» Bll LAWYERS’ BIG FEES. Sr ——— FORTUNES RECEIVED FOR SERVICES RENDERED IN LITIGATION. Amounts Pald in Will Sums Recelved by Patent Lawyers barge Cases ~ Suing » Corporation Law. vers Whe Are Nalnried. Now York Sun.) “Big tees," sald n veteran lawyer, “are generally the private concern of the client who pays them and the lawyer who re. ceives them. If Dorsey saw fit to pay Col. Ingursoll $100,000 for his services in the star route cases, Dorsey probably got the worth of his motey. | have observed that lawyers do mot care to measure the value of their services by the amount of the verdict except when they win, It is not an unfair rule that lawyers’ fees should be go erned by the importance of the Interest Involved. Mr. Tildea re ceived a fortune for his services in railroal litigation and negotiation; but as long as those who paid the money were satisfied, [ do not vec whose business it was bat that of the parties interested. Henry 1 Clinton is repoited to have charged ‘Will iam H. Vandervilt over $200,000 in tive Vaoderbilt will cuse, and to have actually recefved %.5,000, But there were miiléons invelved in that case. It is a common thing for big lawyers to charge $100 per day for attendance in court * Big fees are common in will vases, hut allowances by the courts of estates are now imited to 2900 a side Those were halcyon days for the lawvers when the surrogate could divide the estate among the gentlemen of the bar, leaving the litigants mn debt. In the Ta, lor will case, a few years ago, thelewyers got not only the estate, but avtualy lect widow in dels alter sellimgr her clothes, (n the Parish will case Cha*es O'Conor re ceived a sell fortune will case Jobn K. Potter got, 1 believe, about $28 000, He represented the caim of the alleged widow. Henry Nicol has the | In the Hardin | WHATEVER THE WEATHER, {(MMmes Whitcomb Riley.) ‘Whatever the weather may be,” said hee ‘Whatever the weather may be ts plaze, if yo will, an' I'll say me say — Supposin’ to-day was the wintriest day, Wul Hie weather be changin’ becauss ye ered, Or the snow he grass were yo crucified? I'he best is to make your own summer,” says hoe ‘Whatever the weather nay be” says he-- “Whatever the weather aay be!” ‘Whatever the weather may be,” says he ‘Whatever the weather may be, t's the songs ye sing an' the smiles yo wear Fbat's a-makin’ the sun shine everywhere; An' the world of gloom is a world of glee, Wid the Lird in the bush an' the bud in th tree, Whatcver the weather may be” says he “Whatever the weather may be! ‘Whataver the weather may be,” says be— ‘Whatever the weather may be, : Ye ran bring the spring, wid its green an gold, Au’ the grass in the grove where the snow Hes cold, ye'll warm your back, with a silly’ face, \« yo sit at your beart like an old fireplace, Whatever the weather may be,” sa¥s ho— “Whatever the weather may be!” An’ John MeCullough's Wife, Cleveland Leader | One of John McCuWdtgh's supports, the mun who was with him during his last stage act, tells me that he is getting oetter, and that ®&h wife is waiting on him, Bays this umn: “It is a mistake to so much troub=¥vith his wife. She loves nim devotedly "snd he has supported her und visited hér now and then for years, when the werld thought the two saw nothing of one another, When Me Cullough axl his wife were married the, suppose that Jolin McCullough has had | California Woods at the Exposition, | (* Garth's’ New Orleans Letter.) Everybody knows about the trees, but I shall risk Wt i you, my friend, rather than be faithless to the genuine hearted, hoary-hended, rugged faced old pionesr | that showed me the east sections and ex patinted upon the wonderful woods. Firs and biggest, un slice of the giant red- wood, the largest of the famous grove in Cala verns county, diameter 884 feet; Leight, 880 feot: age, 8,700 years. This block is 18 feet in dinmeter, and was cut 100 feet from the ground. The bark I< 2 feet | thick, aud in the mid«® of the block stands a small tree of the same species, which looks more like nothing that I have séen | thaa spraces. Thirty Vi people waltz upon the stunp of hls marvel of the nges. Other silces, small in comparison 10 this recumbent monster, stand propped up against the railing. Your corre spondent possesses an inch or two ud VEn'age ever most people, but might by uo tiptoelug weans see over them, Beautiful exceedingly are the woods of ‘anta Cruz. Marble-like laurel root, rich red manzanita, burl red-wood, madrone and many, many more. Here slank of common California red-wood, six f et three inches wide, fifteen feet long, from Los Angeles An oddly perforated log bears its own printed story. The reg wiar big thimble holes are made by the speculative wood pecker. Then he flies off in search of a suitably sized acorn, which be forces point foremost into the hole. | uring the winter a grub hatches in the acorn. Woodpecker dines off grub is a hugh | ’ YEARNS FOR EARLY SCENES, Vid Si Thinks Me Canmot Die Happ “Copt at de Ole Homestid,” [Georgin Cracker) “1 bin studyin’!” sald Old B81, us he fin {shed picking up the exchsuges on the ficor, “dat hit's gettin’ time fer you alls ter be breakin’ fn sum mo’ soople nigeer ter walt on the offis. ” “What's the trouble now, you don't imagine you are going to be ulowed 1 leuve, dg yout” “Well, boss, I'se gettin’ ole an’ stiff jirted now; hut dat int do main trulibile 1d me, 1'se'feared. Yer see | woz foch up in de country an’ got nll my fust streagk an’ fust prinserpuls fum de spring branch waters an’ de hill top a'r! De fust toy whut 1 had to p'ay wid wuz de wil’ low rs and co'ntasseles | larn’t my musick wid er constnlk fiddle an er reed fife. De fust politicks whut [ tho't bout wus beis, choosen hed man in de reel dance an’ de ‘possum hunt, Lh, Oh! dem day*! dem { i i *10u dont pine you?" “1 kain't he'p hit, grows ole'r de mo’ my tack ter de ole home All dish heab rushin’ ob Kkyars, and rattlin® ob druys an’ tashin’ ob lecktrick lights, an’ bam merino an’ suwin' an ‘zaustin ob steam compresses is gittin’ so hit disranges my idees an’ keeps me dodgin’ roun’ lke er bar foot hoy elephint in de sirkus persseshun “Oh, that's u fecling that people who for them again, de bogs De mo’ | min’ keeps turnin ve! They call the log the “woodpecker storehouse. " Two red wood are also shown, the first put down al alifornia end of the Centred Pacitic rad road, as solid to all they cresked under the first Jocomotivg of the line. You are ull unhappily familiar with the elder bush whereof the small boy of the north constructs his vociferous aj in are "Or AS were nesrec a par intellectually than they are row. But McCulioagh Kept risng, sid Ms wife stood still until at last ohn grew fur away from her He to see her, however, all the We, and she continued to him. One day a busybody among the women of her acquaintance called pon “ nt charged ®3 high as $5300 a day. George Ticanor Curtis had such a big bill inoue of the oolebrated imdia rubber cases that he charged $1,900 for making it out “Mmy big fees have been received by Professor Morse spent s Jaden! Iawy ers, ortunc in thevourts defending his first | pateats, bat he'rot it all back in the value of Whe patents. Every invention of im portance has eost its inventor or owner dearly for legal service Signal instances of this faet have been seen in the vulcanic rubber, burbed iron fence, wicale plating, | burgiar-alaim, sewing-machine. and other | whick fortunes | tpatent oases, in all of vere paid te lawyers. In sudh cases the labor of lawyers is enormous, the respon ibility great, and the pay of course ap propel ely large get rich, but their furrowed with care “Mr. bvurts has had some wery big fecs from corperutions, loug contested suits record of a great many £1000) fees When a-suitor has a hard case he does not hesitate at paying a few thousand dollars loa goed lawyer. A poer lawyer isa very expensive luxury. When a suitor with a good case has been two or three times to the court of appeals in conse quenceito his lawyer's blunders, he begins to think it pays to get a good one “oot long ago it was unlawful and ua prosessional for a lawyer to have a per soral interest in the mse of his client This was obviously unjmst to peor lit Fgama Af a man got in ured on 7 r&i rosd e was absolutely unable to get damages becsuse of his poverty. It got to be peo ‘verudal that there was mo use suing a cor poration. The poor suitor was at a dis advantage Now it ie lawful and reput. able for a lawyer to become interested in tthe case of Mis client, and lo. make his fees contingent upon success. By the operation of the jaw of sei! inter. ' eat Lhe lawyer thus works harder than he otherwise would Many poor litigants have in this way recovered verdicts who would otherwise have become vagrants, “Many lar dasryers to after their busioess J Dillon left the bench of the United States court to take a from the Union Pacific Heilway p Dudiey Fleld bas had enormous foes out -of the Erie hailway eompsay and the eles: vated rallways The lawyers saved the + elevated Sallis 4bans $1,230,000 (n° she city, 85 the courts cut «down the bills about that sum. g® corporations lke Trinity church, the Equitab.e and Mutual Life, the Standard Oil company, snd in- + stitutions of like nitude teceive hand: some incomes, a devote themselves largely to the bus:uess of one client Lawyers like Ben Hutler, Roscoe ‘Conkling, Senstor Edmunds or Jere Black could fii volumes of of big fees There fs, in fact, always a demand for lawyers who cas earn big fees. There are so many novelties of the law, 50 many expedients and devices to suit new circumstances, that men of pene. tration and of skill in devious expedients ean find plenty of scope ” Why Birds Sing. [Popular Science Mouthly.) The majority of ornithologists agree in | scribing an erotic character to the songs of birds; not only the melting melodies, but also those of their tones are dis cordant to the human ear are regarded as love notes. Darwin finally, saving some reserves, came to accept this view The bird sings, to a large extent, for bis own pleasure, for he frequently lets Limself out lustily, when he Fuows he is all alone. In the # when all is invigor win a mate by ardent wooing is crowned with the joy of triumph, the song reaches its highest perfection. But the male bird also sings to entertain his male during the arduous nest-building and hatching, to cheer the young, aud, if he be a do mesticated bird, to give pleasure to his lord and the providence that takes care of him, and in doing so to plese himself Lastly, the bird sings—by habit, ns we call it—because the tendedcy is innate In the organs of song to exercise themselves An Ex.Governor's Tobhbaco Aveonnt. [Atlanta Constitution. | Ex Governor Catlin, of Connecticut has been considering the cost of smoking Having smoked sixty seven years and at tained the ripe age of 54, the oll gentle man naturally jumped that he had aad up quite a snug sum money Golog over his old account oks he footed up his tobacco « xpendi- tures at 0 per cent, compound interest To his suprise he found that his habit had cost him R200 000), These figure horrid fied the governor, but in view of his great age and the enjoyment he derives from MY good cigar, he could ike up his mind to swear off. He off his case. 4 or, as a terrible example the ris { gi neration, not wr Porter, of In Ihe Tam. tablished in its “lead is of the best supports of the state, A, § oi 14 Ow! Non Good patent lawyers | brows are generally | from will'esses, and | tie ceuld show the | corporations have saturied’ salary. of $90,000 springtime of love, | sted, and the effect to | to the conclusion | vys. McCullough, and straightway began abuse John. raid ‘They say never comes to see you. | have no nen that treat their wives in ink they ought wo be hung wo shies John 1s¢ for such «1 that way I and “Here Mrs McCullough, who had {| grown red in the face, and was leaning | over looking up t e street, said: * Madam, | do you see that man walking there several blocks away? “The woman said she did * Well," continued Mrs. McCullough ‘I would bave you understand that that man is John Mec ullough, and more than that, I want you to understand that | care more for thut man's coat tails than you «de or your whole husband Good «ay, madam? ” Form-Blind ness, Christian Union.) Said a prominent artist of this city the other day in the course of a conversation “1 have, during many years of artreach ing, and in various other ways, ‘encoun tered a peculiar form of visual defect which is akin to celor blindness. lostead, however, of being insensible a a ditter coce in color, these people appear to have lost, if, indeed, they have ever possessed, the power of reelving y defined shape of hexagons, or ootsgons, or deca pentagon or a five poloted star, before those pupils ss a test, and almost jovani. sbiy they were unable to distinguish one form from another, ever when with care ful distinction the differences were ex plained w them Thea, again, | have tested them by ask ing one to draw a figure with a certain number of sides, and he result fn this case ae he Sutin A request to draw a nw bring forth a figure whose shape has never and pevex could be, named; sod If asked to draws square the result would be rhomboid, me some fearful atrocity of anll lines. It was very amusing. This Tact fa8 cus ous one, aad | do sof Khow ‘whether # has ever been treated scientifically or scr] There certaluly scems to be » goed for scientific (nvestigation in th pw defect, and I suspect that the trou would be found to Me veay near to that which causes coler blindness, if-ever it is investigated " Queen by the repeatad shocks of uske at Seville, but not sesiously hurt. She liad & narrow eacape of being in the sauve qui peut in die theatre, whe. o she Was to have witnessed an [tallan opess. But the un expected arrival of & welcome Wait: kept her at home She was 3¢ ah aif ugh isiiat the solemn talk ber parrot, whea first oscillation took lace. The bird fell. down faint ts perch, just as might s young lady. s arm chair to over, and the cup was Lung from band A member of her household writes that she was not aiatmed until sometime. after the shock, when there was a nervous re action. When she felt the earthquake she cried out: “Why, If I were not in my own house, I should fancy we were In a sinking ship ® A second shock at mid night, and a third at dewn, rather upset her. Her ears were assailed by the cries of the ow in the streets. She tele graphed to the king 10 send money at | once for distribution among the tout | sufferers, and she placed the Palais de Castile at the disposal of a Spanish com mittee, which will give a fete there for the benefit of the victims of the earth. | quakes in southern Spain, | The Calor L ne In India (Chicago Herald.) No hotel keeper in India dares receive | & native guest, through fear of losing his | custom. In Bengal and northern ladia | things are still worse, and no native gen- tleman, whateser his rank, age or charac ter may bo, can visit a place of public resort frequented by Englishmen, especi. | ally if it be in mative dress, without a cer- | tain risk of insult and rough treatment | Rallway traveling is notoriously danger. | ous for them in this respect, and men of | high position are often openly insulted by | the guard, and told to make room for an | English traveler by leaving the ear London Parcel Carrying. [Exchanges | London mail-carriers now call at private residences for pareels, the same as do ex press messengers fn this country, scarlet card Is furnished by the authorities, which, when displayed window, insures a call from the postman | of 30 o2 Pie, 0, W. Holm Ile, often foolishly abused, is a good creature ut the right time, and in angle 10 degrees. in som quadrants it may s nes much for t maths prove | love | forms—form blindness, in other words. | | have sometimes placed objects in the | Aj J a | ) the | ircles and | og | w hiistle Here | ection of its Cali forunian attsinments that it would | twelve mon to Lift HE 1 Wines Which Ave \ "Slok." [Popular Science Monthly, The paternal tenderness with which wine wrdod its producers COusuImners They HR is re bot by I Busing SpMaK « ns Ley ’ which is thrust firma lo ing, to fores Lt a en tirely, thus prevent ny air from enter ing the beottics ! « then placed in a chamber heated to tempera tures ranging from 45 degrees wo 100 de grees C. (113 10 J12 debress rabrenheit where ther remain for an hour or They are the + set aside, slowed to cool ond the cork driven mm It that | this treatment kills the smicrobia, gives | the wine an increased bouquet and im {| proved color in facet, ages it considera { bly. Bothold and mew wines may { thus treated ir ino is said The “Turk's Bead Californias [Letter The road which «onnects with the geysers fusnishes some Gone, (Cloverdale of the tourist s eye of any mountain road in Calitornia. Heretefore there have been sever! natural curiosities which were in | erestiog 10 look af, the most wonderful of these being a perfect profile of » Turk's head projecting from the top of # ledge of rocks several Lundred feet high. “Turk's Head, "as it was called, bas bean viewed Ly many thousand peo ple from all parte of the world, sad nu merous urtista have taken pictured repre sentations of Ms stony fenturcs, asd It was maid to beane of the most owrious rook formations known in the state Dur ing ibe heavy eainstorm of the week the “Turks Head " made shaky sad crumbly by the storms aod winds of hinn- dreds of winters, curoe down with & ter rible crash. Hundreds ‘of tons of rock found their Jewel lo the bed of Sulphus creek. The crash and Was 80 heavy | that it shook the window glass in the toll house, which ls situsted sever! hundred yards from where the mass of rock fell Individuality of the Violin. [Louise Andrews in The Current | Enthusiastic violinists have related marvelous things of the capricious violin and its Aer oh coquetries. Ole Bull used to say thet he frequently had to coax and wheodle his violin without sting snd to woo it the gentlest caresses Whea it would o ly refuse to utter accordant notes, be was wort to rub it mildly with good humor with a Hanne cloth, or to put it aside until its uet. Mah mood had passed away. Others have related their inability to control its chords st times, and have declared the utter sub- jection of thelr wills 10 its own capricious sweetness The indestructibility of the violin is un paralleled in the history of musical in struments. It can be cracked aod glued again without fojury: it can have fis i broken and be entirely dismem. and put together again without los- ing its individuality — peculiarities of hy other musical instruments cannot 18 Lithographic Stones, [Chicago Times | The discovery in California lately of considerable quantities of the peculiar stone used by lithographers is the subject of much remark in the papers of that state. Heretofore the best lithographic stones have been found at Kelheim aod Solenhofon, near Pappenheim, on the Danube, in Bavaria; but they have been found also in Silesia, England, France, Canada apd the West Indios. They aro found in beds, commencing with layers of the thickness of paper till they reach the dimensions of one and several Inches in thickness, when they are easily cut, being yet soft in the quarries, to the sizes re quired for printing purposes. Blsmarek's Clerks. [The Argonaut.) Prince Bismarck informs the German reichatag that his clerks work from ¥ o'clock in the morning until midnight; that they are excellent Sor and lin | guists; that they are absolutely trustwor | thy, and that he pays them much less | than they would ordinarily earn in pri- vite life A Shrowd Notion. [Texas Siftings | “I mot Mr, Smith in a shabby coat 4 while ago. He has not failed, has he?” “0 no, he only buts on that coat when goes Lo the assessor's to give in his Gperly for ssessmont, Eliot hen de rallwany ties | the | | the day | be | the | gons, or even so commen a shape as a | most romantic aod beautiful ws enery “oe | are grow ng old often have but vou oucshit to keep yout spirits abreast of the Progress of the ace!™ tryin’ ter keep up wid de! Lats 1nchbe so, but wun er deze dn de chile-hood feber 'li strike me »0 hard dat I keint stan hit no longer. it dant seem ter me dat I cud die happ, | whar cept at bomestid I want | ter go buck ter de udder wurl' de sem | way whut | cum-—111 feel like 1 sorter | knod de road letter I want ter | my eyes on de same bills an’ tree whut | { fust seed wid em; | wants ter hab my ! las’ bed made side de po lapidated grabe ob my ut mudder in de Hitt rail fenced buryin' g un’ an wend trump soins’ want ter stan up fer ment right de ole lose slog wl ole ba oct $4 dar whar de bes part ckornd on yearf wuz ins * That is natural « WA i JO my " "W } wink out in er bac pidgin holed riniss us seminter, whar de a street dred | ter K alley ob an Ix pe Iw and Kin tly down mancerpatid soul widout tan ef Tnumm L dat s mv will an tes Ktory my ere wings in Wires ix 0 Vien The Young Mar Who Was Not Tolersted. Ex soe The Londen correspondent of Yiercury 1 he Liv CT Poo ng to the incident wentioned by Canon Liddon in a recent | sermon of Sir Robert veel leaving a table | at wirich the Christing religion re | viled says that the incident | the sble of a son of a peer, now himself | 8 wember of the house of lords There | was young man present whose ribaldry reierr was | rewétied a height wuich nowadays woud | {wot for an instant be tolerated under any | respectable roof. Sir lobert rose and left | the room | evening for his carriage tw be there: he { left the room. His host, rising sod fol lowing him into the Lali, asked him if he | were ill “No. " | sot sit say longer and hear thet youn | man's conversation.” “Come back { 1 will stop him ~ said the host “No, ” rejoined Sir Hobert, decidedly, “1 cannot #t Wm sn stmosphere polluted by ule young man's presence " And be departed in an ordinary cab. Though that young man was a rislug politician on the econ servalive side, though he had meay part and attained great weight, eel never as sociated him in soy of his governments His neglect made a bitter enemy of km, and he was pursued by him to the end of bis days { young man was Mr Benjamin Disrsell A Bove Made of Paper. [Rxohange | In a New York shop window not long a" might have beet seen an odd-looking kite with a bright fire burning It looked like polished mahogany, but, us the proud laveator explained 1 all comers, was in fact made of paper, and was “ab solutely incombustible ™ A reporter who paid 8 second visit found & bole window She shop keeper ex “Tried quicken her poh ag kerosene, ” sald “Paid his rent sod went away with his hand in You'l Sud what's left of the stove outside in the ash barrel * The Brute! [Prench Paper.) “My husband is a brute” declared Mme X. to an intimate friend the other day. “Why, my dear, what is the mat ter?” “He found fault with a little vi vacity of ing fenoiag, and I threw » candlestick at head; then what do you su he did!" “I don't know. ' “Why, be stood before the mirror, sc fst eR throw the other!” “Th te!” Osone Above, [Scientific Journal | By a method of spectroscopic observa tion, Mr. W. N. Hartley has reached thx conclusion that ozone is a constant con stituent of the upper atmosphere, that i! is present there in larger quantity than nearer the earth's surface, and that ft k the cause of the blue color of the sky. Either in its gaseous form or condensed into a liquid, ozone appears of a deep blue “Almost” Drank It. [Texas Biftings | Sam Powers, of Waco, is somewhat of a toady, and likes to brag about his toney acquaintances, Where were you last night?” said Sam to John Farlow. “I don’t know, * replied Farlow. | was with some high-toned people, 1 was out on a spree with an alderman. We almost drank champagne. ” California Ralsine (Chicago Herald. | Raisin making was first gy in California nineteen years ago. The fol lowing year about 1,500 boxes were made and the industry bas rapidly progressed Ten years ago the crop amounted to abort 40,000 boxes. This year the crop is esti mated at 200,000 boxes dunarer’s Statue, Benito Juarez is a subject ia bronze by San Francisco modelers and molders The statue is seven foot high, weighs 1.100 pounds, and cost $4,000, Chinese maxim: Never offend a civil: service oificer, for you eannot appease his wrath when it is aroused the gre IS never our ten | CLver thi, ne, it bh 1 it) 4 A. Mace { 3 timekeeper, euny | { only twice during that | variation being three | run very ouch better than | occurred at! He did not ring the bell and call bis carriage, for it was 100 carly Ia the | replied Sir Robert, “but | can | and | | 2nd floor Bush Arcade, Quick Railway Time, Rockford, IUl,, Jan, 1580, This is to certify that we have appointed Feank P. Blair, sols agent for the sale of our Quick Train Railrcod Watches in the town | of Bellefowie, ' Rockeonny Waren f OMPANY, BY HOSMEK F. HULLAN D, Sec, Haviog most thoroughly tested the tock ford Quick Train Watches for the | wt three yenrs, | offer them with the { ullent confidence ns the best made and int reliable time kes per for the money that can be obiained. I fully guaranties every Wateh for 100 years, FRANK P BLA IR, No 2 Bro kerhofl’ Row, Allother American Watches at reduced arces, 2» “iy Diagurox, Jan, 1882, downteh purchased Feh 179. hax crmed better than nny Wateh | had. Have enrried 11 every day sand at ao time has it been irregular, or in the lesst unrelishle, cheerfully recommend the Rockford Watch. HORACE B. HORTON, at Dighton Furnace Co Favsron, Sept, 15, 1881, The Rockford Waieh runs very ne curately ; better than any wateh | ever owned, snd | huve had one that cox £150, the Rockford Watch to everyhody who wishes a fine The Hoek fn pret Ver Can recommond 8. P. HUBBARD, M. D. This is to certify that the Roekford | Watch bought Feb. 22, 1879, has run | rery well the past yesr, Having set if | time, only minutes, Jt hw ever an ticipated, Tt was no* adjusted and only cost $20. R P. BRYANT, is The oldest and best appointed Institution lor obtaining & Business Education. For circulars address P. DUFF & BONS, | Tolmpart a Practica] Busipess Kduontior many years aud with great succes been Dns ( Ko. 4% Fifth Avénue student has bore facilition for such & tra qualify him for an immediate entrance u duties in any spliere of lite. Por cir Duff & Bone, Pio argh, Pa. Duffs Boe kkeeping published by Harper & Bro, printed in colors, 400 Pages. The largest warkon the scienos published. A work for bankers railroads, business wen and practi coal scoountants, Price, $3.00 DO YOU WANT A NICE, COMFORTABLE BOOT or 5 SHOE | MICHAIL COONEY'S Well known Boot and Shoe Stand, MeCofferty’e Build. ing, opp. Depot. ELLEFONTE . PENN A bine, fou the aim of The faithfy ning ss will pon practica wiars address V ege STUDIO, (Moom opp. Dr. Rethrock's Dental offen.) am now ready to do oll kinds of PAINTING, Such as PORTRAITS in oil. LAND. SCAPES, SIGN and ORNAMEN. TAL, FANCY DECORA. TING and GRAINING e¢ SPECIALITY. I Satisfaction guaranteed in all cases. I would be pleased to have you eall, and examine specimens of work. In. structions givea in Painting. Very ResrrcrruLry, C. P. filder. HERBERT BUTTS PRACTICAL HARNESS MAKER, Hion Br,, NEXT DoOR 170 Bexzen's Meat Marker, Is prepared to do wll kinds of Fancy and Heavy Harness Making at Reasonable Prices and “IN THER. Most Skillful Manner. Repairing dene with neatness and dispated We challenge, competition in prices and workmaaship, Give us a trial and be convinced. All work guaranteed before leavin 1.3m, ADVIOE TO MOTHERS. Are you distarbed at night and broken of your est by a sick ohild Sativing aad crying with pals of cut ting teeth? If wo, at once and get a bottle of Mas. Winslow's Sootmine Syavr yon Omiisass Duhie, a wales Y Incaleniable, It will relieve the su mmediately, Depend upon it mothers, there is no mistake about it, It onre dys eatery and diarrhoea, regalates the stomach end bow. ols, cures wind celic, softens the gums, reduces in fammation and gives tone and energy to the whole, wystom. Mus, Wineiow's Boorming Syaer von Ominy. REN Trerning is pleasant 10 the taste, and is the pre; seription of one o. the oldest and best female physi. clans and nurses in the United States and i» for sale by all droggists then -howt the world, Price 28 cont » bottle, Yay A UDITORS NOTICE. ~In the i Orphans Oourt of Cefitre County in the mailer of the ontate of A. D. Hahn decenned, the vnderelg ed an Anddor sppointed by sald court, In rald onse to {| 1y emtit have and pass upon exceptions filed and to make dis tribution of the fonds to and among those Iagal Ad thevets, will moet sil parties Interestod af I 8 Keller, Ke Friday Volwanry the | Nah, at In Aoi, when and wheres ali the offs ih. ad 1 V R Wt, Audion a ' LOOK. To Your Interest ImmenseBargains Are being offered from our New Stock a (JF we DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, CLOTHING. TOCEries, &C Which bas just been purchased at the Lowest Figures, [he advantage of which we want received and le g ve to sll who buy from us line of We have a full , and will antee the lowest prices in VELVETS, LADIES CLOTH, Fuar- CASHMERES, WOOLEN and CANTON FLANNEL, CASSIMERE, dc. In Notions : LADIES UNDERWEAR. HOSE, &C. Clothing. A Clean and New Stock of Mens and Boys’ Clothing and Qvercoals, Groceries. A Pure and nicely selected line of Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Eta Remember, we will not be undersold by any firm in town. . We guarantee all ony Prices C. U. HOFFER & CO. Allegheny st, Bellefonte, Py.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers