Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 10, 1901, Image 5

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

    Ty EE SAL
Bellefonte, Pa., May 10, 190l.
EE —————————————
FARM NOTES.
—Take a log the length of the harrow,split
in two and attach each end of it to a har-
row, hy means of a stout wire about
six feet long, placing the oval side of the log
down. Such an implement works well in
smoothing the surface after the harrow.
—E. Dickenson, in Farm and Home.
—White Wyandottes are recommended
by one very good authority as a typical
fowl for the farmer, being blocky, broad in
the breast, with meaty body and having a
low rose comb. The hens are excellent
winter layers. The chickens are hardy
and make flesh development equal to that
of the Barred Plymouth Rock. They are
great favorites with broiler raisers.
—The osage orange will grow to a large
size if planted like other trees. It is free
from disease, can endure severe cold and
produces a hard wood. As a hedge plant
it has no superior, provided the plants are
trimmed and properly trained the first three
ears. If allowed to grow on the north an
excellent wind-break, though not equal to
the evergreen arbor vitae for that purpose,
but it will last much longer than the latter.
—There is no such diseased condition of
the horse’s mouth as lampers. Sometimes,
when they are changing their temporary
teeth for permanent ones, there is a slight
inflammation around the root of the tooth,
bus this only lasts a few days and never
extends to the bars of the mouth. Do not
allow any one to cut or burn your horse's
mouth under any circumstances, as there
is no disease that such treatment will
benefit.
—Tapeworms sometimes infest poultry
“to such an extent that they become very
troublesome. No less than nine varieties
are known to infest fowls, and when fowls
are so infested they become distinctly un-
profitable, both for egg production and for
fattening. One medical authority advises
the use of one teaspoonful of powdered
pomegranate root bark for every 50 fowls.
It is, however, easier to prevent than to
cure such troubles, and the necessity for
greater cleanliness is apparent. The same
ground should not be used for confining
fowls year after years.
—Complete fertilizer is one which con-
tains the three essential fertilizing con-
stituents, i. e., nitrogen, phosphoric acid
and potash.
Nitrogen exists in fertilizers in three
distinet forms, viz., as organic matter, as
ammonia, and as nitrates. It is the most
expensive fertilizing ingredient.
Organic nitrogen is nitrogen in combi-
nation with other elements either as vege-
table or animal matter. The more valuable
sources are dried blood, dried meat, tank-
age, dried fish, and cotton seed meal.
Ammonia is a compound of nitrogen
more readily available to plants than or-
ganic nitrogen. The most common form
is sulphate of ammonia, or ammonium
sulphate. It is one of the first products
that results from the decay of vegetable or
animal substances.
Nitrates furnish the most readily avail-
able forms of nitrogen. The most com-
mon are nitrate of soda and nitrate of
potash (saltpeter.)
Phosphoric acid, one of the most essen-
tial fertilizing ingredients, is derived from
materials called phosphates. It does not
exist alone, but in combination, most com-
monly as phosphate of lime in the form of
bones, rock phosphate and phosphatic slag.
Phosphoric acid occurs in fertilizers in
three forms—soluble, reverted and in-
soluble phosphoric acid.
In natural or untreated: phosphates the
phosphoric acid is insoluble in water and
not readily available to plants. Suoper-
phosphate is prepared from these by grind-
ing and treating with sulphuric acid, which
makes the phosphoric acid more available
to plants. Superphosphates are sometimes
called acid phosphates.
Potash, as a constituent of fertilizers,
exists in a number of forme, but chiefly as
chlorie or muriate and as sulphate. All
forms are freely soluble in water and are
believed to be nearly. if not quite, equally
available, but it has been found that the
chlorides may injuriously affect the quality
of tobacco, potatoes and certain other crops.
The chief sonrces of potash are the potash
salts from Stassfurt, Germany—kainit.
sylvinit, muriate of potash, sulphate of
soda, and sulphate of potash and magnesia.
Wood ashes and cotton-hull ashes are also
sources of potash.
—I have found early peas my most
remunerative garden crop. I select the
right varieties for actual table quality and
see that they are picked when not too
young or too old, taking them to the con-
sumer as soon as picked.
Any pea that has passed through a mid-
dleman’s bands is spoiled. The pea picked
to-day is always handled so as to be eaten
for to-morrow’s dinner. I can keep them
over a single night by putting in a cellar
cool as to cause a dew upon the pods when
brought ont next morning. The Premium
Gem and Abundance are the kinds selected
after long searching among varieties.
I formerly made successive plantings as
late as June 1st, but since the advent of
the pea lcuse I put in all peas by May 1st.
This year I shall go light on Abundance
and put in a patch of Alaska. If handled
quite fresh and sweetened a bit when cook-
ing, these will not he complained of.
The few peas planted last year I put in
the apple orchard and did not see a louse.
Ishall plant peas more extensively this
year, hoping that the shade will again
prove effectual. Professor Johnson recom-
mends the Alaska as in a certain degree
louseproof. This kind is also of a better
eating quality than most of the early, round
sorts. Examination shows it to beslightly
wrinkled.
The foregoing is the experience of a Rural
New Yorker correspondent, who farther
says on the subject of shade: I find the
orchard an admirable place to raise most
garden crops. Potatoes may be made to
gy fine vines, but a small yield of tubers.
The trees both prevent evaporation from
the surface and exhaust the moisture from
below. A wide diversity of climate may
be found between She defise Shade and the
more open spots. Where vacancies occur
corn did well. re
Lettuce grew nicely where too shady for
other crops. Beans and take kindly
to partial shade. Through a period of ten
years I have found the shade of apple trees
an ideal place to grow the Cuthbert Fey
berry. A little more moisture is needed,
perhaps, but the vines seem to come through
without winter killing. A like experience
with the Agawam blackberry has not prov-
en 80 favorable. A blight of the leaves
has resulted in the fruit taking ona faster
less flavor when ripenit This vari®y I
should plant on elevated land, with full
exposure to sun and winds,
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
A beauntifal definition of home was given
by Lady Aberdeen in the address delivered
by her before the recent meeting at Toronto
of the National Council of Women. ‘“What
is that indefinable something that makes a
home; that reveals itself in the hooks and
pictures, in the arrangement of the rooms,
in the preparation for a guest, in the tones
of the children, in the expression of hus-
band and wife? We cannot describe if, but
we recognize it at once when it is present,
and no house can be truly a home without
some measure of it. We do not need just
houses were we can eat heartily and sleep
well, but we want homes, full of rest and
peace and beauty and refreshment.”
For certain occasions and for country
wear sailor hats are just as fashionable as
they have ever been. The newest are rath-
er higher in the crown, and are either trim-
med with a simple band or, if for boating
or cycling, often with a bow of waterproof
ribbon and a fancy quill. Later on it is
more than likely colored silk handker-
chiefs, caught up at the side with contrast-
ing quills, will serve for trimming.
A hollow, caved-in chest is a condition
for which very often the afflicted one her-
gelf is responsible. If one is in ill
health it is a different matter. Disease
will cause the lungs to shrink and contract,
and then depression of the chest is un-
avoidable. Faull, perfect development of
the chest is as natural as red lips or bright
eyes. Breathe properly, carry yourself
with vim and use your backbone instead of
a harness made of steels, whalebones and
pink satin. Then you will bea real flesh
and bone woman, not a fashion plate held
together with hooks and eyes aud braced
up with a corset that makes one’s equator
feel as hard as an oak tree or a concrete
pavement.
The day of the woodeny, corset-leashed
figure has departed— praise be to the gods !
The present mode is the rational one of
natural soft lines. The slender woman en-
tirely shuns corsets and wears a canning
little girdle of tapes or ribbons that brings
absolute comfort and yet holds the abdo-
men in place and gives a support for petti-
coat and gown. Now she knows the joy
of full lung expansion—a privilege which
civilized women have only acquired in re-
cent years. The girdle is worn loose enough
that the breathing can come from the
diaphragm. Now let me suggest some ex-
ercises which will make you as supple as a
Hindu acrobat.
Stand in a doorway—a narrow doorway
preferred. Place the palms of the hands
flat on the door casing, the tips of the fin-
gers being placed at the height of the shoul-
ders. Walk through the door without re-
moving your hands until you are the length
of your arms away. At first you will de-
clare you cannot do it, hut keep on day
after day and the first thing you know you
will become so supple that you will float
through the door after the hygienic fashion
just described. And it is such fun; ask
your friends to try it. It looks so easy—
but it isn’t. This exercise draws back the
shoulder blades, bringing into play all the
important chest muscles, It will make
your throat full and pretty. and the bony
girl will find that it will help fill up the
ugly hollows in her neck and throat and
chest. Night and morning walk through
the doorway fifty times.
Breathing exercises are invaluable if one
would have a high chest, firm, fall bust
and a waist round and supple. Nature did
not intend us to waddle about with droop-
ing chests, looking like consumptives ready
to give up. Expand your lungs to the
limit. Raise your chest and keep it raised.
Practice the exercises as they are given here,
but make it a rule to breathe correctly all
the time. It is quite as necessary to get
all the bad air out as it is to get plenty of
fresh air in. When you rise in the morn-
ing slip on a hath robe and bedroom slip-
pers. Open the windows. To take breath-
ing exercises without perfect ventilation in
the room is to waste your time.
Place yourself in an erect, easy position,
with one foot a little forward, allowing the
weight to rest upon it~ Put the arms
akimbo. with fingers pressing on the ab-
dominal muscles in front and the thumbs
on the muscles on either side of the spine.
Hold the head straight and the hips back,
the same with the shonlders,chest high and
full. Take a deep, tranquil breath, but
one that will cause the chest to rise and
fall fully and freely at every effort. Do
this twenty times. In the act of inspira-
tion take in as much air as you can hold.
In the act of respiration give ont as little’
as possible. This is particularly necessary
in effusive breathing, which is excellent for
chest development. Draw in a fall breath
and send it forth in a prolonged sound of
the letter H. Never mind if you do sound
like a steam radiator ready to explode.
You will get a chest, and the girl who
laughs and sneers will not. °
Exercise in expulsive breathing: Draw
in a full breath and emit it with a lively
expulsive force, still clinging to your H
sound. Do not prolong it like yon do in
your effusive breathing. Let it bea sort
of snort, the breath being projected into
the air. Before going to sleep give your
lungs an air bath. Lie flat on the back
with no pillow under the head. Place the
arms close to the sides, then inhale and ex-
hale slowly, allowing yourself a rest of five
or ten seconds between breaths. Do this
fifteen times. Then, with arms extended
straight out across the bed, breathe slowly
and deeply fifteen times more. You will
sleep like a top. :
It is strange how things grow when we’
brood over them. The magic bean that
shot up to the clouds in a single night is
nothing to the phenomenal growth that a
trouble or wrong con take on if we plant
the seed in some silent hour, and water it
with a few tears. We have a little cough,
for instance. Instead of taking our ail-
ments ont into the sunlight we began to
brood over them. We recall pathetic cases
of young lives blighted by consumption.
We dig back into our family history and
rake up ancestors who had gong , and be-
fore we know it we are trembling on the
brink of the grave, in imagination at least.
“Don’t brood !”’ These two words are a
fine motto for women. Women worry and
Vivicess: Sp emselyes and $he)® adie oo
much. ey not only cross ges before
they come to them, bunt they go out of their
way to build them. There is no reason
for taking life too seriously. We can
labor better and accomplish more to the ac-
Sompaniment of laughter than tears, and
the best medicine for an aching heart or a
isk Jody is a good, hearty, blood-stirring
augh, , 4
The very tight bodice has disappeared
entirely. The shirt waist is probably re-
sponsible for the loose effects now so popu-
lar; but, however that may be, the gown
that fitted the figure like wax and that had
every appearance of being stiffened with
iron instead of whalebone is no more seen.
Wife-Beater Consents to a Whipping.
Anthony Still,Joseph Bassett and Joseph
Goldboro, three negroes with good reputa-
tions, were recently brought to the jail in
Camden, N. J. They were charged with
tying Joseph Fischer, of Sadlertown, to a
tree and beating him with switches.
Fischer's wife is asister of Still. Earlier
in the week Fischer beat his wife so that
she has since been in hed. Fisher was re-
pentant after abusing his wife, and when
Still told him he should he punished for
the act Fischer agreed. It was proposed
he should be switched for his act, and to
this he consented.
Fisher was accordingly taken into the
woods far from any house, and, after being
stripped to the waist, was tied to a tree.
The punishment agreed upon was twenty
lashes. Long birch rods cut in the woods
were used. The men laid on the whips
with vigor, and almost every blow brought
blood. Fischer groaned but made no other
outery.
He kept up until the twelfth blow had
been given and then fainted. He was then
cut loose and revived. He was taken home
and his lacerated back treated.
Fischer did not make the complaint
against his torturers until others heard of
the whipping, and then he was compelled
to make it by the authorities. Fischer in
turn has been arrested for the beating he
gave his wife. He is not bitter againsi the
men who beat him, and thinks he should
not have been arrested, having expiated
his offense by accepting the whipping.
Business Notice.
Castoria
CASTORIA
FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears thie CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Castoria.
AS T.0 BR IL. A
cC A. 8S T.0 RI. A
c A 8ST OR'1 A
C 2S T'O RI A
Cc A 8 T 10 BR TA
coo
BEARS
THE
SIGNATURE
OF
CHAS. H FLETCHER.
THE
KIND
YOU HAVE
ALWAYS BOUGH1
In Use For Over 30 Years.
CCC A 8S T 0 R 1 A
C A 8S T 0 R I A
C A 8 T 0 R I A
C A S T 0 R I A
C A 8 T 0 BR 1 A
ccc A S T 0 R I A
46-19-1y The Centaur Co., New York City.
For Sale.
Roc FARMS.
J. HARRIS HOY, Manager,
Office, No. 8 So. Allegheny St.
Bellefonte, Pa.
Horses, Cows, Sheep, Shoats, Young Cat-
tle and Feeders for sale at all times.
The prize winning Hackney Stallion
“PRIDE OF THE NORTH’
is now permanently located at Rock Farms.
SERVICE FEE $10.00.
43-15-1v
JOR SALE.—L offer my entire lot of
racing bred horses for sale consisting of
THREE STALLIONS,
by such sires as
“DIRECTOR 2:17,
“BROWN HAL" 2:12,
‘‘MONEDALE” 2:18.
—— LEQ
MARES AND GELDINGS
which will make elegant road horses and some
of them first class race horses.
Anyone wishing a horse for either purpose will
do well to call and examine them at my stables
in DuBois Pa., before purchasing elsewhere.
JOHN E. DuBOIS,
46-10-2m DuBois, Pa
ES —————
Restaurant.
0 YOU GET
HUNGRY ?
4 Of course you do. Every body
does. But every body does not
know that the place to satisfy that
hunger when in Bellefonte is ai
Anderson's Restaurant, opposite the
Bush House, where clean,
tasty mesls can be had at all hours.
Oyster. and Game in season.
Ct.
DO YOU
PLAY POOL?
1f you do, ou will find excellent
Pool'and Biliard tables, in connec-
tion with the Restaurant,
DO YOU USE
BOTTLED BEER?
If you do, Anderson is the man to
sup) yon. He is the only licensed
por oon Bx Tigh Bod
su on e and pures!
Ly Wil ail orders from po of
town, promphiy and carefully, either
- by the keg or in bottles. A 8
JOHN ANDERSON,
44-28-6m 4
Bellefonte, Pa;
New Advertisements.
McCaimont & Co.
ANTED—TRUSTWORTHY MEN
AND WOMEN to travel and advertise
for old established house of solid financial stand-
in cash. canvassing required. Give reference
and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope.
Address Manager, 355 Caxton Bldg., Ohicago.
6-16w.
END seven 2c. 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. FRA
CO.
45.47-6m Filbert St., Phila.
Telephone, .
A LONG DISTANCE
TELEPHONE.
COMBINES PERFECT LOCAL SERV-
ICE WITH THE ADVANTAGES COM-
ING FROM ALL LONG DISTANCE
SUBSCRIBERS.
From A CommerciaL Staxp Point THE
TELEPHONE Yieups LArcer ProrITs oN
THE INVESTMENT THAN ANYTHING ELSE IN
THE WORLD.
As A HousgHOLD EQUIPMENT ITS
VALUE CANNOT BE ESTIMATED.
mn
THE RATES ARE MODERATE.
CENTRAL PENNA. TELEPHONE AND
SUPPLY COMPANY.
45-46 tf
Jewelry.
Wome GIFTS
ei) Hos,
STERLING SILVER.
COMBINE
BEAUTY, USEFULNESS
AND
DURABILITY,
for these reasons nothing else
is quite so fitting for the occa-
sion.
Articles for every use in the
best expression of taste.
smn | (ns
F. C. RICHARD’S SONS,
41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE PA
Williams’ Wall Paper Store.
U INTEND
-BEAUTIFYING HOME
3 Be or b Chi Eh bi
THIS SPRING
Certainly you do and we wish to call
your attention to the size and quality
of our stock of
tessevens WALL PAPER...
It consists of 50,000 rolls of the most
beautiful and carefully selected stock
of Wall Paper ever brought
TO BELLEFONTE
o
SPECIALTIES——o
Our specialties consist of a large
line of beautiful Stripes, Floral De-
signs, Burlap Cloth Effects and Tap-
estries. : .
0
tevnneessOUR PRICES.........
Are right, ranging in price from be. to
. 81.00 per roll. We have a large line of
Brown Backs at ‘5c. and 6c. per roll
with match ceiling and two band bor-
der at 2c. per yard. Alsoa large assort-
ment of White’ Blanks 6e. to 10c. per
Toll and matched up in perfect combina-
ons. : ;
Our Ingrains and Gold Papers are more beautiful
than ever before with 18in. blended borders
and ceilings to match, in fact anything
made in the Wall Paper line this year
we are able to show you.
Wide:
ine SEILLED WORKMEN...
Are necessary to put on the paper as it
should be put on. We have them and
ure sbie to do anything in the business.
‘e do
Painting,
Graining,
Paper Hanging,
House Decorating,
Sign Writing, Etc.
riseEiae TRY US AND BE CONVINCED...
Also desler in
Picture and Room Moulding,
Oil Paintings,
Water Colors,
Window Shades,
Paints,
Oils,
Glass, Ete.
§. H. WILLIAMS,
1 46-12-3m High Street, BELLEFONTE, PA’
iB SERS SR
ing. Salary $780 a year and expenses, all payable |
VALMONT & CO.
earth where one can do better than at
46-4-13
Money to Loan.
Mover TO LOAN on good security
and houses for rent.
J. M. KEICHLINE,
45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law,
Insurance.
EO. L. POTTER & CO.,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS,
Represent the best companies, and write policies
in Mutual and Stock Companies at reasonable
ies, Office in Furst’s building, opp. the Sort
onse
FRE INSURANCE
ACCIDENT INSURANCE,
LIFE INSURANCE
—AND—
REAL ESTATE ACENCY.
JOHN C. MILLER,
No. 8 East High St,
Lle-h8-6m BELLEFONTE.
(BART HOOVER,
RELIABLE
FIRE,
LIFE,
ACCIDENT
AND STEAM BOILER INS URANC
INCLUDING EMPLOYERS LIABILITY.
SAMUEL E. GOSS is employed by this
agency and is authorized ‘to solicit risks
for the same.
Address, GRANT HOOVER,
Office, 1st Floor, Crider’s Stone Building.
43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA.
Harness Oil.
UREA : eds
. HARNESS :
OIL.
A good looking horse and poor
looking harness is the worst
kindof a combination
——EUREKA HARNESS OIL—
not only makes the harness and
thd 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 k
YOUR
HORSE 4
CHANCE!
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. : a
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. 5 1 tf
The Thrice-a-Week World's regular sub-
scription pride is only $1.00 per year. We of
«fer this great newspaper and the WarcHMAN
| together one year for $1.65.
~———HAVE THE——
O. conirssir su ieriprsise in SE oss sensasstriiD
Nes? Ny
{ LARGEST FARM SUPPLY HOUSE }
0 sevsessevessnsee sessssssscsssnesesenn sesssssane tecssssane season 0
CENTRAL PENN SYLVANIA.
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 asa 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.
BELLEFONTE, PA
Real Estate. ?
JonN C. MILLER.
" Pres.
J. Tuomas MircHELL, Treas.
REE ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE
= COMPANY
ea Fore
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.
If you wish to buy or rent a Farm {r
ouse consult us.
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.
45-47-1y elephone connections
Green’s Pharmacy.
gallcaliees til... rh el Seep
4 b
: F
1 THER HEADS k
4 O ;
>
4 MAY ACHE, f
4 ’
§ :
4 but yours needn't after the hint we r
s give you here. Green's Headache z
: Cure always cures headache. It i
4 ‘cures any kind of headache. 2
$ * More than that, it relieves sleep- 5
. lessness, melancholy or dejection. 3
2 " Can’t harm you, no matter how 5
£ long you continue them, if }
2 you follow strictly the directions. :
4 It is worth something to have on I
J hand a remedy that so quickly :
2 and safely cures pain. x
PRICE 25 CENTS.
: ¥
5 ai :
: r
b
£ '.. GREEN’S PHARMACY, bp
: ~. HigH-STREET, E
] BELLEFONTE, - PA. :
4 aol i
: ’
S b
So SR gg -
Meat Markets.
G=r THE
| BEST MEATS.
.. You save nothin by buyin r, thin
or gristly meats. Iuse hog ?
LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
and sup customers with the fresh-
est, cho i best blood and musole mak-
ing Steaks and My prices are
no higher than poorer meats are eise-
where. wi Jeakiil
I always have
j ——DRESSED POULTRY,
Game in season, and any kinds of good
meats you want, ! :
Try My Snor.
P. L. BEEZER.
884ly :
fv. High Street, Bellefonte.
AVE IN
2 OUR MEAT BILLS.
There is no reason why you should use poor
. meat, rE exorbitant prices for tender,
juicy ks. Good meat abundant here-
‘ . because good cattle, sheep and calves
WE BUY ONLY THE BEST
and we sell only that which is good. We don’t
Iie to gv it away, but we will furnish you
§oon 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
have better Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea-
gon) than have been furnished you. ii ann
GETTIG & KREAMER,
BELLEFONTE, PA. Bush House Block.
44-18
RN As.