Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, August 07, 1903, Image 3

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    5 MS
Bellefonte, Pa., August 7 1903
FARM NOTES. _
—Nothing should be given a mulch cow
that, so far as. quality is concerned, we
would not be willing to eat and drink. our-
selves. Pastures should be free from weeds,
brush and rank grasses; also from bitter
herbs and ‘low growing, deciduous and
evergreen trees. ?
—Damp houses and yards are where
many of the poultry diseases originate, and
this is the prime cause of the disagreeable
disease of roup, which is so very disastrous
after it once gets a good start; and, in fact,
there is nothing more conducive to disease
and general disorder among the fowls than
to compel them ‘to spend their time ‘in
damp quarters. ~ A sandy soil is the best,
as it absorbs ‘the moisture and dries’ off
quickly. 151d { :
—The use of rich animal or other nitrog-
enous manures on grapevines: should be
avoided, as they cause too rapid growth of
vine; immature growth is liable to mildew
and ros to an increased Stent, fod Lhakes
a poorer quality of grape 0 an
Scaphate are valuable for fertilizers in the
vineyard. ~'Ashessupply thefirst and a fair
amonns of the second, and mineral. phos-
phate the second, . Boneduss is good, but
contains nitrogen, which sometimes in wet
seasons makes a rank growth of vine. The
grape does nob require the application of
fertilizers as frequently as do other fruits. |
If the soil iasuitable, and not too droughty,
the grapes will grow with but the aid of a
small outlay for fertilizers.
—There are many causes why apples fail
to ripen, which do not all; of course, affect
the same tree, but-one or more of them may
cause the premature dropping of frmit. 1.
The trees may be weakened by a severe
winter, which may injure them in trunk,
root or branches, leaving vitality enough to
form and not perfect the fruit. 2. "Wet
weather following dry weather will cause a
sudden growth and make the stems of the
apple so_ brittle that they will break and
fall.. 3. Root lice may rob the roots of
sap, weaken the tree and cause the apples
to fall. 4. Sudden changes from wet to
dry, will cause an irregular growth of the
fruit, and consequently it will drop. 5.
Borers may weaken: the vitality of the tree.
6. Curculios and - eoddling moths. may. at-
tack the fruit. .7. The soil may: be too
poor to support the fruit. 8, The tree may.
blossom unduly late, thus allowing the
growth of the tree to get the start of the
fruit and rob it of the nourishment, thus
causing it to fall. 9. Cold nights may af-
fect the vigor of the fruit germs, which may
grow for a short time and prematurely fall.
10. Heavy winds may sway the balf form-
ed fruit so severely as to loosen the stem
and canse the fruit to finally drop. 11.
The apples may draw the sap from the
leaves and weaken the tree. 12. Fangi,
such as rust and blights, may attack the
leaves. 13. 'Overbearing the preceeding
year may exhaust the vitality of the tree.
14. Imperfect fertilization of the blossom
in the spring may cause weak fruit that
readily falls from the tree, There are, also
many other causes. When the seeds of the
fruit seem to be well—unusoally well—
developed some seasons the fruit seldom
falls prematurely. To prevent premature
falling of the fruit keep the trees ‘healthy
and free from inseots; keep the ground
properly - manured, and set your orchards
in as sheltered a place as possible, free from
winds and storms. A moderate thinning of
the fruit . will cause the remainder to hold
on better. A moderate pruning in the
spring, before blossoming, will also cause
the fruit to fall less than in any unpruned
and overburdened tree. To prevent it at
all times is, of course; impossible. Some
varieties of fruit hold on better and make
surer crops.
—1In England the most important meth-
od of keeping up the vigor of the soil is by
pasturing sheep. The sheep and the tur-
nip are inseparable, and it is due to sheep
passuring that the farms in that country do
not deteriorate in qualisy. ' Their plan of
managing sheep for such purpose is very
different from ours. We turn our sheep on
pasture and allow them to roam at will,
picking and selecting such herbage as suits
them best, oceasioning thereby a wider dis-
tribution of manure than we wish. Sheep
dung is very concentrated and fine, and, if
the animals can be made to feed on small
spaces, they not only strew manure thick-
ly, but press it firmly into the earth with
their feet. It is very rich in nitrogen, and
it bas been Slaimed that this is due to the
fact of the food being nitrogenized by the
air taken into the lungs, and from thence
into the system and discarded. This,how-
ever is not generally accepted as correot,for
if such is the case with sheep it is also
equally applicable to all other animals.
The nitrogenous qualities of sheep manure
are however, very apparent, owing to its
highly concentrated ‘condition. =
HURDLING ON SMALL FIELDS.
Fallowing is practiced to a great ex-
tent in this country,espeocially in the South.
For it should be substituted sheep pastur-
ing. To manage it properly the sheep
should be hurdled on particular locations,
changing regularly at stated periods. It
has been claimed that 100 sheep hurdled on
one acre of ground for 15 days, will manure
the land sufficiently for four crops. The
land is first sowed with turnips, the Swedes
or rutabagas being preferred, as they keep
well. Even in winter these turnips remain
for the sheep. ‘As sheep eat close to the
ground they leave but little of the turnips.
The hurdles are made portable, and are
easily removed or changed. As soon as the
enclosed piece of gronud has been eaten off
entirely the hardleis removed just suffi-
ciently to clear that piece. to an adjoining
one, and the place lately occupied by the
sheep is then re-seeded with something
else. As sheep are not averse to any kind
of food a choice can be made by the farmer
as to the next crop. = :
PLANTS SUITABLE FOR SHEEP.
Among the plants suitable for this pur-
pose are peas and beans. Cow peas are ex-
cellent. A sheep will eat the pea vine—
peas, hulls and roots, too—if he can get at
them. Heavy, tall are'not prefer-
red, and so eager, are the sheep for feeding
close to she ground that thew have been
known to become poor in flesh on heavy
clover pastures that were high. They love
the young, tender grass and nearly all
kinds of weeds make good food for them.
. {IMPROVEMENT OF SOILS. \
1t cannot be denied that by a system of
hurdling,and frequent changing of location |
sheep can’ be used with great bepefit on
poor soils. Instances are known in which
worn out lands have, by being hurdled
with sheep, been brought to the highest de-
gree of fertility. It is also a very cheap
method of ' restoring land, for the sheep so
tured will not only add an increase to
the value of the land, by ring} ng it back
to fertility, but will, with woo! _— CArCass,
pay a handsome dividend on any amount
of capital expended in such an enterprise.
“1 For "AND ABOUT WOMEN.
The habit of biting the finger nails is
formed by a good many children, and it is
oue really hard to overcome, even with
tireless patience. One mother cured her
little daughter of this failing by a singular-
ly simple method, having resorted to al-
most every other without avail. She gave
the ohild ‘‘for her very own,’’ a neas little
manicure set, instructing her how to use it
and showing her how its use beautified the
bands. ; Eureka ! The spring of feminine
vanity was touched. The little girl be-
came devoted to her new toy and promptly
overcame her bad habit.
Caramel Ice Cream.—Make a plain ice
cream of a custard, of a pint of milk, four
eggs and a oup of sugar, all cooked togeth-
er until the custard coats the spoon. When
cold add a cup of cream, ‘and a half cup of
caramel or burnt sugar. Stir well, and
beat in a cup of shelled and chopped Eng-
lish walnuts and a teaspoonful of vanilla.
Freeze.
A writer advises the following for dand-
ruff : Alcohol,” twoounces; witch hazel,
two ounces; resorcin, fifteen grains. - This
cleanses the. scalp and makes the hair soft
and silky. Apply every day uniil improve-
ment is seen. =
Powdered borax, two ounces; boiling
water, two quarts; powdered camphor, one
ounce. Mix. When cold, bottle for use.
Rub into the scalp with the fingers several
times a week.
As for thé bare neck carefully dressed
women do not appear thus on the street in
town, not because they wonld find it:.com-
fortable, bus rather because idle ones would:
make stupid remarks. The next best thing
is to wear a stock of lace which does not
keep out the air. For resorts. stockless
bodices are quite the thing. « For frivolous
little coat suits of lace, or any material
much elaborated, a square effect is very
smart, the chemisette soming up to within
ah inch of the base of the neck. :
If you would have a fashionable morning
gown copy one of the following :
Here come mother and daughter in eor-
rect morning dress. Madam wears a white
pique with a many gored skirt, and a long
Russian blouse of apparently as many gores,
The breadths and seams run up and down
in narrow sections. ‘A white belt encircles
her slender waist, and ber head is crowned
with a beautiful shade hat of pale clover-
pink or amethyst straw Milanese braids.
Around the flat crown goes a wreath of
dainty roses, all pale colors, to harmonize
with the subdued tint of the big hat.
White, blush pink and pale yellow Mare-
chal Neil are the roses. There is no foliage
visible. The hat is bent up here and there
to suit the face of its owner. A white
chiffon veil is tied over the lady’a face. She
carries a white parasol lined with clover-
pink or purplish taffeta.
The daughter is taller and broader than
the slim mother, evidently a product of the
new generation of girls bred up with plenty
of out door exercise. Golf or tennis per-
haps has made her a ‘daughter of the gods
divinely tall,”’ and so, an able exponent of
the new fashions which are all meant for
tall young women. She wears a tailor
made linen frock, gky blue in color, and as
plain as plain can be except at the throat
where the neck has been cut out, and filled
in with a close fisting high collar ‘‘spenzer’’
of cluny lace. The neckband is wired with
white milliners’ wire to make it stand np.
These wires must be drawn out when the
dress goes to the Iaundress to be scoured.
A little round haf of coarsely braided dark
blue straw, with a high glaze, has the brim
slightly turned back from the face. A great
bunch of blue corn flowers is placed at the
front of the has. They swirl over the top
of the crown and out at each side.
For day wear long chains of dall black
beads that wind two or three times around
the neck and hang below the waist are the
last ory in watch chains. As to the heads,
they are big and round, long or oval or in-
terspersed with little beads. ie 2]
‘To: Preserve Brass Orpaments.—Brass
ornaments, when not gilt or lacquered, may
be cleaned and a fine color given to them
by two simple processes. The first is to
beat salammoniac into a fine powder, then
to moisten it with soft water. rubbing it on
the ornaments, which: must be heated, and
rubbed dry with bran and whitening. The
second is to wash the brasswork with rook
alum boiled in a strong lye, in the propor-
tion of 1 oz. toa pint; when dry it must be
rubbed with tripoli. Either of these pro-
cesses will give brass the brillianoy of gold.
fn.
It is whispered that the pouched.front
must go, and that the newest long skirt
suits for antumn will be without it. '' The
accentuated drooping shoulder effect will
continue to be one of the salient points of
the autumn: shirtwaist. The puff below
the elbow is not nearly so exaggerated
among the sleeves of the new autamn shirt
waists as it was upon those of thinner sum-
mer stuffs. Though tucks be as old as any
form of trimming they are in the height of
vogue. ‘They figure in all sorts of mater-
als. ang range from a pin to an inch in
width.
To dust with a feather duster is not to
dust as all, but simply to change the base
of the dust, not to mention risking death
by swallowing or getting it into slight
wounds on: the hands. Tr
Don’ts for a Young Wite.—Don’t weep
in the presence of your husband ; weeping
irritates him or makes him helpless, ‘and if
he is helpless he is provoked with himself.
Don’t cling to him ' too tight, even an
1 may be tiresome when one can never
get out of theshadow of its wings,
Don’t show him all the letters youn get,
he does not show you bis, so undoubtedly
he believes in reciprocity. fl
Don’t imagine that love makes up all his
life. Give him plenty of rope, he may love
you ever 80 much, but he doesn’t like to
eel the pull of apron strings: :
Don’t ask questions. He will tell yon
voluntarily what he wants to.
Don’t explain. Explanations are; tire-
some. If you make mistakes profit hy them
and say nothing. Take mishaps merrily.
Men like women with a sense of humor.
Don’t pont. If he forgets an engagement
and apologizes, treat it as a joke, and he
will love you ten times more. Naver take
offense if it is possible to avoid it.
Don’t nag. There is always a woman
who doesn’t. If you differ on things don’t
dispute them; agree to disagree. =
Make him understand by the surest
means at command that he is the finest man
in the world, but never let him forget that
there are others almost as fine.
Don’t be jealous; give him the benefit of
the doubts. He will seoretly thank you.
Be unselfish, even if he is not.
Don’t shirk your responsibilities.
PNT
‘Castoria.
““Castoria.
Brain Leaks.
True charity entails sacrifice.
Despair flees when Hope will walk in.
Envy is the full measure of small minds.
If the home is right the boy is very apt
to be.
' The easiest way to do a thing is usually
the worst. ;
A cheap politician is a dear investment
for the people.
Giving the Lord lip service is adding to
Satan’s ammunition.
You can get very little good ont of life
until you put some in it.
_Onr children are mischievous; other’s
children are simply mean.
Our eccentricities are signs of boorish-
ness when exhibited by others.
The man who waits for the last laugh
often has to take it out in weeping.
Some business men take their troubles
home with them and their joys down
town. :
Some men emulate the foolishness of
wise.
Pessimism consists in diligently search-
ing for something you are afraid you will
find. :
We know of some singers who persist in
cultivating voices that should be harvested.
I#’s all right to blow your own horn,
providing you do not keep on foreve
blowing it in B flat. ;
‘Cast your burdens on the Lord’ does
not mean that you are not to carry your
joys to him, too.
Every man plays a foolish engagement
once in a while, and when he does it is
usually in public.
The average man is Juite certain he
could make a fortune if some one would
only give him a start.
The cistern into which nothing goes is
soon pumped dry. <The life into which no
good is pus never yields any good. :
Somehow or other most of us never yet
saw the baby that could say as smart
things as we read in the newspapers.
Waves of reform, like waves from the
ocean, may recede, but they always leave
something worth keeping upon the beach.
Sometimes we see a boy acting like - we
did in our youthful days, and then we
wonder how on earth it happened that we
were allowed to live on. :
One of the amusing things connected
with the hot spell is to hear a man who
don'ts know the difference hetween alfalfa
good corn weather.
Little Girl Rescues Boy.
Freed From His Grasp She Held Him Up By the Ear.
Ortha Huyck, 11 years old, daughter of
the Proprietor of the Glenada, at Sea Cliff,
N. J., is a heroine. But for her coniage
and nerve Albin Unger, son of Samuel Un-
ger, of New York, would be dead.
; The children all went bathing together
at the end of the beach, near Glen Cove
oreek, Saturday afternoon. Ortha, notio-
‘ing that the boy who is about her own age,
wens ous further than was prudent, warn,
ed him about the chaunel. ' A minute af-
terward the boy shrieked and the girl saw
thas he had stepped ont into deep water.
She immediately swam to his rescue and
when he came up she grasped him. The
boy, panio stricken, seized her by the neck
in a death grip, and she saw that they
would hoth be drowned if he did not let
go. She pushed and slapped him: until he
loosened his hold and sank again. When
the boy came up she seized him by the ear,
and keeping as far from him as possible
held him up until Otto Smith, an employe
rescue. } : » re
A doctor worked over the boy three hours
before he regained consciousness.
Worth Knowing.
'A correspondent of the Scientific American
says : Let anyone who has a case of lookjaw
pour it on the wound, no matter where it
is, and relief will follow in less than a
minute. Nothing better can be applied to
a severe out or bruise than cold turpentine.
It will give relief almost instantly. Tar-
pestine is alsoa sovereign remedy for croup.
urate and place the flannel on the throat
and obrest, and in each oase three or four
drops may be taken inwardly on a lump of
sugar.
Solomon and imagine themselves to be as| sys
and salsify say, ‘‘Purty hot, but mighty
at the Glenada bathhouse, swam to the |
take a quantity of turpentine, warm it,and
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The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 3C
years, has borne the signature of
and has’been made under his per- CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
sonal supervision since its in- :
fancy. Allow no one to deceive {
you in this. All Counterfeits, imitations and “J ust-as-good’’ are but Experi-
ments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infantsand Children—Ex-
perience against Experiment.
WHAT I8 CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing
Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nar-
cotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays
Fevérishness.” Tt ¢iires Diarrhcea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teéthing Trob-
les, cures:Constipation and Flatulency. 1t assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Pana-
cea—The Mother’s Friend. ;
GENUINE. CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT
In Use For Over 30 Years:
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
: 48-30-3m
tt att
A ——————— ———_———_— EE ES
Says Recorder Brown Was Murdered.
As the inquiry into the death of the late
Recorder J. O. Brown, of Pittsburg, on
Wednesday, J. R. B. Brown, a brother of
the dead recorder, made the announcement
that he was now convinced that his broth-
er had been the victim of foul play, and
that his death bad been brought about by
slow poisoning.
He intimated that several prominent
Pittsburg politicians will be dragged into
thecase when it was called for trial, and that
the register of an Atlantic City hotel would
cut a prominent figure in the case, which
he says is to follow.
SuicIpDE PREVENTED.—The startling an-
nouncement that a preventive of suicide
had been discovered will interest many.
A run down system, or despondency in-
variably precede suicide and something has
been found that will prevens that condition
which makes suicide likely. At the first
thought of sell destruction take Eleotrio
Bitters. It being a great tonic and nervine
will strengthen the nerves and build up the
tem. It’s also a great Stomach, Liver
and Kidney regulator. Only 50c. Satis-
faction guaranteed by Green's Pharmacy
Druggist. :
Medical.
A YER'S
Don’t try cheap cough medicines.
Get the best, Ayer's Cherry Pec-
torial. What a record it has, sixty
years of
CHERRY PECTORIAL |
cures! Ask your doctor if he
doesn’t use it for coughs, colds,’
bronehitis, and all throat and
lung troubles, vi
*’w] have found that Ayer’s Cher-
‘ry Pectorial is the best medicine ,
T can prescribe for bronchitis, in- i
fluenza, coughs, and hard colds.”
M. Foe D., Ithaca, N. Y.
$1.00 abottle. J. C. AYER CO.,
All druggists Lowell, Mass,
ween FO Rome
BRONCHITIS.
48-31-1t ! : §
5 £ f 1 $5 3 a |
i a i
¥ reupud i
AN EVE OPENER... }.
FOR FARMERS! |
attractive prices.”
46-4-13
HIGH GRADE ACID PHOSPHATE
2 Guaranteed 14 to 16 per cen, Goods, ~~
++ In 167 pound sacks, ; . Ce
$11.50 per ton cash at our Warehouse !
We saved farmers a lot of money on
Binder Twine this season, ‘and are. prepared
to do the same thing on Fertilizer this Fall.
Choice Timothy Seed snd Grain Drills at
MoCALMONT & CO.
{+ BELLEFONTE, PA.
Fine Groceries
New Advertisements.
QECHLER & CO. |
‘FINE GROCERIES |
BUSH HOUSE BLOCK. |
If you are looking fcr Seasonable Goods
—We have them. y
Not sometime—but all the time—Every
day in the year.
Don’t spend your strength during this
extreme weather in a fruitless search for
what you need, but come straight to us
and get the goods promptly.
Finest CArtrorNiA and imported
ORANGES. ..covsusissssissssnsssanns .30, 40, 50, 60 per doz.
Lemons, finest Mediteranean juicy
TUT icrerssrnarrensensionnaansiose 30 and 40cts, per doz,
Bananas, the finest fruit we can buy. .
Fresx Biscurrs, Cakes and Crackers,
Sweet, Mild Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon and
Dried Beef. :
Caxnep Meats, Salmon and Sardines.
Orives, an excellent bargain hoe osseeees tite 2B,
‘| Tame Ors, home made and imported.
Prcxres, sweet and sour, in bulk and various
sizes and styles of packages. : if 2
: Pure ExtrACTS, Ginger Ale and Root Beer. iH
New Curzse now comingtous n elegant shape.
CrizAL Preparations. We carry a fine ‘line of
. the most popular ones. ait
| Pure Cioen Vingoaz, the kind you can depend
on.
“If you have any difficulty in getting suited in a
:| fine Table Syrup come to us and you can get what
you want,
Our store is always open until 8 , o'clock
p. m., and on Saturday until 20 o’clook. .
SECHLER & CO.
GROCERS.
BELLEFONTE PA,
42-1
Wall Papering and Painting .
ECKENROTH
THE OLD
RELIABLE
PAINTER
rs
PAPER HANGER
Our entire stock of Wall Paper; Window Shades
and Picture Frame Mouldings. Ihave the exclusive
sale of Robert Graves Co., and M. H. Burges Sons & Co.
Fine Florals and Tapestry effets. They are the Finest
Wall Papers ever brought to this oity. _ It will pay. you
to examine my stock and prices before going elsewhere.
First class mechanics to put the paper. on the wall and
apply the pains to the woodwork. ;
All work guaranteed in every respeot.
473
Bush Arcade,
E. J. ECKENROTH,
: BELLEFONTE, PA.
) | CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
I ENNYROYAL PILLS. a
"Original and only genuine. Safe. Always re-
ask druggist for Chichester’s Eng-
~ § liable. Ladies y
| lish in Red and Gold metallic boxes, sealed wit
blue ribbon. Take no other, refuse dangerous
i | substitutes and imitations. Buy of your druggist
or send 4c in stamps for Jalticujarss testimonials
and “Relief for Ladies,” in letter, by return mail.
10,000 testimonials. Sold by all druggists =
CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO.
47-14-1y : :. Madison Square, Phila., Pa.
Mention this paper. vg
Pure Milk and Butter.
PURE MILK AND BUTTER
THE YEAR ROUND
FROM ROCK FARMS.
The Pure Milk and Cream from the
Rock Farms is delivered to customers in
Bellefonte daily.
Fresh Gilt Edge Butter is delivered
three times a week.
You can make yearly contracts for milk,
Siam or butter by calling on or address-
ng
J. HARRIS HOY, Manager,
Office, No. 8 So. Allegheny St.
Bellefonte, Pa.
The fine Dairy Herd at Rock Farms is
regularly inspected so that its product is
absolutely pure and healthful. 43-45-1y
‘Flour and Feed.
CUES Y. WAGNER,
BrockerHoFF MILs, BELLEFONTE, PA.
Manufacturer,
and wholesaler
and retailers of
| ROLLER FLOUR,
FEED, CORN MEAL, Ete.
Also Dealer in Grain.
Manufactures and has on hand at all
times the following brands of high grade
flour
WHITE STAR,
OUR BEST.
. HIGH GRADE,
* VICTORY PATENT, $
FANCY PATENT— formerly Phos-
- nix Mills-high grade brand.
The only. place in the county where
SPRAY,"
an extraordinary fine grade of
y Spring wheat Patent: Flour can be
obtained.
4LSO: Rg
INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD.
FEED OF ALL KINDS,
SIORIGN. BY ‘Whole or Manufactured.
All kinds of Grain bought at office.
Exchanges Flour for Wheat.
{ ‘OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street,
!’ Bellefonte. ! :
‘MILL,
: «+ + ROOPSBURG.
6-19-1y ;
Meat Markets.
"BEST MEATS.
You save nothing ' by buyin, or, thin
or gristly ain Tse SY . :
4+ LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE,
“and Supply my sdstomers with the fresh -
est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak-
ing Steaks and: Roasts. My: prices are
no higher than poorer meats are eise-
where.
wn] always-have
——DRESSED, POULTRY,
Game in season, and any kinds of good
meats you want...
Try My SHor.
P. L. BEEZER.
43-3¢:1y
. .. High Street, Bellefonte
AVE'IN
YOUR MEAT, BILLS.
There is no reason why you should use poor
meat, or pay exorbitant prices for tender,
3 y: steaks. Good meat is abundant here-
abouts, because good catule sheep and calves
aretobehad. © = 4
WE BUY ONLY THE BEST
and we sell only that which is good. We don’t
Poise te ve it away; but we will furnish you
D MEAT, at prices that you ha i
’ hors for Yer) Toors : YOU have fafa
GIVE US A TRIAL—
‘“andsee if you don't save in the long run and
have better’ Meats, Poultry and Game (in sea-
son) ‘han have been furnished 8 A
GETTIG & KREAM
BrrLEronTs, Pa. Bush House Fico
44:18