FEBRUARY COURT, No Oases of Interest to South Side Resi. dents, *xoept that County Gets Addi. tional $250 Court House Hi), Court convened on Monday morne ing for the regular February sessions with the Hon. Ellis L Orvis on the bench, the new prothontary, D. R. Foreman, and the new register, J. Frank Smith, in their respective places. Robert Cole vs. Centre county, be- ing an appeal. This case grows out of a controversy between the plaintiff and the former board of county com- missioners, the plaintiff alleging that he had drawn plans and specifications for the changing of the Court House, and that he had been spoken to to do this by J Thomas Mitchell. The com- missioners saying that they had not employed ihe plaintiff, and that New- man and Harris plans were adopted, but in their minutes of June, 1909, when adopting the plans of Newman and Harris, they rejected the plans of this plaintiff, and stated that the plaintiff should have reasonable com- pensation ; and in their minutes of November 15, 1911, the plaintiff was to be paid $250, The Commissioners denied that such an agreement had been made. Verdict on Tuesday morning in favor of the plaintiff for $250, The case of James A. Noonan and wife ve. Bellefonte borough, a claim for damages, was settled. Harry Rossman, of Coleville, was found guilty of assault, that charge having been preferred by his wife. Hillary Viral, of Philipsburg, plead guilty to larceny, and was sentenced to the Western Penitentiary for not less than nine months and not more than three years a flae of $100 and costs. All jarors were discharged Tuesday afternoon. The grand jury found all of the ten bills presented to them true, aud recommended a number of minor improvements in the jail and about the premises, Aaronsburg, C. A. Weaver, of Freeport, was the guest of Mrs. Effie Weaver and his many other friends in this place, Mrs. William Guisewite returned home from a pleasaut visit with friends io Bellefonte. David Bummers, of Altoona, aud Mrs. H. C. Yurdy, of Shamokin, were the welcome guests of their aged mother, Dr. John Bowersox has gone to York at which place he will be located aud follow his profession. Raymond Weaver has gone to Plainfield, Ilinois, where he will be employed. Mr. and Mrs. David Dorman, of Feidler, spent the Sabbath at the home of William Wolfe. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bower and Coruelius Bower visited at the howe of Adam Martino at Pine Creek. Mr. sod Mrs. William Guisewite spent tue Sabbath with friends living at Coburn, Mrs. Warren Wiokleblech and Tammie Stover spent part of the Bab- bath with their aucle Enoch Kreamer, east of this piace. Mrs. Claude Feidler, of Feidler, spent Friday at the homes of Mrs, Orwig snd Mrs. Effie Weaver. Miss Mamie lresster, of Bellefoute spent Sunday with friends In this place, Noah Cronmilier and Mamie Rote made a business trip to Bellefonte one day last week, Ira Gramley, of Millheim, spent Bunday with Johu Durst, Robert Bard who had been ili for some Lime Is very much improved, Mrs. H. E. Urouse spent a few days with her parents at Winfield, Jonn Haines aud family spent Bun- day at Rebersburg. Mrs. William tlouser, of Bellefonte, spent a day Iast week with her mother Mes. D. d. Leaker, [Loe personal property of Emanuel Musser, deceased, will be offered for sale on Saturday afternoon, E, G. Miogle, auctioueer, —————— A in Catching Wild Ducks In England. A novel method of capturing wild fucks Is used In England. On small lakes where the ducks are apt to stop for a short time a few tame ducks are kept as decoys, and a well trained dog and some wire netting do the rest. The dog is trained to act like a fox, and the wild ducks congregate in large numbers to frighten it away from a screen over which it runs back and forth. The ducks keep up a constant guacking, and the dog retreats, being pursued until the trapped fowl are caught in the network, with a portion dropped over the opening to prevent their escape. At certain seasons of the year thousands of wild ducks fre quent the fen districts, and these traps have been used very successfully to provide game for some of the large preserves. ~Harper's, 0 ———— Contrary to Fact. The phrenologist was examining the bumps oii Sambo's head. . “Curiosity and acquisitiveness ab- pormally large.” ambo riled his eyeballs and show: two rows of white ivory. “Imitativeness, causa and con. with your sclentionsness small, whic weak moyth Indicates” Wn 6 Tosh monte © Kon, Seats oa ’ a a ma teal." ~Satire, I Tm om a— iy a. thai HORSE TAILS. — We Import Them From All Over the World and Also Export Them. An {tem that seemed odd In the mani. fest of a steamer lately arrived from Japanese and Chinese ports was this in the list of her cargo from Tientsin: Fifty-five cases of horse talls. As a matter of fact, horse tails or the hair thereof are a common article of importation into this country from China and from pretty much every other country on earth. The American market gets large quantities of them from China, but more from Russia, and horse talls are imported here from every other European country and from South America, from Australia, from all round the world. On the oth- er hand, there are more or less Ameri- can horse tails exported. From various causes the supply of horse talls, like that of anything else, may in one country and another vary from year to year, and there may be years when the world’s supply is short and years when it is plentiful, with corresponding changes in the range of prices. Horse talls have sold as low as 20 cents a pound, and they have sold for as much as $2. If stocks are scarce and high in London and ample at low- er prices here New York importers ship horse tails to London. In the contrary circumstances London importers might ship horse talls here. Horsetall hairs are sorted for length and colors, and they are used either alone or mixed with other fibers in the manufacture of various sorts of brush- es and mixed with other materials in the manufacture of halircloth. — New York Sun. A VERSE FOR THE BEGGAR. Victor Hugo's Response to the Old Blind Soldier's Appeal. A Frenchman, writing recently upon “The Mendicants of Paris,” recalls a pretty anecdote of Victor Hugo and a blind beggar. The beggar was an old soldier, very feeble and quite sight- less, who was led every day by his little granddaughter to a certain street corner, where he waited patiently for such scanty arms as the hurrying pub- lic might drop Into a small box that hung from his neck. One day a group of gentlemen halted near him, chatting, and he heard the name by which they called the one who lingered longest. Reaching for- ward as he, too, was about to go, he caught him by the coat “What do you want, my good man?’ asked the gentleman. “I have already given you 2 sous.” “Yes, monsieur, and [ have thanked you,” replied the veteran. “It is some- thing else that I want.” “What is §t 7” “Verses.” “You shail have them.” sald the gen. tleman, and he kept his word The next day the blind soldier bore on his breast a placard with a stanza to which was appended the name of Vie tor Hugo, and the alms in the box were quintupled. The lines may be thus transiated: Like Baelisarius and Tide Homer blind, Led by a young child on his pathway dim, The hand that aids his need, pitying and kind, He will not see, but God will see for him, How One Word Was Born. The two friends had been dining on divers and sundry strange dishes at the Cedars of Lebanon cafe, in the Syrian quarter of New York. They were drinking their coffee, thick with conl black grounds, and wondering whether they really enjoyed it, when Smithers suddenly cried out: “Pataug! Patang!” The walter hurried away and came back presently bringing an ordinary corkscrew. “I was just testing,” sald Smithers to his companion, “the truth of the story that the first corkscrew seen in Beirut was brought there by a Yankee It was a patented American contrap tion, and the Syrians were amazed at its convenience. They spelled out on it the mystic words, ‘Pat. Aug. "76, and took that to be the name of the imple ment. Now, I believe the story that pataug is its name all over the Levant.” ~New York Bun. The First Quarantine. From all accounts the custom of quarantine originated in Venice some where about the beginning of the twelfth century. All merchants and others coming from the eastern coun- tries were obliged to remain in the house of Bt. Lazarus for a period of forty days before they were admitted into the city. Taking the idea from Venice, other European cities, espe elally port towns, instituted quaran- tine during seasons of plague, and well down into modern times most nations adopted the system, applying it when it was deemed necessary. Youthful Wisdom, Father—Why did my little hoy send his papa a letter with only a capital T written on the page while he was away? Little Bon—Because I thought you'd go around among your friends years old and Just see the capital letter he writes!"~Judge’s Library. A Better Figure, spoke of mn baby as ‘a new wave on the ocean of life.’ ” “Quite 80; a poetical figure.” oop you think ‘mn fry ‘ would have hit the mark better Boston Transcript. BULLETS IN BATTLE. Death Wounds and Flesh Wounds and the Feeling When Gtruck. In “Serving the Republic” General Nelson A. Miles says that, lke every other soldier who hag seen much active service, he Is often asked how it feels to be wounded. He himself was wounded four times and twice almost fatally, so he is able to speak from experience. He says: “One Is often asked how it seems to be wounded In battle. The flight of a bullet is quicker than thought and has passed through a flesh wound before one realizes that he has been struck. I have seen bodies of men dead on the fleld of battle where the braln had been pierced and death had been In- stantaneous. They would remain in every position of the ‘manual of arms,’ with an anxious look, a frown or a smile on thelr cold and rigid faces. “My wounds received at Falr Oaks, Fredericksburg and Petersburg were flesh wounds and disabled me but a short time. While riding down the line at Chancellorsville one of the ene- my’'s bullets struck my metallic belt plate with great force. This caused a slight deviation as it entered the body. The result was an Instant deathly sick- ening sensation. My sword dropped from my right hand; my scabbard and belt dropped to the left. I was com. pletely paralyzed below the waist. My horse seemed to realize what had oc curred. He stopped, turned and walked slowly back, I holding to the pommel of the saddle with my hands. We soon reached a group of soldiers, who took me off and, placing me in a blan- ket, carried me to the Chancellorsville House and pulled a dead man off a couch to make room for me.” TOOK HIS TIME. Bill Gave the Old Man a Leng Wait For the Backlog. Skipper Norwood was born In a lit tie Nova Scotia town. During the long winter evenings young Bill used to lie out in front of the big open fireplace, and just about the time he had got warm and comfortable and a trifle drowsy Norwood senlor would make up his mind the fire was getting low and send Lis son out into the snow to bring in a backlog from the wood plle Eventually these nocturnal pilgrim gges got on young Bill's perves, and one night when his father sent him out after the backlog the son contin ved on past the wood pile and across country to the nearest seaport, where whaler Bill came a he shipped on a Nine years ia was a bitterwinter nis was falling Bill sneaked window and looked into the old sitting room. The fire wns burning in the old fireplace, and Bill's father and mother were seated in front of it. He noticed that the fire was a trifle low Bo he the wood pile, selected a big ied It into the house and moment by the fire with the log on his shoulder “Father,” said Bill, “I"ve brought in that backlog you sent me after.” The old man never budged an inch spat into the fire and re back. It , and the snow ter up to the went to backlog, carr stood for n Instead Le torted testily “Set It on the fire long while gittin® it!” ing Post You've been a Saturday Even The Drug Clerk's Caller, “A man came in yesterday and want ed something we didn't have. He had been looking into the window. and he must have thought this was a8 book store just because we were advertising some novels and stationery and dic tlonaries and a lot of that left over junk Well. anyhow, he came to me and he says, says he, ‘1 want Lincoln's Gettysburg address.’ “ ‘Look for it yourself, sir,’ says | politely. like we're taught to do. ‘There's a directory over there in the corner. But 1 don’t think you'll find it. These directories only have the subscribers’ city addresses.’ “Well, say. that fellow was 80 mad be wouldn't wait. Called me ignorant and all kinds of things. But that just shows you what us drug clerks have got to put up with."—Cleveland Plalo Coal Bin Measurements, A solid cuble foot of anthracite coal weighs nipety three younds. When bro ken for use it weighs about fifty-four pounds. Bituminous coal when broken up for use weighs about fifty pounds The consequent rule for the approxi mate measurement of coal in a bin or box is to muitiply the length in feet by the height In feet and again by the breadth in feet and thls result by fifty: four for anthracite coal or by fifty for bituminous coal. The réSult will equal the number of pounds, and to find the aumber of tons divide by 2,000.~Popy- lar Mechanics. +s The Obliging Friend, “You know that Griggs and I both love you. Can't you make a choice to- day? “A choice, indeed! When I do make a cholee you ean rest assured that it will not interest you!" “Thauks! I'l tell Griggs." - Ex: change, Good Little Boy. Mrs. Beant Will you have another slice of eake. Robble? Robble—No, thank you; mother sald 1 must re fuse 0 second plece., ‘cause you mightn’t have It to spare. -Judge AI AS Better Days, Ethel of hor lancer Poor Fred bas fee Totter Ava Kitty ~ Yes: be used to tp 1 to me. Boston Tran wei egg Where nw ends tyranny begins. - oy Siting §rise Opies Bapariar, 1 por poyr, A JAPANESE LEGEND. It Tells a Pretty Story of the Origin of the Chrysanthemum, The Japnpese have an Interesting legend In connection with the origin of the chrysanthemum, In a garden bathed In the soft moonlight a young girl plucked a flower and commenced to strip the petals to see if her flance loved her truly. Of a sudden a little god appeared before her and assured her that her flance loved her passion- ately. “Your husband will live,” he added, “as many years as the flower which 1 will let you choose has petais.” With these words he digappeared. The young girl hastened to search the garden for a flower which should have an abundance of petals, but each one appeared to promise but a brief fu- ture for her beloved, At length she picked a Persian car- nation, and, with the ald of a gold pin taken from her hair, she separated each one of the petals of the flower 80 as to Increase the number of folloles and of the number of years accorded by the god to her fiance. Boon under her deft fingers 100, 200, 300 petals, thin, pliant and beautifully curved, had been evolved, and the young girl cried for joy to think of the happy fature which her ruse had assured her flance. Bo, runs the legend, was the erysanthemum created one moonlight night in a Japanese garden, where sil- very brooks murmured softly as they ran beneath the little bamboo bridges. —~London Globe, CRY OF THE GIRAFF=. ft Is a Peculiar Sound Something Like a Sheep's Bleat, Those who read the accounts of the giraffe tn the textbooks and the de scriptions given by travelers may have noticed that no mention is made of its volce. Sportsmen, in fact, al lude to its apparent volcelessness. Nor so far as the records go has it ever been heard In captivity Up to the present it appears that one could say whether the ery of a giraffe Lleat or a of the recent Afri beard its volce no Wis a groan, n bellow, a neigh: experience of a natura who has actually is of special Interest Blaney Percival question, spent over a waterhole where the mals ca to drink. He b seen giraffe and zebra drinking with in thirty of him While thus watching he had the good fortune to hear the giraffe It was making a bleating nolse, bint Mr. Percival says it is quite {mposs! ble to describe the sound in writing “The nearest | can get to it” “Is ‘war're’ rather drawn out, a ‘baa.’ like a sheep. but m longed, and the softening at the end tore noticeable. — London Fleld The Strange Sea Spider One of the strangest creatures of the seft Is a certain species of sea spider named Nymphon gracile It has = body about the size of a bit of thread a quarter of an Inch long and tied into four knots. The bead looks like the end of a thread split into two horns From each of the four knots start two legs, one on each side, making eight in nil be legs are three or four times longer than the body, but the odd thing about them is that the alimen tary tube into which the food goes runs down into every one of the legs. so that whatever the spider eats circo lates through his legs. and, In fact, the legs are like the body in internal structure. Another curious feature of this form of life is that the baby ses spider is not In the least like the grownop of the same family. It is much more like a crab, but how it de velops from a crablike form is not yet ascertained. Exchange, hence the record list in east Le naturalist In enliment the the day In con wild ani d nt times he feet he says not just we pro Lost and Found. “Almost too strange to be true,” sald 8 woman bho had lost and found again a plece of jewelry a fow days ago. On arriving at her husband's of. fice In the Wall street district she dis covered that an amethyst was missing from an ornament which she wore. The prongs which held It had evident ly worn away, and the stone was given up for lost. She went on a shopping tour and when leaving the Seventy. second street suliway station on her way home dropped her muff. She stooped to pick It up and close to one of the iron plilare saw her lost ame thyst. “I was so glad to find it.” she sald, “but people don't believe the sto ry. Even my husband made a queer face when I told it." New York Trib une. Fact and Figtien, “I suppose your wandering boy will eome home and pay the mortgage off the farm as they do in Christmas sto ries” “No,” replied Farmer Corntossel; “that ain't his custom. When he gits through makin’ suggestions it general. ly means another mortgage.” Wash ington Star, What Bachelors Miss. “You bachelors don't know what you miss,” sald the married man. “Well, we have the satisfaction of knowing that what we do miss len't lifted from our pockets while we are deiphla Record, SO SA. Move On, Do not gaze backward nor pause to contemplate anxiously what is ta front. but move, It ts dificult to persuade mankind that the love of virtue la the love of themselves. Cicero Lagedry wii 40 50s Fo The ofhee Welawiop Sale Heglstor, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, on the Bonner farm uear Old Fort, by W. D, Brunk and O, M Lonberger st one o'clock : 4 homes, 5 cows, 2 heifers, 4 ewes, & full line of farming bmplements, also De laval cream separator, hay 37 the ton, one-hall interest in 16 acres of grain, also household L. ¥. Rosu, auctioneer, | MARCH 4-By B. Gardner Grove, east of Cen tre Hall, in Gregg wwoship, one o'clock : Three horses, 2 colts, 8'good milvh cows some of whieh will be fresh at time of sale, several good calves 2+horthorn bulls, 17 stock ewes, buck, 3 broo sows, 15 shouts, new Burerior grain drinl with fertilizer atiachment. L. ¥ Mayes, a oer, MARCH 6—-Farm stock and implements. A. W., Zettle, two miles west of Bpring Mills, ten o'clock : 2 horses, one colt, 8 head of fine bogr, b fine cows, 8 heifers, two helfvrs will be fresh se time of sule, 12 Holstein bulls, Guernsey bull, 17 sheep, sino a full line of farming implements Free lunch, L. F, Mayes, suctions er, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, one o'clock, on the Keller farm, one-fourth mile esst of Centre Hall by 8 1. POORMAN : Driving mere 4 milch cLws, 12 young eattle, 4 fat stee s, 14 stock ewes, ram, 18 shoats, brood sow. Also lot impiements ail #¥ good as new : Johnston binder, Johnston hay rake Lancaster sidedelivery ba rake, Gear css bay loader, Buckeye riding cultivator, disc barrow, Bcleatific corn culler, land roller, spike harrow, set hay ladders. Harry Grove, auctioneer. FRIDAY, MARCH ETH, by Huyett and Luse, one-fourth mile west of CO pire Hall—-8tock sale, not less thao one hundred head of live steck LF. Mayes. auctioneer, Bee full description cisewhere in this issue, BATURDAY. MARCH 9, one o'clock, at Centre Hall, by Mrs, Haoosh Luse, © W, Luse, agent : Personal property, Consisting of household goods, ete, BATURDAY, MARCH 9, al twelve o'clock. ope mile » ast of Linden Hall, by James W, Bwab : 3 horses, 2 tw -year old colts, 2 year! colts, 4 cows. 12 hesd of young onrtle, 2 brood sows, #0 Pigs, and full line of Implements, MONDAY, MARCH 11, nine o'clock, two miles south of Centre Hall, by Wm, H. Baird : ew bt horses and colts, 9 milch cows, 5 young cattle bull, 10 sheep, 2 brood sows and shoals : Reneral iipe of farming machioery ; also some household goods . TUE DAY. MARCH 12, atten o'clock, one bal! milo west of « ak Hall, by A. W Dale: 7 head horees, 7 miich cows, 15 head young cattle, shorthera bull, 6 brond sows, § hosts 15 bead of sreep, full Hone of farming implements an household goods. Harry Grove, Auctioneer. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 138. nine o'clock, one mile west of Centre Bill, mea Stone Mill, by J H, Welser and H.C Shirk Oue span of mules coming five yesrs old ; brood mare, one hore, ane vearl ng colt, 7 cows, § sieers bull 4 Young callie, 4 brood sows, & pigs chickens, Delavs Cream separator, and & fuil line of implements used but three years L. F. Mayes, Auct BATURLC AY. MARCH 16, one o'clock. at Cen. tre Hall by L G. Reanck : Household goods, and other artic] s TUESDAY, MARCH 19. ten o'clock obe-haif mlie povih of Prunes Cave, by J B., Ream Three five cows, one heifer, three shosts, one. bute wagon, boggy. ele, sed, foe Organ guns and & large num ser of other articles MARCH 20, all day sale, by Perry K and vxecn os of Jacob D twiler, one arts snide chat Of Penus Cave, «01 thre and one-half mile Darth of Bering Mills : 3 Horse, 6 onws 8 belfers, fut bul, 3 brood sows. 19 shoats, & fo ine of farming Lopiements | sno & Id of Bots hold sounds Bele al 930 A M. H H. Miller suctioneer, Detwlie MARCH 21. by N wion Yeroell, wesr Linden inl Buocs Ba 25 head of horn ostlie : ¢ Boorse, = Jot of Dogs, ec This will ale BEATURDAY. MARCH 21 nile Bornh of Spriog Mile, by ROBERT D MU=SER Bix Hol teln Gite, J 6, and § months old, two bellers 10 and 12 m maths old all bred Trew regwiered sock, BATURDAY, MABCH 22 one v'clook. In Cen tre Hall, by Mrs Dastel Wien : 8 large variels of how ehod goods, including sloves, be an all day oe O'clok, one TUESDAY, MARCH 26 at Lind. Hall<By Johu M Wieland. Farm stock, implements, ei le Frank Mayes, Auvclioveer, TUESDAY, MARCH 26-104. m , two miles ess of Asroneburg Zelgier Broibers will sel 4 head of horses. 10 Jersey cows { 4 of them registe red §J.-me, belfers. and fara implements, HB. H Miller. suctiooeer THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 12 o'clock, ene mile cant of Centre Hell, on the Boyer farm, by N. H Zeogler © 4 homes, 1 youriiog colt, § cows, 6 bead of young osttle, full loeof farming Lm, lemenis SATCHDAY, MARCH 30, one o'clock, at Spring Mule, by Jou 1. Soavely : Bieven cows, Shorthorn ball, three horses, arming imple nents, ele, How to cure a cold is a question in which many are interested just now Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has won ite grest reputation sod immense #ale by its remarkable cure of colde [t can always be depended upon. For sale by all dealers. AI A A ———————— The Datrymen, I bave recently received a car of sSocrene Dairy Feed, This teed hss proven to be one of the best dairy feeds on the market, one of the feeds that brings satisfactory results, Try it and be convinerd. It is also an ex- cellent feed for calves and young shoata, R. D. ForEMAN, Centre Hall, —— ———— DEATHS, Henry Moyer died at a Danville hoepital, aged fifty years. The re mains were brought to Penn Hall where loterment was made, on Bun- day mori ing, in Heckman's ocometery. The deceased is survived by two children, namely, Mrs. Lawrence stover, from whose home the fanersi was beld, and Lester, in Dakota, in, Ventre Hall ; Mre. Sarah Booo, Reversburg ; Mrs. Mary Wolf, Reuch- town ; Mrs. Bebecea Cumings, Centre Hull ; Mrs. Johu Page, Fpbersburg ; Mrs. John Kewery, Wililam Moyer snd Samuel Moyer, Loganton, Nervous? Thin? Pale? Are you easily tired, lack your usual vigor and strength? Then your digestion must be poor, your blood must be thin, your nerves must be weak. You need a strong tonic. You need Ayers Sarsaparilla, the only Sarsa- entirely free from alco- ol. We believe your doctor will endorse these state ments. Ask and find out. An Eccentric Viear. One wonders what London theught of Robert Stephen Hawker, the vicar of Morwenstow, when he visited Lon- don (for the second tis in his life) in, 1864. Lord Exmouth, invited to lunch! with him at the Great Western hotel,’ Paddington, found him dressed pre- cisely as he used to dress in his Cor nish village—fisherman’s knitted Jor. sey, long purple coat and wading boots, Lord Exmouth, bubbling with laugh- . ter, sald, “I am not surprised the wait- er should say there was no clergyman bere.” To which Hawker replied: “No doubt you would rather see me dressed lke a walter, with a black coat and white choker! I've felt obliged to ssy ‘Bir' to him twice already.” London Express. Dyaks Fond of Monkey Mest. The Dyaks of southwestern Borneo hunt nearly all the game in the vicini- ty of their settlements with Epears ex- cept in the case of the orang outang, which is hunted with guns It seems that these wild people are very fond of the ment of the orang outang and consequently those animals are very scarce in the neighborhood of Dyak camps. Not Acquainted, “Are you at all familiar with Plato?" asked Mrs. Oldcastle, “No; that's one thing Josiah always blames me for. He says 1 never makes real friends with anybody.” Welcome, “1 s’pose 1 look lke a tramp, Cath. erie Ann. but I'm your cousin, Cy Barker, back from the Klondike with $40000 In gold Gee, don't smother we!” ~Chicago Tribune Both Exempt. “Do your daughters help their moth- er with the housework 7 “We wouldn't think of expecting it Muriel is tempernmentsl and Zaza is tntense.” — Pittsburgh Post Didn't Want Too Much. Amateur Nimrod —Can you show me any bear tracks? Native—] kin show Jou & bear. Amateur Nimrod—Thanks awfully, old chap. Tracks will suf- fce.—~ New Orleans Picayune. AUCTIONEER. The undersigned offers } in ser. ing personal property and ial public sale. The record ring We past few ¥ 18 8 guarantees 3 ales taken NE Lhe whale Rates ressonsble, L. FRANK 1* a» oo gsi . i MAYES, Lemont, Pa. CTIONEER GREAT BARGAINS The greatest bargains ever known in Centre county will be foand ng M, BELL'S VARIETY STORER There re be, 100, 1 Sc snd B36 cent counters Gravulsted sugar 6c per pound, in 25h. jots Call and be convinced. 8 M. BELL, Boalvburg, Pa. It QOLT FOR SALE Sorrel mare oolt, nsing two dryers old, silver mane and tail - will make a good farm animal. Reson for selling & that I must have & horse that can work CLAY- TON E WAGNER, Centre Hall oll Colyer Gordhart's J. BE RISEEL, LOST-Corner cupbosrd, between Ww m witrm aid Red Mill ou day of J. © sie; same is a family relic. Oenire Hall, Pa, FOR BALE—Ten thorobred Duroc shoats, weigh” ing seveuly-five ibs, all open sows. B PF. CAMPBELL, Penns Cave. 09 WATCH LO TA silver Walch, open face, be- tween Mannor Hill school houses and Centre Hall, JUHN C. BAILEY, Centre Hall THOROBRED HOLSTEIN BULLS FOR BALE ~Tue undersigned offe-s ag private sale four young H--istelu b. 138, from one 10 three moniks oid, bred [rom his registered bull Thoruwood Vaie Posch Fiebre, No. 52125 #0 0 5 ST ny FRIDAY, MARCH 8, on the E. MN. Hayett farm ff MM. West of ONE HUNDRED HEAD OF LIVE STOCK, Span of Biack Mules, rising six year old, will Whik suywhete aod are festions of steam and MS, Weigh 220 pounds; clean apd te Bay Morse, rising four years ol : handy Botwe i 841 Garbess, ’ 13a Mated Team of Browns, rising th Years Ol, Butte Kid Mare ; Have Doch hitched aig are Beliliv | uak.og Oi 8 DeaVy tenn, Black Mare, rang two years oid. borrel Norse, Nsiag (wo years old, ELEVEN FINE NILCH COWS, The wost of tuese cows will be fresh themed time Of sie, ADA WIL spunk ur yu ves, Ten Wesiernegrown Shorthorn Heifers trom BB 8 uuu Ade Ged, We deny stem.d, These Je i Weld Dredd, and will mak choice heavy much ovws, - .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers