ne ( OLD SERIES, XL | NEW SERIES, XVL A VOLUME a a CENTRE REPORTER. ; Tr wr and Prov’r. ATIC SI'ATE TICKET. DITOR GENE CAPT. ROBERT TAGG! Of We County FOR STATE TREASURER, HON. JOSEPH POWELL, FOR Al RAL, RT, County SOCIATE JUDGE Pr. J R. SMITH, 4 f Ph 18 {rrave Milla. DISTRICT ATTORNEX W. C. HEINLE, of bi tlefonte, COUNTY SURVEYOR ELLIS L. ORVIS, STL T0 4 of Detiefonle As ’ of girls and some of trip a govern- making a are thern coast on f course at U, 8, expense. and his family Twenty-four hanan censured y follow wssed - . 1. 1% . 43 2a} aves air time shall have px iURe general orae rs [reasury and Navy resident . * 1 4 $s uncies and their out junket- ent SEITE horses and govern- and on government ex- held his first court in the Huntingdon last week, as and was banqueted by Huntingdoners think a weap of His Honor. The Republicans are giving out far more damaging stories of Garfield since his death, than the he Democrats did while was living. Tearfield being a of of ornamentals There are now two second hand chairs for sale in Clearfield good for rheumatism, tooth- district have no judicial f, will henceforth more ourt-room } : those ol time « 1. KNOWN a8 4880 ciate judges, ache or cholera morbus, Dorsey's history of the Garfield cam- paign of which he was manager, has knocked all the leaders and organs of that party dumb. It is even said now that it has checked the Garfield monu- ment enthusiasm, Another storm has done its terrible work up in Minnesota, an account of which is given in another colum. Hon, M'Dowell Sharpe, a member of the present legislature, died at his home in Chambersburg. He was a Democrat and an able lawyer, At Delphos, Ohio, they have a new way of treating disorderly houses—a dis- tinctive “Ohio idea.” They drown them out. On the night of the 20th a band of masked men numbering nearly one hundred, secured the fire engine of the town and, armed with axes and other weapons, proceeded to a notorious place known as the “Gold Dust House,” kept on the outskirts of the town by a hard character named George Hurtig. The itself the ed for the inmates to ap- four or five es appeared at the windows and hurled foul m bh opposite house i pear, female inma language at the mob. The crowd then began yelling “Fire!” and, gottiy attacked the building front and rear un- t he was deluged with water. house ‘he inmates were chased out of the rear and the mob proceeded to destroy the windows, furniture with their axes and other weapons. Hurtig's l will be He fled with his family to the neighboring town of Lima doors, doors and O88 82 000. and will prosecute the town for damages. The Delphos citizens say that Hurtig's place was a public nuisance, -» ol The World remarks that the Austrian dynasty has lasted now for six hundred years, and vet it is terrified because an unknown pamphleteer has dared to print an argument against the dynasty, and even to cirenlate the 1 to the When a cot y has deadly document ose one of imperial had a palaces, government vears withont its being able firmer foundation ths t wirn has been stung the ¢ Perry Sheriff bee, scratch ry Ny LE 2h al $3 : aly y ral Lines aireaay it ars baie Liia yy cand thinks this time 44 ys gline ELEN. n feels a Sheriff ough his hai w here the swelling # » § / a Prothon m, whether he i tends to alle ends to allo » sting him, we are: tuin vat. ha kb certain vet - Kn ws what is snake bite, Other fellows may get stung as we » come across ’ D. L. Zerby, of Penn, is also having a Prothonotary mosquito buzzing around his ear, and Lew Shafer of Walker, is said to have a Prothonotary gnat in hi boots. a ws } ner SCN. J. W. White, of Milroy Preshyter- ian congregation, is tobe arraigned before the Huntingdon Presby tery to be con- He is supposedtito be tainted with Bweden- borgianism, an outline of the new doc trine which Rev. White is charged with having espoused, as given by the Altoona Times: It is not new to the world, but was proclaimed by its founder, Emanuel Swedenborg, more than a century ago. He claimed to have had his revelation from heaven; that he conversed with an- gels face to face, was in their habitations, which were like our houses on earth, but far more beautiful and magnigeent, hav- rooms, apartments, flowers, fields, squares in short, everything as we have now. In these interviews he ‘was fully awake, having his inward eyes open.’ “The general outline of Swedenborg's theological system is that the sacred Scriptures contain three distinet senses, called celestial, ; spiritual and natural; that there is a correspondence, or analo- gy, between all things in heaven and all things in men; that there isa divine trin- ity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost—the all-begetting divinity, united in the one person of the Lord Jesus Christ; that re. demption consisteth not in the vicarious sacrifice of the Redeemer and an stone- ment to appease divine wrath, but in the real subjucation of the, powers of dark- ness, in the restoration of order and good government in the spiritual world, in checking the overgrown influences of vened in Lewistown, September 4. wicked spirits on the hearts of men, and opening a clearer andnearer communica- tion with the heavenly and angelic powers in making salvation, which is regenera- tion, possible for all who believe on the incarnate God and his command- keep ments: that there is an universal influx from God into the souls of men, and the soul upon receiving this influx from God 1 | transmits through the perceptive facul- ties of the mind to the body, and hence these good influxes are received and charged accordingto the nature of the recipients retained by the good and turn We Are placed in the world subiect to the influ- ed into evil by the wicked; that ences of two most opposite prin iples, of the good from the Lord and His holy angels, of evil : evil spirits, i hell or from and, if we submit to the former ceive real life, hell which is ca tual death; that heaven and ta arbitrary appointment if not, then that life from lled in Seripture spiri- being a state arising from the go tions of the heart i consequence of a life, enslaved l love and the is an interm of the fence to withdraw, Any perso mean and contemptable, in down town de of the Lewistown FF» his own contempt whole community, thinks the haps the fellow may think he should run it down to keep it from “going up.” Press, Per a Fitch the defaulting bank cashier of Ohio, was arrested by a troubled con- A tron- bled conscience is much better and less expensive than a police officer. During the day Fitch appeared to suffer severe mental trouble. Arising after asleepless night he decided to surrender, and walk- ed into the headquarters of the district police. He said his name Kirkland M. Fitch and he was wanted in Warren, O. for embezzling $80,000 from the Second National Bank of that place. He said he could not account for his coming to Bos- ton, unless it was to get away as far as possible from the scene of his crime, He also said he had taken the money as charged and had lost it all in stock spec- ulations in New York, He was desirous of saying but little about his evil doings. He expressed a desire to return to Ohio as soon as possible, and would go with- out a requisition, lI MAS science at Boston, last Sunday. Ellen Meloy. daughter of Geo. Meloy, of Centre, Juniata county, was struck by lightning one afternoon last week while churning. The electricity first struck her feet, tearing both shoes therefrom and hurling them a considerable dis tance. It then passed under her clothes burning her whole body into blisters just as if done by scalding water, tore her dress open at the neck, burned off her hair as if cut off by scissors and singed off her eyebrows, slightly burning her neck and face. She is recovering. Reporter for the campaign 25 cls. cash WORK OF A CYCLONE, Death and the West. Minneappolis, Mi heavy storm raged here yester fav. It cause Destruction in nn., August 22 —A west and south of The report comes from Kasson, on the Winona and Peter railroad, that the cyclone passed Over that pace, blowing down many buildings, cilling two persons and injuring several Hail stones that fell measured ten inches in circamference, Governor Hubbard has received word from Bochester slating that the tow: in ruins and that forty persons been killed, It is impossible to get full details of the of storm, as the wires are all down. Passengers from Owatinna state that twenty-five persons were killed in the railroad accident on the Rochester and Northern railroad. It isbelieved from the reporis that have in that the whole eount sUr- rounding Rochester is in ruins, The killed may reach up into hundreds, The that was wrecked was that which leaves Rochester at aboot 4 o'clock arriving at irambata at was caught ia a severe wind rm that prevailed in that v five ar eix o'clock, gh rate of speed was i Kt ¥ is have ravages ne Hne ry train 2 Of ail and hail cinity and Bld tween running ed from the rails and converted ints mass of ins, Gentlemen been to the scene of disaster » of the most ho whno the 8 ever wiing v4r in the train was a cot | was literal i i he sudder ured by ir the rail, burying the unf ers 1 of slraw were » where the cyclone er ly before the train A freight train nl the western ap iWis i106 Wing y 34 tho wermert i its 1 Brow place, Theengineer saw hand aod jun was destroye L badly damaged and x] with debris and g fa fatal black cloud five miles southeast o cutting a swath through the r and farms, wrecking baildings in the little and leaving two corpses Hy rt el Y ¥ Halivs nin namiet nen killed was found He bad been torn limb from limb by the mere force the wind while being drawn up and carried along by the terrible funnel. The storm, so far as can be learned, started in Westfield township near the west line of Dodge county. It continued through Dodge and Oldstead counties and into Winona county, a distance of about sixty miles, and varied from two and a half to three quarters of a milé in width, being the widest where it started. In the path of the storm nothing worth gaving except the acreage is left, W. C. Rich, Judge Stuart and C, I. Chadbourne say a conservative estimate of the loss in Rochester alone is $360,000, Ihe city has 500 homeless people to care for, and traces of the July cyclone are still plenty, Help is needed and at once. Mechanics are wanted to rebuild, if only shanties. Food is plenty and that is about all. Relief commitiees are cane vassing to ascertain the jneedy cases in the country and city. Unclaimed dead and wounded were removed as fast as taken to the undertakers’ or halle, Pleasant Grove is reported annihilated, two persons being killed and tea wound: ed. The town of Salem lay in the track of the eyclone southeast of here and is said to be wipedout. In the surrounding country an estimate of the losses is im- possible, Fences are all gone, cattle in- jared and at large, stacks of hay and grain have totally disappeared and crops of corn and potatoes are beaten flat. of Ars ———— —_—— ADJOURNMENT ON THE WAY. Members of the House, and there are many of them, eame in firmly believing that this is the last whole week of the special session, They said goin the hall last evening, and gave as a reason that every parlimentary expedient had been exhausted; that the house had given up everything 10 secure apportionment, and concession had followed concession, but the senate found no time nowadays for public bosiness and would bold to their obstruction ultimatum policy to the last. In the face of such fact, made plainer ev’ ery day by the stalwart refusal to legis 30, 1883. many he early adjourment as ¢ late, 18a ok 10 an died at | ok this morning. mint de hambord was the last of the anceint line of } if France, and wonid, had he assumed the thr i ed under the title of Henri Ness has all i tion a i governmental in May it was thought that he would the gon of Don Carlos heir to to the French throne to t the Orleans princes, and bitter feeling betw i ants to throne, later on was begun to iovest the Count Paris, who now has the stir the throue, h the title and this action was agreed 1 liant Paul Count de strengthening t! ) 16 Kings « stertye igi along caused d not a little d matters make Cialins usion of 1 he thi Created a he various elaim- jut a movement hag He de yn gest to It, by the bril- death of claim to Plon Plon and ants of the nn the throne disrupted in their par Count de Chambor: Of Age age, HORSES KILLED BY LIGHTNING. y 1 y Cley land, August 25 —Puringa violent ining struck James township, kKiiling y t IATge quanii- vesmie bid rer Hucuinery. ent i from her way fro: deavoring : he had friends wh would piace + Institut % rn $3 e313 } p Ey er 10 Coniinn £ Arne i Was en- where Lier aritabic : i was giv } h A terribi shit ¢ r was enacted in Ohic Lill shot she was | her bat i i in the head and sul in bed with $aryd Frail latter causing irs been married a little er a lived unhappily owing to his drinking. A short time azo he sent his wife to her fathers, saying he conld not support her, Last night he went to her father's house, took off his boots a han- dred yards away, crept to the window of f his wife's room, and did the shooting ts described, Mrs, Hill is seriously hurt, although not yet dead. n— CM A ——— Here are some curiosities of curious suicides : Magruder killed himeelf in Maryland because of grief for his first wife, though he had taken a second and entirely worthy one. Marks drowned himself in a Kansas mill pond, the dam for whlch he had just built, as the water wroved inanfficient to turn the wheel Fennie Roberts of Pennsylvania, flung herself into a stream after being refured parental permission to go to abail. Pick- etts, a member of the Texas bar, had no desire to live when he had lost a case and been berated by the client. Mrs Jones, of Maryland, took lavdanum be. cause she could not take money from her husband's cash drawer. Atkinson, of California, mentally staked his life on his horse, and forfeited it at the conelu- sion of the race. Mr. Wyckoff, a weal- thy farmer of Long Island, hung him- seit because the price of pota was low. w==All the nominees for county offi. cos, without respect of party, wear suits from the Philad. Branch, because they make them look better and the people give them credit for having good judge. mont in so important an article as cloth ing. We never knew a man to be with. out friends it he boaght his clothing from Lewins & Co. Out of a Jopuation of 1,5000,000 in New York, 61,052 persons own all the hire. We are agents for the Thomas Glove fitting corset. —Garman & Son, Macrama cord man & Son's, Eeventy-eight persons era in Upper Egypt on : in Lower Egypt, lucludin soidier at Bue, Sa —— TIME TO 3 too bad, Bir on frightened. Your at's certain. A glance in the mirror, an luvestigating commit Lugers tell the dismal story, We wo BUUSY the possible cause, It Pp 'a Hair Balsam VArEers 1iair alsam uss { : i pres vent further destin hair dion, ls somewhat gray, 100, and yes, The Balsam will original color, softness dye, no 5 fect dressing, a A er give back ald gions IN THE PILOT HOLS 5 Ki ENCOURAGING. Having been encouraged by 1 noresse of business, ] ght Les repelled well ss 10 1 DRUG HUUSK, allreclive Lo my cus isnk 1 possible, municalion with ib $ of New York and supplied wilh « anyibiog io my li will be sent lor al olice sane prices that it « wenl or os i LE you pL sTURS Jul Cash, HR, ’ ad a ve 1a prose ©, 25d Lin Me against 1 of Uenire ¢ Late against thew as stall be ives under ny band, st Bellelonts, e ist df Aug. , inthe jJear of our word as, budred and seventh year of Li ve United Slates, F.d ea dee jail day Live one he independence of LUMBLE dhendl "SPRING MILLS HOUSE, On L&T. RR SUMMER RESORT. FINE Fine Fishing and Hunting Doman tic Mountain and Valley Scenery, Healthy Locality, ——— TERMS REASONABLE, J. H. BIBBY ....cc.ceoennn Proprietor BPRING MILLS, CENTRE COUNTY, PA. 1 fvm W M. A. SANDOE, MERCHANT TAILOR, CENTRE PA, Desires to announce to his customers that he has lately taken instructions under WW, W. Belford, of Milton, in the latest improvements in cutting, who is one of the best tailors in Pen’a, and is now able to serve customers with better fits than before. He has also received fashion plates containing the latest styles. Also a fine lot of samples irom which you can select for suits, He respectinlly asks the public when in need of cloths ings to give him a trial. mary HIS OPINION. In Clear Sentences an Authority adds his own to the Popular Judgment. 191 West Tenth Street, ; New York, Aug. 11, i880, Moms Seabury & Johnson! 1 am slow to pin my faith to any new curative Aen, BENSON'S CAPCINE POROUS PLAS LR has won my good opinion. 1 find i an ex ceptionally cleanly plaster wo use and rapid in a sotion. Any tests In ita qualities in my own family, and among my patients, have convipoed te that there is bo er single article so valuable for alae use, none so helping in coves of Lame kK, Rheumatism, Neamigia, Congestion of the Bronchial Tubes and Lungs, and Lumbago, You may feel free 10 use my nance, Very ta Fours, HH. KANE M.D rh fof of the De Quincy Home Price of thegte Ca INE 3 cent" ney Beabury a Johuson, Chemists, New York HALI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers