—— Democratic alan. i esm—— Bellefonte, Pa., March 1, 1907, —Manare may fail to give good results the first year aud show well the next. Much depends npon the condition of the material. —While some farmers are deploring the loss of profit on wool the knowing oues are raising early or ‘‘hot hounse’’ lambs, and make more profitfrom one ewe than they formerly did with ball a dozen sheep kept for wool. They use the mutton breeds.at- tach but little value to the fleece, and make larger profits from sheep then they have ever done before. —A crack in the wall,or a knothole may receive but little consideration, yet a cold draught from such a source may be injor- ions to the animal. When a cow shrinks in the yield of milk in winter, while other cows are yielding up to the average, it in- dicates thas something is wrong, the ani- mal not being comfortable, and, unless the quarters are free from draughts, the farmer will pay a penalty for negligence. —Experiments made in France with the | sunflower gave a return of 1778 pounds of seed from an acre, yielding 15 per cent. of oil (about 120 pounds) and 80 per cent. of cake. The product varies, of course, with the kind, the climate and the soil. The common oil is used chiefly for woolen dressing, lighting and soapmaking in En- rope. The purified article is largely em. ployed for table use, and is considered by some as equal. —The ashes of plants show a larger per- centage of lime than of any other material, thus demonstrating that lime is a very necessary ingredient in the soil. When phosphates are applied they carry lime to the soil, and the same is true of ashes. Lime also enters largely into the composi- tion of the hones of animals, and the most rapid growth is made by those animals which are fed on foods rich in lime, such as clover, brav aud bay. Grain is deficient in lime. i FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. As unto the bow the cord is, So unto the man is women, Though she bends him she obeys Lim, Though she draws him, yet she follows, Useless each without the other, = Longfellow's ** Hiawtha," All the skirts of thin material show a little fulness at the waist line. There is no sign of abatement in wearing short sleeves. In Paris every sleeve is short except the very severe tailor costumes, and some of these have sleeves which juss cover the elbow. Tan shoes will be worn again this spring. The new plaids and stripes allow of much orginality in the making up. Very carious and beautiful effects are gained by tucking to eliminate or bring out the pat- tern of the material. An extremely handsome and simple gown seen recently was a black chiffon vel- vet striped at two-inch intervals with qoar- ter-inch stripings of white satin. The skirt, which lay on the floor all around, trailing a trifle at the sides and back, was gathered at the top. The hodice was a pinafore; the body of it was gathered in at the waist line. with the stripes running up and down, so that there was no breakiog of the lines. The top was cus vat deep and round, and mere straps that held the velvet up over the elbow-sleeved guimpe of Irish lace over white chiffon. A small black toque, from which floated a white bird of paradise plume, topped the gown, In hemmiog table linen by band it ome- times seems almost impossible to turn it down as evenly as one would wish, and at first removed the thread from the needle. There yon are with a nice, fine bein, firm- ly pressed into place and ready to hem. It i The shaped girdle was also of the material, | the sections going over the shoulders were | Lec as College President. Having been a student at Washington | College, Lexington, Va., from September | 1866, to June, 1869, while General R. E. | Lee was president of that institution, I bave | been asked, writes Dr. 8. Z. Ammon in the Baltimore Sun, to describe the impression | the great Confederate leader, in his role of | private geutlenan and educator, produced in the college world, | The task of describing General Lee's | work at Lexington is difficult, hecause his | successes there were due chiefly to his per- | sonal influence. He did not teach, and | thus did not often come into close relations | with individual students. Nor did he lec- ture or make addresses onany sabject for the edification of the students, as a mod- | ern college president would do. Ido not remember ever seeing him in a recitation | room, except on examination day, when he | sometimes dropped in to lend the weight of | his presevce to the importance of the ocea- | sion. He did not, I believe, attend the | | alumnt banquets (during commencement eral Lee responding to a toast. He was | not in the least convivial—was, in fact, a i | general administration of the college, en- | forced discipline and superintended, in a | on the college campus, He directed, for | example, the construction of the stone | moreans have noted ‘hat the foundation walls of the chapel are of the same massive | of which General Lee superintended before the civil war. | dent face to face. They sometimes en- | conntered him on the campus in the morn- | work aud were gratified {0 receive his salu- | tation. Many of the students were sons of { the army. These he might stop and ques- | thon, asking after the health of his old com- week, and it 1s impossible to imagine Gen- “total ahstainer.”” He looked after the | large way, the initiation of improvements 2a) in which be now les, and Balti- construction a« Fore Carroll, the building The college boys seldom met the presi- | ing when be came to his office for the day’s | officers whom General Lie had known in rades. Rarely there was a bit of pleasan- the same time make a hem cofliciently nar. | try. as for example, bis remark one rainy row. The next time you are troubled try | day to T. A. Ashby, ‘A good day for this: Put your table linen through the | ducks.”” The general was not witty, but hemmer of the sewing machine, having | had a slender vein of humor, which found expression in brief plirases, It way not be amiss to say that General Lee's popularity with the young ladies of —It is urged in favor of subsoiling that | Will stay pressed, too, so that you may do | Lexington excited no little envy among the land improves every year, although it may bave been subsoiled but once. In and lay them away. viewing the effects it should be in the light of improvement and not recovery, as no injarions effects are noticed at any | time. It is also cipimed that if a narrow | roller should follow the subsoil plow, #0 as | to compact the soil after the subsoil plow | has passed, the capacity to hold water | would be greatly increased and the benefits of subsoiling be more immediate, —The most economica! f50d is that which give the best results, Fodder which was oft in the fleld last fall will not compare favorably with that which was protected in the barn. The value of the food de- pends upon its care and preparation, and economy is practiced by judicious manage- ment of the stock and the feeding of food that bas not lost its nutritive qualities by exposure. Even straw may be made valua- ble by good care, and espeoially if fed in connection with concentrated food. —If butter is a specialty on the farm the pigs are necessary to insure a profit. In the winter season the feeding of skim milk and buttermilk to pigs is the best and cheapest mode of making pork. Witha clover patch for the pigs to occupy in sum- mer, and a mess of hran and buttermilk or skim milk at night, they will grow rapid- ly without any other food. If pigs are @enfined in pens they should have the aca cut and thrown into the pens, as they .showld have some kind of hulky food. ~The lambs that come in February are the ones that give large profits. The earlier they come the better, as the difference of 4wo or three weeks in reaching the market may affect the value 100 per cent. The young lamb must have warm quarters and be forced in growth. It is easily chilled if the weather is severely cold, and should such happen it will receive a check from which it will not soon recover. Warmth is more essential at firet than feed, but after the lamb gets a start it will grow “apily if the ewe gives an abundance of milk. . —Cheap wheat leaves a larger profit for the farmer than was received half a cen- tury ago with wheat at double the price of the present day. The value of au article is its price compared with its cost. The wheat drill, the self-binder, and the com- bined thresher and cleaner have so lowered the cost of labor, and reduced the time in growing and harvesting wheat, as to en- able the farmer to now grow four acres of wheat instead of one, as formerly. The way to make wheat more profitable is to increase the average yield per acre by the liberal use of fertilizers. —The farmer has his reverses, and dur- ing some years makes little or no profit; bat the man who has a farm, even if but a small one, controls the opportunities to labor. He is not compelled to starve or seek employment, and can at least grow enough to supply bis wants. Five bushels of wheat will supply one person with bread for a year, hence only shree acres in wheat will keep a family of six in bread. The farmer can also produce meat, [rait, vege: tables, honey, milk, eggs, butter, eto., and by canning a supply lor winter can have his table set with a variety at all sea- sons. —Killing weeds by spraying is now practiced in France. A five per cent. solu- ‘ion of sulphate of copper bas been found structive to wild mustard and some other is, without injuring grain crops. Isis “le that is will not injure certain tasteless meat. all three methods are identieal; the differ- ence lies in the medinm employed. the object to be attaived is to first quickly sear the exterior of the meat, thus coagula- ting the surface albumen and effectually sealing the juices. The cooking then pro- ceeds more slowly to a finish, the time re- i — 1 | The coming embroidery of the season is | Wallachian work. This should be good | news to the woman who is not partieniarly skilled with her naedle, or who is so impa- tient as to chafe atthe length of time i necessary to do more intricate stitches. For | Waliachian work, showy and effective as it | is, is nothing more than the well-known | buttoohole stitch; a button-holing, more- | over, that needs no underlaying or pad- | a wig. . : { It was firsc introduced last fall for fancy work and small dress accessories, such as | collar sets and belts, but now is to be much { used for blouses, parasols and whole suits, | This work is simplicity itsell. The de- | signs are usually of a floral order—such as | clusters of hydrangeas or phlox, more or | less conventionalized. Each petal is divid- | ed by a lengthwise central line, to which | That isall there isto it. It does not | Not even the padding of ordinary button- holing is necessary as the work is done in mercerized flosa. If housewives understood more fully the processes of broiling, roasting and hoillng, there would be less complaint of tough, The principles underlying In all, quired hinging, as a matter of course, upon | the size of the cat. In broiling and in roasting, which are in reality the same, the name depending upon the nature of the piece of meat, this har- dening of the exterior is accomplished by exposing the meat to the direct action of the heat, which must be intense enough to sear the surface at once. When it is not, the juices seep ous, leaving the meat taste- less and sacrificing its nutritive qualities. In boiling meat, surface coaguiation is attaived by immersing the meat in boiling water and keeping up the temperature for a minute. One of the preliminary rales of boiling, one which should be indelibly im- pressed upon every cook, is that water can not be heated to the proper temperature for boiling (212 degrees) in an open vessel nor in one with an indifferently fitting cover. Another point, equal iv importance to the first, is that when waser begins to boil, a quicker fire than is absolutely neces. sary to keep it boiling results merely in wasting the water in the form steam and =o hardens the exterior of the meat as to pre- vent the heat penetrating to the interior.— [The February Housekeeper. One of the most trying things that falls to the lot of the family seamstress is draw- ing threads across muslin or linen to make a guiding line for cutting, but if the goods be well dampened across where the line is to come the thread may be drawn with ease, and, in mos; cases, withoat even breaking the thread. Many a sorte finger end has been saved by this precaution. Another suggestion, it followed, will be found very useful in drawing threads for your whole dozen napkins at one sitting | the students, The gitls had an ambition [ to “have it to say'’ that Geaoral Lee had kissed them. As the General was gallant enongh to avail himsell of this weakness, there were instances that were barrowing enough to the feeling: of the sindents who happened to be in love with some one of Lexington’s pretty girls, The dears not only did not conocal their partiality to the General, bat boasted of it to lovers to whom they denied like favors ! I recall an instance of this dignified osenlation on the highway in the suburbs where I boarded. I hasten to say that I was not acquainted with the young lady. She was awfully pretty, and the students agreed that in this case they would bave done the same, had they en- joyed the General's opportunity The in- cident seems, however, to prove that how- ever stern he might be with men, the gen- eral conld, oo occasion, conceds= something to the ladies. The respect in which the students beld General Lee is illostrated hy hi« sncecess in week’s holiday. A paper wae signed by the boys pledging the signers not to attend sound very hard, yet it is surprising how | lectures during the week between Corist. elaborate and striking are the results. | as and New Year's The feeling was hown in a rhyme circolated among the students at this time, describing alleged incidents of the facalty meeting. Affairs looked threatening in the college world for a time, but General Lee ended the trouble as soon as he heard of it by an- nouncing that all who signed the paper about cutting all lectures for a week shonld be at once dismissed. ‘‘If all sign it." he said, “I'll lock up the college and pnt the keys in my pocket.” Signatures were erased, and the rebellion at once collapsed. Sach was the feeling General Lee iospired that opposition to his expressed wishes was not to be thought of for an instant. Women Workers of Amerien France. and Thereare no less than 4,000,000 women in the United States today who earn their own living, and one-third of all persons en- gaged in professional services are women. There are 34,579 women who are teachers of music, and 10,000 who are artists and teachers of art. Feminine school teachers and professors of learning number 250,000. Thete are 11,000 telegraph operators, 1,150 women preachers, 5 000 women doctors, 888 journalists and several hundred women lawyers in the United States. Wcmen aathors number 2,725. There are 19 wom- en who are trappers and guides, 39 who are chemists or have something todo with as- saying and metallurgy, while in detective work 279 are women. France employs over 5,000 women in her civil service, telephone and telegraph of- fices. The Bank of France has 400 women employed on its salaried list, while 200 women have positions in the Credit Fon- cier. It is estimated that as least 3,750,000 women in France support themselves by their own exertions. ——{'A woman can always get the het. terof a man in an argument,” said the visitor. ‘Yes,’ answered Mies Cayenne. ‘‘But we should remember that in an argument a woman always has a certain advantage. She is not expected to be a gentleman.’ ——‘‘Here is an interesting item about a man who has married 1,400 times.”’ “‘Gracious ! He must be some eastern Sleeping Sickness Fight, The Commissioner of Uganda is making vigorous efforts, writes Renter's Entebbe correspondent, to deal with sleeping sick- ness, and radical measures are being taken. It baving conclusively been proved that the Tse-Tee fly is the main, if not the only, means by which the disease can be trauvs- mitted, all persons suffering from sleeping sickness are being removed from the fly- infested districts along the Lake shore, and placed in specially organized camps or set- tlewents inland, where they will be under medical care and be treated with Atoxyl. Althourh the disease a rs to be on the decrease, the mortality is still appalling, and the number of persons required to be dealt with is very large. It is pro- posed to create ten sleeping sickness settle- ments in the Kingdom of Uganda, and is is expected that provision will have to he made, in each oue, for at least 2000 suffer- ers with their families. Only those who are destitute will be maintained at the cost of the government, but the expense under this head will, in any case, be considerable. It is estimated that an expenditure of nearly £30,000, spread over three years, will be required in this connection. Special arrangements are being made to eliminate all danger from the Earopean settlements at Entebbe and Jinja. All vegetation, capable ol harboring Tse-Tse flies is being entirely removed, and the measures already teken in this direction have proved so efficacions that it is now impossible to find a single fly in Entebbe, The great cost of clearing, however, pre- vents the wholesale denudation of the Lake shore. Professor Koch's claim to having discovered a cure for sleeping sick- ness is being accepted with much reserve by the medical stafl in Uganda, and the government does not propose to relax its efforts to stamp ont the disease by preven- tive measures. Alleged cures have fre- quently heen reported in the past, but re- lapses have always occurred and death has invariably ensued. The Biggest Kitchen in the World. The largest kitchen in the world is in that great Parisian store, the Bon Marche, which bas fonr thousand employees. The smallest kettle contains one hundred quarts, and the largest five hundred. Fach of the fifty roasting pavs is hig enongh for three hundred cutlets. Each dish for baking po- tatoes holds two hundred and twenty-five pounds, When omelets are on the bill of fare, seven thousand eight hundred eggs are used at once. For cooking alone, sixty cooks aud 100 assistants are always at the ranges, -——1 pansed to talk to a fishmonger. “Fishmonger,’’ said I, pleasantly, ‘‘why do yon fishmong ?"’ He answered with a cordial smile : “I fishmong because my father fishmong before me.” ‘‘And have yon been fishmonging long?’ I asked farther. “Yes,” was the reply. “I have fishmong for seven years come Michaelmas.” “You are a worthy fishmonger,”” I re- sponded, “and I'm sure yon aiways mong the best of fish.” ——Your Honor,” said the arrested the buttonholing runs. The foliage is | quelling a revolt at Christmas, 1866-67, Shaufiear, 1 sried to wan the man, bat treated in the same way; all stems are done when the faculty bad refused to wrant a | the horn would not work. in a heavy outline. | “Then why did you not slacken speed rather than ron him down 2’? A light then seemed to dawn upon the prisoner. “Homph !"’ he said, ‘‘that’s one on we. I never thought of that.’’ -——*‘] think Riggley is one of the po- litest men I ever met.” “I'm listening.” “He always thanks the telephone girl when she tells him the line is busy.” ~—‘“There’s no changing a leopard’s spots,”’ remarked the visitor at the 200. “‘Oh, yes there is,’’ said the keeper. ‘‘I saw a lion fighting with one once, and he knocked the spots clean out of him.” ~—— Nell--Polly says her tiance is awlal- Jy conceited. Belle--In what way ? Nell--He bas never once told her thas be #s unworthy of her. ~— Yes, she is a woman who bas sof- fered a great deal because of her beliel.’” “Indeed ! And what is her belief “That she can wear a No. 3 shoe on a No. 6 foot.” —Sergeant : Smith ? Smith : To feteh water. Sergeant: In those disreputable trousers? Smith : No, sergeant; in this 'ere pail. Where are you going, ~——Dr. Florridder : I bad a great many more patients last year than I bave this, I wonder where they have gone to ? Mis. Oldun : Well, all we can do, dee tor, is to hope for the best. ——Snarlshy says it's his ambition te be » great discoverer.” ‘‘He is alseady. He ean find more fault than anyone in the community." ——An exchange has it that society is becoming Jame. Possibly so. It has erip- pled many a one. Best Route to the Northwest. In to St. Paul, Minneapolis or the Nov see that your ticket west of Chicago reads via The Pioneer Limited on the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail- way —tbe route over which your letters go. Standard and compartment sleepers with longer, higherand wider berths. Leaves There are times in every life when the vital forces seem to ebb. En gives place to languor. Ambition dies. car- rent of the blood crawls sluggishly through the veins. It is a condition commonly described by saying, I feel played out.’ For such a condition there is no medicine which will work so speedy a cure as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It contains no alechol. It is not a mere stimulating tonic. It contains no opium, cocaine nor other narcotic. It does not drug the nerves into insensibility. What it does is to supply Natare with the ma- terials out of which she builds nerve and muscle, hone and flesh. A gain in sound flesh is one of the first resnlts of the use of “Discovery.” ——Do not have one set of morals in your home and another in business. Right is right and wrong is wrong. Back GIVES OUT Plenty of Bellefonte readers have this experience, You tax the kidneys—overwork them-— They can't keep up the continual strain. The back glves oul—it aches and pains; Urinary troubles set in. Dot wait longer—take Doan's Kidney “ Bellefonte people tell how they act. Frank P. Davis, moulder, of 246 east Logan 8t., Bellefonte, Pa., says : “I used to suffer very much with a weakness of the back and severe pains through my loins. It i me in constant misery and I seemed to be unable to find any relief, until I got Doan's Kidney Pills at F. Potts Green's drug store and used them. They reached the spot and in a skort time my strength returned. I have never had any trouble of the kind since and am glad to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills not only because they helped me but use I know of others who have also found relief in the same way, and I have yet to hear of a case in which this remedy has failed to give satisfaction.” 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. 51-50-2m-e,0.W. wa Green’s Pharmacy. a oh li BB NM. li é { IN OUR DRUG STORE. . . Se me a. Se Not a single article is misrepre- sented ; if customers do not know what they are buying, we tell them, and let them be their own judges. We handle the purest drugs that we are able to obtain in all the world; and our prices are the lowest consistent with upright dealing. Don’t you want to trade at sach a drog store as this? wi, lll Bl Bo Al Be A Bi. NWT TTT TY TTT TY YT YY YY OY YY WY YY a Aon... By ry GREEN’S PHARMACY CO., Bush House Block, 5 F 5 BELLEFONTE, PA. ’ 1y 5 r b De Bo A Ba AB. WY TY YY YY TYE YY TTY Te ACETYLENE COLT ACETYLENE : Pt : —— : : : OOK ! JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Agency represents the largest Jie Insurance Companies in the ~——NO ASSESSMENTS. —— Do not fail to give us a call before insurin your Life or Pare as w , write large lines at any time. Offiee in Crider's Stone Building, mae PREFERRED ACCIDENT ——————— bee ree TO THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY Benefits : $5,000 death by aecident, 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, 630 loss of one eye, per week, total disability, imit 52 weeks, ) r week, partial disability limit 26 weeks. PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, payable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in pro portion. Any person, male or female engaged in a preferred occupation, in. cluding house-keeping, over eigh- teen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under this policy. FIRE INSURANCE I invite your attention to my fire Insurance Agency, the strongest and Most Extensive Line of Solid Companies represented by any agency in Central Pennsylvania. H. E. FENLON, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. 25 ( 10 501 @ are in position ER a eee | 43-18-1y BELLEFONTE, PA. € MVATAY AT NATL AT AT AT AT AT ATIINT AT AT AT ATL TL T LAT LT LPL MONEY SAVED — ccs Saddlery. | i i | | IS MONEY MADE Reduced in price—horse sheets, lap spreads and fly nets—for the next thirty days. We have de- termined to clean up all summer goods, if you are in the market for this class of goods you can’t do better tha call and supply your wants at thie store, ‘We bave the largest assortment of SINGLE aAxp DOUBLE DRIVING HARNESS in the conuty anu at prioes to suit the buyer. If you do not have one of our HAND-MADE SINGLE HARNESS you have missed a good thing. We are making a special effort tosap- ply you with a harness that youn may bave no concern about any parts hreaking. These harness are made from select oak stock, with a high-grade workmanship, and A GUARANTEE FOR TEN YEARS with each set of harness. We have on baud a fine lot of single harness ranging in price from $13.50 to $25.00 We carry a large line of oils, axle grease, whips, brushes, ocurry- combs, sponges, and everything vou need abou! a horse. We will take pleasure in showing you our goods whether youn buy or not. Give us a oall and see for yourself. Yours Respeetfully, JAMES SCHOFIELD, Spring street, BELLEFONTE. Flour and Feed. (ors ¥. WAGNER, Brockeruosy Minis, Briieroxts Pa, Manufacturer, sud wholesaler aad retailers of ROLLER FLOUR, PEED, CORN MEAL, Bie. Also Dealer in Grain. << i vi a (Tul potentate Union Station, Chicago, 6.30 p. m. daily; Masufactures ard has on hand at all “wel Soiyivs has been found | amined space. prong wig i ly the item says he is an Indians jus- | arrives SI Paul Dest worning as 7.95 ad |] GENERATORS... Pv ree ed fe ou. a . : A of drawing the first thread, draw the one | tice of the peace.’ . oa eB do soo | ba he. ie, Th mii bo brie Sh MER din WERE 954% “ - | to remove than the first one, € Work- | The soak usoally likes to sponge on a ‘of ad wr y be Sopa i this Sonu er will then be ir position to draw two at | others. y Room D, Park Building, Pr. THE LEAST TROUBLE, OUR BEST. na * wate dettively ‘where yu og there-after, and thus halve her THE PUREST GAS, HIGH GRADE, : d if | work. re, w. Nn Pe - AND ARE VICTORY PATENT, ry, as the mes : ds th FANCY PATENT—formerly Phes- ity, as the hanro, w the weeds than | y, odern remedies for chilblains are ANCE PATS legion. Three of the bast are raw onious, ECULIAR TO ITSELF SAFE. grade brand. potatoes for | sliced and bound Spou She Sore #pek; oil ol P . ’ eels a ily whore ; 0 e ————— RTs » ru en ph 4 a me or SE In combination, proportion and process, Hood's Sarsaparilla is therefore Peculiar to araet » : Itself in merit, sales and cores, . & ol » in al rwal. -— It is made from the best blood-purifying, alterative and tonic ingredients by such Generators, Supplies Spring wheat Fant I pnd S va original and peculiar methods as to retain the full medicinal value of each and sll, and Fixtures. . . . 's There is nothing better for a girl, some- The severest forms of serofula, salt rheum, eatarrh, rneumatism, dyspepsia, and de- teases Simen, thah 4 ttl? earty praise when per bility are cured every day by 4150 ormin, useho uties. Many : "ple whom we know ash in a dircotls op- HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA JOHN P. LYON, INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD. ‘¢ wanner, and think nothing better FEED OF ALL KINDS, new] prod Wo. The tault-finding and blame. We find Sold by draggists, 100 doses £1. Begin to take it today. BUSH ARCADE Whole or Manufactured, Sensialiy more v, J os Irom seed , a pro Bry bitterness and pain SARSATABS, For those who prefer medicine in tablet form, Hood's Sarsaparilla is ? ub AO hist ter a few years’ oon 6 is likely to work enough in our lives to de- now put up in chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs, as well as in the usual liquid form General Agent for Central Pennsylvania Kinds Sr ny Wheat bel les and the blight and ros, with potato | + 1 keep us humble. A hearty Sarsatabs have identically the same curative properties as the liquid form, besides sccu- for the J. B. Colt Co. Tachanges ———— Hn eerea to vigor at of whisk be. rendation or even a look of racy of dose, convenience, economy, ~there being no loss by evaporation, breakage, or | : OFFICE and STORE, - Bishop Street, Potatoes, toi Hot advisahe to a. Joa, ! Jrighien a heart snd leakage. Sold by druggists or sent promptly by mail. Headqnarters = Bellefonte, Pa. Bellefon alike standard sorts, ang which are very [sore by, the right moment will : C. 1. HOOD CO., Lowell, Mass. 80-0-1m an ] mach gist merall known, Terr ties and harg Guamaxreeo undgr the Food and Drags Act, June 30th, 1905, No, 324. 529 fact that 4 ave dn | toes that gh, oo hn » an. with mosg consume A potato is peg enough | ap no t until after thee 1°°UT® a market | send ation wil, , ®Y bave given ign |gy, a ed : 0 her no barm, in