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SVDeeds and other legal papers written and acknowledged at moderate charges. Fashionable Barber, Hamnq had many years' of experience. the public can expect the best work and most modern accommodations. Shop 2 doors west Millheim Banking House, MAIN-STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. QEORGE L. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Corner Main & North streets, 2nd toor, Millheim, Pa. Shaving, Haircutting, Shampooning, Dying, Ac. done in the most satisfac tory manner. Jno.H.Orris. C. M. Bower. Ellis'L.Orvls. QBYIS, BOWER A OBYIB, Attornefs-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA., Office in Woodings|Bailding. D. H. Hastings. W. F. Reeder yjASTINGS & REEDER, Attorney s-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. . Office on Allegheny Btreet, two doers east of the office ocupied by the late firm of Yocum A Hastings. J O. MEYER, Attorney-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. At the Office of Ex-Judge Hoy. C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law BELLEFOHTB, PA. Practiees in all the courts of Centre county Special attention to Collections. Consultations In German or English. . A. Beaver. J. W. Gephart. JgEAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street. North of High Street jgROOKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST., 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, BELLEFONTE, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PBOPUnTOB House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev- @be Millfwtit R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 59. Aunt Betsy's Present, "Well, I must say, T think it is hor ibly mean of our Aunt Betsy, Estelia. After making such a favorite of you all your life, and having you with her ever since you were a mere baby, she might have sent you something worth having on your twenty-first birthday, especial ly as she knows how poor we are since your father's death," said my mother, sharply. "You had better take it as a hint for the future, and not build any more cas tles on what Aunt Betsy is likely to do for you, remarked my sister Lena. Walter, my brother, added with a provoking grimace, "Here endeth my sister Stella's 'great expectations.' " "You need not make such unpleas ant remarks," I answered, pettishly. "In sending me the portrait of her old sweet-heart, poor auntie has given me her greatest treasure, and she, no doubt thinks I shall value it as much as she does. 'J "Well, it may come in useful, after all, for if, as I expect, you never get a sweetheart, you can imagine he was yours, when yon are a sour old maid like Aunt Betsy," said Lena, who pri ded herself not a little on being engag ed at eighteen, while I, tt twenty-one, bad never had au offer, not even the ghost of a lover. I had lived with Aunt Betsy down in her quiet country home in the south of Cornwall until my father's deatn two years before, when comiu up to Lon don for his funeial, I found my moth er left in such straightened circum stances that I felt It my duty to stay and earn what money I could to help her ; thereby, however, I incurred Aunt Betsy's anger. "Sorely," she wrote, "your brother and sister can help your mother ; you have no need to leave me lonely in my old age,after I haye bad all the trouble of you as a child." etc. I would willingly haye returned, for a close London lodging was not at all to my taste after my aunt's large, airy country house, but my mother seem ed to lean on me, aud so dreaded my leayiog her, that I had not the heart to *o. Aunt Betsy neither came or wrote, and I had quite resigned myself to the idea that I was hopelessly on hjr black books when the aboye related eyent took place. Now I knew that I was forgiven. In her early youth, Aunt Betsy, then the beautiful Elizabeth Marston, my father's only sister, had been engaged to the son and heir of a wealthy Lon don banker. He bad been sent abroad, on business for his father, just before they were to have been married, and through the jealous treachery of another man who madly loyed her, and wished to sup plant his rival, the engagement had been suddenly broken off by him. He then remained abroad, and Aunt Betsy never heard from him again. Just before he left England he bad presented her with a beautiful little minature of himself set in gold and diamonds, and this she had kept, to gether "with her maiden name—no other lover eyer induced her to change it. As a girl, I bad often seen and re verently admired the pretty souveDir, and I bad taken all a girl's keen inter est in the love-story attached to it. Aunt had always told me it was to be mine, and now I felt certain, with this treasure in my possession, that I had not quite lost my old place in her favor, though I heard in the same let ter in which she solemly commended the portrait to my care, that she had adopted an orphan girl in my place as her companion and probably heiress. I put the letter and portrait away with a sigh of regret for my old happy home, with its quiet and freedom from the daily toil and worry that were now my portion. Things went on from bad to worse with us, and my twenty-second birth day found me in despair. Walter, in despair, had gone to New Zealand ; Lena had married on a very slender income, and gone to live in the North. I could not bend to ask help from Aunt Betsy, and my mother was ill, and my work so scarce that I could barely find us in the necessaries of life. At last, I too, became ill,and we had not a penny in the house ; everything we had, even poor mamma's engage ment ring had gone for food. "Stella, you must go and get some money. Mrs. Burtou says she will have the rent by to or she shall have to turn us out into the street. There is -would you mind, dear ?—your Aunt Betsy's present; you could get enough for that to keep us for a long time." "Mamma dear, I cannot, dare not sell it 1 Anything of mine I would not withhold, but this—oh, dou't ask mat") MILLHEIM PA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1., 1885. "And yet the generous donor has ! never sent us the price of a loaf," said imy mother, bitterly. "Well, take ray | wedding ring ; it has never been off I my finger since your poor, dear father • put it on twenty-five years ago ; but it must go no." "No, no, mamma, you must not, shall not, take it off. I will go and take aunt's present, not to sell, but to the pawnshop ; then I may,perhaps,get it back when Walter sends us some money." With a heavy heart and weary lag • gliig steps, I departed on my hateful errand. All our things had been sold, we had preferred to lose thein to going into that last disgraceful refuge of the destitute, a London pawnbroker's. Arrived outside I paced to and fro, until my tottering limbs, weak from illness and continual fasting, warned me that my strength would not hold out much longer. I entered. Only one other person, a tall, dark gentleman, whose face I could not see in the semi-darknss,stood there taluing to the shopman. "1 tell you, my man, the plate is here. It has been traced by a clever detective, who will join roe here in a few minutes. He is only delaying be cause he thinks he has traced the thief, and has gone to follow up the search." "Well, sir, I am sure you are mista ken, but my principal will be here in a few moments, you must talk to him. What can I do for you, young wo man ?•' he asked, turning to me some what eagerly, evidently glad of an ex cuse to eyade his unpleasant visitor's conversation. Unable to speak, I drew forth ray treasure. The shopkeeper looked sus piciously at me as he took it up and tested it. "Your name and address, please," he said, sharply. "And bow much do you want ?" "I want a—a little money, if you please," I faltered. As I spoke thqgeutleman turned and I could feel a pair of bright, keen eyes scanning my pale face. I grew more helplessly confused, my tongue refused to utter a word. "Tell the shopman how much you want, and your name, my good girl," he said in a kind and pitying tone. Then, for the first time, I raised my eyes to bis face, feeling that I had found a friend. Merciful Heaven! was I dreaming, or had my late troubles driven reason from my brain, and fill ed it with delusive fancies. Surely there stood the original of Aunt-Betsy's portrait, but young and stalwart as he had been forty years ago, when it was taken. Iu vain I tried, to speak. I could only point helplessly to the portrait ; the shop with its occupants and its contents swam around me, and with a cry for help, I sank fainting to the ground. When I next awoke to consciousness, I was lying on an improvised bed on an old couch in our sitting-room at home. I moved my head, it felt weak and sore. Then I tried to lift my hands, but to my surprise I was power less to do so. A woman, plainly dress ed, with a kind motherly face, was sit ting near me, and rose as I moved. I looked around bewildered. . "Mammal 1" 1 called feebly. "Hush, hush, my dear miss," said the kind-looking woman, soothingly. "You must not speak ; your mamma is asleep and you might wake her." So I lay still, wondering weakly who she was and who had sent her there ; but presently, seeing her stir the fire into a blaze, I forgot her caution, as all my old anxieties came back, and I said pleadingly : "Don't poke the fire, phase. It will burn out to quickly, and we have no more coals." "Oh, now, miss, you have been dreaming. The cellar is nearly full, the coals only came in last week." Again I essayed to answer, but was so gently, yet with snch authority or dered to be quiet, that I was glad to o bey, so I lay still enjoying the sensa tion of being not able to think. In a day or two I grew stronger, and one morning, to my delight, my mother came in, and I had leave given me to talk a little. Then I heard all about my late ad venture. "It was really a most wonderful e vent, my dear, and reads like a chapter out of a three-yolume novel," said my mother, who by the way, looked quite bright and strong again. "When you fell down in a faint, you let fall the en velope in which you had carried the minature, and the gentleman who was in the shop—" "I remember him, mamma," I cried, excitedly, "be was the very image of the portrait. I fancied I must be dreaming. "That is the strangest part of the story, but you won't let me tell it to you properly, my dear. That gentle man saw your name and address? A PAPER FOR TIIE HOME CIRCLE. brought you home in u cab, sent in a nurse, and everything we wa ,teiw." "What in the world's the matter with him ?" asked the lady. "I guosss he is only tightening up his jaw, m&rm," replied the conductor, consolingly. i .W '■ :i The man bed now finished the opera tion, and he restored the steel rod tos J his pocket. Then he took out a mem orandum-book and made some entries in it carefully, and, having finished these entries, he remarked to his neigh bor in the adjoining seat, as be closed the book : • Science does remarkable things in these days." The neighbor nodded. ••Now, I don't suppose you would have the least idea that I had n jack screw between two of my teeth." "A jack screw ?" inquired his neigh bor, "Yes," returned the man, smiling. "I'm undergoing a dental operation. One of my teeth had been extracted, aid one of those adjoining it began to grow over in the vacant space. It was a good tooth, and I didn't want it pall ed, but the dentist couldn't get it back to its place, one day ao idea struck him and he said he'd put a jack screw in there. So he made one. It is less than a quarter of an inch long, but it is on the same principle as tlie other jack screws—just like thoee used in lifiiog up Cooper iusLitute, only on a small scale, you see." "Is there no danger of its slipping out ?" "Ob, not at all my dear sir. It is a yery ingenious little contrivance. The whole thing is made of gold and the nut by which it is turned is next to the face ; you saw me turn it just now ? Well, I turn it once around every twenty-four hours, aud that lorn is epual to about a two hundred and fif tieth part or an inch. Then, you see, I make a memorandum of each turn. Generally I turn it twice a day, but only half*way round each time. I expect that it will take two or three weeks to straighten the tooth. "is it uncomfortable? No not espe cially. A little unpleasant when I am turning it. Makes me grit my teeth some,but 1 soon get used to having it there. The only objection is that gold is a little too soft a metal where there is so much pressure brought to bear. You see, the screw is a very slender wire and the thread on it is very deli cate, though the whole thing was a foot long and as big as those used under a building. A day or two after I began to use it the thread snapped under the strain. Then I thought there was a dynamite cartridge in my mouth and the whole top of my head was coming off. But it did not hurt me. The den tist is going to make one of platinum in case this should give out. That is a harder metal. This my station. Good night," and the man with the jack screw between his teeth left the train. A student who had been studying for several years in the medical department of the university of Texas endeavored to pass the examination requisite to his obtaining his diploma. One of the pro fessors gave him a hypothetical case, and then asked him: 'What would you do in a case of that kind, if the pa tient got worse ?' 4 1 would not do any thing,' replied the student; 4 I would just wait until next day, and see how lie was coming on then. He might im prove, you Know. I'd give him a chance.' ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Are you disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and erying with pain of cutting teeth? If so, send at once and get a bottle of MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETHING. Its value is Incalculable. It will relieve the p*>or little suf ferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures dysentery and diarrhoea, regulates the stomach ana bowels, cures wind colic, softens the gums, re duces inttammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTH ING STROP FOB CHILDREN TEETHING is pleasant ao the taste, and is the prescription of one of tbe oldest and best female nurses and physic!- tns in the United States, and is for sale by alt druggists throughout the world. Frtee 99 cents a bottle.