breeds, though the hens are excellent layers. The Dorking is considered super- ior to all others, and when given good care produces fine table birds, but the hens:are not above the average as layers. —It seems to be almost universally claimed now by our best horticulturists that spraying in winter, when trees are hare, effects more in killing fangus dis- eases than a spraying when the foilage has come out, as the spray can be used much more than double the strength and is more sure of reaching every part of the bark, thus also reaching the fnngus spores which may be harbored there. It can also be used on such as may be on the ground, or in the grass and weeds under the trees. These spores lie there dormant during the winter months, but start and multiply rapidly in warmer weather, and especially if it be damp. They are also agreed that the law against spraying apple trees when in bloom to kill the larva of the codling moth, though enacted as a protection to the bee- keepers, is really an advantage to the orch- ardist. In Niagara and Ontario counties, New York, many experiments have shown that when blossoms were sprayed with Paris green strong enough . to kill the cod- ling worms, the blossoms failed to set any fruit, and usually fell off munch sooner than those not sprayed. This was seen when one half the tree was sprayed in bloom and the other was not. —To a cucumber grower who wants to do away entirely with manure because he thinks it causes maggot or grub in the soil American Gardening recommends: The chief requirements of the cucumber crop are water and nitrogen. The one thing to be observed, however, is that the nitrogen is available in small quantities over a long period of time. It is for this reason that stable manure has given such general satis- faction. : If a aitrogenous fertilizer is given, it must be in the frequent application of weak doses. Nitrate of soda naturally suggests itself and has been used successfully where attention has been given to the necessary conditions. The effect of fertilizer is manifested on the cucumber plant very guickly within a few hours of the application. While the fruit is setting and forming excessive appli- cations tend to produce a large watery fruit which will not stand up well after cutting and also would be deficient in flavor. In one series of experiments reported the varieties selected for the test were Bismarck and White Spine. The seeds were started under glass on April 220d, and frequent light sprinkles of water were given to keep the soil of the pots from drying out until germination. Transplanting was done in the first week in May, the plants being set a distance of six feet, the holes heing 2} ft. across and eight inches deep. Well rotted manure and surface soil mixed were used for Planting, y 10, six days after planting, fertiliz- er was applied at the rate of one ounce of nitrate of soda to a gallon of water, a quart of solution to each hill. Similar applica- tions were made on May 16, 22 and 29 and June 3, 9, 15, 22 and 26, when fruit was setting rapidly and in quantity. On the unfertilized patch the plants were just beginning to bloom. On June 29 one quart of a solution of 13 ounces of nitrate of soda to the gallon was given and repeat- ed July 3, 7, 15 and 24 and August 8 with very satisfactory result. Weaker applica- tions of fertilizer were made later on, and the Fines continued in bearing until cut by rost. noi FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Embroidered pique stocks are the things for summer shirt waists. Some pretty ones are shown in two colors. The stock will be in pink, the little bow and turn over collar of white, or vice versa. Blue and white is another pretty combination. All white stocks with white or colored de- signs embroidered on them are very pretty t00. Mildewed linen may be restored by soap- ing the spots, while they are still wet, cov- ering them with fine powdered chalk, which should be well rubbed in. Obstinate spots of mildew will yield to the following treatment : Pour a quart of boiling water over two ounces of chloride of lime, strain this through a cloth, then add three quarts of cold water. Let the mildewed article stand in this for an entire day, then rinse thoroughly. The dressmakers and buyers have return- ed from Paris, London and Vienna and all have wonderful tales to tell, yet on the whole all have agreed on certain features for spring and summer wear. The clinging skirt is still in vogue. All skirts are fitted snugly about the hips and flare with much freedom from the knee line. There is a marked tendency toward fluffiness around the bottom of skirts. Tucking, pleating and shirring in every possible form is noted everywhere, in fact a gown that is devoid of this trimming has not much to recommend it. This of course means a great deal of attention will be paid to detail work, which gives a certain cachet and marks the masterhand. We may rely with positive certainty up- on every form of fancy open jackets, which will he with us till fall. Postilion and sacque backs are noticed on the latest im- portations. Latticed effects in narrow vel- vets are extremely elegant and impart a great deal of attractiveness to the garment. Oriental embroideries, bands of insertion and its more pretentious sister, bands of entredoux, not only trim gowns, but are frequently made entirely of it, with nar- row ribbon between as a connecting link. This year everyone talks of the shirt waist suit. Materials are sold that will go well for this costume, and many of the best dresséd women are getting their spring morning dresses that are heavier than cot- ton of one fabric. The Spring gowns are made often of mo- hair and of challis and nun’s veiling. For the Summer coarse linen, linen duck and chambray. There is one large indisputable reason behind these shirtwaist suits that is more powerful than fashion. That is a reason of climate. Last summer was such a scorch- ing one—honestly, that is the only adjec- tive to describe it—that all the daintily made cloth skirts were hung up in the farthest end of the closet and never even looked at when it is possible to escape them. They looked so hot—they were so hot that the thought of wearing them was intolerable. Women who came blithely out in whole suits of fresh ginghams caused a degree of envy in those who had counted on cloth skirts and shirtwaists that was more serious than any superior beauty could have caus- ed. In summer the tub has great influence on one’s nerves. Clothes that go to the laundry and come home smelling of sunshine and soap are as grateful to the tired body as iced lemonade is to the stomach. Every woman should have one dark skirt, at least, for constant summer wear, besides the thin tailor frock that serves for spring and the first chilly days of autumn. This skirt should be of lansdowne or silk mohair. In and out of fashion there is nothing more useful than a black or blue brilliantine gown. 1t should be made simply, lined with taffeta, if lined at all, and used for all emergencies. No material is so good for traveling. It shakes the dust keeps its color—if you get the right kind—and always looks smart and trig. Add cravat collar of black watered ribbon or taffeta, with turn over of white em- broidery, and patent leather belt, and a pair of the turn over cuffs, that are coming in fashion again, and you will attract at- tention, because you look so cool and so well dressed. Cleanliness is next toa North wind in the summer months; and yon can keep a mohair clean, and you can’t keep a cloth gown clean. Don’t burden it with a heavy cotton lining. If yon have ever thought there was anything cool in sateen or heavy cambric, banish the idea. China silk is the coolest of all linings for summer, and next to that taffeta and mercerized silk. A mohair skirt that has its seams well stitched, with ten inch facing at foot, also heavily stitch- ed, can be worn without a lining by a woman ’t too thin; but a drop skirt mercerized silk with taffeta flounce gives a better finish. The blouse need not be lined at all. Taffeta is entire- ly too hot for it, but China silk will serve. mete The cotton fabrics shown for the shirt- waist suits are very attractive. Figured fabrics are not in fashion. Pin dots and stripes hold their own. The broad stripes are overshadowed by the narrow ones, but the really fashionable thing is the shepherd’s plaid. Every woman really should own a shepherd’s plaid black and white gingham this summer. Then there are heaps of white goods in every fabric, dimity running ahead of them all. For the woman who has a washtub in her own house nothing is better than a half dozen, white gowns for summer, made into shirtwaist suits and worn with fancy stock collars. : Dark blue, sea green and China blue chambrays and linens make up into most effective shirtwaist suits and need not be washed very often. There is a madras sold usually for men’s shirts in old rose and green that is another admirable choice for summer. As for the building of these frocks, that is simple if one understands gooc lines and the good taste of treating cotton with the Fespece due to cotton keeping it in its place and not exalting it to the dignity of foulard. The new skirt patterns for these shirt waist suits are circular sometimes, but usually seven gored, with shaped flounce at foot or one that is vertically tucked. The flounce can be put on in points and covered with stitched bands. . The centre box pleat of the waist is some- times piped with white; the buttons are of linen or pearl; the sleeves are gathered in toa wristband that is sometimes finished with a narrow turnover cuff and always linked with buttons. White enamel and patent leather belts | will be worn with these suits more than colored ribbons, but the latter will reign supreme for collars. : | tles.’’ Remarkable Discovery Made By An Ex- ploring Party in South Dakota. There seems to be a natural telephone line between two mountains in the Black Hills range. On each side of an interven- ing valley twelve miles in width stand two high peaks which tower above the other mountains and bave long been known as landmarks, being called the twin peaks. These mountains are fully ten thousand feet above the range. Only on rare oceca- sions have these peaks been ascended, and little was known of their topography. | Some weeks ago a party of tourists deter- mined to make the ascent, and, forming into two parties, one for each peak, they took apparatus for signaling and expected to have pleasure and amusement by flash- ing the heliograph code across the interven- ing space, to the mystification of the peo- ple of the valley. The ascent was made, and while the people were making arrange- ments to singnal across one of the party on the north mountain was surprised to hear voices which apparently came from the air. He had moved about and the sound was no longer heard. By changing his position several times he discovered that at a certain spos on the mountain he could hear the voices, and it was not long before he found that they proceeded from the party on the other mountain. He called the attention of the others to the!’ phenomena and then they attracted the notice of the party on the south mountain and found that a conversation in an ordin- ary tone of voice was plainly heard from one mountain to another. There was only one place on the mountain where it could be heard, and it appeared to be a natural telephone. No shouting was necessary, and the words were perfectly distinct. Household Deodorizers. A deodorizer, it should he remembered, simply neutralizes the unpleasant odors of a room. and is in no sense a disinfectant. When a disinfectant is needed, as in case of sickness, it is always better to obtain one from a physician. Coffee is one of the best deodorizers which we have. It should be simply ground and passed around the room on a hot shovel, on which two or three live coals have been placed. Burned cotton or cotton rags are also valuable for this pur- pose. Aromatic vinegar and camphor are both excellent deodorizers, and may be sprinkled freely in a sick room. The prac- tice of some nurses who use cologne water, sprinkling it freely throngh the room by means of an atomizer, is very commendable, as it proves grateful and refreshing to a pa- tient. A pail of clean, cold water set in newly painted rooms is said to have a neutralizing effect on the poisonous odor, given out by new lead paint. It is safer, however, not to occupy such a room until it has become thoroughly disinfected and deodorized by pure fresh air. One of the simplest and safest deodorizers to use about the house is chloride of lime. Care should be taken to buy only the best quality and to purchase it only of a thoroughly trust- worthy chemist or druggist. Even fresh whitewash is a powerful purifier and disin- feotant of the atmosphere, and for that rea- son the cellar and the out-buildings, where there is any danger of poison from decay- ing animal or vegetable matter, should be frequently whitewashed. Doctor Struck Dead. Insane Man Dealt Fatal Blows from His Bed. Dr. R. Erskin Johnston, of the medical staff of the state hospital for the .insane at Danville, was killed by a patient Wednes- day evening. The patient who committed the deed is an Italian, who has been in the institution many years. He went to bed ill at noon, and Wednesday evening Dr. Johnston entered the room to take his temperature. ile was warned by the pa- tient to keep away from the bed, and Dr. Johnston called an assistant to assist him. The attendant held one hand of the patient, while the physician took the other, seating himself on the side of the bed. Disengag- ing his right Land, the Italian struck Dr. Johnston several blows. The doctor stag- gered out of the room, fell over and ex- pired. Where each of the blows took effect on the doctor’s body a puncture was found in the flesh, as if produced by a slender in- strument. The patient is of a treacherous nature, and the supposition is that he had fashioned a weapon, using probably a spoon. No instrament could be found about the room, but the patient had ample opportunity to secrete the weapon. An quest will be held and in the inter- im an autopsy, to determine whether death was caused by wounds or was due to to the shock. Dr.Johnston was a former resident of New York state, and was 35 years old. He was recently married to Miss Sweisport, a daughter of Dr. A. Sweisport, a former trustee of the hospital. oe sn ind Shopping In Cairo. During their stay in Cairo, the late Canon Liddon and his sister, Mrs King, oc- casionally went shopping, and the lady gives the following account of oriental bar- tering :. *‘De Nicola (the courier) asked the price of an article, and then offered one half ; the seller protested he never altered his price ; then. De Nicola folded up the goods, put them on a chair, and said, Very well do not waste more words. ‘I shall give yon so-and-so.’ The merchant screamed ; De Nicola gestioulated ; then they shook hands, tonched foreheads, ete., and I thought the matter was arranged, when De Nicola whispered to us, ‘Now the real battle is going to begin.’ They screamed, stamped, thumped, and finally De Nicola threw back all our purchases, and said we would go to another shop, naming it. At once the salesman caved in, and finally protested he’d rather give us his goods than that we should go away empty handed, and so the purchase was conducted with smiles, handshakings and the usual greetings of lip and forehead, and a black- sheesh was given us into the bargain. A RAGING ROARING Froob—washed down a telegraph line which Chas. C. El- lis, of Lisbon, Ia., bad 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 consamption and could not live. Then I began using Dr. King’s New Dis- covery and was wholly cured by six bot- Positively guaranteed for coughs, colds and all throat and lung troubles by F. P. Green, price 50 ots. —— ‘I think I'll have some of those crullers,”” said Jones at the lunch counter; “don’t you want some 9% ‘*‘No,’’ replied Smith; ‘‘they don’t agree with me.” “That so 2” ‘‘Yes: I couldn't even eat the hole in one without getting dyspepsia.”’—Philadelphia ecord. ——— Mann Hatton—What! You're not going to move ? Brook Lynn—Yes, we're obliged to. Mann Hatton—Why, you’re wife told mine you had the cutest little flat imagin- able. Brook Lynn—I know ; but some friends gave us a rubber plant at Christmas and its grown so fast we’ve got to move to give it more room. "Tis EAsy To 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 ; uever gripe or weaken. Only 25 cts. at Green’s drug store. Business Notice. Castoria CASTORIA FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. The Kind You Have Always Bought CHAS. H. FLETCHER. Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Money to Loan. NJ ONEX TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, McCalmont & Co. MN°CALMORT & CO. Nene? = LARGEST FARM farmer. lowest prices ; where the guarantee is as good as a earth where one can do better than at O.il.0i eres Ssiss. ~———HAVE THE—— sedis iiivriiitinivers 0 SUPPLY HOUSE == ei, CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a dollar to the 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 bond; where you can sell your corn, oats, wheat hay and straw for cash, at the highest market prices, and get time on what you buy. All who know the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them. SEE WHAT WE FURNISH : LIME—For Plastering or for Land. COAL—Both Anthracite and Bituminous. WOOD—Cut to the Stove Length or in the Cord. FARM IMPLEMENTS of Every Description. FERTILIZER—The Best Grades. PLASTER—Both Dark and Light. PHOSPHATE—The Very Best. SEEDS—Of all Kinds. WAGONS, Buggies and Sleighs. In fact anything the Farmer or Builder Needs. The man who pays for what he gets wants the best his money will buy. There is no place on’ McCALMONT & CO’S. 45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law, | 46-1 BELLEFONTE, PA —— a oe Joux C. MILLER. EpMUND BLANCHARD. Pres. Sec’y. J. Tuomas Mircuery, Treas. €CCece {JR EAL ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE C C . C A SS8SsSss TTTTTTT 00000 RRRRR III A NY Cc AA S S . 0 0 R R II AA COMPANY Cc A A Ss T 0 0 R R II A A ini Powis ; Baty 8, CU SIRE UH Sed) C AAAAAA T ) c C.A x 8 S T o.oo ER HA A CENTRE COUNTY CCCCCC A A SSSSSSs n 00000 R R HI A A Sis Real Estate and Conveyancing. Valuable Town and Country property for sale or rent. i ; 4 Properties cared for and rents collected The Kind You Have Always Bought, and Which has "been Loans Negotiated; in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of Titles B ined and has been made under his & rishi . ri 1 { es i d itle furnished CHAS. H. FLETCHER. personal supervision since its erties Qhsinaisondy infancy. Allow no one to de- Tipon:applisation, ceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and *“Just-as- 17 you hiv ee ar own boners good’’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the hands. heaith of Infants and Children—Experience against Experi- If you wish to buy or rent a Farm or ment. House consult us. If you wish to borrow money call on us. WHAT IS CASTORIA Is your title clear? It is to your inter- est to know. It is our’s to assure you. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Office Room 3, Bush Arcade, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Diaasent It contains BELLEFONTE, PA. neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its 45-47-1y Telephone connections age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Someone - ams cer ness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colie. It relieves Teeth- G 's Ph ing Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency, It assimi- reen’s armacy. lates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy ‘and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. ui isco lH cy rN tbc fin cn cnt tot fi iT 4 ' 2 GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS 3 3 (THER HEADS £ Bears the Signature of 2 : 4 MAY ACHE CHAS. H FLETCHER. 4 i ? i i THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT ] 2 but yours needn’t after the hint we In Use For Over 30 Years. 3 give you here. Green's Headache Cure always cures headache. It cures any kind of headache. More than that, it relieves sleep- THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. 46-413 | 2 lessness, melancholy or dejection. ————————————————————————— As a Discourager. Tommy Smith—This is the night your sister’s best feller comes, ain’t it? Willie Jones—Yes, but I guess she’s trying to shake him. =~ Tommy Smith—How d’yer know ? Willie Jones—She eat onions for supper to-night. oe —— Subscribe for the WATCHMAK. -New Advertisements. END seven 2¢. stamps and we will mail you a package of Quickmaid Rennet Tab- lets, for making ten quarts of delicious desserts, | a receipt book and a present valued at $2.00 all FREE. FRANKLIN, CO., Filbert St., Phila. 45.47-6m ; OTICE.—Notice is hereby given that I, the undersigned, have this 14th day of March 1901 purchased at Sherift’s Sale all the farm implements, live stock, household and kitchen furniture fate belonging to Sinus Stamm, Anna Stamm and William Stamm in Spring xp: and have left the same in the possession of the said Sinus Stamm, all Dersons are hereby notified not to purchase or meddle with the same or they will be dealt with secording b3 jaw, as the same belongs to me. W. H. by 46-11-4 Pine Grove Mills, Pa. PARPOX NOTICE. Cemmonwealth 1] In the Court of Quarter Ses- sions of the Peace in and (for the county of Centre, No. 9, ANE: Sessions, 1897. Charge, Arson. Prosecutor, W. F. Reynolds. Aug. 26th, 1897, defendant convicted of attempt to burn the Armory, etc. i Nov. 1st, 1897, 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 Harrisburg, on Wednesday the 17th day of April » A.D. 1901 at 10 o'clock, a. m. for the pardon of the said James Cornelly. April 1st, 1901, TAYLOR & JOHNSTON, ORVIS, BOWER & ORVIS Attys. for Applicant. t vs James Cornelly OTICE.—Notice is hereby given that sundry citizens of the county of Centre Nill present their petition to the Court of Quarter Sessions of Centre county, on Monday the 22nd day of April atten o'clock a. m., representing | that the Bald Fagle Nittany and Brush Valley turnpike road, leading from a point on the coun- ty line between the counties of Clinton and Cen- tre, between the villages of Lamar and Huston to the borough of Millbeim is for the entire distance named located in the county of Centre, and that it would be for the best interests of the people of the county for said turnpike to become a public road, free from tolls. and toll-gates, and prayin the Court to appoint ajury of five reputable citi- zens under the provisions of the Act of Assembly approved the 2nd day of June A. D. 1887 and its several Supplements, said jury to view and con- demn said turnpike for public use free from tolls and toll-gates and to assess the damages to which Harness Oil. J oreEa HARNESS OIL. A good looking horse and poor looking harness is the worst kind of a combination ——EUREKA HARNESS OII, 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. Sold everywhere in cans—all sizes. Made by STANDARD OIL CO. GIVE YOUR HORSE A CHANCE! 39-87-1y 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-Week'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. a, The Thrice-a-Week World's regular sub- scription price is only $1.00 per year. We of- the owners of said tustiptke may be entitled. + ORVIS, BOWER & ORVIS, 16-12-1t Attys. for Petitioners fer this great newspaper and the Warcumax togethar one year for $1.65. ; 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. mnt wot, afm GREEN'S PHARMACY, = Higa STREET, BELLEFONTE, - 44-26-1y PA. F =! Eg ggg eg SA I SG A gg ST Meat Markets. G* THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, r, thin or gristly ate I use only or LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fresh- est, pis by 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 Snore. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte. 43-34-Iy 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- shouts, hecause 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 away, but we will furnish you 800 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. ta ii { GETTIG & KREAMER, BELLEFONTE, Phair | Bush House Block 44-18 4 0 :