The Millheim Journal, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY R. A. BUMILLER. Office in the New Journal Building, Penn St., near Hartman's foundry. TTOOPBR ANNUM,IN ADVANCE, oa SI.AS nr MOT PAID IM ADVAROX. AcceptaHe Carrespoßteace Solicited Address letters to MIIXHUM JOURNAL. BUSINESS CARDS- A BARTER, Auctioneer, MILLHEIM, PA. B. STOVER. Auctioneer, Madisonburg, Pa. IYY- H.RRIFSNYDKR, Auetloneer, MILLHKIM, PA. D R. JOHN F. HARTER. Practieal Dentist, Office opposite the Methodist Church. MAIN STKBBT, MILLHEIM PA. D. H. MINGLE, Physician & Surgeon Offllce on Main Street. MILLHEIM, PA. GEO. L. LEE, Physician ft Surgeon, MADISONBURG, PA. Office opposite the Public School House. GEO. S. FRANK. | Physician ft Surgeon, RKBERSBURG, PA. Office eppooite the hotel. Professional calls • promptly answered at all hours. TTT P. ARD, M. D.. ( I WOODWARD, PA ( O. PEININGER, ~ 1 Notary-Public, Journal office, Penn at., Millheim, Pa. , dVDeeda and other legal papers written aud < acknowledged at moderate charges. W. J. SPRINGER, I Fashionable Barber, Having had many years' of experience, the public can expect the beet wort find i most modern accommodations, \ Shop 1 doors west MUlheim Banking House I MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. L. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Corner Main A North streets, 2nd Boor, Millheim, Pa. Shaving, Haircutting, Shampooning, Dying, Ac. done in the most satisfac tory manner. Jno.H. Orris. C. M. Bower. Ellis! L. Orris. QRVIS, BOWER & ORVIB, ( AHorneys-al-Lsv. BBLLEFONTE, PA., Office in Woodings|Bailding. D. H. Hastings! W. F. Reeder TTASTINGS A REEDER, Attornejs-at-Law, BBLLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east of the office oenpied by the late firm of Yocum A Hastings. J 0. MEYER, Attoraey-st-Lav, BBLLEFONTE, PA. At the Office of Ex-Judge Hoy. C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Lav BBLLEFONTE, PA. Practices In an the courts of Centre county Special attention to Collections. Consultations in German or English. . A. Beaver. J. "W. Gephart. •REAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BBLLEFONTE, PA. Offlee on Alleghany Street. North of High Street BROCKKRHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST., BBLLEFONTE, PA. C. G. McMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Bnuto to witnesses and furors- ® L V" OUMM!NS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BBLLEFONTE, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev erything done to make guests oorafortable. itstesraodera** tronage respectfully sonci ted °" ly ®fce IPilllcim Dmtrtfttl R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 59. The manner was more ungracious than the words. Mr. Tracy looked ap penlingly at her as he expressed bis real regret for the carelessness which had brought ber such a disappointment. He had a very tender appreciation of the fact that his wife's cares were very pressing and burdensome. JShe seldom got out, and this missing of a fine mus ical entertainment was no light thing to her. There was no response to his apolo gies'. She was recalling the time, only a few weeks since, when he had prom ised to go out with her, then had be come absorbed in business, sent her a hasty note to say he could not dine at home, and she had seen no more of him until half-past ten at night. It is not to be wondered at that the cloud on Mrs. Tracy's face deepened. It reflect ed itself on the faces of the three chil dren, one of whom, after a few whimp ers of discontent over the unsatisfacto ry dinner, was dismissed with sharp I words from his mother. "Well, well 1" exclaimed Harvey a few minutes later, impatiently pushing away bis plate, "if a man is to be treat ed like a criminal because he has for gotten some concert tickets,he'd better look for a pleasanter place than home." He strode away, leaving her, with some reason, perhaps, to consider her self a verj ill-used woman. She was always busy about the house or always trying to bring up arrears of sewing. Intervals of leisure for read* ing or going out were rare, and always becoming rarer. She was willingly giv ing her best energies to the work of making the most out of small means, taking her full share in the struggle which her husband was carrying on to get a foothold in business. But she was forgetting that husband and chil dren should not be left to live by bread alone —that they lboked to her for some thing more valuable than the mere keeping of a house. She was mauy a time so wearied with her round of du ties in the care of their bodies that she lost sight of their higher needs, not re alizing that a smile or a cheery word from her could go far toward making amends for a much more serious house hold failure than a poorly cooked meal. Her face was rapidly taking on a look of combined anxiety and impatience, and she was forgetting the sweetness of loving forbearance toward little faults and shortcomings. "Tug, tug, tug," she said, fretfully. "I'm tired of it all. Harvey has no more thought of me than if I were a pack-horse. How would he like it if I thought no more of his comfort than be does of mine, I wonder." The fretful mood and the fretful ex pression,fast coming to feel at home by long indulgence, stayed by her as the hours wore on. The children looked in- I quiringly at her when occasion brought them in her way, but wisely made such occasions as few as possible. As the tea hour approached Mrs. Tracy would not have acknowledged to herself that her brow was taking on an added cloud at the prospect of her husband's return. MILLHEIM PA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22., 1885. Ile.hnd left her in anger, after sinning against her so unpardonably, and need not expect to be pleasantly received. If, nowever, he should come home early, she might relax a little toward him. But the hour came and passed without him, and Mrs. Tracy grew angrier. If he was staying away to punish her, he might stay as long as he liked —she would nevor care. But as another hour passed she grew uneasy. With all his trying want of punctuality, Harvey ne'er really miss ed a meal without sending her a word of explanation. It was already growing dark as she pressed her face anxiously against the window pane, when her lit tle boy rushed in. "O mamma ! there's such a big (Ire down town. Can't Igo and see it V' She had heard an alarm an hour or two before, but paid little attention to it. "No, of course you can't, Willie, it is too late for you to be ont. But where is the fire V" "I don't know, but it's a great, great big one,l know. Hear how the whistles blow—and see, the folks are ruuniug more and more." She caught a few words from some passers by which brought a look of dis may to her face. "The Phoenix block—and spreading fast. Trouble with water freezing iu hose." Breathlessly she ran into the house and threw on her wraps. Then, with a few words of direction to the seivant girl, she took Willie's hand and hurried in the bitter co'd of the fast closing winter night through the streets,becom ing more and more crowded as they drew nearer the business precincts with others, who3e faces were all turned in the same direction. Her husband's office was in the Phoe nix Block. A chill, deadlier than that of the inclement air,struck to her heart, as through her mind ran one after a nother dread imagination of what might be. She remembered his worry about the safe—how little she had heed ed him iu her selfish resentment over a little disappointment 1 Her steps quick ened with a wild fear as she thought of the papers be had spoken of—she knew thejirst instinct of his faithful soul would be tq peril his life for the safety of what otheis had confided to his care. The crowd grew thicker as she near ed the fire, until she could move only with difficulty as she still pressed on. They had not lived in the place for any length of time and the faces about her were all strange, until at length a fa miliar voice said ; "You here, Mrs. Tracy ? This is no place for you." She grasped the speaker's arm. "Mr. Brand—do tell me ! Is it seri ous? Is it the Phoenix ?—and have you seen Mr. Tracy ?" His face was more troubled than he wished her to see as he tried to lead her away from the crowd. "Well, a large fire is always more or less serious, you know. It began in the Phoenix " "I want to hear about it," she insist ed, as he paused. "llow are things there, now V" "The fire went up the elevator shaft, so there has been difficulty in getting the occupants. But I do assure you, Mrs. Tracy, tnat no lives are known to be lost. The last I saw of Mr. Tracy he and the other lawyers were working like beavers trying to get out their be longings." "When was that ?" she gasped. "Perhaps an hour ago." "I'm going to get nearer," she said, and, as her frieud could not dissuade her, he took her arm and they slowly worked their way toward the large building to which the fire was now con fined. It was a strange and magnificent sight. Winter had laid his pitiless fin ger on every attempt to interrupt the progress of the ruin, seeming to rejoice in promoting the advance of the fire fiend. All the noble enginery of the fire department was in full play, but many a bursted hose had been thrown aside, and other difficulties from clog ging ice in every direction were contin ually arising. The tall, partly fallen walls of the brick building were sheet ed with ice, which shone and sparkled in the gas-light like the famed Russian palace, and against which many a stream of water fell in rattling hail. , Banks of ice, from leaking hose, lav a cross the streets, while around the burn ing building lay a piled-up mass of iee, mingled with books, carpets, and furni ture,which had been thrown out, to the depth of ten or twelve feet. The fire was by this time, however, well under control, and painful interest was now centered upon the perilous condition of a man who could be seen through the window of one of the up per stories. "That is the old watchman of the building," exclaimed Mrs. Tracy's es cort ; "he is not in any immediate dan ger,but it will be difficult to reach him, and it is feared he may loose his head 1 and fall. Some other men are on a bal cony around the corner, not far below him—they are positively in no danger as yet, but I heard some one say that they weie refusing to be helped down A PAPER FOR THE HOME CIRCLE. until the old man is safe—are dcing all they can to encourage him. Mr. Tracy may be among those." To Mrs. Tracy'B eyes there must be danger. Brick and portions of the wall were continually falling. Aud Harvey might not be there—nobody could know certainly where he was. No live* are known to be lost—that was how her friend had phrased it. The falling of a portion of the roof drove back lookers-on and workers in a confused crowd. "Do go home, Mrs. Tracy," urged Mr. Brand. "You can do no good by staying ; you are risking your health aud the child's too. I will surely see that you have the very first news ofMr. Tracy that can bo secured." Her teeth were chattering and her whole frame shivering, although she had not realized that she was cold. She felt that she could not go, but, after a glance at little Willie, who would not complain, she allowed herself to bo per suaded. Arrived at home, she was thankful for the care demanded of her b/ the sleepy children. But in due time the clamor of the little voices was hushed and then nothing remained for her but to pace restlessly to and fro—now feel ing as though another moment of sus pense would drive her wild,now shrink ing in dread from the thought of what the end of that suspeuse might be. lie had left her in anger. She had, in her pettishness at his forgetfulness, refused him look or smile; she had been harboring bitter thoughts against him while he was exposed to danger, perhaps death. How far she had gone aside from the ideal she had formed of her duties as a true wife ! how far fail ed in making for him the sunshiny home they had long ago pictured ! And now, what if she should never more have opportunity to show him how dearer to her than all else on earth was his happiness and that of their chil dren ? In her misery it seemed that hours had passed before she heard a footstep at the door. And then she sprang up in terror. Was it his step or that of another, come to tell her—? "Amy—at last, Poor wife, did you think I would never come ? But don't come near me yet, dear !" But she clung to him for a moment, aud then stood back in amazement at his appearance. Smoke-b egri me d, drenched, and with ice clinging to his dress and hair—she would not have known him except for his voice. A 8 she hastily brought him dry clothing and hot coffee, he gave her au outline of his experience for the past few hours. "It was a tight place we were caged in," he said, in concluding—"freezing on one side and almost burning on the other. But we got the poor old man safe at last,and all my papers are safe." "And would you really weigh any kind of property against your life, Har vey, even though it might belong to other people ? Is that all you care for us here at home ?" "Well, Amy," he said .smiling at her half anger, "if it were deliberately placed before me to choose,l might,per haps hesitate; but when all of a sudden you find that a sacred trust is in dan ger, what remains but to use your best endeavor, even though there may be risk in it, with faith in the kindly and powerful arm which has brought me out of it ?" His voice had taken on a reverent tone, and she could not say he was not right. But she lay down to rest with a great thankfulness in her heart that she could yet reach him with looks and tones of affect ion,and an earnest prayer that the lesson of the last few hours might not soon grow dim and be for gotten. Hair Growing on the Dead. McCONNELLSTOWN,Pa.Oct. 9.—TWO years ago William A. Walters was bur ied in the stone Chapel Cemetery, in Woodcock Valley, Huntingdon county. The other day the body was exhumed to Wiliiamsport for reinterment. When the coffin was reached by the diggers they discovered that it had sprung at the joints, and out of the crevices the thediair on the skull protruded in all directions. On opening the casket the hair on the head was found to measure eighteen inches, the whiskers eight inches, and tiie growth on the breast six .inche.-. notwithstanding the body had been cleanly shayed when prepared for burial. A similar instance occur red in 1882 at the Cassville Cemetery, fitteen miles from here. Upon exhum ing the remains of Jacob Cresswell, the skeleton, which had been buried for ten years .had hair on it ten or twelve inch es in length and as firm as during life. "Oh! yes," said madam, after the usual domestic racket had got itself well under way, "oh yes, you gentlemen want your wives to be angels!" J "Not at all," replied Mr.Duesnberry, wiping the dish water from his head aud face, "not at all, but we want them to be ladies." Aud then the row began all over again. Tricks on the Track. Danger from whioh Engineers Save the Publio and Themselves. | From The Railway Review.] One who is accustomed to railway traveling can scarcely realize how much he is dependent for safety upon the engineer. Added to the responsi bility of their station, engineers are also ii constant danger of accidents caused by the tricks of jealous rivals. This rivalry, it is said, sometimes prompts to the doing of utterly mean tricks. A Nicklo Plato engineer after his very first trip was laid off because he had "cut out" all the bearings of his engine. He wat> reinstated, how ever, alter he proved that some rival had filled his oiling can with emery. Another new engineer was suspected for burning out the Hues of his boiler. Through grief at the loss of his posi tion he died, and then a conscience stricken rival confessed that he had put oil in the tank so that it foamed and showed water at the top gauge when in reality there was scarcely a quart in the boiler ! These intense jealousies, together with the terrible anxiety incident to their work, has a terribly straining ef tect on the nerve, and statistics tell us that, tLough Locomotive Engineers may look strong and vigorous, they are not all a hearty class. Ex-Cbiet Engineer A. S Hampton, Indianapo lis, Ind., (Div. 143) was one of those apparently hearty men, but he says : "The anxiety, strain and jolting came near finishing me." The Locomotive Engineers' Broth erhood has 17,000 members and 240 divisions. Its headquarters is in Cleveland, Ohio, where* Chief Engin eer Arthur tor twenty years has ex ercised almost dictatorial sway. It was organized in August, 1863, by the employes of the Michigan Cen tral. It has given nearly two million dollars to the widows and orphans of deceased members. Smith Had Misjudged Her. There were half a dozen of them hold ing down as many chairs in a suburban drug store the other evening, when the talk changed to .tramps, thieves and burglais, and Smith said: 'Well, now, but I'd like to try an ex periment. lam a little skittish about these desperadoes, and Mrs. Smith knows it and takes advantage to brag about ber own courage. She says she'd iust like to find a tramp on the door step who refused to dust when she ordered him to. 'Well?' asked one. 'Well, suppose oue of you rig up and go to the frontdoor and demand some thing to eat, and be mighty impudent about it. It will give her a scare and stop her bragging.' The crowd fell in with the idea and one oi the men donned an old hat and coat and fixed up as a tramp. Ten min utes later he was knocking at the side door, while Smith and his friends were posted across the street. It wasn't over two minutes after the tramp's first knock before he come out of the yard. He came over the fence. He was in such a hurry that he rau thirty rods before he could bring up. When Smith and the others reached him he had his hat off and was feeling of his head and gritting his teeth to keep back a groan. 'Well' said Smith, 'what did you do? 'Told her I wanted a hot supper p. d. q.' 'And what did she say?' 'She asked whether I would have bone turkey or frlcassed chicken, and while I was trying to make uu my mind she kicked me on the shiu, struck me on the head with a club, and pushed me off the steps all at the same time,' Andeveiyone of the group looked back and saw MlS.Smith on the walk in front of the house, apparently waiting for somebody's return, and each man gasped out: 'Well, I'll be kazooed 1' BRIEF AND TO THE POINT. "Been to Washington?" "Yes." "See Cleveland?" "Yes." "Did he 'point you ?" "Yes." "What to?" "Door." ♦Did you see White strike Browa?' 'Can't be buie of it. The only thing I'm sure of, mister lawyer, is that my old woman came out with a pail of hot water aud licked the hull crowd and had over two quarts left fur next time.' L > SUBSCRIBE for the JOURNAL. Terms, SIOO per Year, in Advance. Rules for Health. The Philadelphia board of health have issued these hints in pamphlet form for distribution : "Thorough ventilation of dwellings is essential to the health of the occu pants. strict cleanliness in youi person and clothing. Bathe dai ly, if you have the convenience ; if not, wasli freely with cold water erery day. Change your undergarments daily, or as frequently as your circumstances will admit. Be moral, regular in your habits of life. meal, exercise and sleep. Be careful to dress comfortable tor the season, avoid the night air as much as possible, and when thus exposed put on an extra garment, and do not go in to the night air when in a state of per spiration. Be careful to avoid the use of alcoholic drinks. Do not suppose that their use will prevent Ihe recur rence of disease. On the other hand, those who indulgj in the custom are always fair subjects for disease, and when attacked the intemperate are particularly in a condition to oiTer f. e* ble resistance. •'Live temperately, live regulaily, avoid all excesses in eating crude, raw and indigestible food, especially cab bage,salad,cucumbers and unripe fruit. A greater safety will be secured by boiliug all water used for drinking pur poses. Partake of well-cooked beef ana mutton, rice well boihd, and a void pastry and laxative fruit. Take your meals at regular seasons, neither abstaining too long at a time nor in dulging too frequently. An overloaded stomach is as much io be dreaded as an empty one. Avoid bodily fatigue and mental exhaustion. Let all exciting causes be avoided. If you impress or impair the vital forces it is prejudicial to health. By excitement or violent exercise you increase the susceptibility of the system to disease. "During the prevalence of cholera do not neglect even the slightest diarrheal, no matter bow painless at Brst." Dr. Blister Gets Mad. Kosciusko M urpby will not send fo* Dr. Blister in case of sickness. Dr. Blister was bragging about bis profess ion and complaining that it was not properly appreciated. "That's so ; I don't tbink the press treats you doctors right," said Mur phy. "You are correct, sir. We get all manner of abuse from these would- be humorists of the press. Almost every paper contain# some slur at the doc torn." "It is not tbe editor's sins of com misssion as much as it is his sins of o mission that lam alluding to now. I refer to the outrageous manner in which you are systematically neglect ed." "Neglected 1" "Yes, neglected. When a man is married the newspapers invariably give tbe name of tbe clergyman who per forms the ceremony, but when be dies the name of the doctor who attends him is usually omitted in tbe obituary notice. The doctor does as much to facilitate things as the preacher, so I don't see why he is snubbed in tbat way."—Texas Siftings. THERE WAS a case of assault and bat tery before one of the justices the other day, and a witness with a black eve, several strips of eourt plaster across bis nose and one ear badly lopped over, was asked by the defendant's lawyer if he saw Brown strike White. 'Can't say as I did, he replied. 'Did you see the whole affair ?' 'Mostly.' 'Well, how was it?' •Well, Smith and me sot on the rea per talkin' evolution. Jones and Green sot on the grass talkin'religion. Brown and White sot by the edge of the straw stack disputin on politics. Three or four boys was in the barn gettiu' up a dog fight.' 'Yes—go on.' 'Fust I know'd, somebody called somebody else a liar. Next I know'd evolution, religion, politics and fighting dogs was a-rolling over each other on the grass, and every man kicking and biting and bitting away for all he wus wufch.' 'But did you see Brown strike White?' 'Can't say as I did ' The Depth of It. "How deep is that hole?" a9ked an anxious inquirer of a laborer digging a well. "Don't know; never measured it,'! was the none-of-your-business style of reply. "How far would I go if I should fall in?" was the next question. "To the bottom, I reckon, if you're heavy enough to sink," and the ques . tioner didn't pursue his investigations. NO. 41. NEWSPAPER LAWS If subscribers order the dtaeosfchwattftu of newspapers, the publishers may continue to send them until alf arrearages are paid. Jf subscribers refuse or neslect to take Iheir tie wspapers from the office to which they are sent they are held responsible until they have set tied the bills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers move toother places without In forming the publisher, and the newspapers are sent to the former place, they are responsible. ALL- J ADVERTISING* RATES. 1 wk. l mo. I S mo*. 6 mo*. 1 yen 1 square $ 200 S4OO $5 00 $6 00 SBOO Wcehtmn 400 6 001 10 00 15 00 18 00 % " 700 10 00 15 00 9000 40 CM 1 M kIOOO lft 00 1 26 00 46 00 75 00 One lnoh makes a square. Administrators and Executors' Notices JKLSOI Transient uiver tlsements Hnil locals 10 cents per Hue for firs Insertion and 5 cents pr line for each addition al Insertion Arbor Day in the Schools. (Circular to Superintendents.) DEPARTMENT or PUBLIC INSTRUC TION, HARRISBURQ, Sept. 28, 1885. DEAR SIR : The general obser vance of Arbor Day on April 16, in response to the proclamation of His Excellency, Governor Pattison, was most gratifying. Many thousand trees were planted, whose grateful shade and luscious frnit will add enjoyment to the lives of tens of thousands in years to come. In some parts of the State, howev er, the ground was atill frozen or oth erwise in unfit condition for the plant ing of trees, while in many localities the schools had already closed. That the schools of the entire State of Penusylvania may all have opportu nity to begin this good work during the current year, we name Thursday, October 29, proximo, as a School Ar bor Day, on which Shade Trees, Shrubs, Vines, Ac., shall be planted by schools upon their school-grounds under the general direction and en couragement of Boards of Directors, Superintendents, and Teachers ; on which also Fruit Trees, Shade Trees, Ac., shall be planted about their homes by the individual pupils—boys and girls—by the teachers, and by all others who may be sufficiently inter ested in this important work. The following suggestions from the Arbor Da/ circular of March 3*l are equally in order for this Fall obser vance of the day : "Select mainly such trees for plant ing ou school grounds as grow well in your immediate vicinity—maple, hick ory, walnut, sweet-gum, dogwood, but ton wood, ash, bass-wood or linden, bircb, beech, locust, willows, tulip trees, pines, larches, firs,and others too numerous to mention. For shrubbery and vines : Mock-orange, spireas, the burning bush, deutzia, lilacs, wigelia, hardy roses, honeysuckles, Virginia creeper, wistaria, the tecoma, and oth ers, which will give variety and greatly increase the attractiveness of tbe school-building and its surroundings of grass plot and greenery. "As to the exercises of Arbor Day, these may be quite informal, if tbat shall seem best—tbe essentlsi purpose being the planting of Trees, Shrubs snd Vines. But it will be eminently prop er, where arrangements can readily be made for a formal programme, to make this also a prominent feature. The reading of a selection from the Bible, prayer by a clergyman of tbe neighbor hood, readings, recitations and songs by the pupils, an address by the teach er or other citizsn of tbe district inter ested in the work of tbe day,wtl! Afford variety and serve to render tbe occa sion more interesting and impressive. "Let every teacher organize his school for tbe work, and,in consuiation with the Directors, have tbe grounds properly prepared, and boles ready for Trees, and Shrubs, and Flowers, and Vines. Solicit the co-operation of the whole neighborhood. Should tbe day appointed prove inclement and unfit for tbe work, postpone it until the follow ing Saturday. How the superintend ent may be best able to communicate instructions to all bis teachers most be left to his own good judgement. We would suggest the use of tbe local press as far as possible." For additional suggestions as to planting and programmes for tbe day, see issues of the Pennsylvania School Journal for March, April, and May, 1885. It is hoped that the encouragement of tree planting by indivividual pu pils, as well as by schools in their collective capacity with proper school exercises—in a word, How to render most effective the observance of Ar bor Day by the schools—may find a place on the programme of every County Institute held in Pennsylva nia during the present season. It is suggested also, in this connection, that not less than two hours of the time of the Institute be given to the consideration of this very practical educational topic, in such manner as, in the discretion of the Superintend ent, shall seem best. In order that the State Superintendent may have the proper data from which to make definite report of the results of Arbo Day work for the year, he will be pleased to receive by December 1 from each County, City, and Borough Su perintendent a statement approxima ting as closely as possibe the number of trees, Ac., planted within his juris diction at any time during the year as a result of the appointment of the day. Very respectfully, E. E. HIGBEE, Supt. Public Instruction.