The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 15, 1886, Image 4

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    AFTER THE VICTORY.
ems
Talks Among Yachtsmen About
the Late Races.
PLUCKY LIEUTENANT HENN
Does Not Acknowledge That His Boat
is Not the Best,
No More Englishmen are
Rat
Likely to Come 3,000 Miles to Particl-
Says That
That the Calm is What Baved the Cup
New York, Sep. 13. —On board the Gala-
tea Lisut. Henn was very plainly suffering a
good deal from the congestion of his lungs,
which bas afflicted him for several days
Wham asked about the future movements of
the Galatea he said that he had formally en-
tered Wer for the Newport race, and that he
would sail for that phve on Tusday or Wed-
pesday, He said that he bad not reeeived
any answer to his challenge to sail around the
Bermudas and back, and that if no answer
ould withdraw
As to
wetown,
wos reced
the challe:
Gen. Paine's
wait there fo
Marblehead, se
under consideration.
@ another
20 to Prova
le of wind, and then sail to
I that that nu
He did not wish to say
what sort ol a race he contemplated propos-
ing in place of the Of the
cup races he said:
If cowrse there are the che
and light wind,
ter was still
Bermuda race,
vs of ealm
wavs be ex-
ihsurd to eall the
racing NO more
over here to contest
worth while
ung
trials that we
British wvachts wi
for the i up to come
1 mateh.”
There was one part of Saturday's race,
however, wilich he did not think was a drift-
ing match. That was long reach in from
the buoy to ti s said the Galates
had made up : six minutes of the
time in the
buoy, or had gained minutes,
Then the wind fill flat,
He was quite «
had outsailed the Mayflower on the wind dar-
ig she half four that they were making
something like a rate of 12 knets an hour.
He sdmitted that the Galatea was outssiled
m the fog on Thursday, but said at was be-
enuse of the error judging the weather
when they reefad their bowsprit and started
under the shortened sail. On the subject of
the two models, his opinion was as strougly
in favor of the cutter as ever, Even allow-
ing that ¢ had on the whole
beaten must be a good model
h, being a half larger under water, and
she lost run down to
haunt ao
about cight
that the Galatea
Ma
he Mayflower
the oy
ter, it
MES. HENX.
The majority of the yachtamen, however,
said, when they came to go over the details
of the race again, that the Mayflower really
made gains until the wind dropped, which it
began to do in abut minutes, cor-
tainly within ha hour—and that the
Galatea gained thereafter boesuse sho had a
club topsail, which the MayHlower had not,
and on the whole had the better of the wind
It is quite certain thas the most prejudiced of
the cutter men on the press boat did not
notice that the Galatea had gained any until
about 3:20 o'clock, when the jib topsails were
wet, and that was at Jeast twenty minutes
after the wind began to fail and to veer
about, one shift bringing the Priscilla, which
was further out to sea, for about ten minutes
a wile to windward of the Mayflower, al-
though she had been previously half as much
behind the leader,
To Capt. Stone belongs the credit of saving
the day. While the Mayflower was holding
far in to the land off Long Branch he was the
only one on board who thought he was right.
The Galatea being further out to sen, although
considerably further south or to leeward,
plainly bad a better wind and was gaining,
while the Mayflower was running out of what
wind she had. Capt Stone admitted all that,
but he could sea a wind off shore further in
side, and his judgment prevailed after he got
Capt. Newcombe of the Fortuna to look at
the wrinkled water near the breakers, and
the yellow clouds of Jersey dust that were
rolling out to sen above them,
When the race was all over, and the May-
flower was at anchor, a Boston man rowed
out to her, and climbing on deck, was met by
Mr. Burgess. No more quiet, modest and
retiring man than Mr. Burges can be found
twenty
an
VOTING IN MAINE.
THE DAY GIVEN UP TO THE STATE
ELECTIONS.
Prospects of a Light Vote=The Republi
cans Counting Upon a Vietory—The
Democrats Geiting In thelr Work Qul-
oily—An Unknown Quantity,
AUGUSTA, Bept. 13,--The political cam-
palgu which has been exciting this state for
three weoks pust has closed, and today elec
tion for governor, members of the legislature,
eounty officers, and four takes
pla ww. Mr. Blaine fired the opening gun of the
campaign, and ignited the skyrocket which
CONEressmen
has done more talking
in Maine than be Las in any previoms
campaign for a great many years, making at
least a dozen specches in all and speaking in
marked its closs He
due
When Mr. Blale retuinsd to Augusta he
that his campaigning Wr
mnong
the rugged hills of his adopted state in the
lmuguid, oppressive heat of this day
weather had told on him. Ho seemed to foal
all the better for it. Mr. Blaine loves a poli-
tical fight s0 well that when he takes a hand
he to actually grow faton it. His
prominencs in the canvass has been its styik
ing feature. The Republicans have averaged
some thirty rallies a day during the enmpaign,
and these have been addressed by some of the
leading statesmen of the party belonging out
of the state. Gen. Logan and Benators Sh
man and Evarts acceptad invitations to speak,
but failed to put in an appearance,
The Democrats s furnished the people
with but little music from the stump, their
managers depending more upon work than
Calvin Frost, of New York, has been
principe The Prohibisionists
have had a large number of spesechmakers in
the fleld, their biggest guns being St. John
and Gen. Dow, shibboleth has been,
“Kill the Republican party.” There have
also been one or two speakers on the stump in
the intarest of the
The campaign has been to rah on
fuses prin
$530
{
ul
SOILS
ha
wind,
their speaker,
w hie ai
labor reformers,
nations
4 t a ys pe 4 1
ipaliv, eas formualated
}
by
Blaine The only state isénes of conse
involved are thos
the interest of
the opposing
markable unan
the
The
total
mcerning legisiati
and singularly en
soem to show a re
of sentiment in favor
peor le
i
Lcate
ity
8
demands of the working
outlool wins to Ir
vole
fan years
1554 was .
Robie, Republican, |
man, Democrat,
CGreenbacker, |
Prohibition,
scattering votes,
nor in 18832 was 1798,
publican,
Fusion, 63.021
324: William
Warren H, Vinton, Indepen
209, and scattering, 102,
It will be seen
reced
that th
noarly O08, whil
5500. Impartial
k that the total vote
year will exceed 120 (XX), and {t would not
surprising if it did not rea
A conservative estimate puts the Bodwell
vote at 65,000 and the Edwards vole at 5
This would give the slect the
can candidate by 15,000 plurality on ¢
vote. The Prohibition vote is the
quantity amd excites the most speculati
for the reason that the Democrats say
it should come up to the figures that
St. John-Dow men claim it will make =u
hols in the Republican party as will thro
the governorship into the Democrats
This is on the supposition that
will poll the strength of the par
est estimate made of the Pre
12,000, There seems to bo
the Prohibitionists will cast
that the increase they will
vote of two years ago will be drawn e
sively from epublicans. They
made a bot fight, but the chances
they will not poll over 3
+h those figures
wi in
om to
the
are
3,500 votes,
will be drawn quite as much from th
as from the Hey An party
prospects are that the Repu
Mr. Bodwell by their average |
decreased vote
t this hour any estimate we
: Chairm Manley, 1
on upon
Demo
nublic
cratic
iurality
wWever,
Bad Indians Will Fight Fear Now.
ALsuQuerque, N. M., Sept. 18. -
has arrived hers to meet 400 Chiricahua and
today on their way to Fort Marion, Fla « by
way of Bt Louis g
eloment of the Apaches, and their removal
rids the southwest of all Indian troubles
Gen. Miles contradicts the statement made
by The Army and Navy Journal that the
Chiricahua and Warm Spring Indians were
never disarmed, and were prisoners of
war. These Indians were placed the
Apache reservation centrary to the wish of
the interior department, and it is well known
that their removal will all be the work of
Gen. Miles, who has been perfecting arrange
ments for five months, against much « Ppo-
not
on
A War Correspondent Dead.
JosToN, Sept. 13.—The relatives of Wil
Ham Young, of Scituate, have just learned
of his death at Mobile. Young was The Bos
ton Herald correspondent at the first battle of
Fredericksburg, where he was wounded. He
was afterwards employed by The New York
Herald, and was at Gettysburg where he was
taken prisoner and carried to Virginia, but
he succeeded in getting back to the Union
lines, walking nearly fifty miles through a
denss woods, He afterward was The New
York Herald correspondent on the Red river
expedition. )
Brooklyn's Democratic Paper,
New Yomxk, Sept. 18.—The new Demos
eratic.paper in Brooklyn, under the manage.
ment of Mr. Andrew Mclelin, late of The
Eagle, will bo called The Daily Democrat,
and the first number will be issued Oct. 2. It
will be a four-page two cent paper. The staff
will include Mr, Mclean as editor-in-chief,
Mr. Goorge Gordon as managing editor, Mr,
Alfred C. Burton as editorial writer and
Washington correspondent, Mr, Thomas Me-
Grath as city editor, and Mr. John Cogan as
Albany correspondent.
Canadian Telegraph Facilities
Montreal, Sept. 18,—The Canadian Pa
cific Railway company's telegraph system,
which is now com th Canada
from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and to be
rum in connection with the Postal Telegraph
company’s wires to New York and th
rsa
THE CADET COUAT MARTIAL,
Gen. Merritt Cautioned to Go a Little
Slow,
Hiouraxp Faris, N. Y., Bept. 11--The
latest advices regarding the court martial of
the cadets at West Point is that upon infor-
mation being received at the war department
about the state of affairs, secretary Endi-
cott sent a sharp dispatch to Gen,
Merritt, the superintendent, which had
the effect of making him go slow,
As the superintendent oannot carry out
a sentence of dismissal against the cadets and
can only inflict a temporary punishment, if
the secretary should not approve the findings
of the court, it would be an implied censure
upon both the court and the superintendent.
The disposition on the part of both sec-
retaries Endicott and Whitney has been to
discourage the arbitrary methods which have
prevailed during the last few years at
both the military and naval academies,
by which incessant turmoil has been kept
up, and the cadets lost valuable time by
these wholesale court martials,. Young
Wheeler, the cadet adjutant, has been re-
stored to duty. It is a nice question how
tien, Merritt could bring charges against the
cadets, even had they been drunk as sus
pected, as they were in citizen's clothes, and
were not required to report until the expira-
tion of leave, which was at parade, * niue
hours later,
THE NEW CRUISER
To be Given 8 Thorough Trial Next
Week
Wasnixeron, Sept. 11.—The new cruiser
Atlanta will leave Now York next week for a
week's trial trip at sea, going in the direction
of the gulf coast. The purpose is to test the
vessel to her full capacity, and with that end
in view the best fuel and well trained firemen
will be procured. Engineer-in-Chief Loring
will be on board to supervise the engines and
nachinery. The naval advisory board may
also be invited to male the trip. The vessel
is to undergo a trip similar to that of the
Dolphin. If a storm can found, it
is not the intention to avoid it and her per
formance in both light and heavy seas is to
be carefully noted. Nothing has yet been de
termined as to the Atlanta's station after the
trial is completed, but she will, of course, re
mein on the home sation until her battery
is placed aboard ler guns are finished, but
still have to undergo the statutory test at the
Annapolis proving: grounds before they are
placed on board and two or three months
will elapse before that is accomplished
be
THE OLEOMARGARINE STAMPS,
Bogus Butter,
Sept. 1L The oleomargna
ips have all been determined upon,
» ready for delivery to the internal
reang within a few days. Fa
olesale 8500 stamp, as already stated, the
gn is a vignette of the treasury depart
ding. The with dif
Lt Z. has been cont
wholesals
Wasisoron,
same design,
* IK
all the provisions of
The design of the export
hip in full sail—appropriate enough.
the retail stamps the
t f an agricuiiurist
en sarcasm prompted the
vice is not known,
Ianation is that
wiertaken to make the
can take a rest The internal revenue offi-
continue to find much trouble in arrang-
» minor details for putting the law into
at rest
the
butter, the farmer
now
noothly when once fairly started,
Up in a Balloon.
CRAWIORDSVILLE, Ind, Sept
Cincinnati, made an ascension
in a gas balloon from the fair grounds and
t lowing her life YVhen i
half a mile above the earth she at
The grappling
ut the anchorage was broken by a
ha
Lulu Bates, of
iil five mi
descend
the balloon was torn The hooks
the
herself
n against
basket and
life,
firmly
saved ber
the top of the
Bhe was badly
Secretary Bayard and Mexico.
Wasuixorox, Bept. 10. —The secretary of
hstanding the release of Cutting,
= 8 Re
Is of
confers
under
foreigners
will, it
the Mexican penal
upon Mexican
certain
which
jurisdiction
over
circumstances
com.
least Mr. Bayard will insdst upon the renunci.
jean citizens to that code, on the ground that
American courts bave exclusive eriminal
jurisdiction over offences committad within
the territory of the United States by Ameri.
can citizens,
Wisconsin Republicans,
Manson, Sept. 9 ~The Republican state
convention yesterday renominated Governor
tusk by acclamation amid intense enthu-
clas. The governor, in his speech of ace
ceptance, invited Anarchists to make them.
solves very scarce in this state so long as he
was in authority. Secretary of State Ernest
G. Timme was also renominated by scclama.
tion. George W. Ryland was renominated
for lieutenant governor; Henry B. Harshaw
was nominated for state treasurer, and
Charles E. Estabrook for attorney general,
Six Persons Drowned.
NASHVILLE, Sept. 11. A letter from Foun.
fain Run, Ky., gives the particulars of an
accident near that place by which six per.
sons lost their lives A party consisting of
the wife and child of Roy Turner, two sons
of John Nelson Turner, and two young men
named Hood were fording Greens river in a
wagon when the horses became frightened
and ran down stream into deep water, The
wagog upset, and as none of the occupants
could Swim the entire party were drowned.
The Count All In.
Waite Riven Jusorion, Vi, Sept. 11.
Complete returns from the entire state give
Ormsby (Republican) 87,081, Shurtleff (Dem.
ocrat) 17,901, Seely (Prohibition) 1,532, Green.
back and scattering, 205. The state represen.
tatives stand: Edmunds Republicans, 156;
anti-Edmunds Republicans, 6; straight Re.
publicans, 45; Prohibition Republicans, 2;
straight Democrats, 20; E Demo-
crats, 4,
Neverals Vessels Lost.
Macwias, Me, 10. «The British
Dart, Capt. Beattie Lisbon, for Calais
sailing from Halifax, is on Fisherman's
Jonesport and will be a total lose
I
—— S—— S————— { ig
{
El
— a —~
FENCE
TEI ERE
BELLEFON? EK. PA,
Price, 40. -
PRICE, $40,
PRICE, $40
PRICE, $40
nor do it
MANUFACTURED AND
ILD 60 RODS OF FENCE PER D
ave a
belter fence
ne. Note the price iz hout
3 {1 if that 1
Ding olbered 11al 0 any
i
than does the
LE BY
CRESS,
BELLEFONTE, PA,
tr
WN
AY
iain
one
better
HUNG ITSELF IN A CRIB,
Youx, Pa., Beer. 8.—~A six~-months old
bung itself this morning. It is
time, became restless and worked its way
| ards, resulting 1a strangulation.
§ -
TURKEY APPEALS TO EUROPE.
INOPLE, fhe Porte
| has sent a note to the powers, paving
i them to prevent a foreign military ocean
| pation of Bulgaria. Turkey hes author.
| ized the Ouoman Bank to loan
§
Coxsrar err. 8,
isAne a
i !
directly and the remainder in
| ments,
i .
WILL BE RETURNED
Wurre Riven, Vr, Serr.—The Repub-
| licans have elected 112 members of the
| EDMUNDS
| House of Representatives: Demo rats, 18;
| Workingmen ,1 Of the Ispublican
members elected 90 favor Edmunds for
U nited States Senator.
-——- -
BISHOF'2 DECLA-
RATIONS,
Dusuix, Serr,
THE CATHOLI
i
i i,-The conference of
| Catholic Bishops at Maynooth adopted
| resolutions to-day deciaring that the
Irish pedple appreciate Mr Gladstone's
| efforts on behalf of Ireland, snd that
| they still adhere to their demand for
| Home Rule, and indignantly denying
| the Tory assertions that if the Irish peo-
| ple were allowed to govern themselves
| in domestic affairs the Catholic majority
| would abuse the power eonferred on the
| Irish party parliament and harass the
| protestants of the country, The resolu
| ions further declare the trouble and dis
j order inlreland and Great Britain will pot
| cease until Ireland's right to administer
{ her own laws is recognized.
- a.
~Clothing selling off at cost
| Philadelphia Branch, If yi
| suit, DOW 18 tour time no ge
{ & pile of money. Boy's suits of all styles
{ 80 cheap thst you will surprised,
{ Don't miss a chance, bu! go at once and
| secure a bargsio.
at the
i want a
itand save
i
oR SMITre.
| SATE
wif A WELL-KNOWN REMEDY
ETTER SCROFUL
Ty A
SIPELA 4
| FLESH-WOUNDS, FELONS, BOILS, ULCERS,
i BURNS. BCALDS
CHAPPED-HANDS,
| PILES, CHILBLAINE, AND RUNNING BORES
Sent by Mail, post-paid, for 25
CENTS
Address, 8
in every County in
W. SMITH, Contre Hall, Pa
WANTED SOLICITO Pennsylvania for
THE LAKE snHone
MASONIC RELIEF ASSOCIATION
of Brie, Pa. For particulars write with references
or oall on WM. HIMROD, Geperal Agent. Erie, Pa
FO Rm
Furniture! Furniture
M'CORMICK BRO .,
(Successors to W. R, Camp.)
CENTRE HALL, PENN'A,
Offer the finest and largest stock of
FURNITURE
ever Lrought to Centre Hall,
— Prices to Suit the Tiines.—
Come and examine
stock and learn prices.
Wejkeep all furniture usually
we found in pe
FIRST CLASS FURNITURE STORE
BE A 1 AA Aa
UNDERTAKING
A SPECIALTY,
COFFINE, CASBKET®, BHROUDS
BURIAL ROBES, &e,
kept in stock,
—Funsrels Attended—
With the Finest Hearse in the County
. 17jan
IS THE BEST AND
¥ go 4 i : ¢
8 Because any sl
iron pickets equally well an
4 Weomse MM Will take a
are all woven plumb
5 Because the
best wire and picket fence,
repair . c
7 Becapse it is made of the best materials, a1
# Because it i» the only mechine that forces
breakage is impossible.
10 Because the fence made by this machine
er than any barb wire fence, and completely obyia
esch other, It will iot hold the moisture or rot. 1%
board fences soon rot off at post, and occasion contd
1 ONEY HLIOOR yy
tomo
I
ot Joy Lousy Luo ony Jo
: IMPROVED
Ze MACHINE
HAS NO. BQUAIL
of 43 i
5 fora th
ithe field belore 1
the weavidg = oom
double strands can be used,
can be used, weaving fancy
or up and down hill slike,
ing adjustable, the pickets
ios making Nie strongest and
aud there are no parts to get out of order and
4d, with , will Inst a life-time.
aripe?
the s cket firmly against the wire, thus
taunot be pulled out, and
will turn all kinds of stock, and is much strong
tes all danger of u ¥ 0 sock
nds to the posts with sta
wood parts from coming in contact wilh
148 is a very important matter, as all boards in
ned expense jor repair,
first-class, practical fence machine in the world,
SHIRES & KENNEDY,
CENTRE HALL, PA,
“Castoria is wo well adapted 10 children that
[recommend it as superior to any
known to me.”
Taw
Caxrars Corvaxy, 19 Palton Sirvet, NX. 1.