seme ER ey seman ec— Democealic; atu, Beliefonte, Pa., June 14, 1901. FARM NOTES. —Watering the flower bed improves the opportunities of weeds and grass as well as of the flowering plants. The plant bed should be closely watched, and all weeds and grass picked out by hand until the flower plants are large enough to permit of working the plot with a hoe. —As flies will most annoy stock, all cracks in the stable should be closed and mosquito bars or mesh placed at the win- dows and doors. The cows will give more milk if thus protected and the horses be in better condition for service. Remove all manure promptly and keep the stables clean, —Careful examination should be made for borers in trees. The longer it is de- ferred the more difficult it will be to kill them, as they go deeper into the wood. The trees should be examined often in or- der to guard against missing a single one. They can be easily detected by the ‘‘chips’’ or refuse, at the entrances. —If there are any bare places in the pasture field scratch them with a harrow and sow seed upon them. If the pasture is thin take the stock off and give the grass an opportunity to grow, as it will other- wise be destroyed by close graizing and trampling. No pasture can last without having a rest from continual cropping. —If the garden plants are backward ow- ing to cold rains, use a small quantity of nitrate of soda along the rows, close to the plants, but do not apply it on the leaves. As soon as a shower comes and dissolves it the plants will take on a green tinge and grow rapidly. If is the best substance that can be used where plants appear sickly or yellow. —By placing small boxes in trees one can have the hirds come and stay. For wrens the entrance to the box should nof not exceed an inch in: diameter. Keep no cats to destroy the birds, as they catch them oo the ground. A bird box on a pole will be taken possession of by martens, which can be protected from cats by wind- ing barbed wire closely around the pole. —The castor oil bean plant is one of the prettiest and most ornamental that can be used along borders, its leaves being a beau- tiful green. The cotton plant can be grown in this section to the blossom stage, but will not mature, though the seed should be planted in hot-beds early and transplanted. The canna is another very showy plant, and it makes a fine contrast with castor bean plant. —The spraying of kerosene, or kerosene emulsion, on trees, should be done judi- ciously. Pure kerosene will injure any tree, destroying peach trees almost instant- ly, and even when the emulsion is used it should be well diluted. No inexperienced person should use kerosene emulsion on orchard trees, though erude petroleum, ap- plied in winter, has heen recommended as efficaceous and harmless. —The fact that there are hundreds of farmers who do not know one breed of cat- tle from another has cansed many of them to make mistakes, or even to fail in their business. Some of them use, the Jerseys when they wish to increase the quantity of milk yielded, instead of some breed that excels in producing milk. While the Jer- seys are excellent producers of milk, yet they are preferred more for the richness of their milk rather than for yields. —The package will sell the goods in any market, even if the goods are not of the best, as appearances in market convey the idea of quality. Buyers are not always capable of discriminating between the best and the inferior, hence much depends upon the packing. It is claimed that Danish butter is no better than that produced in America and Canadian dairies, yet Danish butter holds the highest place in the Eng- lish market because the Danish dairymen use extra care in shipping their butter to market in a manner to attract attention and impress upon the buyer that it is of the best quality. —The your g pullets that have been se- lected for lay. \g next fall should not be forced by feeuing too heavily on grain. They will thrive much better if allowed to roam at will and pick up their food but a mess of cut bone at night will be of as- sistance. The early hatched pullets only should be kept for winter laying, as the late ones do not usually begin to lay until spring. If they do not grow exam- ine them carefully for the large lice on their heads, necks and bodies. Dusting with insect powder once a week will be an advantage, but the most important mat- ter is to keep their quarters free of lice, which may be done by spraying the poul- try house once a week with kerosene emulsion. The roosts should be anointed freely with crude petroleum. It is the best plan, when raising pullets for winter laying, to cull out all the inferior ones and send them with the young cooklets to market. —The grass on lawns has been favored by the rains of May, and no doubt the lawn mower has beén used frequently by many. Unless the soil is very fertile the lawn will become thin in grass in time, owing to the withdrawal of plant food every time it is mowed. Some persons who have beautiful lawns, which are kept clean by using the lawn mower every time the grass ‘is high enough to be cut, do not understand why the grass begins to die and thin out ina year or two. To preserve a lawn it should be covered with horse manure late in the fall and raked over in the spring. If manure is not easily obtainable use a mix- ture of 50 pounds of sulphate of potash and the same quantity of superphosphate. Early in the spring apply 25 pounds of nitrate of soda. ese quantities are for one. fourth of an acre. About 25 pounds of air- slacked lime may be also applied early in the spring, before using the nitrate. —Beginners in farming, especially those with limited capital, should endeavor to produce early and late crops, so as to have cash coming in all the time, if possible. One of the essentials for quick returns is poul- try. The hens should lay every day, with good management. One or two good cows will also be found serviceable, as milk and butter are cash at all seasons. Small fruits, such as strawberries, currants, gooseberries, raspberries and blackberries, soon give returns, but grapes and orchard fruit require more time. On a small farm it may not pay to depend upon the cereal crops. Stock, fruit and vegetables give better profits and bring in cash long be- fore the harvest comes for corn. There is nothing that will give larger and quicker profits in proportion to capital than fowls, and as they multiply rapidly the number can be increased every year. The fowls will also consume much waste material that cancut be otherwise utilized. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. It is said that Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stan- ton so strongly disapproves of the un- healthy trailing skirts, to which her sex is devoted, that she has given positive orders to the elevator boy to show no woman to her apartments who sweep up the streets in this way. The point to be remembered about foot- wear is to don the right shoe for the right occasion. For dressy walking wear, with the serge and woolen dresses, navy blue and black costumes, the proper shoes will be the patent leather walking shoe, with low heels. Then for golf wear and outing the tan calf low shoe is the thing. Next to this comes the dressy, walking low shoe, worn with silk gowns, the foulards, the white, thin fabrics, and other extreme summer wear. These shoes are light kids, with patent vamps or toes, and have high French heels. The especially smart style is the Colonial tie, and these will be worn uni- versally by well dressed women this sum- mer. The reigning fashion in the hosiery worn is the lace lisle stocking. Womankind is particularly devoted to the very thin styles —absolutely more lace than hose. Next to these, very fine, thin, plain lisle and very thin silk hose, showing the white of the limb through the fabric, are being mostly bought by the fashionable set. No hoisery is solid or heavy for the summer fashion. The white linen or pique skirt is a ne- cessary article in the summer wardrobe,and the pure white shirt waist is the correct thing to wear with it. It may be plain, tucked or embroidered, but it should be white and worn with a white belt and a white stock. White waists are also worn with the beige colored linen skirts, and some of them have the embroidered ecru batiste collar. The bolero is far too becoming to lightly abandon, but it varies so infinitely in form that it bears little resemblance to the ubi- quitous garment that one was accustomed to see some years ago. Some couturiers ‘simulate the bolero effect by means of a ‘deep corselet helt, pointed back and front, over which the bodice pounches a little. Again, the bolero is often simulated in lace and embroidery or ribbon, or chiffon, drawn round the figure; in fact it is a style that the Parisienne fancies much. Nearly every skirt is plainly cat, nearly every corsage is simply pouched into a nar- row waistband, with no frills or furbelows whatsoever. The Jong basqued coat is steadily growing in favor for gowns of thicker materials, and unless things take a sudden change it is likely to be the rage in autumn. of his latest gowns, a pastel gray cloth, covered with stitched strappings to form a bolero, and the long hasque belt shaped over the hips; the skirt of this dress has three shaped flounces, narrow in front and deepening behind, which gives ita trim- med appearance. Foulards are being greatly worn, but al- ways of the satin faced kind; they are pro- fusely trimmed with lace and velvet rib- bons, a prevailing idea being graduated bands of black velvet from the bottom of the skirt up toward the waist, where they are very narrow indeed. Blue and white, black and white and heliotrope and white are the most fashionable combinations in foulard patterns. Every Parisienne - is now wearing her hair dressed quite low. For day wear she adopts a middle course, the hair gathered into a knuc of small curls and poufs, not lying too close to the back of the head, and in the evening, at theatre or restaurant, the hair lies in a heavy coil or loop on the nape of the neck. This, of course, means the abandonment of the coliar, and all the summer dresses, excepting, of course, the ‘‘costume tailleur?’’ are being made with no collars at all ex- cept a transparent piece of lace. Such a mode is eminently becoming to the French women, who is usually inclined to be rath- er short necked. At Phoenix, Ariz., last week, there was | incorporated the Golden Rule Mining and Exploration Company, with a capital of $350,000. The incorporators are eight un- married women, residing in different parts of the territory. Teach the children not to waste trifles, which they often throw away without thought and which, if saved, might he of use to others if not to themselves. Wrap- ping paper, pieces of twine, odds and ends of various kinds, may do service a second time if put away until the need for them arises. The habit of economy is one that ought to be cultivated, for careful saving makes lavish giving possible. Hoarding is not a vice of childhood, nor should it be encouraged, but the wise husbanding of re- sources for future expenditure is a valuable lesson that cannot be learned too early. ‘‘No one wears bonnet strings any long- er,” nor any shorter, for that matter. These once inseparable accompaniments to the bonnet have now vanished, except in the case of very old ladies. To be a matron however young, used to be the signal for assuming the bonnet, which replaced the hat worn by young girls. But hats are worn by women of middle age, and that useful compromise, the toque, is recom- mended by milliners to young and old wo- men who ‘‘can’t wear a bonnet” in the artist’s opinion. A great deal depends on the shape of the head. English women, or those having the Anglo-Saxon type of countenance, where the lower part of the face is heavy, often look extremely well in a bonnet. It istry- ing to any one with thin cheeks or where the forehead and upper part of the head is more developed than is the lower part,as it accentuates the triangular outlines. ~ It used to be said that bonnet strings are becoming beneath the chin, but there are two opinions as to that. Bonnet strings are very warm in summer time, and the color is apt to discolor the soft white ruching or necktie worn about the throat. The woman of 70 or 80 is conceded old enough to use bonnet strings, but they have vanished from the millinery of many grandmothers who might once have worm them. A Elderly women who have thin and insaf- ficient hair on their heads may well assume bonnet strings, which help to supply the deficiency. But where the head is covered with a plentiful crop of thick, soft bair, white, gray or brown, no bonnet strings are required. ~ On the other hand, the Hebe-like debu- tante, with rosy cheeks and deep dimples, sometimes attends a garden party with a white picture hat and ostrich plumes, tied beneath the chin with soft white satin rib- bons. But these are hat strings, not bonnet strings. Worth has introduced it on one | About Meat Eating. The Effect on One’s Nervous System of Heavy Diet. It is a frequently discussed fact that Americans, as a rule, eat too much meat. In European countries, even in England, the land of four meals per day, there is not so much meat consumed as in the average American household whose inhabitants be- long to the elastic class of “well-to-do.” In such homes meat at every meal is almost invariable. Chops, cutlet or steak for breakfast, cold meat or potted meat for luncheon, roast, joint or ‘‘boiled’’ meat for dinner, and meat again frequently at the light lunch which in so many house- holds immediately precedes the going-to- bed. hour. Taking the naturally nervous constitu- tion of most Americans, the national lack of systematic exercise, the general pre- ponderance of sedentary occupations, all of which operate against the digestion and as- similation of such quantities of meat it is not difficult to trace many of the ills which flesh is heir to back to the quantity of meat consumed per diem. ; There are many scientists in the world who allege that all of us overeat regularly and systematically, consuming vast quanti- ties of food over and above what the body demands, and suffering consequently. Physicians and dietists are constantly en- deavoring to win the world over to ampler and more abstemious living, and it is al- most common now for a physleian who has had the advantage of the most modern teaching to advocate absolute fasting dur- ing illness. It is unquestionable that if we could all follow Pope Leo’s methods of eating a lit- tle fruit for breakfast, a little soup and vegetable for dinner, and fruit again, with crusty bread for supper, we might live to be as old as he is. But such a reformation in our ways in a generation is hardly pos- sible. Particularly in summer weather, when every extra ounce put into the stomach robs us of just so much energy, should we make stringent reforms in the butcher's bill. Oncea day from June to October for Nneat is more than sufficient, and is the first step toward reform. Three times a week is better ; once a week still better, and if we could force ourselves to do with- out flesh entirely for that period we should be triply the better for it. Vegetables, fresh and crisp, uncooked or simply prepared, with a little butter and seasoning ; fruit, plenty of it, ripe and sweet ; salads at all times and of all va- rieties and whole wheat or crusty brown loaves—these would work direct reforma- tion in the summer health for most of us. Do Not Forget. The colder eggs are the quicker they will froth. : Ammonia painted over woodwork will darken it. Lemons will keep a long time if covered with cold water. All spices should be kept in tin cans and salt should be kept in dry places. Soap and chalk mixed and rubbed on mildewed spots will remove them. Always well heat a gridiron before broil- ing meat, fish, bread, or anything else. Whole cloves will more effectually ex- terminate moths than camphor, tobacco or cedar shavings. A spoonful of vinegar added to the water in which fish is hoiling will make the fish firm and tender. A lump of soda laid upon the drain pipe down which waste water passes will pre- vent the clogging of the pipe with grease. Chloride of lime is an infallible preven- tive of rats. It should be pnt down their holes and spread about wherever they are likely to appear. A little vinegar should be kept boiling on the stove while onions or cabbage is be- ing cooked; it will prevent the disagree- able odor going through the house. : Some Exploded Food Fallacies. Fish as a food of the brain worker must be consigned to the limbo of vanities, though certain forms of fish are the cheap- est of all foods. Oysters are frauds. It would take four- teen oysters to equal the nourishment of one egg, and 223 to provide the same Aon of nutriment contained in a pound of beef. Salt fish, especially salt flatfish, is the most valuable food for the poorer classes, and the whole races in the South of Europe live on the Newfoundland cod. Canned salmon at twenty cents a pound is no more expensive than cod at ten. Millions of people live on it, and the North American settler who is well provided with cash finds it a good substitute and change from fresh meat at times. Frogs’ legs are not of high nutritive val- ue, which need not surprise us. Turtle soup, from the chemist’s point of view, is not worth a tenth of the price paid for it. . Food and Character. The importance of a duly proportioned and sufficient dietry is shown by its great influence on health and character. An ill- proportioned or deficient diet is certain to lead to failure of health, The anatomy of an animal may be modified in the course of generations by altered diet, as well as its character ; thus, the alimentary canal of the cat has increased in length to adapt it to its omniverous habits. In the case of the bee we have a still more remarkable in- stance. If hy any accident the queen hee dies or is lost, the working bees (which are sexnally undeveloped) select two or three eggs, which they hatch in large cells, and then feed the maggot on a stimulating jelly different from that supplied to the other maggots, thus producing a queen hee. In making the railway from Paris to Rouen, it was found that 2 English workmen were equal to 3 French natives; on examining the cause, it was found that the former were fed on large quantities of meat, while the latter ate chiefly soup and lentils. The diet of the Frenchmen was altered to the English standard, with the result that the inequality in work soon diappeared. —Governor MacCorkle, of West Vir- ginia, is fond of narrating the following story : ‘‘A colored man was telling a white friend about another negro who owed him $2 and absolutely refused to pay the debt. The creditor dunned and dunned him, but all to no purpose. Finally the creditor went to his white friend, who is a lawyer, and poured his tale of woe into his ear. ‘Well,’ said the lawyer, ‘if he posi- tively refused to pay you what reason did he give?” ‘Well, boss,” said the colored man, ‘he said he had owed me dat money fo’ so long dat de interest had dun et it all up, an’ he didn’t owe me a cent.”’ A Remarkable Grove. Strange Trees that Hedge the Beach at Wild d Wildwood, the resort on the Jersey coast where the ceremony of casting flowers upon the sea on Decoration day in memory of naval heroes was inaugurated, has a good reason for its name. It is located upon an island, which is separated from the main land hy Grassy Sound. For about two miles a grove of trees, perhaps the most re- markable in the world, fringes the sound. The place takes its name from the trees, which have been shriveled and distorted into all kinds of fantastic shapes by the gales which have swept over it from the Atlantic for centuries. The coast is com- pletely exposed to the full sweep of the southeast and northeast storms, which in the winter rage for several days at a time. Some of the trunks of the trees have twisted into numerals, letters of the alpha- bet and weird forms, which give the grove the reputation of being haunted among some of the negro servants and ignorant white people who live in the locality. One tree, which must be fully fifty years old, has been bent over until it forms the figure 8, looking at it from one side, while from another point of view it is a perfect oval. From the lower left-hand corner projects a branch which startlingly resem- bles a snake’s head with the tongue stick- ing out. Two of the largest trees started to grow up from the ground, then changed their minds and bent downward, shaping their trunks into the form of the letter W. Still another tree has grown in the form of the letter N,two trunks starting from the same root below ground, and a third growing from one to the other in a diagonal direc- tion. Another consists of two trunks run- ning straight up and parallel to each other. Af no less than five different points branch- es or stubs have grown from one trunk in- to the other, forming a sort of natural lad- der, for a distance of 30 feet from the ground. The warm southeasters have brought nourishment to Wildwood, and vines and plants grow luxuriantly. Some of the grape vines are of mammoth size and, trail- ing along the ground, have run up into trees and expanded until they seem like immense boa constrictors. Even the up- per branches of the trees have been twisted into curious shapes, and a number have been cut out in the form of different arti- cles. Three of them are almost exactly the shape of a triangle, a harp and pitcher. In walking through the grove one can scarcely. find a tree which has not some odd form about it. A large holly can be seen which really consists of two trunks twisted about each other. Each trunk is fully a foot in thickness, and it is supposed that when young two slips were blown around in this way and have gradually grown to- gether. The spiral separation can be traced from the roots fully forty feet from the ground. x SAVED Two FROM DEATH.— ‘Our little daughter had an almost fatal attack of whooping cough and bronchitis,’”’ writes Mrs. W. K. Haviland, of Armonk, N. Y., ‘but when all other remedies failed. we saved her life with Dr. King’s New Dis- covery. Our niece, who had consumption also used this wonderful medicine and to- day she is perfectly well. Desperate throat and lung diseases yield to Dr. King’s New Discovery as to no other medi- cine on earth. Infallible for Coughs and Colds. 50c. and $1.00 bottles guaranteed by F. Potts Green. Trial bottles free ——Two years after China invented bank notes the currency became. so in- flated that a $100 note would only buy a pound of rice. Castoria. Ag ipl gia pil A cC A 8 T ORI A c A .S T.0 R I. A C A. 8S. T O BR 1 A c AS Tg RT A ccc The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow jno one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘“Just-as-good’’ are but Ex- periments, and endanger the health of Children— Experience against Experiment WHAT IS CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Cas- tor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neith- er Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It re- lieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipa- tion and Flatulency. It ‘assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach ‘and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of . CHAS. H. FLETCHER. : IN USE FOR OVER 80 YEARS. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. Pot NEGLECT A COLD. Don’t neglect a cold, if you do, it’ may cost you your life. A cold at- tended to at once can easily be cured if you have a remedy, naturally, you want the best, and that is KIL-KOLD Guaranteed to cure you in 24 hours or money refunded. Price 25cts. ,Take no substitute, Take our word for it, there is nothing just as good ; refuse anything else; insist on KIL- KOLD. At F. P. Green's or will be sent post paid for 25¢ts. U. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 45-39-3m No. 17 East 14th St., N. Y. Money to Loan. MOo¥EY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, 45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law, McCalmont & Co. VJ CALMONT & CO0.——— 0 ——HAVE THE—— ——IN—— CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. Their prices are right and their guarantee is behind the goods, which means many a dollar to the farmer. The more conservative farmer wants to see the goods before he buys, and buy where he can get repairs when needed, for he knows that the best machinery will wear out in time. Goods well bought is money saved. Money saved is money earned. Buy from the largest house, biggest stock lowest prices ; where the guarantee is as good as a bond ; where you can sell your corn, oats, wheat hay and straw for cash, at the highest market prices, and get time on what you buy. All who know 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 46-4-13 Jewelry. McCALMONT & CO’S. BELLEFONTE, PA | Real Estate. W EDDING GIFTS a Flees 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. men [re F. C. RICHARD’S SONS, 41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE PA Williams’ Wall Paper Store. OU INTE ND THIS SPRING RN i Certainly you do and we wish to call your attention to the size and quality of our stock of It consists of 50,000 rolls of the most beautiful and carefully selected stock of Wall Paper ever brought TO BELLEFONTE 0 SPECIALTIES 0 Our specialties consist of a large line of beautiful Stripes, Floral De- signs; Burlap Cloth Effects and Tap- estries. : sses02.OUE PRICES......... Are right, ranging in price from 5c. to $1.00 per roll. "We have a large line of Brown Backs at 5c. and 6e. per roll with match ceiling and two band bor- der at 2c. Ie yard. Alsoa large assort- ment of White Blanks 6c. to 10c. per Tol and matched up in perfect combina- ions. Our Ingrains and Gold Papers are more beautiful than ever before with 18in. blended borders ard ceilings to match, in fact anything made in the Wall Paper line this year we are able to show you. «SKILLED WORKMEN... Are necessary to put on the paper as it should be put on. We have them and are able to do anything in the business. e do Painting, Graining, Paper Hanging, House Decorating, Sign Writing, Etc. Also dealer in Picture and Room Moulding, Oil Paintings, Water Colors, Window Shades, he / ils, \ Glass, Etc. S. H. WILLIAMS, 46-12-3m = High Street, BELLEFONTE, PA: Jorn C. MILLER. Pres. J. Tuomas MircueLL, Treas. | R=ar ESTATE, LOAN AND TITLE COMPANY site Of ie CENTRE COUNTY EpMUND 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 for 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. est Otc cori Tcstlhns at ltt] a QTHER HEADS ne gp ‘MAY ACHE, wn gg but yours needn’t after the hint we give you here. inst ect cit, cbf ls... —— Green’s Headache It cures any kind of headache. More than that, it relieves sleep- gy Cure always cures headache. rill, sl i castle afl, "I lessness, melancholy or dejection. Can’t harm you, no matter how long you them, if you follow strictly the directions. It is worth something to have on Mitel. continue Re wath ge weet, lft. hand a remedy that so quickly and safely cures pain. ll, ag eT gg sot fo PRICE 25 CENTS. rao GREEN'S PHARMACY, HreH STREET, BELLEFONTE, - PA. 44-26-1y UE emer ERD tc cs acct trv Sg ge NG AGI Meat Markets. GET THE BEST MEATS. You save nothing by buying, or gristly meats. I use only ti LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and supply my customers with the fresh- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are ne higher than poorer meats are eise- where. Foor, thin ° I always have ~——DRESSED POULTRY,=— Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. ke Try My Shop. P. L. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte, 43-3¢-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- 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 to Jie it away, but we will furnish you 80D 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 hed you: GETTIG & KREAMER, Bush House Block. BELLEFONTE, PA. 44-18
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers