Bellefonte, Pa., August 15, 1919. Country Correspondence items of Interest Dished up for the Delectation of “Watchman” Read- ers by a Corps of Gifted Correspondents. PINE GROVE MENTION. is now Farmer Will Thompson steering a new Overland car. W. H. Glenn, wife and son Guy were Sunday visitor at the Mac Fry home. Don’t miss the big Baileyville pic- pic in Irvin's grove tomorrow Sat- urday). Mrs. Sallie Musser, of Bellefonte, is a guest at the home of Dr. and Mrs. G. H. Woods. Ernest Royer, who has been under the doctor’s care for two weeks, is now improving. Prof. Fred Cohler, of DuBois, with his wife and two interesting boys, are visiting friends in the valley. J. H. Strouse is breaking ground for a new brick bungalow on his farm. John Fagan will be the builder. After a ten day’s visitéamong rela- tives at Curwensville the venerable D. L. Dennis returned home last Fri- day. After a month’s visit at her old home in this place Mrs. Agnes Decker returned to her home in Altoona on Wednesday. Rev. and Mrs. I. E. Fisher were royally entertained at supper at the 1. 0. Campbell home at Fairbrook last Friday evening. J. D. Neidigh is loading two cars with wheat at Struble and one at Fairbrook, paying $2.12 for the wheat delivered at the car. Hugh Fry Goss, who spent a week’s vacation among relatives in this sec- tion, returned to his home in Tyrone on Monday afternoon. Mrs. Mary Brouse is now convales- cing very nicely and expects to spend two weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Cal Lykens, at Fairbrook. S. E. Ward lost one of his auto tags, No. 102693, and the finder is re- quested to return same to the St. El- mo hotel, Pine Grove Mills. The community picnic will be held in Johnson’s grove near Pine Hall on Saturday, August 23rd. The Citizens band will furnish the music. Miss Edith Dunlap departed on Fri- day evening to spend several weeks .at the home of her brothers, Randall and J. C. Dunlap, at Twin Rocks, Pa. Charles W. Wilson arrived home on Friday from service overseas with Company B, 9th infantry. He was both wounded and gassed but has re- covered from both. George Moser, of Altoona, son of the late Rev. D. M. Moser, one of the old-time Methodist preachers in this section, has been visiting friends here this week, the first time in half a century. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Ritchie are receiving congratulations over the ar- rival of a sweet little girl at their home. As it is their first-born they are naturally very much set up over the advent. T. G. Cronover, man of Huntingdon, urday looking over Tussey mountain, considering shutting for the present. The Lutheran Sunday schools on the charge which includes the church- es at Pine Hall, Gatesburg and Pine ‘Grove Mills are planning to hold a ‘big picnic in the Academy grove on ‘Saturday, September 6th, with a fes- -tival in the evening. W. E. Johnson and wife and their -son Charles and wife motored to Al- -toona on Sunday for a family gather- ‘ing at the Shadrack Wilson home, as .an informal greeting to the latter’s .son, Charles W. Wilson, just returned from service overseas. S. E. Ward has purchased the D. L. ‘Dennis property on which the black- .smith shop is located and will convert “it into an up-to-date garage. Ce ¢Collins, our village blacksmith, bought the Harper property on east Main street and will erect an up-to- «date blacksmith shop. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Mallory, of Altoona, are spending Mr. Mallo- ry’s summer vacation among relatives ‘in Bald Eagle valley, here and at ‘Boalsburg. Mr. Mallory is one of the most efficient engineers on the Pennsy and is off duty at this time on account of slight injuries sustained in a fall. The Centre county veteran club reunion will be held in connection with the Williams’ family reunion in the John Q. Miles grove at Martha on Saturday, August 23rd. Several prominent speakers have been invited for the occasion and the public is cor- dially invited to attend, while the boys who recently served in khaki are es- pecially urged to be present. Grandmother Rebecca Ard recently celebrated her 84th birthday anniver- sary in a quet way at her home on west Main street, where she was the recipient of many congratulations from her various friends. She is in good health and can see without the aid of glasses. Mrs. Ard is the old- est woman in our town while the old- est man is William J. Dale, who is 85, while D. L. Dennis is very close to him. farmer and lumber- was here on Sat- his lumber job on and is seriously down operations RUNVILLE. Mrs. Marjorie Fetzer, of Fleming, visited at the home of Mrs. Grace Walker, on Wednesday. Rev. J. C. Erb is still unable to fill his appointments but his parishioners are very glad to know he is convales- cing and all hope for his speedy re- covery. Roy Rodgers, wife and little son, and Mrs. William Rodgers and two daughters, of Tyrone, autoed to Run- ville on Friday evening and called at ‘the home of Charles Rodgers. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Lucas and two children, of Snow Shoe, were guests at the homes of their mothers here on Sunday. Mr. Lucas is able to fill his position” with’ the P. R. R. Co. again, which his many friends are glad to know. ——————————————— rrr rrr BOALSBURG. Rev. Harry Walker, of Milroy, was in town on Wednesday. Miss Hazel Hoover, of Altoona, is visiting at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Harry Markle. Rev. and Mrs. Stoyestwon, spent town last week. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Felty, of Altoo- na, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Jacobs recently. Mr. and Mrs. Brown, of Yeager- town, spent Sunday with their son, Rev. E. F. Brown. Mrs. Kidder and daughter, Miss Mary, of State College, were in town on Tuesday evening. Misses Nelle and Anne Holter, of Howard, are guests at the home of Charles Mothersbaugh. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Ailman, of Houserville, were visitors at the home of Mis. Lucy Murray on Sunday. Miss Helen Coxey has resigned her position in Tyrone and is spending some time with her mother, Mrs. Nan- nie Coxey. Mrs. George Houtz and daughter Elsie, of Williamsport, and Miss La- von Yarnell, are visiting at the home of George Rowe. Mr. and Mrs. James Kling, of Clin- tondale; Mrs. Clyde Kling and daugh- ter, of Philadelphia. spent Monday at the home of A. J. Hazel. Mrs. Bliss Meyer and daughter Elizabeth, of Farmville, Virginia, are visiting Mrs. Meyer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James M. Ross. Mrs. Clara Rupp sold her home on Main street to Major Theodore Davis Boal and on Saturday, August 16th, at 1:30 p. m., will offer her household equipment at public sale. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Kline and Mr. and Mrs. Sinie Hoy, of Bellefonte, and Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Stuart and daughter Elizabeth spent Sunday at the home of William Mothersbaugh. Dr. and Mrs. Weston, Mrs. Miller, Miss Rebecca N. Rhoads and Miss Barnhart, of Bellefonte; Mrs. Irving 1. Foster and Miss Gladys Dunkle, of State College, were present at the W. C. T. U. meeting at the home of Mrs. Boal on Tuesday evening. Dr. William Woods, who spent the past year in the U. S. service, has de- cided to locate in Boalsburg and will practice his profession here. Boals- burg has been without a resident physician for more than a year and we will be glad to have Dr. Woods lo- cate here. —————————— AARONSBURG. Frank Wetzel, of several days in Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stover, on Monday, August 11th, a little daughter. Master Paul Krape spent the past week in Sunbury, as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hain. Miss Lizzie Yarger, of Bellefonte, came down Tuesday and spent the night with her sister, Mrs. A. S. Sto- ver. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 0. Grove and baby, of Millmont, spent a few hours on Sunday with Mrs. Grove'’s mother, Mrs. Alice Eisenhauer. Corp. Earl Cummings, of Carlisle, was fortunate enough to a three days ‘furlough, which he spent with his mother, Mrs. Charles Wolfe. Mrs. Ed Bressler and two children, Omer and Isabelle, and Paul Stover, of Plainfield, Ill, arrived in the vil- lage last Friday evening and are guests of Mrs. Bressler’s mother, Mrs. Sarah Leitzell. The festival held Saturday evening was a splendid success, notwithstand- i . Report says some expenses f there will remain a tidy sum. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Herman, their daughter, Mrs. John Isenberg, and two daughters, Marian and Mildred, of State College, motored to our burg Sunday and were guests of Mrs. Her- man’s brother, ’Squire A. S. Stover. Miss Martha Niess, of Harrisburg, is the guest for a week of her friend, Miss Marian Stover, at the home of her parents, ‘Squire and Mrs, A. S. Stover. On Tuesday 'Squire Stover, Miss Stover and Miss Niess motored to Bellefonte on a trip of business and pleasure combined. Miss Estella Stamm, of St. Joe, Mo., who spent the past few weeks as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolfe, left on Tuesday for Philadel- phia and Atlantic City. Miss Mary McAlees, of Chicago, ., _grand- daughter of Mrs. Wolfe. will also leave the same time for her western home, after spending her vacation in this village. 4480 of U. S. Forces Captured During the War. War Department 3 shows the to- captured by 4480, of Rechecking by the of figures up to June tal number of Americans the enemy in France was whom 316 were officers. The 28th divsion was the heaviest loser with 18 officers and 714 men, and the 26th next with 19 officers and 438 men. The 8th division reported one man captured. Of the divisions earlier in line the 1st division lost no officers and 152 men, and the 2nd di- vision five officers and 152 men. a A little girl wrote the following composition on men: “Men are what women marry. They than women, also more zoological. Both men and wom- en sprang from monkeys, but the women sprang farther than the men.” ri are more logical Literally. “I've decided to buy cheaper hats in future, dear.” “Good! That will reduce overhead expenses.” CASTORIA Bears the signature of Chas. H.Fletcher. In use for over thirty years, acd The Kind You Have Always Bought. "DEATH OF ANDREW secure | Great Philanthropist Away at Lenox, Mass. The Passed Lenox, Mass.,, Aug. 11.—Andrew Carnegie, eighty-three years old, the steel magnate and philanthropist, died at his Lenox summer home, “SQhadowbrook,” at 7:10 this morning, after an illness of less than three days with bronchial pneumonia. So sudden was his death that his daughter, Mrs. Roswell Miller, was unable to get to her father’s bedside before he died. His wife and private secretary were with him at the end. Mr. Carnegie had spent most of the summer in Lenox, coming here late in May and up to a few weeks ago en- joyed himself in almost daily fishing trips on Lake Mahkeenac, which bor- ders his big Shadowbrook estate, and in riding about his grounds. He was taken ill Friday night and grew stead- ily worse. His advanced age and les- sened powers of resistance hastened the end. Mr. Carnegie leaves his wife, who was Miss Louise Whitefield, of New York, and his daughter Margaret, who married last April Ensign Roswell Miller, of New York. _ Although Mr. Carnegie had been an invalid since 1917, when he suffered an attack of grippe, the news of his death was a shock to old friends and former business associates here. Since his previous serious illness he had been under the care of two nurses. Identified so long with the inter- national peace movement, Mr. Car- negie was said to have been more se- verely affected by the world war than most men. It came as a hard blow to him and the cause which he had so close at heart. Owing to his ill health Mr. Carne- gie for some time had led a secluded life, and his withdrawal from all pub- lic activities gave rise to frequent statements concerning his health. After his retirement he was compel- led to limit the number of his daily visitors, and until his last illness he met and spoke to only a few of his oldest and closest friends. His phy- sician decided he frequently overtax- ed his strength by seeing all callers at his Fifth avenue home here. Two years ago Mr. Carnegie found a refuge at “Shadowbrook,” his new summer home at Lenox, which he pur- chased from the estate of Anson Phelps Stokes. Previously he had spent his vacations at Skibo Castle, at Dumfermline in Scotland. When he purchased the property it was an- nounced that neither he nor any mem- ber of his family piohanly would ever again visit Skibo because of changes, physical and sentimental, caused by the war. Mrs. Miller was at her home in Millbank, N. Y., when word came of her father’s approaching death. She hurried to Lenox but did not arrive until a few minutes after her father died. Although Mr. Carnegie was taken ill Friday, it was not until early today that his condition took a critical turn. On Saturday it was said that he was suffering from a severe cold, but it was no different, apparently, from other attacks he had endured, and so no fear was entertained that it would prove fatal. It was announced that he was remaining’ indoors under the’ care of the nurses who had been in attendance on him most of the time since he.came to. Shadowbrook.. The marriage. of: Mr.: only daughter, Margaret, on April 23, to Ensign Roswell Miller, U. S. Ns was the last social affair the aged philanthropist and peace advocate at- tended. e bridegroom, son of a for- mer president of the Chicago, Mil- waukee and St. Paul railroad, who died in 1913, had not completed his college course when war was declar- ed. In 1916 he left Stevens institute in Hoboken, where he was taking a course in civil engineering to drive an ambulance in France, and when the United States became involved he en- tered the navy as an ensign. It was said at the time of the wed- ding that after the honeymoon Mr. Miller and his bride would go to Princeton, N. J., where he would com- plete his studies before entering upon a professional career. The former Miss Carnegie, heiress to her father’s millions, is twenty-two years old. Her husband is two years her senior. Mr. Carnegie at the time of his death was the holder of numerous honors and decorations bestowed on him by rulers and people all over the world. He received as a result of his benefactions abroad the freedom of fifty-Tour cities in Great Britain and Ireland. Altogether he endowed 3,000 municipal libraries in the Unit- ed States, in addition to his other nu- merous philanthropic enterprises. During his life Mr. Carnegie gave away over $300,000,000 in diversified beneficences that are now proving and will continue to prove until the end of Medical. A Good Friend A good friend stands by you when in need. Bellefonte people tell how Doan’s Kidney Pills have stood the test. Mrs. J. C. Johnson, of 3563 Bishop St., endorsed Doan’s eleven years ago and again confirms the story. Could you ask for more con- vincing testimony ? “1 can’t say too much for Doan’s Kidney Pills,” says Mrs. Johnson. “They are the best remedy I have ever used for backache and weak kidneys. I was a great sufferer, I could hardly straighten up or get around the house. I had dizzy spells and would nearly fall over. My kidneys acted very irregularly. A member of my family had used Doan’s Kidney Pills and on his advice, I got a box from the Green Pharmacy Co. They did me more good than anything 1 ever used. The backaches and pains soon left, my kidneys became normal and now I am enjoying good health. Doan’s certainly cured me and highly recommend them to anyone having backache or kidney trouble.” Murs. Johnson gave the above state- ment October 21, 1907, and on Octo- ber 18, 1918, she added: “I am very glad to confirm my former endorse- ment of Doan’s Kidney Pills. No one knows better than I what a wonderful benefit they have been to me, for they cured me of a seripus kidney trouble.” 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y 2 -32 . = CARNEGIE. time great blessings | away State College, | Carnegie were present at its Carnegie’s | to humanity. libraries he gave was the Carnegie library at | and both Mr. and Mrs. J dedica- tion. One Centre county citizen, Daniel M. Clemson, was made a mii- lionaire through Mr. Carnegie’s spe- cial beneficence at the time he dispos- | ed of his vast properties to the Unit- | ed States Steel Co. He began life a | poor boy, was the bread winner of the | family at sixteen, and although he | has given away over three hundred ; million dollars he died possessed of hundreds of millions more. memset pe mts Among the many i MAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANA COURT HOUSE NEWS $ AAAAAAAAAAAI ANPING REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. G. Edward Haupt, et al, to Frank Torsel, tract in Spring township; $1950. William L. Mellick, et ux, to Frank Michaels, tract in Philipsburg; $3000. Charles A. Fisher, et al, to Edith Hurwitz, tract in State College; $450. James K. Barnhart, Exr., to John S. McCargar, tract in Bellefonte; $3500. J. Edith Holt to Samuel Saylor, tract in Snow Shoe township; $300. Robert Spicer, et ux, to J. T. Wat- son, tract in Boggs township; $125. John G. Frantz, committee to John Erb, tract in Philipsburg; $500. P. H. Husser, et ux, to A. Walter, trustee, tract in Millheim; $700. Prudence Haines, et al, to C. Wes- ley Owens, tract in Philipsburg; $1500. John W. Stonebraker to sel, et al, tract in Rush $700. Columbia Fire company No. 1, to Victor Rupeck, tract in Rush town- ship; $700. C. D. Moore, Exr., to W. H. Stuart, tract in Harris township; $945. Ernest E. Demi, et ux, to Homer Sankey, tract in Philipsburg; $100. Christina Bell to Curtis W. Solt, tract in Taylor township; $300. George D. Morgan, et ux, to W. W. Hale, tract in Rush township; $250. Katherine G. Jones to Frank Fitz- gibbon, tract in Rush township; $1500. Edward S. Erb, et ux, to Newton Mike Hen- township; HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. All Run Down and Worn Out Because you have not thoroughly purified your blood, but have allowed to remain in it the accumulations of waste matter that cause weakness, loss of appetite, dull headache, broken sleep, backache, eruptions and humors and other troubles. : Take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the med- icine that renovates, strengthens, tones—it will build you up, make you feel better all over. Hood’s Pills help as a stomach- toning, digestive cathartic. 64-32 a an a SIRT IAAI The Man Who fs Content to go along year after year planting the same land and dribbling a little cheap fertilizer in the furrow, merely not farming at all. Our SEEDS are the apply them. Let us know ) ) ) 62-47 ) NAA UAIIRIII III INIT GWE a Farmers—-Gardeners—-Truckers land is going backward. Land must cultivation or lose ite fertility. produce desired results. We have them for every use. We aim to carry a full line of FIELD SEEDS! as well as the spraying machinery with which to A Full Line of Agricultural Implements, Garden Tools, Etc. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) SPRAYING MATERIAL for Every Pest and Blight ) ) ) ) ) ) Special Feeds; ) ' ) ) ) Dubbs’ Implement and Seed Store DUNLOP STREET, BELLEFONTE. PA. AAAI I NININININI NI NNN = ~~ ATTORNEY’S-AT-LAW. ELINE WOODRING — Attorney-at- La, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices all courts. Office, room 18 Crigers Hartswick, tract in State College; $2000. S Exchange. Why Corn Has “Silks.” A potato Hill man, who is sixty- one years old, never knew until this summer that for every grain on an ear of corn there is a silk running out to the end, to light and moisture. These silks run back under the husk; one is attached to each grain on the cob, and nourishes it. Everything in nature is more wonderful than any in- vented story.—Atchison Globe. TRIBUTE TO GOLDINE. B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law. N Practice in all the EY os tation in English or German. Of- A : Crider's Exchange, Bellefonte Pa, S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsel- lor at aw. Office in Temple Court, Bellefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business attended to promptly. J KENNEDY JOHNSTON—Attorney-at- law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business en= trusted to his care. E High street. Offi J M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at law Mr. W. K. Frantz Pays Tribute to ces—No. 5 i y i and Justice of the Peace. pro= Friend Who Recommended Goldine. Pad Jus ies wall receive prompt attention. Office on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y G. RUNKLE—Attorney-at-law. Con- sultation in English’ and German. Office in Crider’s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. 58-8 He said: “I had rheumatism so badly I could not turn over in bed, I suffered everything and naturally did all in my power to get relief, but everything I did failed. A friend of mine, Mr. Porter, came to see me. He asked what I was doing for my- self and if I had ever tried Goldine Alterac. I told him I had heard of it em PHYSICIANS. 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and but had not gotten any. “Well, I Surgeon, _ State College, Centre have,” he said, “and it is all right. | 4 county, Pa. Office at his esl Now you try it and ia less than a ones. month you will be out of this; it fixed or — me up and I am sure it will do the ESTAURANT. Same for you” 1 took his plviee Bellefonte now has a First Class Res- threw aside the other medicine I was i taking, and started in on Goldine. In less than a week I was out on crutch- es and in three weeks I went to work. I feel no effects of the rheu- matism in any way and I have a good chance to tell people what the medi- Meals are Served at All Hours Steaks, Chops, Roasts, 2 half shell or in any style desired, Sand- wiches, Soups, and anything eatable, can be had in a few minutes any time. In ad- Oysters on the cine did for me. I don’t forget what dition I have a complete plant prepared to a great help the advice of my friend furnish Soft Drinks in bottles such as was to me, so I am recommending | POPS, Goldine in the hope of helping some SODAS, other fellow.” SARSAPARILLA, Be sure to get the original and SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC.. genuine Goldine, manufactured at for pic-nics, families and the public gener: Youngstown, Ohio. ally all of which are manufactured 00, of Get it at Grenn’s Pharmacy. 32-1t p C. MOERSCHBACHER, High St., 50-32-1y. Bellefonte, Pa. INSUR ANCE! Fire and Automobile Insurance at a reduced rate. 62-38-1y. J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. cma Get the Best Meats. You save nothing by buying poor, thin or gristly meats. Iuseonly the LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE and supply my customers with the fresh- est, choicest, best blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no igher than poorer meats are elsewhere. I always have —— DRESSED POULTRY — Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP. P. L. BEEZER, 34-34-1y. Beliefonte, Pa. ——————————————————— FINE JOB PRINTING o—A SPECIALTY—0 am—— Employers, This Interests You The Workmans’ Compensation Law goes into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes Insurance Compulsory. We specialize in placing such in- surance. We Inspect Plants and t— High Street. AT THE recommend Accident Prevention WATCHMAN OFFICE. Safe Guards which Reduce In- ew surance rates. Thereis no le of work, from the —— cheapest er” to the finest It will be to your interest to con- BOOK WORK, sult us before placing your In- sufance. hat we can not do ip ibe most satis- aor te class of work, Call on of JOHN F. GRAY. & SON, comm s of Bellefonte 43.18-1y State College The Preferred Accident Insurance memes THE $5000 TRAVEL POLICY to get a little more o in, i BENEFITS: g ee the land they he puts in, is 0 death by acc dent, y 3 08S Of eet, e man who is not improving the Bs os, be improved in 5.000 loss of one hand and one foot, loss of either hand, loss of either foot. 630 loss of one eve 25 per week, total disability, (limit 52 wt ) per week, partial disability. (limit 26 weeks) PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR. pavable quarterly if desired. Larger or smaller amounts in proportion Any person, male or female, en a referred occupation, in house, ping, over eighteen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under this policv. Fire Insurance { invite your attention to my Fire Insur- ance Agency, the strongest and Most tensive Line of Solid Companies represent- ed by any agency in Central Pennsylvania § HE. FENLON, d 50-21. Agent, Bellefonte, Fa, VATA TA TAS TN va ASA NS ,500 000 Good Fertilizers will 10 BEST we can BUY Roofing Etc. your wants. FINE GROCERIES Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER snr os NAVAL ORANGES are in. The quality is fine and the price reasonable. CALIFORNIA WALNUTS and almonds of extra fine quality. OUR WHITE GRAPES AND CRANBERRIES are very fan- cy goods. CANDIES. In Candies we have succeeded in geting a fair sup- ply of desirable goods. EVAPORATED APRICOTS, PEARS AND PEACHES are very fine this season and we have all of them. We Have the Supplies We are receiving fairly good shipments Supplies for the New Year Fill All Orders. of When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky water-fixtures, foul sewerage, OI escaping as, you can’t have good Health. The air you Breathe is poisonous; your system becomed poisoned.and invalidism is sure to come. MINCE MEAT. Mince Meat of the usual high Sechler & Co. standard. Positively the finest goods we can produce. 28c. 1b. Try it. FANCY, MILD CHEESE, Sweet Potatoes, canned Fruits, Olives, Ketchup, Pure Olive Table Oil, old fashioned New Orleans Syr- up and fine table Syrup by the quart. Much finer goods than the Syrup in pails. and Will be Pleased to SANITARY PLUMBING is the yu we 2 4 jus the on kind you ought tc have. Wedon’t trustthis work. to oa Our workmen are Skilled Mechanics, boys. we! Our no better anywhere. Material and Fixtures are the Best ° Not a cheap or inferior aticle in our entire establishment. And with good work and the finest material, our Prices are Lower than many who give you Jeon unsantary work and the lowest grade o finishings.i For Bush House Block, SECHLER & COMPANY, --57-1 the Best Work trv Archibald Allison, Bellefonte, Pa. Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa 66-1¢-1v.