THE MILLHEIM JOURNAL, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY R. A. BUMILLER. Office in the New Journal Building, Penn St., near Hart man's foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OB *1.26 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCB. Acceptable Correspondence Solicited Address letters to .MILLIIEIM JOURNAL. CARDS. UARTEIt, Auctioneer, MILLIIEIM, PA. D It. JOHN F. IIX.TEII, Practical Dentist, Office opposite the Methodist Church. MAIN STREET, MI LLIIEIM PA. R.GEO. S. FRANK, Physician & Surgeon, REBERSBURG, PA.- Offlce opposite the hotel. Professional calls promptly answered at all hours. TJH. D. H. MINGLE. Physician & Surgeon Offltce on Maiu Street. MILLIIEIM, PA. J. SPRINGER, R Fashionable Barber, Bhop 2 doors west Milliieim Banking nouse, MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. D. H. Hastings. W. F. Reeder JQ-ASTINGS & REEDER, Atlornejs-at-Law, BBLLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east of the office ocupied by the late firm of Yocum 4 14 700 10 tX) ISOO 3000 40(0 1 * 10 00 15 00 25 00 45 00 75 CO One Inch makes a square. Administrators and Executors' Notices $*2.50. Transient adver tisements and locals 10 cents per Hue for first Insertion and o cents per line for each addition al Insertion. They Drove Him In. The owner of a place on Sibley . street appeared in front of the house the other morning with a step-ladder i and a saw and began the work of • trimming up his shade trees. When he was at the first limb a pedestrian halted and queried ; 'Going to trim your trees eh ?' 'Yes.' i 'Urn. I see. First-rate time to trim trees. Um. Exactly.' He hadn't got two blocks away be fore number two came along and call ed out: i 'Going to trim your trees,eh V -'Yes.' 'Ah I I see. Oought to have wait ed a month later.' The limb was off when No. 3 halt ed, stood for a minute with his hands in his pockets and then asked : 'Going to trim your trees,eh V 'Yes.' 'Ought to have done that last month.' No. 4*said that April was the prop er month. No. 5 wouldn't trim a tree except in May. No. 6 thought November the beat time of the year, and so it went until every month in the year had been named and there were five or six individuals to spare. Before the first tree was finished the seventeenth pedestrian halted, threw away the stub of his cigar and loudly demanded : 'Going to trim your trees,eh V The man hung his saw to a limb, got down off the ladder, and spitting on bis hands be walked close op to the inquirer and said : 'Supposing lam ! What are you going to do about it ?' 'Oh, nothing,' answered the other as he dodged around a pile of brick; 'I was simply going to ask you if you used tar or porous plasters to cover the scars V The citizen got his saw and ladder and disappeared in the house, and the I remainder of the work will be done at night.— Detroit Free Press. The Farmer got a Seat. An old farmer entered a Chicago, Burlington and Quincy train at Mon mouth. Every seat in the car was occupied. The old man walked up and down the aisle two or three times, expecting to see somebody offer him a s 3at. But nobody stirred. Finally he stopped beside two seats, in one of which aSt Louis drummer had de posited his grips and in the other him self. His feet,encased in cardinal hose aud imitation patent slippers, adorned the top of his luggage. 'ls this seat engaged ?' inquired the farmer, pointing to the gripsacks. 'Don't you see that it is V The old man took another turn down the aisle. He was evidently loosing patience. As he returned the train was pulling out. On the side track was a stock train, loaded with squealing porkers. 'Say, Mister,' shouted Jthe farmer, unable longer to restraint himself, 'be you goin' up to Chicago V 'I am so,' replied the St.Louis man. 'Wall, all I've got to say is, you're on the wrong train. You ought to be over there on the next track.' The drummer got off at the next stopping place and the old man set tled into his seat with a smile as broad as his acres in Knox county. Perfectly safe. Jones—'See here, Smith I don't like to hurry you away from the boys, but you are a married man and I am afraid you will have trouble if you stay with us any later. It is nearly midnight.' Smith—'Oh,don't worry about me ; I'm all right.' 'But you said Mrs. S nearly took the roof off when you got home after midnight.' 'Yes, but there is no danger this evening.' 'Won't she be awake V 'Oh,she will be wide awake enough, but my eldest daughter had her beau with her this evening.' 'What difference can that make V 'A very big difference. She will have all the clocks two hours slow.' AN alphabetical list of the person ages in Sir Walter Scott's novels has just been compiled, from which it ap pears that they comprise 622 distinct characters.