THE MILLHEIM JOURNAL, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY R. A. BUMILLER. Office in the New Journal Building, Penn St., near Hartman's foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OR $1.35 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCE. AccejMe Corrapface Solicited Address letters to MILLHS IM JOURNAL. BUSINESS CARDS. AII&BTER, Auctioneer, MILLHEIM, PA. JQR. JOHN F. BARTER. Practical Dentist, Office opposite the Methodist Church. MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM PA. R.GEO. S. FRANK, Physician & Surgeon, REBERSBURG, PA.* Office opposite the hotel. Professional calls promptly answered at all hours. D. H. MINGLE, Physician & Surgeon Gffliee on Maui St reet. MILLIIEIM, PA J * SPRINGEB > Fashionable Barber, Shop 2 doors west MUlheim Bankinc House, MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. D. H. Hastings. W. F. Keeder -JG-ASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east of the office ocupied by the late firm of Yocum & Hastings. C. T. Alexander. C, M. Bower. A. LEXANDER & BOWER, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office in Gariuan's new building. GEO. L. LEE, Physician & Surgeon, MADISOXBURG, PA. Office opposite the Lutheran Church. C. HEINLE, Attorncy-at-Law BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre county. Special attention to Collectious. Consultations n German or Englisn. J. A. Beaver. W. Gephart. ■gEAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street, North of High Street JgROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST. J BELLEFONTE, PA. C. G. McMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. Free Buss to and from all trains. Special rates to witnesses and jurors. OUMMINS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONT, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR. House newly !rcfttted and refurnished. Ev ervthing done to make guests comfortable. Rates moderate. Patrouage respectfully solici ted. 51 y JRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel in the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS, LOCK HAVEN, PA. S.WOODS CALDWELL PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travel ers on first floor- QT. ELMO HOTEL, Aos. 317 & 319 ARCH ST., PHILADELPHIA. RATES REDUCED TO $2,00 PER DAY. The traveling public will still find at this Hotel the same liberal provision for their com fort. It is located iu the immediate centres of business and places of amusement and the dif ferent Rail-Road depots, as weU 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. "pEABODY 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. A Westerner's Way. A tall man, with a full beard the col or of old gold, and a wide-brimmed bat such as is invaribly associated with the denizens of the wild west, and wearing a suit of ready-made clothes with the shelf marks of an Omaha store plainly visible, got off the train as it reached theJNorthwestern depot, at Chicago, and bad his gripsack checked for safe keeping in the waiting-room. "I'm goiip to take in the town.pai d ner," he confided to the man I ehitul the counter,"and the grip might be un handy like." "Say, mister," said be of the checks, " mebbe you'd better leave that thar gun," pointing to a 44-calber revolver, the 'down-pointing muzzle of which hung some inches below the tail of his short sack coat. "The perlice might take you in, and then you'd bo fined SSO, besides confirskatiu' the shoot er." "P'rhaps you're right, parduer,"said the westerner,after a moment's consid eration. "I never been in a big town before, and ain't exactly fly on the ways of the people. You're sure I won't need it ?" "No, you won't need it," said the checkman, "leastways if you don't drink too much V" "I never drink," said the newcomer, unstrapping the formidable weapon and handing it over. Then he stepped out of the depot and walked east on Kinzie street, looking curiously at the buildings and the pe culiar merchandise of that thorough fare, and making up his mind that the trade in hides monopolized Chicago peeple. When he reached the corner of Clark street be glanced up and down admiringlv at the crowded street, througed with wagons, street cars and people. Setting his hat firmly on his head the stranger stopped a hurrying man and asked : "Say, stranger !" • "Well, sir," said the other, stopping impatiently. "Say, can you tell me where the bus iness part of town is ? I'm a stranger But the man hnd gone before the sen tence had concluded. " 'Pers like they didn't tumble to innercent jokes, he said to himself. Then he looked across the street and saw the signs of the Chicago museum. "A show, hey ? Well, I'll take that in sure." He bought a ticket and pass ed in, and was soon contemplating the pretty girls in the costumes of all na tions. Round and rouud he walked, and all the time his wonder grew. He glanced furtively and bashfully at the beauties in their gorgeous and becom ing custumes. "Wonder if they can talk United States ?" he thought. Fi nally he found a post against which he could stand, and, thus braced,he push ed his hat brim out of the way and stared long and earnestly at one of the young ladies, who seemed to take his eye. The girl was fully concious of his admiring look, hut like a well be haved girl, took no notice of it until after the space of some minutes, when the steady gate brought the color to her cheek and a half smile to her face, which she attempted to hide by quick ly turning about. This was not lost to the keeu eye of the western man,and several times he moved forward as if to speak to the girl, hut each time he shrank back bashfully and resumed his first position. The girl became some what nervous. She attempted to dust off the front of her boot with a feath er brush, but it flew from her fingers upon the floor. The western man sprang quickly forward and handed it to her with untaught grace. "Thank you, sir," she said, with a a smile and a blush. "Oh, can you talk American ?" he asked. "Yes, sir,'' she replied, not ?" "Oh, I dunno ; you wearing a furrin rig, you know." "Yes, I am an Americau," she said. "It's a mighty purty rig, anyhow," he said. "Do you think so ?" "Yes. Do you stay here all the time ?" "No ; I live at home. I'm only here for a couple of weeks." "I'm a stranger in town," said he. "Indeed." "Yes ; Elive in Arizony." - "Is that far away V" "Yes ; it is lonesome out there some times." "Why don't you live in the city ?" " 'Cause I've got a ranche and a lot of cattle." She looked at him with sudden res pect, for she had heard of the western cattle kings. "I was going east to see a gal," he said after a pause. "But I don't think I'll go now." "Why not ?" " 'Cause I'ye found one that suits me MILLHEIM, PA. THURSDAY, AUGUST 21., 1884. ''l *U t >H£S,S Aii" M iu Chicago." * "You're lucky," said the girl smiling at the simplicity of the man. "Who is she ?" "You." "Oh, go on with your foolishness, you never saw me before." "No," said he, "hut I'm going to stay in Chicago and see you again. Fact is I want a wife. I'm a plain man. If you'll marry me, say so." "This is so sudden,and I don't know you, and " 4 'Never mind that. Where do you live ?" "No. street." "Father and mother living ?" "Father is dead. I live with moth er." "And you come here to make a little money toward paying the rent V" "llow did you know ?" "Never mind. I'm coming up to see you to-night. I can convice your mother that lam able to take care of you, and I've got letters to Chicago men that'll show who and what I am. If your mother will go along out I'll be glad to have her along. Anyway, I'm going to take you. 41 You're very confident, seems to me," said the young lady, who had suddenly come to think a yellow beard handsome. "Never mind," said the Arizonian. "Tie up your dog and leave the latch string out to-night, for I'm coming, sure as thunder," and he walked a way. To-day there is a vacancy in the 4 'Bazaar of Nations," for one of the prettiest girls has gone ; and in a neat little cottage in the northern division an old lady and a girl are sewing for dear life on a serviceable bridal out fit. A Pitcher of Blood. 'Half a pint*of blood, please.' 'Come this way.' The butcher led the way into the hack of the store into a temporary shambles where a cow had just been knocked down and was having her throat scientifically cut. In a few .moments the small white pitcher was returned to the girl full of the smoking red liquid. 'llow is M this morning 4 IIe is better and he says it's the blood is helping liiin.' The girl went out with her pitcher of blood and the butcher picked up an or dinary glass, stepped back in the sham bles aud returned with it half filled with the liquid which was now of the consistence of thick cream. 'There are dozens of men and women in Detroit who drink blood. We used to serve a great many sustomers with it. Now we have only one.' 'What do you charge for it ?' 'Nothing. We never sold a spoonful. Anyone is welcome to come here and drink it. We let the girl come with that pitcher because the old man for whom she gets it is dying and ho won't take any other nourishment; taste it.' 'No, thanks.' 'lt is like rich,warm mils; there is no taste or smell to it.' Thus encouraged the representative of the Free Press took up the tumbler and swallowed a mouthful Qf the fluid it contained. It had a sweet, milkisli, sickish taste, half of which was imagin ation and the other half b-l-o-o-d ! 'The it in some cases,' said the Jefferson avenue butcher,* 'but with most folks who come here it is a tradition. They take it because some other member of the family took it.' 4 Do healthy people ever take blood in this way r" ~'Yes, occasionally; just as they would take a stimulant of any kind. Drink ing blood won't, make a fighter of a man. It isn't men that drink it as much as delicate, consumptive women. We drink it fround the shop when we feel like it. A pint of blood is equal to a good lunch at any time.'— Detroit Free Press. 'The new materials for the coming seasonjare beginning to make their ap pearance, and are very stylish, espec ially the handsome embroidered cash meres and the figured velvets, both of which promise to be very popular.— Paris letter in Peterson's Magazine. PAPER FOR THE HOME CIRCLE Cleveland and Hendricks, Democratic Candidates FOR PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT. The Right Sentiments. Feelings With Whioh Grover Cleve land Approached the Duties of the Governorship. The following letter was written by Grover Cleveland to his brother on the day of his election to the Governorship of New York : M A YOR'S OFFlCE,Buffalo,Nov.7,lßß2] MY DEAR BROTHER : I have just voted. I sit here in the Mayor's office alone, with the exception of an artist from Frank Leslie's newspaper, who is sketching the office. It mother was here I should bo writing to her, and I feel as if it were time for me to write to some ono who will believe what I write. 1 have been for some time in the atmosphere of certain success, so thai I have been sure that I should as sume the duties of the high office for which I have been named. I have tried hard, in the light of this fact, to properly appreciate the responsibilities that will rest upon me, and they are much, too much, underestimated. But the thought that has troubled me is : Can 1 well perform my duties, and in such a mauner as to do some gopd to the people of the State ? I know there is room for it.and I know that 1 am honest and sincere in my do" sire to do well, but the question is whether I know enough to accomplish what I desire. The social life which seems to await me has ulso been a subject of much anxious thought. I have a notion that I can regulate that very much as I de sire, and if I can I shall spend very lit tle time in the purely ornamental part of the ofiice. In point of fact,l will tell you,first of all others, the policy I in tend to adopt, and that is to make the matter a business engagement between the people of the State and myself, in which the obligation on my side is to perform the duties assigned me with an eye single to the interest of my em ploye! s. I shall have no idea of rfc-elec tion or of any higher political prefer ment in my'head, but he very thankful and happy if I can wel 1 serve one term as the people's Governor. Do you know that if mother were alive I should feel so much safer V I have always thought that her prayers had much to do with inv success. I shall expect you all to help me in that way. Believe mc, your affectionate brother, GROVER CLEVELAND. The Fatal Blunder. Mrs. Shabby-Genteel [in the train]— 'Well, I am glad we are off at last. You attended to everything, didn't you, dear ?' * Mr. S. G.—'Oh, yes. I telegraphed to Uncle Jake to meet us at the depot with the farm wagon and sent personals to all the papers saying 'Mr. and Mrs. Shabby.Genteel are still at Saratoga. That was all right, wasn't it ¥' 'Of course, hut I was referring to the house. You know some of our neigh bors, who have been off all summer, will he running in about this time to look after their houses and ' 'Oh ! That is all right. They will see our front windows all boarded up and the door knobs almost black with tar nish.' 'Yes; I noticed that bottle of tarnish worked beautifully. By the way,where did you buy it V 'At the hardware store where I got the nails.' 'What !' 4 Where I got the nails.' 'For the front window boards V 'Yes.' 'Oh, mercy. Our social reputation is ruined.' 'Ru ine! llow can it be ?' 'Oil! you horrid old goosey gander, you.' 'Why, Mariah !' 'Fresh, new nails along side of tar nished door knobs! Oh, you—you, I thought any fool would know enough to use rusty ones.' Embroideries and lace are still much used, but will be superseded by heavier adornments later in the seas on.—Paris letter in Peaterson's 3lag azine. Vests are worn by many ladiet, es pecially young ones.— Peterson's Magazine. Our Nerves. The persons who are not familiar with the structure of the human body can best obtain rational ideas of the nervous aytem by comparing it to the electric apparatus in common use for communicating between distant points. Herein the nerve centres, the brim, spinal cord and nervous ganglions are regarded as bitteries of telegraph offices and the nerves as the wires that com plete the circuit. Insulated wires,such as are used for submarine telegraph ca bles, illustrate especially well the dis tribution of the nerve elements. The life-work of these organs is not shown by post-mortem studies, consequently we do not know what changes, if any,oc cur in the nerves during the transit of nervous impulses. Many persons appear totally uncon scious of the existence of their nerves and these persons are very fortunate, for on all sides complaints of nervous ness are heard and the extraordinary prevalence of nervous disorders nowa days* scarcely has escaped the notice of even a casual observer. Nervous ness is essentially a loss of power in the neives and according to Beard, the author of "American Nervousness," this were much better expressed nerve lesßnes3. The symptoms of this are well enough known to most people. At all events the persons who are rest less, who have flushes of heat, whose heart palpitates on the slightest excite meut and those who have twitching of the muscles of various parts of the body and divers other vague and transient sensations of like character, iuvariably call themselves "nervous," likely e nougli for want of a better word. The cause of the complaints just named have been detailed at great length. Inheritance, indigestion, at mospheric conditions and the exactions of modern life are, however, worthy of especial note in this particular. In herited nervousness is explained readi ly enough by the old sayiug, "like fath er, like son," and it is not inherited this disposition, but who was so unfor tunate as to be surrounded by nervous persons, might easily be iucliued that way. Hew indigestion may cause nervous ness is well shown by the following from a well-known writer on the sub ject,who said : "Though there may be much force iu tne nervous system, yet if digestion he clogged and waste mat ters suffered to accumulate in the di gestive apparatus and circulate through the nervuos system,the amount of force generated and usable will be much di minished. Under these circumstances we may supply food and the best of food in any amount and the person will still be fseble." "We are nervous," says the same writer,"because the rap id evaporation iu our dry outdoor air and in our overheated rooms heightens the rapidity of the processes of waste and repair in the brain and neryous system and because of the exhausting stimulation of alternations of torrid heat and frigid cold, and this nervous ness is increased by the stress of pover ty, the urgency of finding and holding means of living, the scarcity of inherit ed wealth and the just desire of making and maintaining fortunes." The Church of the Latter Day Saiuts commonly known as mormons, of Fall ltiyer, Mass., is an active organization, and is busily pushing its missionary operations. Its membership at present is 125, one third of whom are native born,the rest mainly of English origin. Elder John Gilbert, who resides in Fall River, is the general missionary agent for Rhode Island, Connecticut and Massachusetts. The society at Plaiu ville, in the vicinity of New Bedford, is reported to be very flourishing aud mostly composed of native-horn mem bers, and the one at Little Comuton,R. 1., is also composed mostly of the same class. In that sectiou the success of the saints is reported very encouraging, baptisms by immersion being frequent. These people are monega.nists and do not harmonize with the Mormons iu U tah. — Boston Post. SUBSCRIBE for the JOURNAL. Terms, SI.OO per Year, in Advance. Marriage Now and Then. Some Modern Ideas Contrasted With Those of Bygone Times. "The thing can't come off," said a young girl loudly in u crowded room, lately, "until after Lent. It's no!, the style at all t< think of anything In but prayers and church. But it will come oil on Easter Monday. That is if my dresses are finished in time. It all depends on that.' 1 It was not a journey or a ball that sho was talking ot, but her marriage ; the moat solemn ciisia Jof a woman's life,the time when all her trust in God, and love for the home she is leaving come to light, if ever. - • "Well, I declare," she continued, "the whole thing's a horrid bore, and so I tell Jena. Since our engagement was announced, I can't accept an invi tation without him ; he has to hang a ruund the house all the time, or all the gossips tongues will be wagging. I'm just marrying him to get rid of him. He'll have to attend to business when he has me to keep I "Then here are eight bridesmaids/all fighting about their bonnets and the color of their flowers.and I have to set tle it all! And Susy Jackson got three hundred wedding presents, and that means three hundrd letters of thanks to write ! She wrote sixty-odd the morning she was married, and was completely fagged out. Then there are all the duplicates to exchange afterward. Oh, I tell yoa, getting married is a big job, and a horrid bore !" Perhaps not many young girls would talk as freely or as coarsely as this one, but bow many of them regard marriage from precisely the same point of view? It is a matter of presents, of brides maids, of gowns, a stately show at church, and somebody to pay their bills afterward. The recent unveiling of Chief Jus tice Marshall's statue in Washington brought forth a pretty, teuder story of the great jurist's courtship of a Virgin ia girl while she was scarcely more than a child, in her father's home. How jealously the sacred secret of "the engagement" was guarded while she was being educated and fitted for her position as wife and mother. How grandparents and sisters and cousins brought their simple gift, with hearts full of love and blessiDg for her ; how she went at last, shy, tender, blushing, from her motner's arms to.her husband and was cherished by him, with a chiv alry of devotion, for more than fifty years. When God called her, the va cancy in his life was more than he could bear, and he soou followed her into that higher life where they cannot be parted. Marriage comes into almost every woman's life, and every woman natur ally and rightly looks forward to it as the fulfillment of her highest work in the world. But how is she to look for ward to it ? There are two ways, the old and the new. Which will she choose ? Meteors by the Milion. The Earth Now Undergoing a Fierce Bombardment by the Stray Shells of Space. From the Boston Herald. The earth is now passing through the stream ot August meteors, generally seen in the north-western sky after midnight. A single observer under favorable circumstances sees from six to eight meteors an hour. But he sees only one fifth or one-sixth of those vis ible aboye his horizon. The total num ber therefore visible in an hour at a given station is about thirty-five. If we should multiply this by twenty-four we should get over eight hundred as the number visible at a giveu point of the earth's surface iu an entire day, piovided that clouds or sunlight did not interfere with the observation. From a single point on the earth's sur face, however, we see only a small por tion of the. atmospheric envelope,and it is within this atmospheric envelope that the meteors become visible. The total uumbe visible over the whole earth in a day would be upward of 10,- 000 times the number visible at a sin gle station, or 10,000 multiplied by 800 equals 8,000,000 as the number of mete ors falling every day to the eartb, which would,in the absence of the sun, moon aud clouds, be visible to the na ked eye. Fortunately for us, these bodies are not very large, and a protective atmos phere interposes between us and their tumultuous assault. Were it other* wise everything on the surfaces of the earth would be battered down to a common level. For the most part these bodies are dissolved in the upper regious of the attnospheie and decend imperceptibly as meteoric dust, a de posit of which has sometimes been found upon the tops of mountains. The August meteors are usually of an orange color, moye very rapidly and commonly leave streaks which last for one or more seconds. These streaks are highly useful in enabling us to fix the radiaut point with precision. NO. 33. NBWBPAPBR LAWS If subscriber* order the Of newspapers. the |iut>lishers may continue to st*ii• i them until all arrearages are paid. If sul>H(;riU*rs refuse or neglect to take Heir newspapers from the offlee to which they are > ent they are held responsible until they have settled the hills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers move toother places without In forming 1 the publisher, and the newspapers arc sent to the former place, they are responsible. '"WW—SWH" ADVERTISING RATBB. lwk. 1 mo. 18 mo*. 6 moo. 1 yea 1 square S2UU 0 4 ot> | 05 00 $6 00 $8(0 X " 7on id oo 16 oo :oo 4010 1 M 10 00 15 00 1 25 00 45 00 75 (Q One inch makes a square. Administrators and Kxecutors' Notices $2.50. Transient adver tisements and locals 10 cents per line for frit t# insertion and 5 cents per for each addition al insertion. SCHOOL AND OHUROH, There are two thousand school teach ers in Arkansas, eight hundred of whom are colored.— Pittsburgh Post. Penny dinners for school children have been instituted under the direc tion of the London School Board. Both Houses of the Swedish Parlia ment have passed a bill closing pub lic houses on Sunday throughout Swe den. An article in the Churchman fe y Bishop Coxe, of Western New York, concludes in favor of giving the Pro testant Episcopal Church in the United States the name of the Apostolic Church in America. An interesting Sunday-school con vention was held in Waterbury, Conn., recently. It appeared from the report that in the State there were 1,037 schools ; IS, 152 officers and teachers ; 134,649 scholars. Total membership, 152,801. Underlying the forty-one acres with in the enclosure of tiirard College walls, Philadelphia,there are 3,500 feet of tunnel, intersecting almost every part of the grounds. At adistaoee of one hundred feet apart there are gas gels, which are lighted by electricity. The tuouels are used for the pipes which carry the steam and hot water to the eleven buildings on the ground.— Philar delphia Press. At the annual meeting of Friends re cently held in England, Mr. Bufus King, of Baltimore, obtained tlie sanc tion of the society for religious work in the south of France, Mount Lebanon, Australia,Tasmania,and New Zealand. Mr. Isaac Sharpe returned his certifi cate after a seven years' mission, and gave encouraging accounts of his work in Africa, Australia, and the adjoining islands, Madagascar, the United States, Canada, Indian Territory, and Mexico. Mr.Sharpe's certificate was renewed for work in Norway. A comparative statement of the var ious colleges, complied by Mr. Taylor Payne, shows that Harvard has thirty two professors and twenty -three lectur ers, instructors, tutors, etc., making a total of fifty-five. Princeton come next with twenty-eight professors sad six lecturers, tutors, etc., making a to tal of thirty-four. Yale follows with twenty professors, and ten lecturers, tutors, etc., total thirty. Theu follows Columbia with a total of twenty-nine ; Amherst, tweuty-four, and Brown and Wesleyan nineteen each. Extravagance in Living. Such crimes as those of Ferdinand Ward, while they spring often from de pravity, are oftener the result ot mere weakness of character. Thackeray in many of his minor sketches constantly draws the portrait of the man and wo man whose means are not equal to the style of living which they desire ; and they desire it not for itself; but only because others have it. They are not strong and steady enough to be content with that which they can command and afford, and the means to secure the other must somehow be obtained. Thackeray puts the fact in the simplest aud most amusing form. The young couple must give a dinner, and instead of the joint of lamb and the glass of beer which is the only repast to "which they have the moral right to invite ft friend—if, indeed, the beer may ne morally permitted—they must needs }-l prepare a feast which they cannot hon- 1 orably afford, and for the sole reason that other people who can afford it give such feasts. It is this doing a litt'e more, or a great deal more, than the doer can hon estly afford, which leads to the swin dles of Wall Street. Living in a house too expensive for his means, maintain ing it accordingly, dressing as his rich er neighbors dress, doing in all things as they do—it is this weak compliance which is hidden in the fine houses, and drives to the Park in fine equipages, which presently ends in Lndlow Street Jail and hopeless disgrace. Yet it is the poorest kind of competition, be cause the little imitator might see even with his dull eyes that, there must al ways be a few persons who can "do the thing" better than all the rest, and without feeling it. The bull frog may swell until he bursts, but he can not rival the ox. This is the tendency which all sensi ble people—and a great many otherwise sensible people are swept awa/ by it-r ought quietly to resist. The power of individual example is immense, but it is often underestimated by the individ ual. "My vote is of no consequence, but, since you wish it, 1 will vote," said a man to his neighbor, and the r?ght candidate was elected by a ma jority of one. The family which in the midst of a saturnalio of luxury and ex travagence refuses to take part in it, and holds to a simple, moderate, tem perate way, is diminishing the supply of Ferdinand Wards and Wall Street panics. •