The Millheim Journal, PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY IJ. iL. Office in the New Journal Building, Penn St.,nearHartman's foundry. SI.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OB $1.25 IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCE. Acceptable Correspondence Solicited Address letters to MILLHEIM JOURNAL. 7? T r S TXE S S Col 11 nS■ IIABTEU, Auctioneer, MILLIIEIM, PA. "J" B. STOVER, Auctioneer, Madisonburg, Pa. 11. RKIFSN YDER, Auctioneer, MILLIIEIM, PA. J W. LOSE, Auctioneer, MILLIIEIM, PA. JL) R JOHN FIIAHIE Practical Dentist, Office opposite the Methodist Church. MAIN-STREET, MILLIIEIM PA. Ty i - ge °- L lee Physician A- Surgeon, MADISONBURG, PA. Office opposite the Public School House. ■YY # R. ARD, M. D., WOODWARD, PA O. DEININGER, Notary-Public, Journal office, Penn St., Millheim, Pa. and other legal papers written and acknowledged at moderate charges. J. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Havinq had many years' of experience? the public can expect the best work and most modern accommodations. Shop next door to Kauffman's Store. MAIN STREET, MILLIIEIM, PA. Q_EORGE L. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Corner Main & North streets, 2nd floor, Millheim, Pa. Shaving, Haircutting, Sharapooning, Dying, &c. done in the most satisfac tory manner. Jno.H. Orvls. C. M. Bower. Ellis L.Orvis QRYIS, BOWER & ORVIS, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA., Office in Woodings Building. D. H. Hastings. W. F. Keeder. JJASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east of the office ocupied by the late firm of Yocum Hastings. J C. MEYER, Attorney-at-Law, BELLEFONTE PA. At the Office of Ex-Judge Hoy. C. HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law BELLEFONTE, PA. Practices in all the courts of Centre county Special attention to Collections. Consultations in German or English. J A. Beaver. J- AV. Gepliart. "JGEAVER & GEPIIART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street. North of Ilich Street JGROCKERHOFF HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST., BELLEFONTE, PA. C, G. McMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. Free Buss to and from all trains. Special lates to witnesses and jurors. QUMMINS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev erything done to make guests comfortable. Ratesmodera'* tronage respectfully solici ted 5-ly ~£RVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel in the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS LOCK HAYEK, PA. S. W OODS~CALiD WELL PROPRIETOR. Good sameple rooms for commercial Travel ers on first door. R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 01. TIE sun IIIUTOB PURELY VEGETABLE. Are You Bilious? The KegnLlior nn'tr fails to cure. I most cheerfully recommend it to all who suffer from Bilious Attacks or any Disease caused by a dis arranged state of the Liver. KANSAS CITY,MO. W. R. BERNARD. Do You Want Good Digestion ? I suffered intensely with Full Si,'mar ft. Head ache, etc. A neighbor, who had taken Simmons Liver Regulator, told me it was a sure cure for my trouble. The first dose 1 took relieved me very much, and in one week's time I was as strong and hearty as ever 1 was. it is the bust medicine / rrer too* for Dysbefsia. RICHMOND, Va. H. C. CRBNSHAW. Do You Suffer from Constipation ? Testimony of HIRAM WARMRR, Chief Justice of Ga.: *' 1 have used Simmons Liver Regulator for Constipation of my Bowels, caused by a temporary Derangement of the Liver, for the last three or four years, and always svith decided benefit." Have You Malaria? I have had experience with Simmons l iver Regu lator since 1865, and regard it as the greatest medicine of the times for diseases peculiar to malarial regions. So good a medicine deserves universal commendation. REV M B. WHARTON, Cor. Scc'y Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. I THERE IS BUT ONE SIMMONS \ LIVER REGULATOR I See that you get the genuine, with the red Z on front of Wrapper, prepared only by J. H. ZE9LIN & CO., SOLE PROPRIETORS, PHILADELPHIA, PA. ■ Behind the Counter. 'My first day at the store !' said Car ry Walliugford, with a curious thrill through her, as if an ice cold stream were trickling down the line of her spi nal column. 'Oh,I wish I were a rich girl, and didn't have to work ?' 'Work is honorable, my child, said old Uncle Wolsey, who, with his spec tacles on his nose was trying to spell through the illegible paragraphs of the daily paper, mutterfng to himself that 'either they didn't print as good as they used to, or else his old eyesight was failiug.' 'Yes, I know,' fluttered Carry ; 'but —but I'm very willing that someone else should have the honor this time.' Uncle Wolsey turned his glasses with mild reproach upon his niece's pink and white balsam of a face. 'I wish I could be as brave as you, Uncle Wolsey !' said Carry, as she tied the crimson strings of her little capote under her round chin. Old Wolsey Wallirgf.ud had shelter ed his little pet lamb by bis health fold all her lifetime until now. lie was a jeweler by trade, and lie had kept bis unpretending store open as long as possible. But the tide of fashion went by, and left bira stranded on the un frequented side-street, where the sign of the tarnished silver watch attracted no further Attention. And one day, when he had set all day in the window with his magnify ing-glass,woi king at some impossible old time piece, whose owner had died and never called for it, twilight crept dark ly over his eyesight and his heart. lie laid down the tools. 'All day long.' said he, 'and neyer a customer I Well-a-day ! it is time for the old man to shut up his store at last.' lie went out and put up the wooden shutters, with a heart that was heavier than they, and from that time thence forward the wooden imitation of the silver watcn swung no longer oyer the door. Uncle Wolsey had been conquered in life's battle, and had laid d >wn his arms, and now it was that Carry re luctantly threw herself into the breach. llow could she let the dear old man starve ? And Mr. Pickrell's fancy and dry goods store on Sixth avenue was really a very creditable establish ment, and Mrs. Pickrell herself had promised, from the scveie heights of the cashier's desk,to 'keep an eye' upon old Mr. Wallingfaid's niece, and if her services preyed desirable, there was no sort of doubt but that her sa'ary would be ii creased in time. So Carry bultone.l up her sack, drew on her neat lisle tin end gloves and took the little basket, in which, wrapped in a napkin, was packed her lunch of ap ple-pie ai.d ch°ese, and went forth to meet her new career, little reckoning how hi ief it was to be. At Grst it was not very pleaaant. The store was small and stuffy, with gorgeous piles of cretonne and chintz at the door, and festoons of laces, silk handkerchiefs and colored jerseys flap ping against the head of the girls be hind the counter, of whom there were three besides Carry—bold, high-yoiced damsels, who wore their hair down oyer the bridge of their noses and gig gled incessantly. Customers came and went, char ge was made and paper parcels expedi tiously wrapped up.. Mr Pickrell walked the floor with his hands in his pockets, ordered away small girls whose no.-es were flattened 100 persistently against the windows outside, and smiled beamingly on old MILLHEIM, I'A THURSDAY, JANUARY 27.. 1887. ladies who stopped to examine the quality of the chintzes and flannel suitings. Mrs. Pickrell reprimanded the young women with the banged hair for gig gling too loud when there were custo mers in the store, and called to Carry to 'mind what she was about' when a box of ribbons fell off the counter upon the floor. Carry grew yery weary, her head be gan to ache, and she wondered how* long it would be before 'aliutting-up time.' At last a tall, brown-faced young man came in, wearing a foreign-look ing Conalble. ADVERTISING RATBB. 1 wk. t mo. 13 mos. 6 mos. 1 yea' 1 square $2 00 S4OO $ 500 $ 600 SBOO K " 700 1000 1500 3000 4006 1 " 1000 1600 | 2500 4500 TSOO One Inch makes a square. Administrators and Executors' Notices $2.50. Transient adver tisements and locals 10 cents per line for flrst Insertion and 5 cents per line for each addition al Insertion* panic started, remained to help and protect his wife. So the old man was brushed down by the rushing crowd and stamped to death. Hia wife's body lay opposite. The womao was in the prime of life aod wore brightly colored clothes and quantities of jewel ry. Beside her lay a little boy, whose knickerbockers and stockings were torn to shreds. Gospel Without Cost. A venerable Kentuckian told "THI INTERIOR" the following story : A wealthy planter, a man of education, an eloquent speaker, and a successful politician, was converted. He wanted to do good. His neighbors were ir religious, and he felt that his first du ty was to them. He buiit a commo dious church, put an organ in it, and hired an organist. He obtained a li cense to preach, and prepared some excellent sermons. When the house was ready, he sent his servants all over the neighborhood and invited everybody to come to church at 11 o'clock next Sunday. The people came and listened. At the close of the seryice the preacher thanked them for coming, and invited tbem to come again next Sunday. On Saturday be sent his servants out to remind them of the Sab bath service. He did this year after year, paying all expenses himself, not taking collections from anybody or anything, for he wanted to convince the people that the gospel was free—'without money and with out price.' 'And what was the result ?' was asked. Oh, he preached for twenty years, and there wasn't a single conversion in all that time ! People are not likely to prize very highly that which costs them nothing. If you want to get a man into the church, begin by getting him to do something for it. If you want to de velop the piety of a church, train its members to work and to give. Washington's Birthplace. There is scarcely a sign now of the house in which Washington was born, on the lower Rappahannok, nor any more of the other houses where he passed his boyhood, over, against Fredericksburg, aod in the landscape which must have been known to onr soldiers who fought atChancellorville. Both these houses were of the old Virginia stamp—big roomy piles of lumber, with long, sloping bent roof in the rear, and two huge chimneys slapped against the exterior walls at either end. It was at the home in Stafford county must have happened that episode of the cherry tree ; and it was there, too, happened [alter his father's death] that other better au thenticated incident of the boy's sub jugation of a young thoroughbred colt which nobody could master ; and yet this intreped lad known as George Washington, and known for many athletic feats even as a boy, did mas ter the brute, and so enraged him by the mastership that the poor animal, in a frenzy of protesting plunges, died under the very seat of the boy master. This martyr to young Washington's iron resolve was a great pet of his mother's, under whose special guid ance the fatherless lad had now come; and there may have been a bone to pick between them regarding the colt; but never, then or thereafter, any real breach in their mutual regard or love, —"American Agriculturist." Politeness of Great Men. Truly great'men are polite by instinct to their inferiors. It is one element of their 'greatness to be thoughtful for others. The greatest men in the world have been noted for their politeness. Indeed, many have owed their greatness mainly to their.popular manners, which induc ed the people whom they pleased to give them an opportunity to show their power. Many years ago the errand boy em ployed by a publishing house in a great city was sent to procure from Edward Eyerett the proof-sheets' of a book he had been examining. The boy entered the vast library, lined from floor to ceiling with books, in fear and trem. bling. He stood in awe of this famous man, and dreaded to meet him. But Mr. Everett, turning from the desk where he was writing, received the lad with reassuring courtesy, bade him sit down, chatted kindlv as he looked for the proof-sheets, ana asked : "Shall I put. a paper ground them for you ?' as politely as if his visitor were the president. The boy departed in a very comfort able state of mind. He had been rais ed in his own esteem by Mr. Everett's kindness, and he has never forgotten the lesson it taught him.