The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 07, 1884, Image 1

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    voLumg | OLD SERIES, XL.
30,
4
aw mR
THE CENTRE REPORTER,
FRED. KURTZ, Epiror and Pror's.
_—
We ruess it will be Samuel J. Tilden.
———
he political atmosphere
ith candidates.
It seems to be
rl of commissioners
- el -
mes it that no Republican lead-
boom for a colored
? I'he
Bruce, and
, : a
e- Presidency re is
iblicans, wet
even that the colored race
thousands wlored voters
ip: “. i
wnition at Chicago by
ive rec y
¢ a negro for Vice President.
: } f hia 1
pecome of al HI8 [Ove
for the
I. 4
ville, Kentucky, the
Arthur and Blaine
in a terrible ri
Bersons were shot
ther cl
Here is an hn Sher
st him at onee proceed to investi-
loody republican riot.
—— " po
nr interviewed
the New York Evening Pos
ground of Dis
v 3
W ard Beecher,
ObDection
cources of income
have been the money centers and mo-
ies of the country.” There is
inestion that from such a soure>
i
, inti ast
Ir. Hutchins
2
gachusetis gre
: fav ir Ben
national «
its meeting.
- —-
ret2 Jowa, and
5
1 state of
Blaine
[iis OWS
Vermu Is.
ihe Maine greenbackers refuse to ine
struct for Batler.
I'he Massachusetts
vy $ ov
ich Wot rats ¢
Democra xpress
their desire to have Batler nominates
for President and have elected him one of
their delegates
Convention.
West Virginia is for Blaine.
- rst mri
The recent published statement shows
the entire production of anthracite coal
during 1883, We give it as it appears in
an official paper :
to Chicago Democratic
Tons
ix 05 4
5,887 700
258700
To New York, Penn's, New Jers
To New England States
To Western States oPRaes sin sabi
To Bouthern States, including Dela
ware, Maryland and tho District of
Columb waskiummss ssnsimsvavaesrimiananiis 184 508
24.655
600 A098
[43
81,7817
The product for March was 1,981,462
tons, making a total since Jannary Ist of
5,773,721 tons, thus showing a decrease of
615,529 tons as compared with the same
time last year. The stock at tide water
thipping points on March 31 was 588,229
tons,
To the PRCIAC COMBE..covviv. co vmmmivsrnme
To the Dominion of Canada...
To foreign PoriR. consis isis
- oo.
Keene, the great grain gambler, went
under one day last week, to the tune of
about 4 millions, while indulging in
speculations in New York. No one feels
anyways sorry about it, and it is the fate
that we would gladly see overtake all
those who gamble in the staff of life and
are the causes of panics to the ruin of in-
nocent parties. When Keene recently
came to New York in a palace car, Jay
Gould remarked they would send him
away in a freight car. The Wall street
blacklegs got away with him.
.i- ow
The Democrats of Huntingdon county
will present Mr. Baily for Judge. Our
county will present Judge Hoy, who has
been tried afd given general satisfaction,
and whose character is unspotted. These
points should weigh largely in favor of
Judge Hoy before
©
judicial confers
the J
- -— -
DOES PROTECTION PROTECT,
An exchange argues that protected in-
dastries pay no better wages than others
nor can they keep on
cturi
y . $3} y 2 a vse
uring after the demand is sup
plied any more than a farmer can em-
loy reapers after his harvest. The cry
is protection to American indostries, In
1 %
a rnnt 3:4
8 JUL 8 :
issue raised by a
{ional effect, Is
makes millior
in a few years at
sectional
protection
aires of ri
and pri
iron business at the e
tion of th
XDense
> Show me an iro:
town and I'll show you high rents, pro-
dijss
almost out of reach,
visions scarce and
@ wages are as low as they can be
found in anv unprotected business com-
munity no matter where. Lumbermgn,
farmers, shoe factories, and all trades not
wl, pay as good wages
These are frigid facts,
gel away fr MI, facts that
may not digest well withverlain interests,
but the truth is self evident. This much
tected industries, Now for pro-
for pre
tion to the industious. Are they pro
} ing to Cas-
Are miners protected from
iy pauper Poles, laborers from water.
tected .
For an answer we J
tle Garden.
filtl
1d-flower-earthy Itaifans, beastly Huns,
Swedes, ish-murdering-
} No!
Monopo-
ce-and - rat - eating - Chinamen
% 1 %
no embargo on them.
“nrotect our works,” while they
» workman, Protect
give us
Bi i
pauper !
auper labo
ir in Europe, but
We do need protect
yrotection from We
] monopolies,
protection from P
18, Swedes and Cl
f oy
Wie KinaQ Of pr
mechanic, artisan, merchant, clerk, min-
er, miller, laborer, servant girl and wash-
An want an
After the mille
birth and
« WIEN 8 Nan
100 years of age.
he burning o
ie final judgment.
a
OTHER TARIFF BILL.
. Converse, of
the
list, with
The
y be equalized by
metal
reducing
i
»
on,
some articles and increasing
few others. The tobacco internal
tax is to be abolished and a provision
is to be made forjgivingljalecohol to man-
ufacturers free of tax. The manufactur-
ers who manufacture for export are to
receive a rebate on their raw materials
equal to the duty less ten per cent. A re-
duction of ten per cent. is to be made in
favor of goods imported in American bots
toms.
law passed in Jefferson's administration,
except that Jefferson's differential duty
was an increase of 10 per cent, on the
thenlexisting tariff list, while Converse
proposes 10 per cent, reduction. Con-
verse thinks that this bill will reduce the
revenue $40,000,000,
This is said to be similar to an old
ws etambmt thol tpspiabs
The delegates to the Republican na-
tional convention are about all chosen,
and the count ns near as can be known
of instructed and reported preferences,
sums up thus: Arthur, 250 ; Blaine, 208 ;
Edmunds, 75; Logan, 48; Sherman, 24;
Hawley, 12; Gresham, 6; Unknown, 98,
Whole number, 820; necessary to a
choice, 411,
It is not likely that Blaine or Arthur
will be nominated-—each one goes in
strong enough to prevent the other from
being nominated ; and there is so much
bitterness between these two factions
that neither will yield to the other. Ed
munds may then come out catbird and
lightning may strike Bob. Lincoln be-
cause he is the son of his father,
——————— A A il
Is this a new temperance move :
Peoria, Ii, May 1.—Lightning last
night struck 8. C. Clark & Co.'s distillery,
setting fire to eighty barrels of aleohol.
Loss, $6,000 ; insured.
HURD ON THE TARIFF,
Frank Huard, of Ohio, delivere
best argument on the side of the M
son tariff bill, on 20. Mr. Hurd strongly
advocated the bill, He denied the right
of the Government to surrender the tax.
ing power and allow an individoal to ex«
ercise it, When he earned wages they
wore is 3
1
them
own, and he had
expend where he pleased
could make a better contract
Frenchman, a Mexican, or a Canadian
an Englishman than with an America
he hal a right to do it, and the Gov
ment had no right to interfere, ¢
far as the needs of its ravenue
cerned, Ie rested his whole
proposition that, subject to the nead
Government, every man had a right
ae!l where he conld get the beat price fi
} ed, and buy
the most cheaply.
ussed the tarill
as affecting the rates of wages for labor,
declaring so far as that labor was
cerned the fruits of protection were want,
penur> and starvation. Those were jew-
els in its crown. He wished workingmen
would cease to believe in the delusion
that protection was a& help to them. It
came in the guise ofa i
ally a mortal foe,
the atiitnde of benedi
ally raised to curse,
Mr. Hord went on to giv
why he supported the
in the « ]
Was con
caro on the
3 Wa
what he had produ
d bay
He hen dis
arb
where
he co
nestion
Cone
Ita }
yurse of nis
inconsistent with
“1 will answer y
Warner, of Obie,
louse would say
Democratic
1
on the floor of the
there over was a
off the war taxes of
ago, [lond and los
on the Democratic side,] and if that
the meaning ofthe gentleman ; if
the gives
platform, then I say here and now
appeal to the gallant Democracy of
native state to repudiate the heresy
that platform, and I have no fear of
result that it will place self where
ought to be, close to nationa
heart of
Renewed
twenty five
g continoed
3 §
constroction Lhe 10 the
o $
the great
plavse.] Int
¥ #
this protec & grant of
t rrbt
Oral
While the tari
by the importer,
by the © t
for the purpose of Gov
i a revenue tariff;
ernment it
callie
nanmplion,
110 an ann
s there
| $4
olutely
compensation in protective system
It hal already America
half of the marketz of the Old World
Enelind, because the American
34 \
sa
Lhe
r yobed of On eé-
' 4 11 il
goods, had sought to find food
under the .
"INA
en devel
bad become
rom
fhe
wheat
will not pay for th
and the corn raised o1
ries will again be b
that day the farmers
dst of their
the mi
sharre, Mav M
w is
3
“
Il raging ero yin
GL
« hat th
was reported this afternoon,
nin, a lt town n i
arted ar
capied by men er
Two bn
us dal
At Califor
i
rat por
i 34
road were destroved,
bles of Alhs
a]
in business enterprises
protective tanff, y the first, wi
GIsCriminas
to Lhe
pp sed |
» rovernment
rf
jas Of
. he b
t the expense of another
isiness were a profitable on
dt wa of the Gove
if it were unprofitable
reason why he #l
money into it, but no
A reason
npel his fe t
shionid © FW - ens
prices jor the article
ie protects
two a He den
right of the Government to sur
the taxing power and allow an individo
al to exercise it. When he earned wages
they were his own, and he had a right (0
expend them where he pleased. If he
could make a better contract with a
Frenchman, a Mexican, a Canadian or a
Englishman than with an Amen
had a right to do it, end the Government
had no right to interfere, except in so far
as the needs of its revenue were con-
corned. If he had earned a
dollar it expressed ali of that day to him,
With that dollar he went to ]
what he wanied from a Frenchman, bul
the Government stepped in with ils pow.
or and said : “You must not buy from a
Frenchmao, you must buoy from an
American.” He went with his dollar to
the American, who said: “I charge $2
for that article.” He must go back to
his toi! and another day must go out of
his life to get the additional dollar, What
was the significance of that transaction 7
He had been, by the power of law, com-
pelled to work one day againet his will
for an American manufacturer, In oth-
er words, for one day he had become a
slave. Every dollar of increases in the
price of all goods which the protective
tariff occasioned was an hour or a day of
slavery, He rested his whole case on
the proposition that, subject to the needs
of Gevernment, every man had the right
to sell where he could get the best price
for what he had produced and buy where
he could buy the most cheaply. This
was the approved doctrine of political
economy and the plainest teachings of
justice. i :
The present American tariff wasa high
protective one. It increased the price of
articles imported into this country more
than 43 per cent, It was perfectly man-
ifest that its influence on our foreign
commerce conld only be deleterious,
Nothing was clearer to his mind than
that the destruction of the foreign carry-
ing trade waa the result of the prohibi~
tion of an American registry to foreign
built vessels and the high price of raw
material to ship-builders, The oceans
were free to all ; and a person might sail
withersoever he pleased; but in this free-
for-all whore was America? The skill of
every sailor of every nation was there
asserting itself, except ours; fortunes
were being built up for people of all na-
tions except ours, and yet this was an
ocean-bound republic. Every ripple of
the waters on the seashore was an invi-
tation to enjoy the wealth of foreign nas
tions and every stormy wave that beat
upon the Sraga spoke in thundering de.
nunciation of a poliey that would lock
America ont of the markets of the world,
{Loud applause. ] speed the day
when the divine thougnt oi man's broth
erhood to man wonld succeed the degrad.
ing and humiliating one of national iso
lation and foreign exclusion,
What was the effect of the rainous sys-
tem upon the farmer? It increased the
in one day
PUTrci ass
veral sick persons were taken
from their homes with diflicaity.
one hundred families were ref «
thing in the world save the
wore, . Duncan, an old
ed lady, was caught by the fire and burnp-
: . us .
I verve
being
#t severely
rho were detected drinking
¢ made to de
liresis
were recly
14 said, was
leave thiseection
Cryal, the engineer at
wr, Hughes & Co's mill, remained at his
post uatil completely surrounded by fire,
He wus compelled to twice burry himself
in the earth to save himsalf from being
burned to death. He finally maoaged to
get throogh the flames and made his way
to the top of the hill above Brisbin,
whers he was found by Dr, Whittier and
removed to the home of the latter. From
the doctor it iz learned that his condition
is critical, and it is feared that be may
be fatally injured through inhaling smoke
and flame, The citizens of Houtzdale are
doing all in their power 10 assist the
homeless.
- de. - on
FIRE AT WILLIAMSPORT.
Williamsport, May 2A fire which
broke out in South Williamsport this af-
ternoon burned the saw mill of Valentine
Lappers, entailing a loss of over $20,000,
insurance $0,000. It also destroyed five
dwelling houses, three barns and several
small buildings on Lousia and Elmira
streets, causing a loss of between £8,000
aad $10,000.
LIVES LOST IN FLAMES,
Kalamazoo, Mich,, Apr, 30.-~The poor
house of Van Baren county, near Harte
ford, was burned last night. Fifteen or
sixteen inmates lost their lives in the
flames. Loss on building, $10,000, It
was insured.
pm——— i ——
~The cheapest and best stock of
boots and shoes in Bellefonte will be
found at Graham's shoe store,
- oe. it
We sell more lace curtains than all the
Bellefonte stores combined —-Garmans.
Ur w
we [uenday and Wodnesday wet and
fine growing weather,
A —
AN APPEAL FOR HELP FROM OHIO
Cincinnati, April 30~The Xenia relief
committee will make an appeal for help
for Jamestown, in which they will state
that 1,200 iehabitants of that village
With #
nting to nearly $300,000,
. —
Aivtinls af
Cree
Garmane,
The cheapest all w
(zarmans,
BARGA
[5
{a rotey
Bottier
Merchants
RE
t ti1ey
tichards, Jeweler
30 fillinme & Fro, Wallpaper
jae. Clears 0G
Pool...
ou
8
ras
Re.
Port Matil
AW Hoase,
yATH
Martha,
J F Williams Merchas
Julian,
(roo wien
TH Jom
leming.
4 cist. Mercha
ton, 4
operative Ast. Limited,
chants... cn
w Shoe Intersection.
Benjamin Bnyder, Merchant
James LL. Sommerville,
Jeliefonte.,
Brockerhoof Bros, Flour and feed...
Jos, { t. Confectionery. wa
V J Banger & Oo, Grocers,
Charlies Brown bik
Bunnell & Adkins, Musical Insts...
E Brown, Groter. on -
Strickland,
¥F His
i: 1 Black’
oitler, ya SRA
and fobmooo
tahilon
y Furnitam
Goldsmith Bros, Merchants
8 4&4 A looh, "
Jomeply Bros, FR
Monwgomery & Oo, Gents’ Furnishing
4d Beller & Son, Drags... -r
James Harrie, Hardwame .......
A C Mingle, Boots and shoes,
J D Sowgbeck Confectionery ..
CG MeMillin. Pool table,
FP Blair, Jewell pins
E A Graham, Boots and shook...
HY Stiteer, Books and stationery
UC U Hoffer & Co, Marchanta.........
PF Kichline, Tobacto and cigars
PF Xichline, Billiard and Pool
Lyon & Co, Merchants...
HK Hicks, Hardware.
Jolin Harvie, Drags...
J H Bayle, Confectionery
Samael Lewing Clothier...
Jolin Mons, Groce En —-
Singer Man’ Op, Sowing Machines.
WH Wilkinson, Semple ARON
Wilson & MoParlane, Hardware... ....
Gorge KE Lewis, Uroter.......o.oooniinn
J.C Miller & Co, Books and Stationery
H © Weaver, Tolmeoo and cigars...
dW Ook, Merchant... isis
1 Gugeenbelmer, Logthor,
MARIR Dips. i iii
James R Alexander, Impletnent store
na Appebon, LHORIMIE........oonugeimsismins
WT Twotmire, Sivesnn om
tmire, Te WRI...
& Mayer, ny re Crores
Valentines Sore Co, Lit
hd
a lB
Gl
a
-
we EE We
lh ae a
a
al dd ld Tal ch ll A Yl Ws Tk lh ut
Bua aT ead BES aaB BEES
a8 ’ §at at
gSgagdigg
ina C0, MErChantE....coucermmries seo 15
Peale City,
: Fender, merchant. oo... M 15
are concerned in th
appeal will be held
oder’ Office, in Bellefonte, on
TUESDAY, THE 13TH DAY OF MAY,
between the hours of 10a. m. and 4 p. m., when
and where you may attend if you think proper, :
TAVERN LICENSES FOR 18
Janes I Delong, Blanchard.........
Samuel Kunes
Chas. Bologue, Saloon,
AE Graham,
Jacob Cooke, Howard, Hotel
E A Nolan, Hotel, Bnow Shoe.........
Jas. Redding, - 54 . -
Harry Wiherright, Hotel, S8aow Shoe
Marthe Healy, Saloga, Snow Show
John Ussle, hotel, Soow Bho.
John Delaney, hotel, Bpow Shoe...
Samuel Boyer, saloon, - i —
Johu Ramedale, hotel, Philipsburg
Veen Passmore, - - vo
= ww, hotel, Philips —
OH Brady, saloon, : ig.
Win. Parker, hotel, "
Robert Taylor, ~ -
Pat MoCan - a
John A M'Comber, hotel, Philipsburg
¢ A Junikne:, ae Fr Soe - 1
gle, Obed, hi PER voc vv an
Jones Steller, ~ pai y —
C Genrt saloon, Bellefonte...
James MoCarty, hotel, = Sa
Fred Smith, salaon, -
F H Lehman, hotel,
E Brown -
CG MeMillen ~
Daniel Garman, hotel,
John Anderson, sioon, .
YR Teller hotel, » rr
A or, hotel, Milesturg.....o.
Hou 20 Nittany, hotel. ¥ “
I ¥ Moyer, Madison a, |
H Bhaflor, Stine TY ——
sy Prd 0, Millhetm, hote
Hanchard
he EE ee
stata ap statu ata -
RPP REPRINT
af atu ot abu g
gITNNg
PEELE
wf Bafa atuty
HRP Ras
a
Pheermmirnbrpnbrars
A
BERN
os K Bue semmcrns
Jechuer. Cobtirn, hot
H Bibby, Spr
hb) ng Mills, hovel
TR
okemtamican hotel
erdby rartt
ool wh
PHEEETEEELREIEREEREEY REESE
=¥
SIL RPTPP
gggggg
that the above list of taverns
of Cetitre county is
I. W. BRICKLEY, Appraiser,