THE MILLHEIM JOURNAL, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY R. A. BUMILLER. Office in the New Journal Building, Penn St., near Hartinan's foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OB $1.25 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCE. Acceptalile Correspondence Solicited Address letters to MILLHEIM JOURNAL. BUSINESS CARDS. AHARTER, Auctioneer, MILLHEIM, PA. D JOHN F. HAliTEtt. Practical Dcntis, Office opposite the Methodist Church. MAIN STREET, MILL mix V\. JQ R.GEO. S. FRANK, Physician & Surgeon, KEBERSBURG, PA. Office opposite the hotel. Professional calls promptly answered at ail hours. D. R. MINGLE, Physician & Surgeon Offlice on Mam Street. MILLIIEIM, PA J. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Shop 2 doors west Millheim Bankinc House, MAIN STREET, MILLIIMM, PA. D. H. Hastings. W. F. Reeder •JJASTINGS & REEDER, Aitorneis-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east or the office ocupied by the late flrui of Yocum Hastings. C. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower. Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office in Carman's new building. GEO. L. LEE, Physician & Surgeon, MADISONBURG, FA. Office opposite the Lutheran Church. M C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre county. Special attention to Collections. Consultations n German or English. J. A. Beaver. •*. W. Gephart "gEAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street, North of High Street JGROUKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST.,' BELLEFONTE, PA. 0, G. MCMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. Free Buss to and from all trains. Special rates to witnesses and Jurors. QUMMINS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONT, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR. House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev erything doue to make guests comfortable. Rates moderate. Patronage respectfully solici ted My JRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel in the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS, LOCK HAVEN, PA. S.WOODS CALDWELL PROPRIETOR. Good Saninle Rooms for Commercial Travel ers on first floor. QT. ELMO HOTEL, Nos. 317 & 319 ARCII ST., PHILADELPHIA.! RATESfiEDDCEDTOS2.OO PER DAY. The traveling public will still find at this Hotel the same liberal provision for their com fort. It is located in the immediate centres of business and places of amusement and the dif ferent Rail-Road depots, as well as all parts ot the city, are easily accessible by Street Cars constantly passing the doors. It offers special inducements to those visiting the city for busi ness or pleasure. Your patronage respectfully solicited. Jos. M. Feger, Proprietor. JPEABODY HOTEL, 9thSt. South, of Chestnut, PHILADELPHIA. One Square South of the New Post Office, one half Square from Walnut St. Theatre and in the very business centre of the city. On the American and European plans. Good rooms from 50cts to $3.00 per day. Remodel ed and newly furnished. W PAINE, M. D., 46-ly Owner & Proprietor. R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 58. Cleveland at his Home. From the Philadelphia TIME*. It is nearly always an easy matter to trace a man's career where nearly ever yone you meet knows all about his in comings and outgoing. Here the po liceman on the corner was appointed by him when Mayor. Further up the street the lawyers, doctors, preachers and tradesmen spetk of him as "Clove" or "Grove." All siv to his credit that his phenomenal advance in public favor has not changed him a whit ; mat he is still the same quiet, unassuming cit izen now as when he was a lawyer seeking clients. The old uncle, L. F. Allen, who gave him good advice, but very little else, when he reached here some thirty years agv> on his way to Cleveland, Ohio, still lives here and is now past four-score years. He persua ded his nephew to 6top at this point and helped him to get a chance to study law by working mighty hard for it. He is an eccentric man, of strict busi ness habits, and doesn't seen, to take much interest in politics. lie really knows less of the life of his relative than almost any man of repute you meet. GROVER CLEVELAND'S ROMANCE. Grover Cleveland came of a some what singular family. All his ancest ors were strong poeple, but turning to the church for a living they were al ways poor. The city is full of remin iscences of his Gght for a place here, but the story of his boyhood days must be gathered in another locality. Prob ably, not three people here know why he never married ; perhaps none do. The mishap that led him to tred the wine-press of life alone was a painful one ; but it left the sting before he came here. Ever since his residence in Buffalo he lias liyed with his law books and in his profession. Although he is reputed to be a good, genial com panion, fond of life and the world, he has shunned society and lived for his mother and sisters, who needed his help. Probably more preachers were reared out of his family than any oth er in the country. They all taught the doctrines of the Presbyterian Church for a small price and died poor. Mr. Cleveland's father left some ten chil dren, about his only available assets when he died. Hence it went out that be was too poor to marry until so well grounded in his bachelor ways that he could not be tempted from them by the comeliest girl in the land. There are no traditions that he ever courted a lass. Yet it is true that he did and that the picture of that one still re mains by his side. It is true that lie was and, as the world goe3, still he is poor. It was uot until a few years ago that he felt able to pay back the money he borrowed to bring him West in 1855. He only got his legal education by a pretty tough fight with adversity and it took him four years of drudgery in the office of Rogers & Bowea before ho was addmitted to practice. AS A LAWYER. I went into the spacious offices this morning, but not one of the old firm was there. Only one is alive and he is in Europe. Mr. Cleveland has had four or five law partnerships with the strong men of this city, and a'l say he was a valuable business companion. His career as a lawyer is well defined in this region and bis reputation well established. It seems queer that the general agieement has not reflected it self outside of Western New York. Mr. Milburn, a bright young man,now a partner in the law firm where the present Governor studied, said to me this morning : "It amuses me to hear this talk a bout Mr. Cleveland's lack of ability. He is the strongest character I ever knew without a national reputation. He is a fine lawyer. He is incapable of wilful wrong and nothing on earth cruld sweep him from his conviction of duty. That he is thoroughly honest cannot be questioned and without be ing what might b9 called a brilliant man he has always been regarded as an able and safe one in every relation of life. This terse summing up of the nom inee's position at hocne is simply dupli< cated by the Judges and lawyers with whom he has mingled. Among the laymen he seems to stand equally high. Republicans and Democrats alike speak of him as a man of the strongest character and highest attainments. Mr. James N. Mathews, who edits the Express , the leading Republican paper in the city by the lake, speaks for this sentiment as follows : "I know of no Democrat better e quipped for the position for which he has been named than Grover Cleveland. He is an able, honest and incoriuptible man. He is self-reliant and has excell ent judgment. I shall do all I can honestly and honorably to defeat his e lection, for I am earnestly for Mr. Blaine, But when people speak of him MILHEIM, PA. THURSDAY, JULY '24., 1884. as an obscure man it is but fair to say that lie has long stood in the front rank with the very leaders of thought and action in this part of New York." BIIEIUFF CLEVELAND. Grover Cleveland's habits of life seem to have been as simple as the gen eral jonduct of the man has been unas suming. lie dwelt in a quiet boarding house, and when its mistress got a well to-do son-in-law and quit business lie used to take his Sunday morning break fast at the Terrapin Lunch,a plain res taurant, where probably a terrepin was never seen. Old Major Randall, of ttie Lake Shore Railroad, was his compan ion. He died soon after Cleveland was made Governor. It was his oft expressed ambition to live to see "Grove," as he called him. President. In 1863 he became Assistant District Attorney and carried the burden of the office for three years, to be beaten for District Attorney at the close of his term by Lyman K. Boss, his nearest friend. They afterward became law partners. He was made Sheriff of this county by an accident. In fact, he never had an office that he was not forced into, lu 1569 David Williams, superintendent of the Lake Shore Rail road, wanted to run for Congress. This district was close and he wouldn't make the effort with any of the aspir ants for the Sheriffalty. It was the most important office to be filled and there was a bitter contest for it. The leaders got together and decided that Cleveland must run to help Williams. There wasn't much chance of an elect ion, but they insisted that lie must make the sacrifice for the party. He was then regarded as a good lawyer, with a good practice, but he became the candidate aad not only helped Williams,but squeezed in by a hundred votes. During his term as Sheriff the office was well administered and when the term was finished Mr. Cleveland went back to his law business. HIS FINANCIAL START. The fees of the Sheriff's office were large and the income from it gave hira his first financial start. He then made money at the law and saved something. His leputation is not that of a money - getter and money-saver. Had he been ambitious in this direction iie could and would have been a rich man. In 1 18S1 he was forced to be a candidate for Mayor. A popular revolt against the methods that were lobbing the city swept him into this office. The Council was against him,but he vetoed eyery obnoxious measure it passed and his assaults upon the Aldermen were so vigorous that they did not dare to pass them over his objections. A FOE OF ALL JOBS. Here his veto of the street-cleaning job is regarded as the real beginning of his public career. Soon after he came into ofiice the Council voted to award the street-cleaning contract for live years to George Talbot, a local politi cian of power, at $422,500 a year. There were several lower bids by thor oughly responsible men. Mayor Cleve land vetoed the award and severely con demned the attempted waste of the people's money. The contract was subsequently awarded to the lowest bidder.at SIOO,OOO. The amount saved on this and an item for a sewer during the first six months of his administra tion was nearly $1,000,000. These acts brought him into prominence andstart ed him towards his present place. It was on account of his fearless fight in spite of large odds against public plun derers that he was pushed and elected by these people Governor. It is because they know him to be perfectly honest and incorruptible that to-night all men, regardless of differing politcal affilia tions, are re joicing over his successes. Though his law office and his bachelor quarters over there are silent, both are saluted as the abode of a man who has done well on a small beginning. If the record of his life is soon told, his own people point to it with pride and go bond to the country that he will do ev en belter in the futuie. This is the tenor of all the speeches and of the talk of the people. ADVERTISE in the JOURNAL. A PAPER FOR THE lIOMH 01 ROLF Cleveland and Hendricks, Democratic Mites FOR ■■■■% PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT. FIXING- A FLY-SCREEN. Man Again Proves His Super iority Over Woman in Me chanics. Fie had a doubtful expression on his ' phiz as he entered a hardware store, and lie spoke about the stove trade,and several other matters before he finally : said : 1 "I think it is time to put up my fly screen doors." "Certainly." "You have springs, I suppose." "Yes, sir." "Have you a spring which I can ad just ?" "Wo have. Here is one which a boy ten years old can put on. The time for intricate springs has passed, and simplicity is the rule." "Let's see. I wonder if I can put. that on ?". "Of course you can. All you want are a screw-driver and three screws. Here—this end goes on the door—that end on the casing. See ? When you have it on,take this wire and turn here. When the spring has the right force drop thoe slots—thus. See ! Why, a woman could put one of those springs on with her eyes shut—price 15 cents. Bones hadn't lost any of his doubt ful expression as he started out. lie walked home, feeling of his ear, and trying to remember just what the dea ler said, and in half an hour ho was at work on the door. The dealer had held the upper end of the spring to the north west, while his door opened to the northeast. He sat down and thought and thought, and finally decided to try it, any how Mrs. Bones came out and helped liirn, and the spring was finally put on. After the spring was on Bones turn ed and turned. The spring stiffened and the door ft w open. "That's just like you," she said as he jumped back. "What on earth do we want with a spring to keep the door open ?" "That's so—that's so. Let's take it off and turn it end for end." This was tried, but it was no good, and Mrs. Bones cried oat : "You might have known it ! It takes a man with brains to put on a spring !" "And I've got more of 'eui right in my heels than your whole relations have in their heads !" "Then put on that spring 1" "I'm going to when 1 get ready. There's no particular hurry as I can see." "Maybe it's tired," she sneered. "And maybe you had better attend to your mopping." She went in and Bones tried that spring six different ways. Then he went off and borrowed a gimlet, and inch auger, a crowbar, a jackscrew and a pair of pinchers, and he tried six oth er ways. lie turned the old thing un til the tension lifted up one end of the house, and lie looked from the front gate to the alley fence for the ratchet, but the door had no spring to it. He put the spring on diagonally,crosswise, lengthwise, top for bottom and bottom for top, and about 1 o'clock in the af ternoon Mrs. Bones came out and found him pounding it with the ciowbar, while the door had been wrenched a part and heaved into the alley. "I said you couldn't do it," she re marked. "Couldn't do what ?" "Put on th.it spring." "Who's tried to put on that spring ? We don't need any door there,and I've taken it aivay. It isn't at all likely that wo will see three flies, hut if a few do come around we aint going to murder 'em. Spring ! I was just fool ing you. That was a burglar alarm, and the reason I didn't put it on was because we didn't have anything to burglarize. Even if we had I'd let 'em come. A burglar can't live unless he has a fair show. The power developed by the explosion of a ton of dynamite is equal to 15,005 foot-tons. Oiie ton of nitro-glycerine similarly exploded will exert a power of 65,452 tons, and one pound of blast ing gelatine similarly exploded 71,050 tons. A Complexionist. Strolling up-town recently a reporter for the New York Mail and Express had his attention atti acted by the sigu "complexionist" which was hanging over the door of an inoffensiue-looking dwelling house. Wondering what un der the sun a complexionist might be, he wandered in to satisfy his curiosity. A French lady of medium height and with charming conversational powers received him in a small room fitted up in a stylo that might indicate at first sight either a drug store or a hair dresser's saloon. "A complexionist," said the lady, in answer to the reporter's interrogation, "is one who makes a study of the hu man skin aud takes charge of the cus tomer's complexion." "But suiely there are not many who " "Oh, yes ; there are hundreds of the fair sex who come here during the gay season to be made up or have tlie skin treated with delicate washes to prevent tlie bad effects of gas, heat, and late hours. But young ladies are not the only ones tr°ated ; men—young and old—are often found within these walls." "What is your usual mode of treat ment V" "That depends on the complexion; if it is merely to he preserved, we advise a little careful dieting and bathing in elder-flower water. Nat a particle of fit must me taken,as it injures the pol ish of the skin. Here is a prescription that will clean the complexion in a very short time : A tablespoonful of sulphur taken every other morning for a week, then omitted for three morn ings and taken again. A mixture of powdered brimstone or diluded glycer ine should be rubbed on the face at. night and washed off in the morning with soap and water iu which there is a little ammonia. Washing the face in spirits of camphor, glycerine, and ammonia is also very good,and various other methods are resorted to for this end." How a Home was Ruined. A Husband's Drunken Spreeand. its Terrible Results. A dispatch from Atlanta, Ga., tells this sad story ; A Mrs. Fairchild, once a beautiful and accomplished woman of Savannah, has just, died a miserable death in one of Atlanta's haunts of sin. The story which attaches itself to this woman is peculiarly sad. Three years ago she was a happy wife in a cosy home in Savannah. Her husband, young, handsome,educated,had a lucrative and responsible position with the Central Railroad in that city, and possessed the respect and esteem of all who knew him. About Christmas of 1881, while on a drunken spree, he shot a young man, who subsequently died. He was arrested, placed in jail and tried. The case against liira was a stubborn one, and it required his home and everything else he could accumulate to save his neck. Ilis wife gave everything cheer fully, and her grief, which wa%mani fested during the trial, had great influ ence with the judge and jury. The trial resulted in a sentence of live year's im prisonment. The parting between hus band and wife when he was taken to the penitentiary was deeply affecting. With a hope ofsecunng a mitigation of the sentence, she went to Atlanta, and fell a victim to a well-known officer,who professed his ability to aid her. She took a downward road, took to drink, and in a few weeks was a confirmed drunkard. This step was followed by others, until she found herself utterly disgraced and sank to the lowest depths of infamy. She died very suddenly, without having been sick a moment, ller husband was at Lowe's camp, on the Chattahoochee river, and when Mr. Lowe heard of the death of the con vict's wife he caused two guards to bring him to the city. The man knew nothing of the downfall of his wife un til lie found her dead in a house of sm. Ilis grief was painful to witness,and as lie stood beside the cofliu lie raved like a madman. The kindness of the lessees tor whom lie was working enabled him to send the body to Savannah for buri al. He has two children liying in that city, hut it will be three years before Fairchild can go home to them. Terms, SI.OO per Year, in Advance. The Editor was "In." But the Man Who Wanted Him Didn't Stay Long. "Ls the editor in ?" askeil a wry faced man, who stood six feet live inch es in his socks, of the office boy of a Sunday newspaper. "I do not know," said the hoy. "I'll ask him.'' lie was gone about ten minutes, when he returned, smiling blandly, and said : "I guess hf'a in. He's in if you are the man he thinks you are. Is your name Smithers ?" "Yes. My name is Smithers, and I reckon he won't be in, the cowardly puppy, when he knows Jake Smithers is after him." "So you are Smithers, are yon ?" said the bov. "Yes, I'm Smithers. The same Smithers that tlie gum started editor called a liara m this morning's paper. I've come to clean out the shop and thrash that editor till he won't know himself from a stuck pig- I reckon the editor ain't in. now, is he ?" "Oh, yes ! I'll show you up to his room in a minute. lie told me to ask you if your name was Smithers, and if it was, to show you up. When I left the room, he had two revolvers, a ten pound weight and a sword lying on his desk, and he told me to show you the door to his room right away, and get behind the base burner for safety as soon as you went in. Itight this way, sir. The editor's in, and he's anxious to see you." "Well, you tell the editor that I tfaid he might go to Chicago, if he wants to. He can kiss my foot. I hain't got no time to fool away on hira." And Smith ers hurried to catch the train. The Housekeeper. A Few Seasonable and Useful Hints That are Worthy of a Trial. Milk porridge is very nourishing if it is thickened with arrow-root instead of flour. The odor of onions can be effectu ally removed from the frying-pan by boiling a little wood ashes and water in it, or if you have no ashes, potash or soda will do as a substitute. Now is a good time to prepare mint vinegar. Take pepjier or spearmint leaves; wash them, and put them into a large-mouth bottle; fill the bottle up with vinegar ; have a cork that fits closely. Let this stand tor three weeks, then pour it through a muslin cloth into a clean bottle, and it is ready for use. Never use soap in the water with which you clean the looking-glass ; it is almost impossible to polish the glass if soap is used. The following receipt for making 'cold cream' is said to be excellent: To one ounce of glycerine allow ten drops of carbolic acid ; add one ounce of rose water. I)o not let boiled potatoes stand in the water a moment after they are done; drain it all off ; cover the kettle; some very painstaking cooks remove the potatoes from the kettle, and,, af ter laying a towel on a tin plate, put the potatoes in it, cover it, and put them in the oven to dry, leaving the oven door open. A dainty dish to serve with cake as the last course at dinner, is made by stewing prunes of the best quality un til they are tender, and the pits will slip out easily; stew them in as little water as possible. Beat the whites of eggs to a stiff froth ; add almost as much sugar as if you were making trosting; drain the water from the prunes, mix them with the eggs and sugar, and set in the oven to harden. Serve cold, with cake and coffee. A novel way to serye lettuce is, after washing and looking oyer carefully, to pour a dressing over it made by frying out the fat from a slice of ham, cutting the ham in small pieces before frying ; when the fat is at the boiling point add a cup ot vinegar, let it boil for a minute or two. then pour over the lettuce; gar nish with cold boiled eggs cut 111 rings. An entree of great merit is made by dipping slices of ripe tomatoes into a batter made of Hour, sweet milk,aud an egg, and then frying them a delicate brown. Cauliflower salad is an excellent en tree. Boil the cauliflower in salted wa ter ; when tender, which will be in a bout half an hour, drain ever} drop of water from it, let it become cold, then arrange it in a salad bowl with a rich mayonnaise dressing poured over it. It may be garnished with small rings of pickled beets or with slices of pickled cucumbers; and,by the way,it is a good plan to pickle a large jar of cucumbers so that you can have them to use tor a garnish, and to chop and add to the dressing served with boiled fish. NO. 29. ; NEWSPAPER LAWS If subscribers order the diacontiuufctlon of newspapers. the publishers may continue to send them until all arrearage* are paid. If subscribers refuve or neglect to take their newspapers from the office to which they are sent they are held responsible until they have settled the bills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers move toother places withoutlnJ forming the publisher, hud the newspapers ar , sent to the former place, they are responialble. L ADVERUBINQ RATES. 1 wk. 1 mo. 1 3 mos. 3 mos. 1 year 1 square *2 on * 4 001 $A no $6 00 $ A tie >2 - 700 10 00 15 00 30 00 40 00 1 " 10 00 15 00 1 25 00 45 00 75 00 One Inch makes a square. Administrator* and Executors' Notices f-J.50. Transient adver tisements and locals 10 cents per line for first insertion and 5 cunts per line for each addition al Insertion. The Mea With the Pig. A few days ago two men,who were afterward found to be Detroiters, ar rived in a town about [fifty miles to the west of this, leading a pig. It was perhaps big enough and heavy enough to lie called a hog, but they termed it a pig, and as they turned it over to the care of the landlord at whose inn they proposed to rest for the night one of the men explained : 'lsc awful careful with that pig. He's a daisy—a new breed just from Scotland. We've sold him to a farm er out here for sf)o,and we don't want anything to happen to him.' The landlord locked the pig up and then began to think and cogitate and suspect. When the strangers had gone to l>ed, he called in some of the boys and said: 'l've twigged the racket; them two fellows are sharpers, and that's a guessing pig. To-morrow they will give you a chance to guess at his weight at ten cents a guess,and you'll be cleaned out—only you won't! As the fellows sleep we will weigh their pig and beat their game.' Nobody slept until the pig was tak en over to the scalet. and weighed. He pulled down 170 pounds to the hair, and th 3 villagers went home and hunt ed up their nickels and dreamed of pigs and scales and sharpers through the'remainder of the night. Next morning the pig was led a round in front, and, before starting off on his journey, one of the owners re marked to the assembled crowd : 'Gentlemen, I'm going to weigh this pig directly. Maybe some of you would like to guess on his weight ? I'll take all guesses at ten cents each, and whoever hits it gets fifty cents.' This provoked a large and selected stock of winks, and smiles, but no one walked up until the pig man said that any one person could guess as many times as he cared to, provided a dime accompanied each guess. Then a rash set in. Three or four merchants put up fifty guesses each. A Justice of the Peace took thirty. A lawyer said about twenty would do for him. Be fore there was any letup in the guess ing about 600 had been registered and paid for. Every soul of em guessed at 170 pounds. It was curious what unanimity there was in the guessing, but the pig men didn't seem to notice it. When all had been given a chance the pig was led to the soales, and lo ! his weight was exactly 174 pounds ! 'You see, gentlemen,' explained the spokesman, 'while this animal only weighs 170 pounds along about 11 o'- clock's t night, we feed him about five pounds of com meal in the morning before weighing! You forgot to take the matter into consideration !' Then somebody kicked the landlord, and he kicked the Justice,and the Jus tice kicked a merchant, and when the pig men looked back from a distant hill the whole town was out kicking itself and throwing empty wallets in to the river.— Detroit Free Press. t Why He Felt Mean. The Experience of a Man who was Traveling in Florida. Says a correspondent: If I eyer go into a new locality again I will study up my geography better than I did this time, for my ignorance got me into a most uncomfortable position. As the the boat neared Sanford I was standing with others on the deck, when a very pretty young lady came up to me and, with a sweet smile on her face, looked up to mine with a pair of lovely eyes and asked : 'Are you going to kiss me, sir ?' If some one had offered to lend me $lO I could not have been more sur prised aad hardly knowing what to say and in order to gain a little time, I gasped out: 'Pardon, miss, what did you ask ?' I felt that she knew I heard her, but she said sweetly, 'Are you g>- ing to kiss me to-night ?' There was no misunderstanding her this time. I heard her, and so did others, and I felt the blood rushing into my face, and I stammered out, 'I would like to accom modate you, miss, I would truly, but I have a wife and thirteen small childien on board with me,and if my wife would see me kissing you—' ,Kissing me, you hateful old thing ! who asked you to kiss me?' 'You did,' I yelled; 'you asked me twice I' 'You old fool, I ask ed you if you were going to Kissime— Kissime City to-night; don't you know anything V and off she went, and if ev er anybody felt meaner than I did I would like to exchange photographs with him. SUBSCRIBE for the JOURNAL.