ATTORNEYS. D. F. FORTNEY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA Office North of Court House. r—————— et Ww. HARRISON WALKER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, PA No. 19 W. High Street All professional business promptly attended to 8. D. GET CS EITIG, Jxo. J. Bowen BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW EaoLr Brook BELLEFONTE, Successors to Orvis, Bowen & Orvis Consultation in Eoglish and German. WwW. D, Zznny PA. CLEM ENT DALE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, Fa Office N. W. corner Diamond, two doors from First National Bank. Ire WwW G. RUNKLE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, Pa All kinds of legal business attended to prompt!) floor Crider's Exchange. R B. EPANGLER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practices in all the courts. Consultation Is Buiniing 0 Fort Hote EDWARD ROYER, Propristor. Location : One mile South of Centre Hall, Accommodations first-class. Good bar. wishing to enjoy an evening given special attention. Meals for such occasions pre pered on short notice. for the transient trade RATES : $1.00 PER DAY. gu———— vamssi— w— Sing Mis hotel fy EPRING MILLA, PA. PHILIP DRUMM, Prop, First-class wecommodations at all times for beth man and beast, Free bus to and from al trains. Excellent Livery attached. Table board first-class. The best liquors anf wices at the bar. Penn's Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA, W. B. MINGLE, Cashief Receives Deposits . . Discounts Notes . , LIVERY .2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com. rercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn'a R, R LADIES s\ MY [Fs AT CARE OF THE BROOD MARE. A contributor to Farm and Ranch There is probably no animal on the a greater If a pay the brood-mare, is trying would advise than hogs has helped pay and has so often but I know have left the not than a good is In debt mortgage, 1 or to rather that the hog many mort the Cases still somet say gages, man out, the poor where further hogs And horses, brood-mare off this is in imes with but often. The good pay mare will do ju raise season will sas now of mea Some went Into yusiness and mut if they tell it of men who failed in who all you will all farming Failure in getting a good brood-marée branca of was certainly on account of neglect of Und could team of good brood-mares bad management vou get business oF ’ a profit out of hogs? The farm piece of propar) which and profit pro the best farmer owns, with proper in the wav the colts, which » & good also in gome oi fall is have t} have ho ie furnishes needed vit mafe and fi the colt, should have it wi the best Exercis muscie 1d pasture when is also needed to keep the another point ways exorcise the brood. Yon will a can NAre AND FERTILIZERS fcal Suparic ir to other remedies sold at high prices. Cure guaranteed. Successfully used by overg 200, 000 Women. Price, 235 Cents, drug. gists or by mail. Testimonials & booklet free, Pr. LaFranco, Philadelphia, Pa, wl Swe NEW LIFE TEA ALWAYS CURES CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, SICK HEADACHE, And imparts new life to the whole system. At all druggists and dealers, 25c, or sent by mail, if your dealer will not supp! John D. Langham, Holley, N. Y. For sale by J. Prank Smith, Centre Hall, STAMPS AS WALL PAPER, Philadelphia Girl Has Unique Decora: tion for “Den.” For more than fourteen vears, be exact, since March 26, 1891, Sadie Disston of Keystone street has arduously collected led postage stamps, with the of covering the walls of her “den.” At the task has been completed and the room presents an appearance resembling the mosale tapestry n times The room is 10x15 feet. The paper was made into panels 28 inches wide on white linen, which were then placed together by a narrow walnut molding. The stamps were accumu lated so quickly that by the end of the first year two panels were finished the first containing 6.004 stamps. The ground of the Dane design is made ug of English penny stamps, By July 1894, seven panels were completed Almost every country {as represented In the center of one panel is a blue wlangular Cape of Good Hope, and or snother a white Royal Mint, London After Miss Disston found that there would not be any difficulty in gettin the required number of stamps, hay ing one week received through the mail 14.000, little care was takon in the number stuck on each panel, untl the total reached 99.998. ~Philadelphie Record. ’ or, to Miss CRN purpose last of olds sand hari tion BOVE fa This an be obtalr acid phosp acre gible pounds of 4 bone per When it is impos to reduce t level to more than two feet be the use of 250 pounds potash per has profitable corn crops Nice farm, in the of 250 the acre level at harvest low the surface, ' 4 acre in On the 1. G canoe of Tippe pounds on County muriat having a plant. 14 inches and at of 24 gave 42.3 bushels of corn per while the plats on which no potash was used gave 18.2 bushels, On potash plats 90.2 per cent. of tha corn was sound, while on plats to which no potash was applied, only 8 per cent. was sound. e of potash water ing of inches, acre, plied broadcast before plowing or afl. ter plowing and before harvesting. Do not apply It In the hill with a ferti- lizer attachment, since it is so con- centrated and so soluble that it may retard or prevent germination, unless it should rain very soon after tha crop is planted. productiveness is reduced, periments conducted last year on lands that were plowed for the first time, proved that it was profitable to use it on the first erop, the in creased value of the crop on the fer- tilized plats over that on the unferti- lized being nearly three times cost of the fertilizer. With onions the results have been even more remarkable. With this crop, however, It Is advisable to use some quickly available nitrogen in ad. dition to the potash and phosphoric acid, There is plenty of nitrogen In the muck, but during the early stages of the growth of the onion plant the soll is so cold that nitrification does not take place rapidly enough to sup. ply soluble nitrogen to the plants, and growth is retarded An experiment with onfous on land at Nappanee, Indiana, following results No fertilizer, 300 bushels 100 pounds sulphate of hels 100 pounds 500 muck gave tha per acra: $000) pounds bone, potash, bus 240 per acre blood, bushels per 160 pounds sulphate of potash, 240 blood, while 400 700 pounds bone, pounds bushe Is pa acre; 5040) pounds of a mixed fertilizer cor ing its iain phosphate acid and the before nitrogen and 3 3 more soluble forms potash in the same form as gave a per bushels acre, i 0 4 ty ingicate ti rops on these nplete wriflizer containir soluable form trogen 2 mt, phosphoric acid, 6 t potash 5 {i profitable been about or three time { amount could be profitable used most successful gr ed Jones, Jr. IWETrs recon mend 1.000 pounds per Acre W J Associate Chemist, In Bullet No. 118 YOI comes in in SHOEING Trouble NG HORSES this handling work here is Improper colt is shod amount that So don't forget plenty of water the times when as ding are the times the il suddenly go wild Ida M and die Sheple VALUE OF THE In a year book of of Agriculture notes are distribution, habits and economic ance of this bird. The quail considered as of importance in stroying weed seeds and insects and in furnishing food and sport. A studs was made of 501 stomach contents of quails, collected every month of year in twenty-one States, Canada, and the District of Columbia, An ex. amination of the food showed that 14.93 per cent. was animal matter and 85.06 vegetable, Seeds from 50.78 per cent. of the food for the year. The majority of this seed is from weeds of which sixty species are represent ed. The author estimates that in the State of Virginia alone quails destroy 572 tons of weed seeds annually Grain forms only about one-fourth of the food, while large numbers of po. BOR WHITE the Depa given rims on port ie the eaten. Weekly Witness, LIME AND GRIT FOR POULTRY. lime mortar, for poultry? If not, two main elements for poultry, espe clally laying hens-—lime for eggs and bones, and grit for grinding their feed. It Is easily broken up for use, is cheap and 18 just what they need. | Lewis 8. Alter in the Epltomist, The geals of Newfoundland are not fur-bearing, but are killed in large sumbers for their skins and fat. TINSEL PICTURES Tinsel fou pletures are the interes thed by for Among and ting works of art being uneq housand The enough to have h searchers who is Gl tors hand 1a8t century antiq woman fortunate Bowe the possessions of her ar ed down fron with The who prefer comb light amber iy polished. To mateh these long hairpins wi balls. The and the cheap considered dressy who possesses bring forth her shell or amber, Never would she with a severe waist sult, cCoOmn ends cella. very h knob comb of led form does lke ioid not for fancy comb and the jowe arn only girl extravagance real with such a tallored gown or shirt. god TLS such oeCaRic An comb of studded WOoar {orioisa gems comb WALKING SHOES Warm days maake some think of low shoes, and this vear are love. lier than ever. The latest thing ars walking pumps These come in black patent leather, Russian calf, and white canvas or linen, and are a sort of compromise hotween a dainty slipper and a common sense they and mediumweight sole, and are ¢u out like a slipper, leaving the Insten exposed. A flat made ribbon bow the same color as the pump is the only decoration, says the Boston Traveler, woolen the walking bluche rit no IBeaROY Lila trong for administes advice plivsician Have guard round the nu fire one, Intehed gate at the h when the And not take it ROY is and a firmly ead of the stairs to crawl about child is “fidgety” do with paving both Indian. baby begin 5 when a you when calls; it discomfort, io and Calines the hostess vourself apolis News FOR MORNING WEAR morning suit for will severely plain, in tae linen which are with a deep hem and will be a SUITS The gireet wear especially so finished stitching. Rus feature the attire, but they differ from those of former years, not only in be ing of a much darked shade, but also in having the flat bow to the instep. ‘ith the tailor suit a soft leather belt usually selected, which may be ornate or plan, according to the taste of the wearer.~Washington Times. bo suits, sot shoes of street is FASHION NOTES. " Apricot yellow is playing a promi nent part in the costumes found in the fashionable trossean The smart brideassids’ gowns are | of some soft, sheer stuff of some brik | lant color; and often adorned with | soshos, — R—- DEMCRATIC CO. COMMITTEE-<19058. stinirg {fs Cantre Hall Howard, Howa Milithelm, Pier ail osburg Ji th Philips { nionvilie Slate College Benner Boggs, N " : EP Ww, ¥ Burnside Haltmoon Harris, Jo CENTRAL RAJLROAD OF YENNEYLVANIA Condensed Time Table Week Days Read Down. Bead Up Blationus z 8 2 - |$ : | XK TER x «3 a CRC RCRY % Bb LS ELEC aR Y * wn PRE RREFRRRERER RE BAS ASN BER EERE RPERFPEDY 1 Hudson River R. Jersey Bhore - Lve 2 Ary & Eeading Ry PHILA... en EW YORK Via Philsd.) Wi msport AM PX Ar New York de®... 0 Via Tamaqua) J. W, GEPHART General Buperintendent Come to our store and you will be convinced of a few facts in Footwear . . Co A. KRAPE.... SPRING NM LI Pr: i 1 Jno. F. Gray & Son Successors to, . GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies in the World. . . .. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . . . . No Mutuals No . Asmeuments Before insuring r life the contract of = HE HOME which in case of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums paid in ed- dition to the face of the policy. Money Loan First SONLRLLTRR to Loan om A A 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE A handsomaty ein Fan. onlntaon wl any for monte ol Fg (0,30 18rectnm. “iow Yor N & Cos FoR WwW