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Haireutting, Shanapooningf, Dying, Ac. done in the most satisfac tory mauner. Jno.H. Orvis. C. M. Bower. Ellis L.Orvis QRVIS, BOWER & ORVIS, Attorneys-at-Law. BELLEFONTE, PA., Office In Wood lugs Building. D. H. Hastings. W. F. Reeder. TJASTINGS & REEDER, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Allegheny Street, two doors east or the office ocupied by the late firm ol Yocum * Hastings. J U. MEYER, Attorney-at-Law, BELLEFONTE PA. At the Office of Ex-Judge Hoy. C. HEINLE, Attorncy-at-l-aw BELLEFONTE,VP A. Practices in all the courts of Centie county Special attention to Collections. Consultations In German or English. J A.Beaver. J.W.Gephart. JGEAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street. North of Hlh Street JGROCKERH OFF 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. QUMMINS HOUSE, ] BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev erything done to make guests comfortable. Ratesmoderat* tronage respectfully solici ted s ' ly TRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel In the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS LOCK HAVEN, PA. S.WOODS CALDWELL PROPRIETOR. Good sameple rooms lor|commercial Trave.- ttrs on first floor. R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 61. FJIBLTLESS FIMILY MEOIGIRE "I have used Simmons Liver Regulator for many years, hav ing made it my only Family Medicine. My mother before me was very partial to it. It Is a safe, good and reliable medi cine for any disorder of the system, and if used in time is a great preventive of sickness. I often recommend it to my lYiends, and shall continue to do so. "Rev. James M. Rollins, 'Tastor M. E.Church, So. Fairfield, Va." TIME AND DOCTORS' BILLS SAVED by ahrayH keeping Simmons Liver Regulator in the house. "I have found Simmons Liver Regulator the best family med icine I ever used for anything that may happen, have used it in Indigestion, (\>lie, Diarrhcra, Itiliousness, and found it to re lieve immediately. After eat ing a hearty supper, if, on going to bed. I take about a teaspoon ful, 1 never feel the effects of the supper eaten. "OVID G. SPARKS, "Ex-Mayor Macon, Ga." ~ONLY GENUINE"** Has our Z Stamp on front of Wrapper. J. H. Zeilin & Co., Sofo Proprietors, **rice, 81.00. PHILADELPHIA, PA. LOUIE AND I. If I had been the least bit pretty I shouldn't have been surprised at it all ; or if I had even been bright and witty'; but such a little simple simpleton as I ? I never in all my life had the least expectation of lovers, or of any sort of admiring glances ; and I never had any. And sometimes mother used to say she guessed it was just as well ; for if she had to dress two girls out for their pretty looks, as she did one. it would have beggared her. Mother on ly had a little money.just barely enough to live on, and some of the principal going every year ; but it wouldn't have been in human nature, haying a daugh ter as pretty as Louie, not to want her to nave His best tiiui would act vtt pencil Ocuutjr ; allU IOT mj l'^ 1 lT I never grudged Louie a rose or a rib bou. I couldn't have worn them ; for I was far ioo proud to try to do what nature hadn't, or to pretend I thought such things became me ; and I liked my print dresses and plain collars bet ter for myself. But when Louie was dressed in her muslin 3 till she looked like one of the old fashioned blush roses, so white without and so delicately flushed with in, her lovely yellow hair breaking out in sunny curls all over her head, and she all radiant, as you might say, with her skin, her teeth, her great blue, beaming eves—then I used to like to look at her as much as any of her loy ers did, look at her as I would at any lovely picture ; and she always turned from her gayest scene, the dear little person, to give her sweetest smile to me. So when'. Dennis began all at once to come to our house, as if he had just seen Louie for the first time in his life, I was only delighted. For every one that knew him loved and honored Dennis Reed, who was the soul of all integrity; and if he wasn't a beauty himself, lie was a stalwart son of Saul, and had the nicest little place in the region, a cot- ! tage up a lane, oyer looking the river, and with a woods behind its orchard and across the railway cut to keep off the east wind, if the east wind could eyer blow in that sunny nook, with a j garden spot made and blooming in every cranny of the rocks around it. But my first thought was none of that, only that I liked Dennis Reed so much I liked to have him feel how lovely Louie was ; I liked to have him come to see her ; I liked to think her as s;ife with such a sweet, strong soul as I fancied his to be and last of all, I thought how pleasant was the home he had to givo her, and it pleased me to place Louie there, in my thoughts, a mong all the rocks and flowers, looking out upon the river. Not that it made any odds to Dennis 1 what I thought about it all. I doubt if in those days he knew any more than that I existed, going his happy way with his head in the clouds, and eyes and heart only for his love. So he married her and took her away, and a happier nest of singing birds than that in the cottage among the rocks and flowers could nowhere have been found, unless it were in my own heart, at the sight of the happiness there. But then mother fell sick, and it took all my time to care for her ; and I couldn't go up to Louie's very often, for I had every thing to do at home and was tired out by nightfall and of ten up half the night besides. Louie couldD't very well come down often and if she had come she wouldn't have MILLIIEIM, PA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10., 1887. known what to do. Poor mother ! Once, I remember, she said to me, "I don't know but its more satisfactory to have one daughter plain than anything else." And it made my heart bound. And then I reproached myself for my seltishness in caring to hear her say that over Louie's head, as it were ; hut I remember it long afterward, and sometimes it used to give me a throb of joy when everything was dreary and I seemed to be alone In the world. For mother died presently. And then it turned out that she had been living on her little property more than we had dreamed, and Louie's outfit and her long illness and hills had used up her money. And when everything was paid, there was only enough left for me to hire one room as a sort of refuge when I came home at night from work ing at my trade,for 1 had quite a knack at dressmaking. I did not put on mourning ; for I was glad that moth er was out of pain, and I was glad that she was gone before she knew that all the property was gone, and she, with her proud spirit, would have had to be dependent. But Louie did—and oh ! what a beauty she was, with her black crapes falling around her, so waxy, fair and rosy and tiansparent ! Of course she didn't miss mother the way 1 did. How could she, with Dennis waiting on her every wish ? And she didn't seem to want anybody hut Dennis, either ; so I didn't see a great deal of her, only when she had something new to make up, or something old to alter over ; and then she and Dennis weie out, most of the time, strolling along the rocks or planting a new flower gar dener she was going to meet him com ing from his work or running into the next neighbor's across the pasture, and I had almost nothing of her, except at trying-on times. And I will confess that trying-on times were trying times, and no wonder. For if you had such a perfect little figure as Louie had, you would want your dress to look as if you had been melted and poured into it, too. I used to wonder at Louie then, a little somet'me ; not for not sitting at home sewing and helping me in the work, because you might as well have asked a humming bird to do that : hut j tnkinjj more interest in the IlUli i u • • — "IB" •***•' * ' And I used to bo atraid that if I were Dennis, and there were boles in my socks, and half the buttons oil my clothes, and my coat and hat never brushed, and I came home and found nothing for dinner—not even the cloth laid—and my wife off enjoying herself , somewhere else, and the dust every where so that I could write my name, that I shouldn't feel recompensed for all that by having my wife stroll round hanging on my arm, looking as pretty as a new blown rose. And yet, al though the house must often have been thoroughly uncomfortable to Dennis,he never gave a sign that it was not Para dise itself ; and I came to the conclu sion that he didn't really miss those other things, and was satisfied with what he had. I used to go up in the Eden pome- i times, without being sent for, and i mend up everything, and put the whole house straight ; but I couldn't go so , very often, on account of my work ; and, besides, I had a sensation of in truding where two people wanted but each other. But at last the babies came ; and then I had to go. And Louie was wild with delight, and insisted on having them laid on the pillow close to her j cheek, and talked and laughed and cooed and cried to them with such glit tering eyes and dazzling color in her face, and said it was all she wanted, even if she were in Heaven to morrow! "But your husband, Louie !" I ex claimed. "Oh ! husbands are all very well." she said. "But I haven't been such an ! awfully good wife. You'd have made Dennis a great deal better wife, dear, for the matter of that. But my little ; sons ! Oh ! I know I could be a good mother !" j She was in Ileaven to-morrow, the dear little innocent soul, and one of the | babies went with her. j I was glad that the little baby went too. For I remember that she had said then she would have all she want ed ; because it troubled me to think that, for all his grief to-day, Dennis wouldn't be like any other man in the world, if he didn't marry to-morrow ; and the other wife would haye the long life with him, and become dearer and dearer, and Louie would fade into just a beautiful dream ; and, when the next life came, it would be the dear wife of the long continuing time that would be all alone if it wasn't for the baby, and . she had said that the baby was enough. Of course all this was only a sort of I flash through my consciousness, not i any deliberate thought. Nobody could ; have thought about anything of the > kind who saw Dennis' grief. He was i all beside himself. I don't like to tell i you what he said and did ; 1 was half A PAPER FOR TIIE ifflME CIRCLE afraid sometimes that a thunderbolt would fall and destroy him ; and then again I was afiaid that he would destroy himself. I don't know how we ever contiiyed to get him to let Louie he placed in her casket, and I thought lie would jump into the very grave itself. But at last that agonizing time, every moment of which knows how to give a fresh stab, was over, and the worse time came of tho absence and silence, and wild, vain, Litter longing. And Dennis couM'nt look at the baby. "Take it away 1" he said. "It killed her 1" So I look him into my own room, and cuddled hi in close to my heart every night, and 6very nighc, and every morning he awoke me with his laughing and gurgling and crowing, playing with the shadows of the dan cing leaves across the bed and he had Louie's yellow hair and rosy cheek and perfect features, her great, longing blue eyes and Dennis' black eyebrows ; and every day he grew dearer and dear er, soul more inexpressibly dear, and I Baid to myself that, much as I missed poor Louie, here had been made up to me all I had failed of in my life ; for this cnild was to take the place to me of mother and sister and husband and child altogether. And the dearer he grew, the more angry I became with Dennis for his indifference ; and one day, when the boy was about four months old, I said to Dennis : "I think you had better let old Nan cy come in again and do your chores, the way she used to do, and I will go away and take the baby " "Take the baby ?" "Certainly," I said. "You can't bear the sight of him, aut! I love him. And then if you ever marry again" "I shall never marry again," he said, the gloom settling in his eyes. "I don't believe you will I" l ex claimed. "I don't believe there's the woman living who will ever take such an unnatural, wicked father for her husband ! Louie's own child, too, and tne very image of her. I wonder what she'd think of you !" And I snatched the baby up out of the cradle, and ran from the room, lesi I should break out i crying before his face. The next afternoon when Dennis Mm iiiton ; clothes, and came down to where 1 stood in the side door with the baby in my arms,look ing at the sunset. And he stooned to take the child; and the little darling turned, with a low, frightened cry, and hid his face in my neck. And then, all at once the tears that I had not seen Dennis cry iu all this time, gushed out,and he put his arms around the child, who began to scream with terror, and as I half turned and main tained my own hold, he took him for cibly away from me. "Let go !'' he said, in his low half smothered tone. "He's my child 1" "I supppose he is !" I cried. "By some wicked form of 1 aw, the cruel law that men made for men. But you don't deserve him. You helped him to life, but I should like to know how much life lie would have now, if it had rested with you V" I never was so angry. I thought I would take my things and co away that moment. But how could I leave the baby ? His little screams were torturing me then. I sat down on the doorstone and flung my apron over my head, and put my thumbs in my ears, and wished the baby and I were dead along with Louie. Perhaps, it was an hour afterward when I looked up, and there was Den his coming through the orchard with the baby, and the boy was crowing and jumping and catching at the bending boughs, and catching at his father's great mustache, and rubbing bis little wet lips all oyer Dennis' face, chirrup ing and joyous ; and I couldn't help it, L ran to meet them. "You s*e," sai l Dennis, as he let me have him back, "blood is thicker than water, after all." Oh I what a long journey I felt as if that baby had been on as I took him and could hardly haye done kissing him. "Come," said Dennis, laughing, "leave something of liini for me." It was the first time he had laughed since thechild was born. And the darling had gone a long journey—a journey in to the infinite depths of a father's heart. Well, after that, Dennis couldn't get home early enough in the afternoon, and it seemed as if he hated to go away in the morning, and Sundays ho had the baby in his arms from morning till night. And in the evening when I sat sewing on the little clothes, he would come and sit opposite, or where he could see how the work went on ; and he brought home all sorts of little im possible toys, and he talked and sang to him, and walked with him ; and the baby began to look out for his coming as much as I did. And all that, of course helped me a good deal in my work about the house, for I kept every- thing as line and orderly as a honey comb ; only, with the baby to tend and gee to, I sometimes had to sit up nights I to do it. "I shall call him Louis,for his moth er," said Dennis, one night. "Do you think you can bear it ?" I | asked. "To hear him called Louis V Yes. lie is Louie over again," said Dennis. And I couldn't tell you how pleasant life grew to be as we watched the child grow, unfolding like a rose. There was absolutely a sort of rivalry between us presently as to who should discover his first tooth. When he took his first step, it was between Dennis' arms and mine,as we both sat on the floor. And when he spoke his first word, how we listened to learn if it were Dennis' name or mine. The day wasn't long enough to watch his dear loveliness in. And I think Dennis was envious ot me for having him nights ; but he could not help that. I never shall forget, though, the night the baby had the croup, and we both hung over him. fearing every breath would lie the last ; and, when ease came, how wo both broke down and cried together ; and as we looked out the window and saw the first flush of dawn, and the shining moon and the morning star glittering out of it with ineffable brightness. So time went on ; and 1 thought then it would not he easy to see how we could he tiappier ; for even the memory of Louie was softened into something that was hardly a grief to us in our love of her hoy, though sometimes I used to wonder if the little fellow that went with her was as sweet as the one that staid with us. Hut when the dear child was about 3 years old. there came a snake into E den. A snake ? A whole nest of them ! It seemed as if every girl in the whole village had just found out what a rare and charming person I was, and how pleasant it was late after noons up where I lived, and how nice it was to run up evenings to see me. And sometimes Dennis would have to go home with the.n ; and sometimes he wouldn't, hut just went out the other way, and never came home till they'd nuja , I couldn't say why it worried me—l '■ only knew it did. And I used to take the hoy and go off by myself and cry.! For ot course, sooner or later, Dennis would marry some one of those terrible girls; he couldn't help himself ; it would come about after a while as nat urally as water runs dowu hill. And then there would be a stepmoth er for my hoy and Ileaven only knew what would bpcome of him. And what would become of me ? And by this I gave on t completely. I should see Dennis no more. No more of that dear voice and presence, and cheery way of his. And all at once it came over me, in a flash of hor ror and shame, what was the matter with me ; and then I felt that happen what would, I really must go away. Ilut I couldn't go and leave the boy ; and there I was. And I grew pale and could eat nothing, and was stiller and stiller every day. I could as soon have , talked Hebrew as liaye smiled. But one day I had the little fellow asleep in his morning nap, which he had not quite outgrown, although it was getting to he short and fitful ; and, thinking that Dennis was there to see, or knowing he was, and thinking noth ing, I went out by myself, down the field by the railroad cut ; for there was an app'e tree there where I gathered the windfalls, and I liked, too, to sit on the bank and see the train dash in the cut. 1 had my apron full of apples,and as I came back, I stood loitering a mo ment or so on the steep bank, bearing a train coming, and liked all the rush and roar and rattle that seemed to snatch me out of myself, as if it told of away to somewhere, some distant re gion where my trouble might be forgot ten; and all at once another sound from that of the approaching train caught my ear, a glad, gaj shouting and cry ing. I turned and looked to the right and left, a little confused, for it was the child's voice. And, turning back suddenly, I saw him ; and there, at the foot of the bank, in the very centre of' the railway track stood the little fellow, who had crept from his bed and ran after me, and been beguiled down the slope by some blossoms that lie saw there—there, in the centre of the track he stood, waying his little hands and shouting to the coming train. There was not a half minute time, it seemed ; but in less time I was down there, and was just grasping the child when my foot slipped, and I fell with him in my arms, and the thunder was in my ears and the hot breath in my face, and I knew that was the end. No ; it was only the beginning of the end. When I knew anything more I was lying on the bank in Dennis's anus; | for he had come bounding after the boy, I and had snatched us both out of dan ger as the engine, like a wild dragon, > whizzed and roared and thundered by, Terms, SI.OO per Year, in Advance. and he was holding me as it' he would never let me go. And he never has let me go. "Oh I" he cried, "I found out in that second what life would be to me without you, dear; something I couldn't bear a day." And 1 only clung to him, too ashamed to let him see my face, too tired and weak to lift it. And so it is I that am the second wife, and the boy's mother. And I suppose everybody was surpris ed; hut nobody, as 1 told you, was half as much surprised as I.—HARRIET PRKSCOTT SPOFFOBD in the Independ- I en t. . Tsool\l\cc|oii]g. Peculiarities of a Woman Shown in Her Expense Aooounts. It is a touching sight to see a wo man begin to make up her expenses, having firmly resolved to put down every cent she spent, so as to find out how to economize and find out where all the money goes. Procuring a small book, she makes a due entry, and on Monday after the first Satur day in which her hukband brings home his pay she carefully tears the margin of a newspaper and with a blunt pencil strikes a trial balance something in this way.- John brought me home $48.49 and $1.43 I had is $49.93 and $1.09 I lent Mrs. Dixon is $50.93, but hold on, I ought not to enter that, because when she returns it it'll go down. That was $49 93, and what have I done with that ? Then she puts down the figures, leav ing out the items to save time—a pro cess that enables her to leave out the most of the items to where a round sum is involved, on the supposition that they have already been put down. As this : Six dollars and four teen cents for meat, and 10 cents for celery, and 10 cents on the new street car line, and a bad five cent piece 1 got in exchange, and $2.81 I paid the milkman—who owes me 19 cents— that's $3.00, and 15 cents at church, and tLe groceries—they were either $15.60 or $1G.50 I forget which, but I guess it must have been $15.60 for him a dime he would give me haifa dollar which would make even change and I couldn't, because the smallest I had was a quarter—and $2.75 for mending Kate's shoes, which is the last money that shoemaker ever gets from me, and 10 cents for celery—no, I did put that down. Finally she sums up her trial balance sheet, and finds that it loots up $64.28, which is about sls more than she had original ly. She goes over the list several times and checks it carefully, but all the items are correct, and she is just about iu despair when her good angel hints that there may be a possible mistake in addition. Acting upon the suggestion she foots up the col umn and fiuds that the total is $44.28 and that according to the principles of the arithmetic she ought to have $5.65. Then she counts her cash sev eral times, the result varying from $1.40 up to $1.97, but then she hap pily discovers that she has been mis taking a £2 gold piece for a cent, and remembers that she gave the baby a trade dollar to cut its gums with. On the whole she has come within 86 cents cf a balance, and that, she says, is close enough, and she enters in one line of her account book .♦ "Dr.—By household expenses," so much ; and is very happy till she remembers, ju3t before going to bed,that she has omit ted $2.75 for her husband's hat. A Ghastly Firepl aoe. A Southside physician has capped the climax of suggestions. He is something of an artist in modeling in clay, and after he got his office sup plied with natural gas he made a cast of a skull. The thing is horribly nat ural, even to the sutures across the skull,and one front tooth knocked out. This is set up in the grate in such a way that the bluish crimson flames of the turning gas steal through the eyes and nostrils and flicker playfully around the ghastly jaws. Little jet 3 of flame flash through between the sunken jaws and lighten up the bony countenance, heated to a white-red heat in a manner horribly suggestive of other fires, which are said to burn, but not consume. Indians Dying by the Score. WINNIPEG, Man., Feb. 2. —Indians at Lesser Slave Lake are dying from ■ starvation and pestilence. Over 150 died last month from measles, and the living are without fish and game. NO. 6- Pretty Polly. How a Smart Bird Exposed the Vanities of Sooiety Life. Apropos of parrots, the people who own them and are accustomed to their noise and contradiction are seldom disturbed by them, but it is far other wise with the unhappy visitor who encounters tbem. A lady on Jeffer son avenue who owes one of these siily pests was entertaining some call ers the other day, when Polly struck into the conversation from her place of ambush. One .'lady bad just re marked : 'So glad you were at home to-day, Mrs. ' 'That's a lie !' responded a hoarse voice. The visitors started, but as their hostess seemed not to notice it, resum ed the conversation. ' 'I saw Mr. and told him to—' 'Kiss me 1 kiss me ! screamed Polly. '—say that I would call goon.' 'You're another ! Shut up !' yelled the parrot. At this juncture the lady of the house observed bow disconcerted bee guests were, and, guessing at the > cause, dragged Polly into sight. The mischievous bird did not otter anoth er word until the ladies rose to leays when they were most affectionate and profuse in their farewells. Polly bal anced rapidly from one foot to the other, gave a series of smacks, and in a tone of complete disgust croaked: 'You make me sick !'— Detroit Free Press. AN EXCITING RIDE. A Doctor's Escape from What Ha Thinks Was an Attempt to Ktl) Him. * ' SLATINGTON, Pa., Feb. 3.— Last Monday night Dr. Joseph P. Eogle man, au ex-member of the legislature from Northampton county, who lives at Cherryville, five miles from here, went to Walnutport to see a patient. He started home at a late hour, and #BB*IB The doctor stopped his horse, and the person was soon sitting in the carriage beside him. In a short time the doctor discovered that bis companion was a man in female attire. In order to a void suspicion the doctor chatted pleas antly with the man, and dunng the conversation suddenly dropped h!a whip on the road. "I have just lost my whip," said the doctor. "Wont you please get it ? My horse is at times unmanageable, and I am afraid to leaye the carriage." Without SUB-. pecting the trick the man alighted to get the whip, at the same time saying : "Wait for me ; don't driye off." Once out of the clutches of the unknown the doctor soon bad the horse running at full speed and the man far in the rear. Just as the doctor was about to con gratulate himself on his escape he,found a lady's muff on the seat containing a loaded six-shooter, and a few minutes later met two more persons in female attire,both of whom gazed into fcis car riage as he approached them. The par ties separated-as he neared them, each taking a position on the sides of the road. Believing these people to be con federates of the man who got off after the whip, the doctor urged his horse, and was soon beyond their reach. The muff and revolver are still in the doc tor's possession. The doctor is of the opinion that the parties saw him drive to Walnutport in the morning and waited for him to return, either for the purpose of robbing or assassinating him. Northumberland Foat-Offioe Burglarized. NORTHUMBERLAND, Pa., Feb. 2. The post-office in this place was bur glarized this morning of $450 in cash and about SIOO in stamps. The thieves pried the safe open with a wedge. When Postmaster John O. Forsyth ar rived on the scene at 4 o'clock this morning he found the room full of smoke, and tracks in the new fallen snow about tiie door indicated that three men had been engaged in the job. Mr. Morgan who occupied rooms oyer the post-office, heard noise in the office, but supposed it was the postmaster atd his assistants. A Teacher's Cruelty. TAUNTON, Mass., Feb. 2.— A young lady school teacher of Raynabam, be longing to Acushnet, punished a pupil, a seven-year-old son of F. L.Lowell, station agent at that place, for whit ling a desk one day last week, by cut ting the boy's thumbs with his own jack-knife. At first the teacher con sidered that she was justified, but she afterward apologized to the father, who caused her arrest. 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