Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, April 03, 1879, Image 6

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NEWS, FACTS ANI) HUFIO RATIONS.
TH TT ar Till SATIOXAI. W (LI-ASK 1, Till I3ISLU
OKSrK SD rStMt'FSITV or THK (ASUSR.
Every farmer in Ait annual e.r/tcrtCHee
discovers s imrthir.g of value. ll'rite it anil
send it In Ike "Agricultural Editor if tke
DgMOCHAT, llellefonte, I'cnn'u," that other
farmere may hare the benefit if it. t.et
eommuniratiomi be timely, and be sure that
they arc brief ami irell'/iointed.
Prior. COOK, of New Jersey, who
was one of the Commissioners to the
Paris Exposition, improved the op
portunity to examine into the present
state of agriculture and agricultural
teaching in various parts of Europe.
Among other interesting things, he
tells us that in England "the prizes
for the.best managed farms in the
country for the last two years have
been taken by men who studied" at
the Albert National Agricultural
Training Institution. This is en
couraging to the advocates of special
an 1 thorough agricultural education.
A Sl'RixcimU) paper tells of a
"farmer-miller" who purchase*! all
the corn cobs he could get at one or
two dollars per hundred bushels, and
ground them as fine as possible.
There was "no corn on the cob worth
mentioning, and there was no other
grain mixed with the cobs in grind
ing or otherwise." Up to this point
we have no difficulty whatever in be
lieving the story. In fact, it seems
altogether probable, and we presume
that no one who purchases "choj>-
feed" will entertain a doubt on the
subject. Hut when we arc asked to
believe what this same story goes on
to say, namely, that this same meal,
made from these same cobs, was by
this same miller "/■</ to his own rouv,"
we must be excused if our credulity
proves "unequal the great occasion."
We do not say that it is impossible
that this should lie true, but what we
do say is that, if true, this miller was
letter prepared for the adveutof the
fool-killer than any of the craft with
whom we have happened to meet. To
make the story seem altogether pToll
able—as a sort of lubricator, so to
speak, to make it "go down easy"—
it states in conclusion that this same
miller's cow "ate it with relish, kept
in good condition and whenever cobs
gave out, as they sometimes did, the
cows would shrink their milk one or
two quarts per days." Now wc"be
lieve it, sure. Hut we should think
that with cobs "at one or two dollars
per hundred bushels" ho could have
afforded to keep up a supply. May
lie that wasn't the reason the "cobs
gave out," though.
WK have received, on trial, the
widely-advertised South Bend Chilled
l'low. The manufacturers of this
plow claim for it and
warrant to "give |erfect satisfac
tion, suhject to a two day's trial
xin the field." If it fails to comply
with this warrant the plow can lie re
turned to the dealer, and the money
refunded. Judging from appearances,
it is all that its friends claim for it,
and as soon as the ground is in prop
er condition, we shall anbjoct it to a
thorough practical test, and will give
our readers the benefit of our obscr
vations.
BUnghter of Nariery Stock,
W. V. S. Itorkman. In lb Trllinn,.
A* the time for delivering nursery
stock approaches 1 am moved tosugg st
that greater care he exercised in takinv
up nl packing trees, etc. I have suf
fered by carelessness in this matter on
many occasions. Several thousand
strawberry plants I once ordered had,
to all appearances, been hoed up, many
being entirely destitute of roots and all
more or less mutilated. As m >*t of
them failed to grow I ploughed up the
bed, thus losing my money, labor and
a year's time. Mad a somewhat simi
lar experience with a few hundred new
and expensive raspberries. Home years
ago a neighbor (against my advice) or
dered through a travelling agent over
thirty dollars' worth of choioe varieties
of shade trees with which to beautify
hia lawn. After they anived heinviUd
me to come and look at thpro, and a
forlorn sight they were. They had been
pulled like weeds and crammed into a
DOX, many of the limbs broken and the
roots dried out.. The result was he
threw them away. My advice had been
for him to go and personally select
his trees and see them dug and packed,
even if it cost considerably more. It
certainly would have been the cheapest
in th end. During the packing season
nurserymen hire many extra hands
who in some instances know nothing
about trees and care nothing beyond
getting their daily wages. Hut it sc-ems
to me that this does not excuse them
fbr "ending out stock improperly dug
and packed.
An excellent way to avoid the evil*
j complained of by Mr. Hcckmntt in to
procure your trees of nurserymen
near home, and in nddition to that
you will get trees and plants adapted
to your own climate. Any Centre
county planter who will give Win.
Fisher, of Unionville, the go-by and*
send abroad for nursery stock, de
serves to be scorched a little.
A Little Farm Well Tilled.
Ilnrry Ledgwick, of Cornwall
Hollow, Conn., contributes the fol
lowing to the Tribune, and we copy
it entire ns an illustration of "How
to make Farming I*ay."
In these days of hard time* it i* re
freshing to Hud one farmer who is mak
ing his business a success, ami is enthu
siastic over it. It is also interesting to
note that farming in New England i*
not played out, but that in favorable
locations it pays, if managed rightly, a
well as it ever did. This reflection was
suggested by a visit to Mr. C. 11. Cables,
in the Naugutuck Valley, who has a
farm of twenty-three acres, favorably
situated near a thrifty manufacturing
town. It has a warm southern expos
ure, well sheltered from cold winds.
The soil, except some six or eight acres
of bottom land which has been well
drained, is what wo would rail a gravel
ly loam that does not hold manure or
grass well. Tho farm is devoted mainly
to the production of milk, which is sold
in the neighboring village for six cents
per quart, but in connection with this
quite a largo quanity of early vegeta
bles, such as lettuce, cabbage plants,
etc., arc turned off. There is also near
ly an acre of strawberries raised, and
about the same of cabbage. By soiling
his cows, not letting them run at all,
and by a proper rotation of green crops,
Mr. is enabled to milk seventeen
cows, and this Winter, besides these, he
has also six head of young stock and
two horses, and expects to have hay
enough, all raised on the place. The
rotation for soiling is as follows : First,
rye, about an aero with clover; seeded
with clover; then green oats, clover,
and lastly corn fodder. About half the
farm is taken up with these, leaving the
remainder from which to rut hav.
By keeping the rows up, Mr. C. in rn
nbled to make an immense quantity of
manure, which is composted, nnd the
liquid manure—when is carried into a
cistern—is pumped over it; what this
compost does not absorb runs back into
the cistern. This manure is usedabund
anlly, not only on the crops but as a
top dressing on the meadows, which pro
mowed two or three times each year,
and yield from two to three tons of hay
per acre. The buildings are so situated
that the fall of ground carries the li
quid manure through a pipe, which it so
a hose attached, and the manure is dis
tributed by gravitation. This liquid is
used rooro particularly in the cold
frames and bobbed* to force the growth
iof the lettuce and early plants. The
i buildings on the place are very conven
-1 ient in which to do work and save la
| hor. The cows have running water he
fore them all the while, and are only
let out occasionally an hour or more at
; a time. Mr C. finds he can make more
milk from animals kept this way than
by letting them run, even with all they
want to eat. Now for results; In the
sales of milk, vegetables, plants, etc.,
Mr. Cables turns ofl from this (dace from
♦J,SOU to *.1.1)00 per year. II- does #ll
his work with one min, hired by the
vear, and one for the Summer, includ
ing peddling the milk, nn I has leisure
Ito reail and observe. The gross income
of these twenty three acres per year is
I often as high as sl2."i per acre, anil the
net profit for some time has exceeded
SI.(MJO per year. All this on a small
farm, well tilled, having a good market.
Mere are facts for our average Connecli
i cut farmers to lay to heart. Jo not till
too much land, and do it thoroughly,
and raise what our loeal market de
mands. Most of our efforts are s| ent
ion too much land, I am convinced.—
| [lf. S. Hautboy Hill Farm. Conn.
Planning Work in Advance.
Frm th* F*rm#r.
It is of importance to plan out the
spring work, so that with the owning
of the season you shall know just
what fields you wish ploughed, and
just where the manure is coining
from, and how much you shall apply,
and what crops you shall plant. Such
a course will serve to make you more
| certain of your course, nnd more re
liant, and will in many cases abso
lutely save labor ami cost. It is this
preliminary thinking nnd arranging
which is so serviceable towards edu
cating into the liest courses, and
which utilizes past experience as nn
aid in helping you to avoid future
wastes. It is also well to think over
in advance the amount of lalior you
shall need by the month, and just
what you expect this lalior to lie
wortli to you, and how much you
can afford to pay Air lalior towards
carrying out your plans. It is nlso
well to think out what you can save
by buying implements or machinery,
and Justify n ready decision the one
way or the other. A horse possesses
fivo times the power of n man, and,
if rightly combined, n horse ami a
man shotjjd accomplish six men's la
lior. If now the spring farming is
plnnned on the Imsis of horse lalior,
much more can be efficiently accom
plished than hand lalior is e-ipable
of, or hspiinzsrd labor which a crop
may chance to receive. There is a
wide difference between the agricul
tural productiveness of adjoining
farms oftentimes, and to be account
ed for by the difference between the
men who farm them, —the prompt,
careful, thoughtful,' planning man,
excelling, in production of crops, the
slack, hard-working, laborious, lest
careful-thinking neighbor. In farm
ing, accurate thinking tells; fore
thought is an important factor of
success. Careful planning and prompt
execution can bring success from al
inoHt any farm, or out of conditions
usually deemed very unfavorable.
Winter Killing of Wheat.
tli# K*w York Tiil utin.
An inquiring friend asks the de
gree of cold that will kill Winter
wheat in Michigan, the ground 1 icing
"dry and surface exposed." Wheat
is greatly protected by a light cover
ing of snow, and if sown broad cast
rarely Winters well where the ground
is exposed to the frost and winds.
\\ heat put in with a drill suffers
much less ; partly because it is cov
ered deeper with earth, and all the
seeds are at the proper depth, and
partly because the ridges made by
the drill protect the plants from the
action of the wind. In places much
exposed we have made the drill marks
at right angles with the direction
ol the prevailing Winter winds.
Ground frozen lieeoines dry, and the
wind often lifts the surface particles
and carries them away. Wheat drill
ed comes up in rows in the bottom
of the trenches made by the drill,
and each row is between two ridges.
In case of uncovered ground, and
cold nnd much wind, the tups of
these ridges will be blown otf and
the trenches between will be filled up
with earth, and thus the plant will be
covered deeper and deeper by the
wind, until the ground is levelled.
Wheat that has acquired a good
strong root in the Fall, planted in
drill trenches that run at right an
gles with the prevailing winds, on
ground properly drained, will go
through the Winter with very little
loss by reason of the cold. It is not
tiic cold alone that in Winter kills
wheat; the strong winds of that
season, acting on plants not sufficient
ly covered with earth, "blow the
wheat out of the ground " —to use a
common expression. The great
value of the drill is in the uniform
depth at which it places the seed—
none of it too shallow, and none of
it too deep—and the raising of ridges
to protect the plants from the \\ inter
winds.
I>r ill I wheat Home times if* rollwl in
the Fall to level the surface, that the
harvesting machines may the more
conveniently run over it. It is tat
ter to <lefer this rolling until the
| ground is settled the next .Spring;
hut this is a very busy season, and
the |eriod that intervenes between
the time the ground is dry enough to
allow rolling, ami the time the wheat
is not too mueli grown, is short, so
many farmers do the rolling at the
i most convenient season, and take the
| risk, but this practice is not often
continued long by the same |>ersons.
In Central New-York snow came in
December last, on ground unfrozen,
and saturated with water; this snow
is ♦ til on the ground in hard drifts,
some of them many feet deep, and
will probably remain, in part, until
thawed by the sun in the month of
Mai". These drifts arc in the hol
lows and in the lea of fences, while
the ridges and many pieces of level
ground have been made bare of snow
I by the many severe gales that have
: characterized the present Winter.
In less a great thaw comes soon that
will carry off the snow drifts, the
wheat under them will be destroyed
by ta<ing smothered. Since the in
troduction of the drill deep snows on
unfrozen ground are much more
| dreaded by the raisers of Winter
wheat than is naked and hard frozen
ground. The very best conditions
for Wintering wheat arc, tlrst, hard
frozen soil; then a few inches of
snow all over the surface ; then a mid
winter thaw, followed by snow to
again cover the wheat; then if we
can have a Spring that has but few
warm days followed by hard frosts,
we have high ex|eetfltions of a good
crop. The wheat of this year has al
ready suffered so much injury that
there is no reasonable prospect of
even an average harvest.
Drainage Experience.
Mr. Pitts, Columbia Co., N. Y., late
ly told the Chatham Farmers' Club,
as reported in the Courier of that vil
lage, that in ditching he ploughs
as deep as he can before using pick
and shovel. Mr. Parks mentioned a
Scotchman who went in debt for a
|2,000 farm, drained and cultivated
it, refused s*>,ooo for it three .years
altar, and in five years bad paid off
every cent of his obligation. Mr.
Garner, who thinks he has laid thirty
four miles of tile in as many years,
remarked that a poor, wet piece of
land, drnincd, cropped several sea
sons, and then laid down to grass,
was the only part of the field where
the seed did not fail. Mr. Stewart
put in a main, with a few short later
als, twenty-five years ago; they work
still, and cattle always eat the pas
turage close on that a|>ot before feed
ing elsewhere, and there the yield is
always heaviest whenever the field is
cropped.
THE KPAHK will do for Old World
gardencra, but our great American
eagle muat rooat on a plow when ahe
aligLta in the Tmck Ganlen.
PoTAan in the form of ashea ia a
moat excellent fertilizer for fruit tree*.
There ia no doubt about it.
llow to Make Butter.
Hon. L. K.
In my opinion a great nmount of
butter in spoiled, Ist, Ity unclcnnli
ncHK iii munufacturo; '2nd, by too
much acid in the crcatn; :tl, by
cuwin in a decomposed Hlnte in the
butter; 4th, by too much friction on
the butter in churning and work
ing. Foul milking stables, impure
water, odors from decomposing mat
ter, all effect the quality of milk.
There is over a pound or more su
gnr in a hundred pounds of milk
then there is in butter. Sugar acid
is tin' lirst sign of decomposition in
the milk. It destroys the sugar.
The second, or luetic acid, acts upon
and destroys the oil that gives butter
its fine arornu. When these two
acids are fully developed, destroying
the sugar and aromatic projicrties,
we have what may be called the na
tural oleomargarine butter—it is
scarcely better than the patent article.
(,'rcnu should Is: churned while in
the lirst or sugar acid. The ls-t
butter is made from sweet cream, but
that made from sweet cream is more
susceptible to ordorsthun sour cream
butter.
Mr. Lewis related careful experi
ments that he had made in raising
cream at different U nqieratiires and
under different treatment. The gen
eral conclusion being that it will rise
the fastest on a falling temperature.
He did not believe that all the cream
could Is: got out of the milk but what
is left is of little value for butter
making. It is the cream that aepa
ratcs readily under good treatment
that makes good butter.
The churning should lo Htop|Kt]
while the hutUr is in a granulated
state. It is a mistake to churn until
it is gathered in a compact mass. If
the huttcr is taken out in the granu
lated condition, the buttermilk will
drain from it readily.
The butter should lc put in a fine
hair sieve and the buttermilk tho
roughly washed out by pouring clear
cold water on it. In ibis way it ran
be thoroughly freed from the casein
nnd otir buttermilk with scarcely any
working, and the less working that is
necessary the better. In working
the ladle should never lie js rrnitUsi
to slide or slip on the butler, to in
jure or breake down the grain.
The Old and the New.
|*r m th* Visftliftf ftfTutf.
The old agriculture concerns itself
with maturing the soil; the new ag
riculture concerns iUclf with feeding
the plant. The old agriculture is lo
cal ; tjie new agriculture, cosmopoli
tan. The old agriculture knows hut
the soil, tiic plant and the m-ason;
the new agriculture knows all this, as
well as the additional and iin|ortnnt
fact that there is n physiology to the
plant and a chemistry to the soil, and
that each event in culture acts with,
nnd is acted on by, other collateral
events. The good farmer, in olden
times, was tin- routinUt; tliconewho
equalled the farming of the Wat of
his predecessors. Under the new
regime, the good farmer is a tnnu of
culture, who thinks,* who schemes,
who studii%, not to equal, but to sur
pass, those who have I teen before
him.
Drying Sugar Beets.
The Maine Beet-Sugar Company
dried last season 500 Urns of snger-
Is-ets nt their drying establishment
in Aroostook county, and when the
season's work has been finished these
will be converted into sugar, produc
ing probably an additional 125,000
pounds of sugar and bringing the
whole production of the company
during the first season up to 250,0<>0
pounds. Roots sliced and kiln-dried
are reduced in weight five to one,
making it an easy matter for an or
dinary team to haul ten tons at one
load.
Better go 81ow.
From lh- Farm Jmirnal.
While it is pleasant reading to pe
ruse the accounts of the large prices
obtained for fast trotters, wc seldom
see it stated how many failures there
were to counterbalance these very,
very few grand successes, and there
are hundreds of farmers and others
who arc essaying to breed trotting
horses, using all their spare tunc and
cash to further the purpose, but will
generally fail signally, while the gen
eral farming interests will suffer in a
corresponding degree.
STUDY up the soiling system and
give it a trial the coming season.
Oats may be sown—three or four
bushels per acre—this month, to l|e
followed by corn, to lie planted at
ditrerent timA through the spring.
A patch of rye, wheat or clover may
lie cut nnd fed green to tho cows, be
fore the oats and corn nrc ready. We
hear of a number of farmers who
aim to keep a cow to every acre of
land, by using green fodder for food,
and who rAj on the high road to suc
cess.
Ir the question were put to every
poultry breeder: "To what cause
are nine-tcnths of the diseases of
chickens to be attributed P the re
ply would probably be: "Vermin
and dampness."
NATURALISTS who havtv observed
the habits of robins very carefully
say that they do immensely more
good than barm.
J TAIIDWAUK.
WILSON, MnFAIILANK <fc CO. 1
I.KAI.FKH I.N
STOVES AND RANGES,
PAINTS, OILS, (jLASS, HAKES, l-'OKKS,
CRADLES & SCYTHES.
HOLE AGENTS FOR
.JOHNSON'S KA I .SO AI IX K.
ST.,KIT. ; • • - Ml Mrs. .... nrt.LRroXTR. FA
'J" IIE CENTRE DEMOCRAT
BOOK and JOB OFFICE
RUSH HOUSE W/K'lv,
IiELLEFONTE, PA.,
IS Now or IK 111 NO
GItE A T INI) UC I; MEN T H
TO Til OMR WISH INO rillhl-( LANS
Plain or Fancy Printing. |
J CD \
We have unusual facilities for printing
LAW P.OOKH,
PA M PH LETS,
CATALOGUES,
PROGRAM MRS,
STATEMENTS,
CIRCULARS,
BILL HEADS,
NOTE HEADS,
BUSINESS CARDS,
INVITATION CARDS,
CARTES DK VISITK,
1 CARDS ON ENVELOPES,
AND ALL KINDS OF BLANKS
tar Printing done in the best style, on
short notice and at the lowest rales.
Bq jr'i,'ler by mail will receive prompt
! attention.
XkkIKCWSfcK TIIK I'l.Ai E !
CENTRE DEMOCRAT OFFICE,
liutk ilutite lilotk,
men NTHr.rr, niai.KroN rs. M
PATENTS
AND
c.
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lIT'TriTTCIIS
Vr.l ua n low tijdt n *f J*mr IntnnUnfi, firing j or
IMA In jr*nr • n lnvigtiag*, ttpl ■ Ul no
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rrqvrvt.
ADDRESS: R. 8. A A. P. LACEY,
PATENT ATTORNEYS,
No. 004 F Street, Washinotox, I). C.,
Nearly I'.Ui.t <Hn..
Arrears of Pay, Bounty and Pension..
VT* haw* ftnr**a in rhargw of *tjw par-rod twv*r* •
an* floki.luf j.rs*- uU n "1 All Holli*t M iMtna. Py, J
in ] Paijrt'HiA. A* •* fhwgr •* I** tHthw '■
• u 'Will, I*rr.| f..f rwlurti al. .M U * t ;
• I tf U ft. A A ■ P LA< KY
GREAT REDUCTION.
ECONOMY 18 WEALTH.
Tht ttrual |7O Macbinu redncei to caly |25.
11.50 PER WEEK!
Horsed- Wn(on Free to Amenta. '
"THE FAMILY" SHUTTLE
SEWING
MW MACHINE.
U'.onlNl B|e ns pr,|ts).~l .>r .SIM Msrk aslnnl top
UMs siel Itsdi, *ith s l.Aftors ,w btbsst
fl rutt lu (hsn snj csl.sr msrbin*. iui'l llr.l ,.
eely tCs> h m,ft.ins IHoe.ngaiv wsrrint sith
W StrVIB til ISIUM In. As# )nw. Ks,'t IB iOW SB IS
s f *aot; <J rsfan.ls.l l I>MS if n. l wtitsit.,rr
TNs mnM BnlM, raU*t>l, ant MIKTU, tm, ins-liins
srss Insrntet f*r all tl,.], ~f family Bo,a. An sr. {
Kn<>|—is—l nn— ,nlsml msrhnl<nl sncsßS, tk'.r
'■sffWf ibh-I 81.,1 ns.-i in ilH.itiMi.4s of Nono An
*ol'isi. sil.nl, m(44. rsllsl ls sn4 ssse-rrwl> bl|-i
to Iks Htt Bits MSIMUhs. that Bill 4o lbs s.sk
<4 a family far a lifa tims. ~r It Bill ram fn.m >t u 14
l"4*sy fa any <m slmsMn t.. SSB f..r a liiin(.ati4
t.Hls |hm taan lists tas rstrs ot , a mtrSla.s (
lih# qnnllty llsssstrs! n* ls>irsHnrs-l atiullls. ranly
m nn.ir.l Its Ira far gs si nr.l NnMiny H*' j
<4 Ibrsmt 4><l off mi atlh lbs fss~,rrt r-s in<ll'n> .if
b..144ns It tunksa lbs shnttls, 4.mbls-Ibx-st. lork
atitik. (IbH Sams on both at4es of tbs Both , ahb b
terst*s4 ttae NH.arsr aaathst tbr iVnUnnlal Tbs
str-.ntssi RasS.and aval Instinystitrk ssor ps.hlbm-4.
It is Isailt far itrmttt. awl nsalaat knit! autk labs
t hi|..i u arrrkln# |nru Msnsfa. intssl ot Bn- ,.l
isb-dstert. Will ran b.r yrs ailboat rsfturs. is
Stmpls t.l losm, easy to annae. awteSoM prrfa lit
in an boar, sM alsaji rsntly la • in..mml to do srrsy
drs.rljtlixn of bsasy nr Bns Bork at Irws risk mors
easily, saaootbly and faster, and Bilk loss labor or
trsiaUs (ban any other marblnea, it *r rs irs, eses
did or ran do. It a ill era anything n n rolls can
iter, Ibas bare or ran,loir in lori rlotk nr harness,
with any kind of tkfssa.l. and ran on twenty ranis p*r
minute. uses a stn.ng. atraifkt needle.*an.l nsr
towaks them. Tt rannoi miss or drop a stitch, tasel at
break Ike thread. The miaaey rbeerfnl! r-fa4~l Iftl
Bill not ot-TBoag and .otasst any ma. bias at doable
tbs nrlm. II y.m base Bar olbat ms< bine, laay this
and We a b-tter nan. TVs ease and rapMlty B f its
milxß and quality ol Its Bork Is Its low! t~ ornate ado.
lion. It Bill bens, Ml, tack, btntd,mrd, lead, gather.
TOllt. rae. plsrt, f"M. aralfap, sblrr, roll, baste,
■enfa adder, fa a ap breadih*. etr, auk eteganre same
and ani'bnem. anoarpaaeed by any marbina'aarr
latenfed. The rri.es .4 4ar Saw amrklnra are leer
than Ihas naked by dealers In aenrnd hat.d, rwbaitt
and reßoMaed msrhlnes, or threw celling oat Old Work
ta rloae ap bnmaeee, many sark Infer tor and eldwSyle
markltses being nffersd as new at tadnrwd wheat
H'ware of imitations and only bay new ma.bines
Tkete are w, an Brat Warn machines *arsid at ton as
lbs -Pamtls." by many dollars.
For testimonials pen dear rlptlaa books, mailed fras
with sample* at stark.
<toads (kipped tosnr part of the eonntry. no matter
fc " w T**;!*'*' "y K snd . Jsdel.ssry gaar
salswd. Blab privilege of a ttna..irt rtsmaarton
begww payment ,4 Idlt. or am rwoetM of pries by
Bantriae I<l letter, Ibarr order, or ISrafi
Agenle Banted Uamaglaoat the -nntri far this, tbe
rbaa|**, ntoad mttoßartors and rapid nailing mar it lae
la tbe wertd For bhentl .erms, mtdrem
'AXII-t SUt'TTLR MACUIXK 00,
>4* 7M Orostdßay, X.b Tmk. i
IJKLLKFOXTE A SNOW SHOD
J K -I' TIM"-TL L IN •HIT ON and aft.l |,~.
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L-ai-. 11. M>F TII„ |0 I a a , animal KOU* KBOA
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I * LLOAI) TINIF 7*l .• LIMNNUR |F7T ;
I.i; Mail UintAln. I. *j. ,Mml.
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&ti S £! 44 Ltk IUT-n 44 ... *4211 IN
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ETLFT Mail 14 fit *IFT-FTI r.l| K.I X4'ad, Ift- K llaiiti
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I,I lit,,. *II, *.<pir LJ<... 14aaft. AND**;,
ri I rati IT-al. and LAR* Halt!. A MI,
•nakft ,:(■ , T1,1,T. 1. ~ AL M Uliftiuaift IL aitn A.< K.
44 Hall, • 14 -ill,
EH- Mali 14-tl. *larai EFT !>F*ttaa IV„T, AR <: LY
I FT|*T T I M*T - AFT, rl-., rrt'ITNT-LFTT-T at Ik- K Ilaitn
14,11, It | \ UK iiaiita.
1 ',l Mail KAN AA,D 4A ,-I LT— lat EIO at lib lral< a
T n I, * 4 M * H LL L {'.411 "•' " < A A V K
K .1 Ll..|. r na. ,IH I! * V I P R. K.. aai at
|lNF|*<aad A lib A 1 IT II
I'ail .I tarft mil tin. L-t.-a I'hiiad-LI L.IA and
v. illi.lT <|.II T,n liaiirt I IJITA V 4.11 KI-. I 1.1..
44 at!. I'L.T 1 -TW Ifliia II|,H. EFT.L ~„1 |>., K,,—..
I. HI. *! . FTTMDAI RT } I—aa latt MTTT|,,T.A< ,AN „N AIL
•ftMlnkk MA A IHMW
Uaal hiwlalaaliat
J TAHI'KR BROTHERS,
M'RINO HKF.ET. UEI I.KIHXTE FA.
Hvc their counter* nd abclro filled *UH
NEW GOODS,
f BANK KTPT RATES
.'urcliAoed at - BANKKUIT KATES
( HANK KURT HATES
MRILIM TtlliT OEFKR AT
BOTTOM PRICES,
BOTTOM PRICES,
BOTTOM PRICES.
OOXSIFTIXO or
I>rj- (AOODN,
Millinery Good*,
Clothing,
FANCY Good*,
Notion*, AC.
BOOTS and SHOES
HOOTS and SHOES at very low price*.
BtHITS and SHOES
It ATS and CAPS
Lateftt HYLE* of H ATS and CA PS
HATS and CAPS
Carpet Bag*, ,
Umbrella*,
ParawiU,
KM He*' Cloak*,
Carpeting,
Oroeerie*,
Jueen*W*re, Ac.
Oawimain, rrrrj IKFET TKAL caa B* * sad la a Inl
<laaa *4nr*. .
HARPER BROTHERS,
FPBIMi HTRKET, . . BRU.UFONTR. PA.
CORJFTKT PKOMC* takea la IUK U| . ,1 Ik.
l,I S WL aatk-L l<ri- |., ;
* e. wan, PR-AT , Oaß'r.
"EPIRST NATIONAL HANK OF
I RKLLRFOVrC. ,
Allr*W UML, Rallafoale. Pa. 44F
riENTRE COUNTY BANKING
VFT/ TXLMPAXR.
Recall- Pafmlta
AA4 Alltta I a TRIM,
Btaroaai Xataa;
Rap mad ML
OE*. Raratlliaa,
JA * B.FTIRA, PIMDW,
i. 6. *neaaT. OaMtt. , 4_ TF
HOUSE,
1 * RRI.LKH.IiTI. FA.
HOUHAL A TELLER, Proprietora. '
OOOD Samplt Room on FSril Floor,
a. MTIHL®""! !" * M FKM " 4,1 Ttmlm*. HMUI IM.
*"■■ aadlanam. T_l.
r>RO<SKRnOFF ITOUBK,
1 * i.L*mrr*. r*.
HOCSAL & TELLER, Proprietor*. *
0004 Somplt Room on Firtl Floor,
•rhwhMiiitMlhaiilt Tnlu. •pnUlnu
It ukljtnn. 1-1/