Bellefonte, Pa., April 26, 190I. FARM NOTES. —Many common evergreens can be trans- planted from the woods with ordinary care if not too large a size be taken. A plan of three feet, with good roots, will be more satisfactory than a six-foot one. Early spring is a good time for it. —For scours in calves give two or three tablespoonfuls two or three times a day of powdered charcoal until a cure is effected, which will not be long. If they do nof lick it readily from the hand, put it in their mouths, and they will soon take it freely. —1If the weather becomes warm do not be tempted to plant beans, squash, melons or sweet corn until May. A rule that is usually followed by some is to sow any kinds of seeds desired after the apple trees are in blossom, If the land is cold and damp the seeds will sometimes rot in the ground, thus necessitating another plant- ing. —Sal$ is a constituent of every part of the animal as well as the human body, and enters largely into the composition of the blood. Animals obtain some salt from their natural foods, but not enough for the most healthful growth. For the best re- sults it is absolutely necessary that all stock be regularly allowed a moderate quantity of salt. Salt may not be the elix- ir of life as some doctors are now claiming, but it is very essential to the health of ani- mals as well as of mankind. —Oae of the things that should be known by farmers is that nitrate is very soluable and is easily carried away by a heavy rain. If applied very early in the season it makes nearly all kinds of plants show vigorous growth, but later in the season its effects are not so easily noticed. apply it two or three times during the sea- son in small quantities, than to ap- ply a full allowance at once. A mixture of one part nitrate of soda and two parts dried ground blood will give better results on corn or cabbage than nitrate alone ; also for garden crops, but for wheat 100 pounds per acre, if applied this month, will be su- perior to blood, as wheat has but very little time for growth from now until harvest. The Southdown sheep has long held a leading place for quality of mutton pro- duced. This breed is well known to Amer- ican farmers, as it is not of recent introduc- tion. They oan he kept in larger flocks than some other breeds, and are capable of for- aging like the Merino. Used for crossing on common sheep, they effect a wonderful improvement. They are smaller than the Oxfords, Shropshires, Hampshires and other mutton breeds. At the Smithfield (England) show, a few years ago, five Southdown whether lambs, of an average age of ten months, showed an average | weight of 176 pounds, which surpassed the best Shropshire whethers of the same age. Tuisls a good record of ten months’ old ambs. —Lambs born in the winter months can be raised successfully, provided one has a warm stable, that is, such as can be closed against all currents of air, and if it has a southern exposure, so much the better. - If a lamb can attain to the age of 24 hours without becoming chilled, and can thereafter be kept dry and out ‘of currents of air, a very low temperature will not af- fect it. : Provisions should be made for feeding the ewes indoors, that it may not be neces- sary to remove them after the lambs are born, and they should have a liberal sup- ply of oats and bran in equal parts, roots: and good clover hay. Let sheep have ready access to salt and fresh water at all times. Lambs to catch the early market should be early introduced to the meal bin. If they do not commence to eat at two weeks of age, a few grains of sugar sprinkled over the meal is all that will be needed to teach em. The lambs should have an apartment ac- cessible to themselves only, in which feed must he constantly kept. It should com- prise clover hay, corn meal and bran. “Lambs thus fed should, at the age of six weeks, eat one pint of meal or cracked corn per day, and will be gaining at the rate of one pound daily. At the age of eight or ten weeks they will be ready for the city market, and will pay one a good profit for the care given. —Now that spring is here a few words upon turkey raising: will not be out of place. In the first place try to have the hens lay their eggs in a pen or poultry house where they can be gathered before ~ they chill. If the hens begin laying in March there will he great loss from not finding the nests hidden out. It is a good plan to keep the eggs until all the hens are done laying, in a moderate temperature, carefully turning every few days. The may be kept one month and hatch well. Lo Having a number of hens ready for the Te eggs, seb them all the same day as it is much better than on successive days. A few days’ difference in the age of poults is a t disadvantage to the younger ones. When a goodly number have been hatohed all of one age, give as many to one hen as she can safely hover. I find the plan I fol- low to work well, viz: Put both turkey and chicken hens with a flock of poults. - The turkey hen will then take them off to _ pasture in the morning, and the chicken hen will bring them home at night. Then again the chicken hen will wean the tark- eys too soon but the turkey hens will then take charge of the entire flock. When the poults are all out and dry re- move to a roomy dry house with plenty of ~ sanlight and place the hens with them. The first evening I give each one a half black pepper berry. The next morning I give bread and milk and onion tops- chop- ped fine mixed together. They will eat at the first feeding unless there are some siok- 17 ones. I find 16 impossibe to force feed own a poult as you can a chick with good results. Keep clean watér and crushed oyster shells continuously before them. Keep the poults confined three days, then if the _ day is bright let them out on the grass in a pe made of 12-ipch planks set on edge. ~ Have some kind of shade also. When I wish to feed grain I n by mixing mil- let seed, chopped kaffir corn, wheat and milo maize with the bread and milk, until they will get the grain along. Then feed whole grain. Give onion tops as long as they will eat them. This is my way of ~ managing poults, and I never lose one that is not deformed or very weak when hatched. ~ Do not feed poults and chicks together un- til they are at least one month old. Don’t ; raise pure bred stock and they will make you aoney.. It is better to | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. White pearl buttons that look like mere ks are extensively employed on the thin gowns. Some of the swellest of the shirtwaists from Paris are buttoned down the back. Sleeves are growing fuller, skirts wider and oollars lower. : Golf and cycling shirt waists do not vary much from the ordinary shirt waist, says Harper's Bazar, butshounld always be made with large enough sleeves to give full free- dom to the play of the muscles of the arm. The armholes must be a good size, and there must be nothing around the waist that in any way confines the figure. Many stout women cannot wear unlined shirt- waists, but the lining may be cut away around the shoulders ; and with thesleeves unlined, there is really not much differ- ence. There are flannel shirt waists, mo- hair shirt waists, and the wash silks—and these last are the smartest of any this year, for they really do launder marvelously well, better than any materials that require starch, White waists are smarter this year than ever, as are plain colors, but in the colors the stripes are considered more nov- el. These stripes are in three or four shades of one color, and are as a rule, im- ported by the shirtmakers. The waist with the yoke in the back, a very short yoke on the shoulders, fullness below the yoke, and blending a little at the belt in front, is an old pattern, but a favorite one again. The waists made with box-pleats, either large or small, are not satisfactory ; for when they are laundered it is almost impossible to have the pleats ironed in the shape that they originally were, and it is best to have something that will come out of the laundry in the same shape it goes in. Aphorisms: for Children.—Animal food once a day and in small quantities, if the teeth can masticate, is necessary to a rapid- ly growing child. Avoid a too nourishing diet in a violent- tempered child. Avoid seasoned dishes and salt meats, pastry, uncooked vegetables, unripe fruit, wine and rich cake. Never tempt the appetite when disin- clined. Insist on thorough chewing; a child who eats too fast eats too much. , Vary the food from day to day, but avoid variety at one meal. Take care that the child’s food is well cooked. Wine, beer and confections should never be given a young child. Give no food between meals ; the stom- ach requires rest, like any other organ of the body. Remember that overfeeding and the use of improper food kill more children than anything else. Give no landanum, no paregoric, no soothing syrup, no teas. Remember that the summer complaint comes chiefly from over-feeding, and the use of improper food, but never from teeth- ing. When children vomit and purge give them nothing to eat for three or four hours. . Do not bring a child under three years of age to your table to eat. To keep the skin clear of freckles re- quires constant attention and frequent ap- plications, since exposure to freckle-creat- ing sunbeams will cause them to return. Any good cold cream is a protection, while cucumber milk is a most satisfactory lotion for the burnt orange polka dots. Scrub your face carefully at night with a com- plexion brush, strong, pure castile suds und add a little alcohol to the water. It will have a depressing effect upon the’ blackheads that flourish in the spring- time. : : Here is a formula for a freckle lotion : borax, 60 grains ; potassium chlorate, 240 grains ; aloohol, 1 drahm ; glycerine, 2 drahms ; rose water, sufficient to make 3 ounces. Dissolve as much as possible of the two salts and filter. Apply with a soft sponge twice a day. Buy a chiffon veil. Never use soap and water on the face just before going out of doors or directly after coming in. School girls are having attractive frocks made up for the summer in the Russian blouse style, like those of the small chil- dren, says Harper’s Bazar, and also in sail- or style. These are made of pique, linen, galatean, or striped percales, or in serge or ‘| flannel. Sailor suits are more elaborate than they were. The skirts flare more, the col- lars have more rows of braid, and the vest is more elaborately embroidered. The shape is the same in all instances, hut the original model is rather lost sight of in the white pique and linens that have embroid- ered collars and embroidered vests. For- tunately, the style is generally a becoming one, but care must be taken shat there is not too much fullness at the sides of the blouse, for that makes a girl look abso- lutely shapeless. Khaki is used also in these suits, and is a good wearing mater- ial for summer. These frocks are suitable for girls until they are 12 years of age, but after that they look better in a more closely fitted waist. : In the choice of furniture, varnished oak is not recommended. The old finish, that the wood may darken with age, is to be preferred. One of the tricks of the trade to assist time is to use strong ammonia on it. The dark, almost black finish now so pop- ular as Flemish oak is, of coarse, merely a finish. The inexperienced buyer must con- sider the wood work of the room in which she will put the fashionable and effective Flemish oak furniture. It will never do with light or red woodwork, such as is found in many rented apartments, and set against a glossy finish of doors and window casings it is very much out of harmony. A ‘‘flat”’ or oil finish is needed. There are many points to_ bear in mind before the standing furniture of a room is ordered ; the backgrounds of wood work, wall cover- ing and carpet are most important in their relation to the chairs and table which they may effectively contrast or harmonize with, or with which they may hopelessly and discordantly clash. 4 Milk je the latest and most approved dietetic fad. The woman who is fair and with 40 staring her in the face and who is ed determined not to be fat makes her break-, fast and launch of milk and fresh fruit. She { dines on a quarter of-a pound of lean roast meat, with enough fresh, green vegetables to ‘‘make bulk in her insides,’’ as Tommy Atkins would say. The fresh, wholesome beauty of the young Queen of Holland is attributed to her frugal diet of the national milk and cheese, and the extraordinary vi- tality of the aged Roman Pontiff is another evidence of what a rigorous diet will do for even so delicate a man as Pope Leo has ale val- | ways been. The milk diet is of more by ue th of washes, and as a oy ‘and cut off the individual limb above. Trimming of Trees and Vines. A Timely Article by an Expert. As we are arranging our work for spring there is one thing very important to be con- sidered, and that is the trimming of our trees, vines and shrubs. And to do this ‘we should in the first place study the gen- eral disposition of the tree or vine to be trimmed and comply with their nature as near as possible. In trimming there are two things to be kept in view, namely : The present and the future form of the shape. If it be fruit trees and we desire low heaps we should begin fo trim when small in such a manner as to lead and en- courage the growth of the tree in that di- rection or if spreading or high trees do like- wise always, keeping in view what we want, and at the same time assist nature. Don't cut and slash without any respect for the poor free, for every cut we make we inflict a wound which nature must heal. If we do our work right and with care we are doing a kindness to the tree, if we do it without respect we are simply murdering our trees and the result is decay and death. What would you think of a surgeon who would operate on a patient, who had a broken limb, with an axe or saw, and not stitch or bandage the limb after operating on it? If he understands his business he will use his utmost skill to protect and assist nature to heal the affected part, and save the life of the man. Why, if a surgeon would do an act of that kind you would cry aloud ‘‘hang him, hang him!’ But if some one olimbs up a shade or fruit tree and cuts limbs off 15 or 20 feet high and six or seven inches in diameter, uses no wax, paint or anything to protect the wounds, as likely as not you would hear some one say, why, he has trimmed his trees nicely,’”” we would better cry ‘‘mur- der, murder,’’ that is to the tree, for just there we are going contrary to nature, not assisting, and the result will be death to the tree. The writer has seen in every town he has visited large shade trees buichered up in that style. Would it not have been better if they had been sawed of at the ground ? Destruction, destruction, why ? because the tree was too tall, too wide, too big, or what? No, be- cause they did not have the proper trim- ming when young. That is, nature was not assisted in the right direction. Would you suppose for one minute if a man was pub in a box without air that he would sit down and be contented, no, not much would he, he would be standing on his tip toes to see out and get fresh air, just so with shade treesin a street, blocked up with houses on all sides, they are forced to grow up between the houses where they can get sun light and air, and because they have grown up thick and stragly they must be topped and the owner thereof expects nature to heal the wounds, make new tops, protect his residence from hot sun and cold winter. ‘“‘Absured idea!’ It is not necessary to butcher trees in this style. If we will but take a walk in the forest and there take a lesson from nature, we will find all sorts apd kinds of trees growing in the most beautiful man- ner of style and forms, each adding beauty to the surroundings. There the ax and saw as yet have not created sounds wor bas intelligent man laid hands up- on nature to bend her from her course. Now let ua, as benefactors assist nature and not destroy wholly or in part that which is one of the essentials in the way of health, water supply, protection from beat and cold. Some one may say why we can’t comply with all the requirements of nature, we don’t know how to trim onr trees... Why you surely know what you want, if yon don’t who does? In trim- ming trees keep an eye on the buds that areon the limbs; if a spreading top is want- ed cut the limb off one half inch from a bud on the lower side, that bud will grow down and out, and if a high head is wans- ed cut the limb off one half inch above a | bud on the upper side, likewise if there is a gap in the top look for buds or twigs in- clined in the direction of the open place It will be but a short time till you will see your frees like good children going in the right way. The best time to trim is just when the buds are opening, then you can tell which are alive and good, buds for leading. Never let two limbs grow across each other for it will spoil both, keep this in view when the tree is small, when there are two limbs inclined to grow across cus the one off, that will show the least—when out—and keep all leaders or suckers trim- med out. For any large limbs that muss be cut out, nse one-fourth rosin and one- half bees wax 2 oz. tallow, melt altogther, keep thin and apply while hot, or use some good paint, although the wax is far the best as oil of any kind is not good. Fruit trees should be trimmed to suit one’s fancy ; so far as high, spreading or low tops are concerned, but keep the tops open to admit a free circulation of air and sun- light, keep out all laterals or suckers, watch the various scales, wash every spring with a weak solutinn of lye applied with a mop or brush. There are many shrubs that should not be trimmed in the spring. Wergelias, Dentzins and Mock orange should not be as they flower on the wood of the preceeding year’s growth, hence the shrubs should not be trimmed till they are done blooming, when the old wood should be cut back or ont, thus permitting the Powih of new wood which is to flower the ollowing summer. Spireas, Lilacs, Al- theas and Honeysuckles may be trimmed in early spring but the branches should on- ly be reduced enough to keep them in good shape ; the old wood should occasionally be thinned out. The Hydrangea Pancicu- latra should be gently cut back and thinned in the spring. — Huntington Journal. Struck By Avalanche. Two Locomotives Swept Down With the Slide—Four Trainmen Were Killed. A terrible accident occurred Thursday on the Colorado and Northwestern road, near Boulder,Col. Two big engines attached to a passenger train, coming from Ward to Boulder, were struck by a huge snowslide and hurled into the chasm below. Four trainmen were killed. They were engineers Hannon and Fitzgerald, fireman Miller and conductor Bair. The second firemen has not yet been ac- counted for, and it is believed he is also dead. The bodies have not been recover- The passenger train left Ward for Bounld- er, drawn by two engines. When the train reached Boomerville the engines were uncoupled, and started up the hill to buck the snow, which was deep on the tracks. A sharp curve occurred near the apex of the mountain, and just as the engines started to round the curve a vast avalanche of snow and earth was looséned from above. It came down with a terrific force, and gained momentum every second. It is said that the train, which was heavily loaded with passengers, was not touched | A be ~~ | one hundred snd twen the United ‘Sermon by a Boy of Eight Years. Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Carroll, of Chester, have a“8-year-old hoy, Richard Norman Carroll, who, at the age of 3 years, took to elocution; at 5 was a Bible student and can now deliver a very fair sermon. His Easter sermon was repeated on Tues- day evening in Trinity Methodist Episcopal On Easter Sunday 700 persons listened to the boy preacher’s words. : Tis Easy To FEEL GoobD.—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. 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. Mex EY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. ’ J. M. KEICHLINE, church, his text being ‘Consider the Lilies.’ |” McCalm ont & Co. MV cCALMONT & CO.————————0 ———HAVE THE—— ~ a A oO LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE Er IE SRN TINY AISAIL I avers evssresnstirseratisf) I= ——N— 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 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. the house know the high standard of the goods, and what their guarantee means to them. ——=SEE WHAT WE FURNISH : All who know 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 McCALMONT & CO’S. Memphis Physican Murdered. EE ———————— Harness Oil. Dr. H. 8. Soruggs, Jr., who resided at Aulona, a suburb of Memphis, Tenn., was found sitting upright in his buggy earl Wednesday. A bullet hole behind the left ear showed that he had undoubtedly been assassinated by some person, who climbed A A RAGING ROARING FLOOD—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. covery and was wholly cured by six bos- tles.”” Positively guaranteed for coughs, colds and all throat and lung troubles by F. P. Green, price 50 cts. : New Advertisements. ANTED—TRUSTWORTHY MEN AND WOMEN to travel and advertise for old established house of solid financial stand- ing. Selafys $780 a year and expenses, all payable in cash. No canvassing required. Give reference and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Address Manager, 3556 Caxton Bldg., Chicago, 46-16-16w. END seven 20. stampsand we will mail you a package of Quickmaid Rennet Tab- lets, for making ten quarts of delicious desse! a receipt book and a present valued at $2.00 al FREE. - FRA LIN, CO. 45.47-6m Filbert St., Phila. OURT PROCLAMATION.— Whereas the Honorable J. 3. Love, President Jud of the Court of Common Pleas of the 49th Judie District, consisting of the ccunty of Centre having issued his precept, bearing date the 1st, of Mar, 1901, to me directed for holding a Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the Peace in Bellefonte, for the county of Centre and ta.commence on the 4th Monday of April., being the 22nd day of April, 1901, and to continue two weeks, notice is hereby given to the Coroner, Jus- tices of the Peace, Aldermen and Constables of said county of Centre, that they be then and there in their proper persons. at 10 o'clock in the fore- noon of the 22nd with their records, inquisitions, examinations, and their own remembrance, to do those things which to their office appertains to be done, and those who are bound in recognizances to prosecute against the prisoners that are or shall tn the jail of Centre county, be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be just. : Given under my hand, at Bellefonte, the lst day of Mar., in the year of our Lord, 1901, and the | -fourth year of the inde- | pendence of 8. = CYRUS BRUNGART, Then I began using Dr. King’s New Dis- |. upon the back of the vehicle as the physi- J UBERA Sian Ja Teturning from visiting a) patient. : e horse wandered along the way for HARNESS several hours before the crime was discov- ered. There is no clue to the murderers. OIL. A good looking horse and poor looking harness is the worst kind of a combination ——EUREKA HARNESS OIL— GIVE YOUR HORSE 4 CHANCE! 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. 89-37-1y Prospectus. TEE 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 asa publisher of first news has given a ecircula- tion wherever the English language is spok- en—and you want it. Z The Thrice-a-Week World's regular sub- scription price is only $1.00 per year. We of- fer this great newspaper and the Warcmman together one year for $1.65. ; 4 418 45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law. | 46-413 BELLEFONTE, PA Castoria. Real Estate. Jonn C. MILLER. Epyuxp BLANCHARD. es. r Sec’y. J. THoMAs MITCHELL, Treas. : cocoeg REAL ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE Cc A 8888888 TTTTTTT 00000 RRRRR III A Cc AA 8S 8 T 0 0 RB II AA COMPANY Cc A A Ss 0 0 R R II A A —O Fa % AAAAAL % x 3 9 RB DE I AAAARA A c 5 A s T 0 0 ER H A A CENTRE COUNTY ¢ceceee A A SSSSSsS n 00000 R R II A A Real Estate and Conveyancing. Valuable Town and Country property. for sale or rent. : Properties cared for and rents col The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been pe > renisellecied : Loans Negotiated. in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of : = and has been made under his Titles Examined. . 2: CHAS. H. FLETCHER. personal supervision since its Certified Abstracts of Title furnished infancy. Allow no one to de- application. ceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as- Hf youhaves Farm or Town property . r sal t good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the oy oF YOU piace J ju our health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experi- If you wish to buy or rent a Farm or ment. ouse 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, Paregorie, Office Room 3, Bush Arcade, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains BELLEFONTE, PA y : neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its 45-47-1y Telephone connections age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverish- EE ————————————————————— ness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teeth- " ing Troubles, cures Constipation and Fiatulency. It assimi- Green’s Pharmacy. lates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The 3 Mother's Friend. Boeeetilles fi, tt, Bent ofl | oilllie all | woilllt. fh 5 ’ : a £ GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS . : ( )THER HEADS i £ Bears the Signature of : £ 4 MAY AC] CHAS. H FLETCHER. : ACHE, : z 4 THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT ! : s £ but yours needn’t after the hint we In Use For Over 30 Years. ; 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. 46-4-13 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. ots el mc ntl atl Alt ill hell til tlt GREEN’S PHARMACY, HigH STREET, BELLEFONTE, - PA. 26-1y = Mtn mst * & ll Tg Meat Markets. GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by bu ; or Ny oats Toor ying, Joo, : LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my custom8rs with the fresh est, choicest, Tested and muscle ms ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices a no higher than poorer meats are eise- where. . I always have —DRESSED POULTRY,—— Game in season, and any kinds of meats you want. J Try My SHop. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte. 4 43-3¢-Iy AVE IN YOUR MEAT BILLS. There is no reason why you should use poo: meat, or pay exorbitant ‘prices for tender juicy steaks. ood meat is abundant here: shouts pecause good cattle, sheep and calves are , Ko 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 &ooD EAT, at prices that you have Lik : . elsewhere for very poor. . Re GIVE US A TRIAL— and see if you don’tsave in the long run and have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea- son) than have been furnished Jou, Gel : GETTIG & KREAMER, BELLEFONTE, PA. Bush House Block, =k
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers