Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 04, 1906, Image 3

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FARM NOTES.
—When buying an animal in order to
improve the live stock nothing will be
gained in so doinz unless the animal is
much sa to the stock that is to be
improved.
~The principal objection to potted plants
is the higher price of the plants and the
additional charge for ex but there
is a larger loss from layer plants, which
balances the difference in cost.
~—Small are worth bas Itttle in
market, but when wid lor stuck Su She
farm they possess value, use there
no ot or transportation charges on
them, and for stock they are just as serv-
iceable as the choice ones.
—In Paris $e gsi) Sheila ac-
milk as when it contains one
wo ol er od four ounces of solids
per quart. At Berne milk must contain at
least 3 per cent. of butter, and may contain
90 per cent. of water. At Berlin the police
seize all milk offered for sale which is be-
low the legally required standard of 2.7
per cent. of fatty masters. This allows
the dairyman to add with safety from 10 to
15 per cent. of water to fairly rich milk.
-—The best time for pruning maple and
other deciduous trees is on mild days in
the latter part of winter, before the sap
starts 1n the tree. If the work is properly
done at such time there is little danger of
bad wounds. Where only a small amount
of wood is to be removed I prefer to do it
in June when wounds heal quickly, but if
a large amount of pruningis done at this
time of the year so much foliage is remov-
ed thas it is aps to somewhat check the
growth of the trees.
—There is more profit in keeping a few
animals than to have the stalls occu-
pied with them that give no return for
their keep. There are two duties devolv-
ing apon farmers which are seldom fal-
filled. One is to thin off the fruit froma
tree and the other is to cull out the inferior
animals. When the herd is thinned out
the cost of food is lessened and less labor
is required. Every year the herd or flock
ehould be improved and the least profitable
animals d of, so as to increase pro-
duction reduce the cost.
—The whole field, garden or truck patch
should he worked over alter every rain as
soon as it is in proper order. Quick move-
ment is worth a great deal at such times.
Is is a great saving of time, labor, patience,
wear and tear. The weeds are killed, or
kept down, before they make much growth,
or before they mature, and vegetation is
soothed and nourished by the moving of
the most, crumbling soil. If roots and
spongioles are broken they heal rapidly,
and their growth and extension are greatly
facilitated. The wear and tear of plow
points, harness and caltivators in hard, dry
soils, especially if they be clay, are not
duly considered, and the expense of keep-
ing tools in order when compelled to be
used in such soils is an item of considerable
magnitade.
=o reves Sw are kept oe gram i
regarded as the important part of the milk,
while the skim milk to the pigs or the
poultry. Of conrse, itis thus utilized, and
ultimately comes around as food, but it
may be better to make a more direct use of
it. The skim milk contains a valuable
portion of the most nutritions food. In
taking the cream oniy a part of the nutri-
ment is removed. The skim milk is al.
lowed to become slightly sour, or ‘‘clab-
bered.”” The pan is then set upon a cool
pars of the stove to warm gently, or on the
top of a kettle of boiling water. It should
get no warmer than the heat of new milk,
when the whey will Sppeas clear and se)
ra‘e from the curd. en separation takes
place pour the whole into a bag of thin ma-
terial anu hang to drain. When it ceases
to drip turn the curd from the bag and mix
with salt and a little sweet cream.
—The olimate has much to do with the
quality of the product. Years ago it was
noticed that wheat from France, when
cultivated in Canada, bad to be acclimated
before it gave satisfactory results. Climate
has also an important influence on the pro-
portion of gluten and starch in wheat, the
wheat grown in a warm climate containing
more gluten, proportionately, which is
Lquivaiest to a large amount of nitrogen.
beat contains the largest amount of glu-
ten in proportion when it is ripe. In an
experiment made with a ety it was
found that when wheat was cut 18 days
before it was ripe it contained only 6
cent. of glaten, but when fully ripe it con-
tained 12 cent., but, as gluten is not
quite as white as starch, it will follow thas
when wheat is cut a little before it is dead
ripe it will make a whiter flour than when
it is cut at a later period, but it will be
less nutritious and less in quantity. These
conditiops are, however, subject to the
variety of wheat and the climate and soil.
w=Duribg She warm days the manure
heap is liable to become overheated and
lose a large share of its valuable ammonia.
Should this condition occur the best plan
to pursue is to open the manure beap in
several places with a crowbar, and pour in
cold water, in order to arrest fermenta-
tion. The manure will lose over one-half
its value if the fermentation proceeds until
the material becomes ‘‘Gre-fanged,’’ and
careful farmers for that reason prefer to
baudle the heap by shoveling is over and
throwing the coarse and bulky portions to
the centre. A t materials, such as
cut straw, or even earth, will serve well to
arrest the of fermentation, and, as
the admission of the air condunces to the
production of heat, the heap should be
firmly trampled and packed alter it base
been forked over and made into a new
Daring the busy season farmers are
prone to neglect the manure ly
so doing they are liable to permis a large
proportion of in hoi valuable constitu-
ents to escape into the aymosphere.
~—Some hens are more careful with
ing chicks during the cold season depends
not only on the care provided, but also
e hen. Winter is not the
i
able to endure quite a low degree of tem-
perature without difficulty if they can oe-
casionallv ran under the ben and get warm,
but some hens are more active than others,
and will not remain quiet for the chicks to
be nestled. It is best, therefore, when
placing eggs under a hen, in cold weather,
to take into consideration the time when
they are to come out. Brahmas and Cochins
are excellent mothers,as they are naturally
indolent and prefer to remain quiet. They
sometimes tread upon the chicks, and
thereby quickly thin a brood to a wini-
mum number, but they endeavor to do
their best to care for the chicks, and clum-
giness is not always the rule. Light hens
are sometimes too restless for winter, It
is best, in extremely cold weather, to con-
fineall aettisg hens in stall yards or bose,
in order ey may bave no nit,
to race the chicks about. The cd wines
are very severe on young chicks,and damp-
ness is also a serious obstacle to them,
PET | nade with the bias
FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN.
A DAILY THOUGHT.
A good word is an easy obligation; but not to
speak Ill requires only our silence, which costs
us nothing. — Tillotson.
Beauty in many women is a serious
handicap, because, being beautiful, a wom-
an fancies that she runs the gamut of
charm. Consequently she takes little
pains to cultivate other gifts wore potent
than beauty itself.
The woman who starts out in life a plain
face and a figure that is nothing to
peeds be well cultared with good common
sense and the full knowledge that ber indi-
viduality must more than compensate for
the poverty of personal charm.
Such a one is, then, at greater pains to
please others than hersell, and is rarely a
wall flower. The laws of compensation
work well in her beball.
She a charm that her more
beautiful sisters could ever cultivate, and
which is sure to bring her love that her
more favored sisters could never win.
A woman who is intensely womanly, who
apes at nothing of mannish prerogatives,
whose eyes are true, whose voice is sympa-
thetic, with a touch of a child’s appealing
faith in both voice and manner, is the
woman who charms
She may nos be brilliant, and she may
not be witty—and heaven defend us from
the witty woman who always wants to say
something smart, sacrificing ihe feelings of
her friends to keep up her reputation for
wit—but she does say the right thing at
the right time.
She is sincere because in her heart she
cherishes none of the small spites that
ake women both treacherous and unfeel-
ng.
Her voice is soothing and musical, and
you feel trom your very soul that yon
could trust her with your life, your honor,
if need be, and she would never fail you.
The masculine woman isa ‘‘good fel-
low’ at times, The womanly woman is
sacred always.
A mun may like the masculine edition
when in the mood, but in bis heart he fits
the womanly woman into a sacred shrine.
He may laugh at the slangy talk of the girl
in a golf eapand a swagger to matoh, but
he honors the womanly woman as he would
Syme precious effigy of a long-buried
saint.
Women do not always appreciate the
fine line that a man draws between women
and women,
Plenty of dresses of pretty, cheery ma-
terials, madein ways that permit of fre-
quent laundering—these are the first and
most im t requisites in fitting ous a
lissle girl for the summer.
Study gingbams and linens, and the dez-
ens of cotton, the favorite materials used.
For best, of course, there's nothing
better than—nothing half so good as—all
white.
Sailor suits are as popuiar as ever—more
80, if that is possible; and some of them
are made interesting by a choice of materi-
al orof color which gives a conspicuously
different air to the little frock. :
Galatea and pique, linen, linene and
duck make the more satisfactory of sailor
suits; those for morning of medium dark
colors—old blue, natural color and the
cool, pretty reds which have come out in
such profasion this spring; those for after-
noons of white, with the big collar scallop-
ed by band or edged with a narrow rufile
of embroidery, or as often left untrimmed,
the silk tie of bright blue or red—even of
pink or light blue—made to do duty as
the only trimming.
New stylesin guimpe dresses show the
inflaence of surplice styles; while the fa-
vorite of the new sleeves is one more like
a tunic sleeve than anything else, made
short, and slashed ap on the outside. And
belts, of one sort or another, are upon al-
most every style.
Skirts are as fnll as they can be; some of
the quaintest of white dresses, made witha
short, full skirt, with a very full flounce
of embroidery—as i the skirt itself
and almost twice as full—makiog the skirt
look like an animated ruffle.
The simple morning dresses, though, are
often cut on long straight lines, the belt
quite literally holding the fullness in. On
many of them collar and bel, or, peshits,
a sheer, beantiful bertha, are adjustable,
edge carefully seamed
into straight bands, so that the fioiug 8p
is a much easier matter than it has n
before.
Nothing takes the place of the cheery
plaid ginghams, trimmed with strips of
smbiouduy, haloss is be those i
percales, w seem to grow prettier wit!
each washing.
English embroidery, in the simpler pat-
terns, makes the most effective sors of
dresses for best. It is combined with
batiste or lawn or with nainsook or swiss.
And handkerchief linen is as popular for
the better grades of children’s dresses as it
is for blouses and dresses.
The quaintest little suits—echoes of the
linen suits which will be worn by nine out
of ten women this year as last—have come
over from Paris copied from some the little
girls wear. They are made with
kilted skirts and round ets, with which
a sailor blouse of fine white washable stuff
* Voeth they will Ia
hether or not they will prove popular
here is hard tosay; but the a ,
without in the least losing its childish
oc copies princi
re styles have quaint es -
ly g guimpe dresses, the high belt and
ow-cut yoke giving opportunity for un-
usual, revere-like berthas, to take the place
of the more usnal kinds.
Reveres of blue or of red, or of the pretty
shepherd’s plaids which are never ous of
fashion for children’s clothes, are the most
satisfactory coats, with the all improve-
ment chevron embroidered, of course, upon
one sleeve.
As to hats, there's little change. Lin-
etic and kes for ew the plain
Re yw Ett, ey Sy
the | with only a ribbon, or at most, with a big
ue!
Natte of & bow, with a long quill st
Tan shoes have come in to stay for chil-
dren, with white is almost as popular for
afternoon, and general dressup occasions;
aud strapped slippers for only style of slip-
pers worn.
To heat cloths for sickness without scald-
ing the hands. A doable boiler, a spirit
lamp or auy simple heater makes the prob.
lem an easy one. With hot water in the
outer part of the kettle place the boiler
over a low flame, wring out the cloths and
place in the dry inner kettle, keeping the
cover on. When they are hot enough to
use take ove out aod apply to patient,
leaving the others to keep hot. In this
way a constant supply can be kept with
out scalding the hands. If the cloths be-
come a trifle dry a little water can be
gpeiukled over them when returned to the
e.
Sees Evil for 1906.
Paris.—The new year does not bring
much good to anybody if we are to believe
the predicition of Mme. Thebes, the seeress
made famous by Alexander Dumas, fils. In
her almauae for 1906 which bas just ap-
, she says:
“As I predicted years ago that 1905
would be a bloody year I now predict that
1906 will be a mad year. The civilized
world, or, rather, the world which likes to
call itself civilized, is in a stage of trans-
formation. What will emerge from the
chrysalis ? A monster. It will take a long
time and many bloody dramas before wars
between the classes and nations will be fol-
lowed by peace and friendship and estab-
lishing of a new social order. I once more
ios that the small country of Belgium
destined to play a strange and import-
ant part in this transformation, which isto
come, and which will change the whole
political situation in Europe in a most re-
markable manner.
“The disturbances which are now
threatening the Russian empire will spread
to Germany and before the end of 1906 the
Germany colossus, built as it is on a foun-
dation of clay, will begin to crumble into
dust. The days of more than one prince are
counted, and I am not afraid to =ay that
altogether the year of 1906 will bring the
most astonishing events.
“In France the political situation will
continue to be as unsettled as ever and toa
certain extent more dangerous, though the
1 danger will be more imaginary than real,
and in spite of violent financial crisis and
struggles between political parties the
country will emerge unharmed.
“I am not able to say whether we shall
have any great war, that depends on too
many different circumstances and the book
of destiny reveals nothing, bnt neither
does it reveal that Europe will remain in
peace.”’
Cure For Red Noses,
Red noses are a delicate subject, to which
however, one may be permitted to refer for
the purpose of stating that a German scien-
tist claims to bave devised an efficacious
remedy. According to his theory, red noses
do not spring from bottles or Rastes, as
the malicious insinuate, but in their occa-
sional redness may be attributed to the
extreme sensitiveness of the sanguineous
vessels of some noses to cold, and in their
permanent high color to the excessive dila-
tion of the minor veins at the point of the
nose. The object in view is to destroy
these slanderons little blood vessels, but as
deep scratches might deform the nose, and
pricking by needle would cause excessive
pain, the German scientist, Professor Las-
sar, of Berlin, has devised a sort of a spe-
cial massage, and by the use of chloride
of ethyl enables the operation to be per-
formed withotit pain or risk.
POISONED CANDY THROUGH MAIL
Trenton Police Investigate Case That
Made Four Persons Sick.
Trenton, N. J., May l.—Prosecuto:
Crossley and the local police are in-
vestigating a case of the receipt of a
box of poisoned candy through the
mail by 12-year-old Josephine Daven-
port. The child lived with the fam.
ily of Elijah Jones, of Titusville. Mrs
Jones, the Davenport child and a child
of the Jones’ were made sick by eating
some of the candy. They were attend:
ed by Dr. G. N. D. Adams. The father
and mother of the Davenport child
were arrested on another charge and
locked up. The couple did not live to-
gether,
COMMITTED SUICIDE AT 108
Aged Mrs. Mary McKittrick Ends Her
Long Life.
Uniontown, Pa. May 1.—Mrs. Mary
McKittrick, who recently celebrated
her 108th birthday, committed suicide
by cutting her throat with a small
knife which she had in her room to
trim her nails. Her mind has been de-
ranged for severals weeks, but it was
not thought she would make an at.
tempt on her life,
Killed By a Blow.
Wilmington, Del, April 30. — Ber
pard Larsen, aged 28, from Brooklyn,
was committed to jail at Newcastle
without bail to answer for the murder
of Lee Givisin, aged 28, at Delaware
City. Larsen, who is a steward on a
sailing yacht from New York, went
ashore at Delaware City and engaged
in a fight with Givison, during which
the latter was killed by a blow.
His Body Found in River.
Harrisburg, Pa., April 30.—The body
of Luther Neiman, a Pennsylvania
railroad engineer, who had been miss-
ing from his home in this city the past
10 days, was found floating in the Sus-
quehanna river here. It is not known
whether his death was accidental or
suicide.
Castoria.
(ASTORIA
The Kind You Have Always Bought has
borne the ure of Chas, H. tcher,
and has been made under his personal
supervision for over 30 Jone. llow no
one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits,
Imitations and “Just-as-good" are but Ex-
Poviiedts, and endanger the health of
Shildren—Faperionce against Experi.
WHAT IS CASTORIA
Castoria isa harmless substitute for Cas.
tor Oil, and Soothing
Syrups, Itis t. It contains neith.
er Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
desrors W hs i ae. h
orms an ness,
It cures Diarrhea and Wind Golie, It re-
lieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipa-
tion and y. It assimilates
Food at and Bowels,
ving healthy oh natural sleep. Th
an 8
Children's a Mother's of
THE KIND YOU HAVE ALWAYS BOUGHT
Bears the Signature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
In Use For Over 30 Years,
The Centaur Company, New York City.
51-7-2lm
»
Real Maple Sugar.
The Department of Agriculture’s Barean
of Forestry is trying to tevive and extend
the production of maple sugar, As persons
of middle age can remember, maple sogar
was formerly obtained fiom the sap of
maple trees. Now it is usgally compound-
ed of glucose, brown cane sugar, extract
of hickory bark, and cther substances cap
able of more or less plausible disguise.
The Bareau of Forestry considers ita
moderate statement to say that seven-
eighths of all the maple and syrup
eit. It thinks
on the market are coun
thas the production of the genuine article
can be made profitable t the
Northern States and We Svughw as the
mountains of Eastern Tennessee and West-
tern North Carolina. Its investigations
Show tha u fartaer can sully clear $3 per
acre, usoally more, from a sugar grove
on land that would be useless for any other
purpose. At the same time this industry
would help to preserve forest conditions.
The Bureau believes that the producers
can push pure goods into the market at a
little higher price than is now paid for
adaiterated articles by forming associa-
tions, adopting registered trade-marks
carrying absolute guarantees of quality
and, if neceserry, seliing direct to the con-
samers instead of to the middlemen who
are Jesponaihe for the present conditions.
Governor Sets Two Arbor Days.
Gov. 8. W. P:noypacker issued at Har-
risburg a proclamation designating two ar-
bor days in Pennsylvania, in order that
whichever may ap he to the cli-
mate of the locality may be selected. The
Governor says :
Since the seventeenth of January, 1903,
the Forestry Reservation Commission have
bought 42,726 acres of forest lands, the
State now holds in all 753,741 acres of
such lands, and this commission is doing
much to preserve and maintain our forests
and our streams. It behooves every citi-
zen who cares for the welfare of the Com-
monwealth to lend assistance and to give
encouragement to this important work.
The lives of men and of trees are sc inter-
woven that without the other neither can
exist. The growth of the grove means
both happiness and benefit, to mankind.
In order that all our citizens, men,
women and children, ma jattici pale in
the pleasure and benefit of planting trees,
I, Samuel W. Pennypacker, Governor of
the Commonwealth «of Pennsylvania, do
hereby, in accordance with law, i=xne this
my proclamation, designating Friday, the
sixth day of April, and Friday, the twen-
tieth day of April, A. D., 1906, to be ob-
served as Arbor Days throughout the Com-
monwealth,
Business Notice.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
Medical.
Twice TOLD TESTIMONY.
PEOPLE ARE DOING ALL THEY CAN FOR
FELLOW SUFFERERS,
Bellefonte testimony has been published to
prove the merit of Dean's Kidney Pills to others
in Bellefonte who suffer from bad backs and kid.
ney ills. Lest any sufferer doubt that the cures
made by Doan’s Kidney Pills are thorough and
lasting, we produce confirmed proof—statements
from ‘Bellefonte people saying that the cures they
told of years ago were permanent, Here's a Belle-
fonte case :
James Rine, unter, of 230 High street,
Jaya : “Doan's Kidney Pills cured me in
1879 and the statement I made for publica.
tion at that time recommending this remedy
was a true statement and stands today.
I therefore have no hesitation in recommend-
ing Doan's Kidney Pills n. WAS 80
weak before I took the first dose that I could
not put on my shoes and was hardly able to
drag yaa) around. There were severe
ins all through my back and down info m
imbe, During all the Jeans since Doan's
Kidney Pills cured me I have not been troub-
led in this way. Ihave recommended Doan's
Kidney Pilis to a good many sufferers to F.
Potts Green's drug store for their first box.
In no case has the result been other than sat-
isfactory."”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole
agents for the United States, .
Remember the name—Doan's—and take no
other. 5113-e. 0, Ww. 2m
New Advertisements.
ACETYLENE
The Best and Cheapest Light.
COLT ACETYLENE
GENERATORS..........
GIVE
THE LEAST TROUBLE,
THE PUREST GAS,
AND ARE
SAFE.
Generators, Supplies
and Fixtures. . . .
JOHN P. LYON.
BUSH ARCADE,
General Agent for Central Pennsylvania
for she J. B. Colt Co.
Headquarters . Bellefonte, Pa.
80-9-1m
SECHLER & CO.
PURE FOOD STORE.
+
We carry a full line of all goods in the
line of Foods and Fine Gr.ucries.
MANHATTAN DRIPS
A fine Table Syrup in one quart,
two quart and four quart tin pails, at
12¢., 250., and 45¢. per pail; try it.
Maple Syrup in glass hottles and tin
cans.
NEW ORLEANS MOLASSES
The finest new crop New Orleans—a
rich golden yellow and an elegant bak-
er. That is the report our customers
bring to us. Fine Sugar Syrups—no
glucose.
MARBOT WALNUTS.
These Nuts are clean and sound,
heavy in the meats and in every way
very satisfactory. We have some very
good California Walnuts but not equal
to the Marbots. Fine Almonds and
Mixed Nuts.
EVAPORATED FRUITS.
Peaches 100., 120., 150. and 180. per
pound. Apricots 15¢., 180. and 20c.
per pound. Prunes 5o., 8c., 100. and
120. per pound. Raisins 100. and 1%.
per pound, either seeded or unseeded.
Currants 10c. and 120. per pound.
Citron, Orange and Lemon Peel.
Dates, Figs and fine Table Raisins.
All these goods are well worth the
prices named on them and will gi
good satisfaction. :
MINCE MEAT.
The foundation of our Mince Meat
is good sound lean beef, and all other
ingredients are the highest grade of
goods. It represents our best effort
and our customers say i¢ is a sucoess,
and at 12§o. per pound is very reason-
able in price.
FOREIGN FRUITS.
We are now receiving some of the
finest California Naval Oranges and
Florida bright and sweet fruits. This
frais is just now reaching its very fin-
est flavor. They are exceptionally fine
and ab reasonable prices. Lovers of
Grape Fruit can be nicely suited on
the fruit we have. Lemons for some
time past have been a difficult proposi-
tion, but we now have some fine fruit.
SECHLER & CO.
Pare Food and Fine Groceries,
491 BELLEFONTE, PA.
Green's Pharmacy.
4
4
4 EPPER
4 Pirrrx
Twelve years ago ground black pep-
per was selling here at 40c, the Ib.—
and not the best at that. We thought
we could save our customers money
by buying in large quantities, direct
from the men who imported and
ground it—packing it in pound pack-
ages ourselves—we did so, buying
Singapore Pepper, and for five years
sold it to you at 15¢ the Ib.—then itad-
vanced to 20c. For the past three
years we have sold it for 22, itis
sifted free from stems and dirt before
grinding and is just what we repre.
sent it.
PURE SINGAPORE PEPPER
The price is still 22c. the pound—we
invite your trade for pure spices.
GREEN'S PHARMACY CO.,
Bush House Block,
' BELLEFONTE, PA.
y
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Medical.
ILES A cure guaranteed if you use
RUDYS PILE SUPPOSITORY
eq
prick, Soa ae, 0 LY
Call for Free on)
1y IN RUDY, Lancaster, Pa,
8 to
Bary SA advertise and dist aie nbs
Te Eat nt. TDL:
om
Randolph Bh. ieago,
— NG PTT TTT TTY TYTN YT YY Te YT a
OOK !
JOHN F. GRAY & SON,
(Successors to Grant Hoover.)
FIRE,
LIFE,
AND
ACCIDENT
INSURANCE.
This Agency represents the largest
Fite Insurance Companies in the
——NO ASSESSMENTS.—~—
Do not fail to give us a call before insuring
your Life or Property as we are in position to
write large lines at oy time,
Office in Crider's Stone Building,
43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA.
VA vA va ea
dR PREFERRED ACCIDENT
INSURANCE 00.
TEE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY
Benefits :
$5,000 death by accident,
5,000 loss of both feet,
5,000 loss of both hands,
5,000 loss of one hand and one foot
2,500 loss of either hand,
2,500 loss of either foot,
loss of one eye,
25 per week, total disability;
weeks. )
10} She partial disabili
Jlimoit 26 weeks. iy.
PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR,
payable quarterly if desired.
Larger or smaller amounts in pro
portion. Any person, male or fomale
cngaged ina preferred oocupati ine
clu house-keeping, over .
teen of age of good moral and
Pp condition may insure under
this policy.
FIRE INSURANCE
I I invite Jue on Sittin to my fire
nsarance e strongest
avd Mort Extensive Line of Solid
ompanies represen an;
agency in Central a y
H. E. FENLON,
50-21 Agent, Bellefonte, Pa.
Saddlery.
10 PER CENT. REDUCTION
ON ALL GOODS SOLD—WHY YOU
SHOULD VISIT THE
COUNTY SEAT
———
You can combine business with
Jesse and make the trip pay
or itself. You will save more
than your expenses by calling at
SCHOFIELD'S HARNESS FACTORY
and purchase bargains that we
are now olfering. All leather
goods are advancing in price.
We bave now in stock a very
large assortment of
HAND-MADE HARNESS—LIGHT
AND HEAVY—
at all prices. Our stock of Blan-
kets and fine Robes is complete—
and nicer patterns than we bave
bad for many a year. We can
supply you with anything in the
horse line, Axle Grease, Harness
Dressing, Harness Soap, Stock
Food, Chicken Food ; the best in
the market. Money refunded on
all goods if not satisfactory.
Very truly yours,
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
Spring street,
BELLEFONTE.
Flour and Feed.
(RTE Y. WAGNER,
Brockeruorr Minis, Beuieronts Pa,
ROLLER FLOUR,
FEED, CORN MEAL, Et.
Also Dealer in Grain.
Manufactures and has on hand at all
times the following brands of high grade
WHITE STAR,
OUR BEST.
HIGH GRADE,
VICTORY PATENT,
FANCY PATENT-—(formerly Phe
nix Mills high grade brand.
The only place in the county whers
SPRAY,
traord fi
Spring ar 8 lle, 3
ned.
ALSO:
INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD,
FEED OF ALL KINDS,
Whole or Manufactured,
All kinds of Grain bought at office,
Exchanges Flour for Wheat,
OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street,
Bellefonte.
MILL « «+ - ROOPSBURG,
TRE