8 THE CENTRE REPORTER.| Epitor and ProP'r | THROUGH A BRIDGE, FRED. KURTZ, - A KILLED 118 AND MORE THAN 800 INJURED, Centre Haun, Pa., August 17, 1887, > An excursion train, carrying 960 pas- gengers, bound to Niagara Falls, about midnight of Wednesday 10, plunged through a barned bridge near the town of Chatsworth, Ill, on the Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway. The list of dead nurabers 118, and of the 2 The oldest lawsuit in [llinois has been | wonded it is propable that many will . 5 Bows die. The corpses of the dead and the on the docket for 42 years. It began persons of the injured were plundered about a 82 hog, and bas cost the princi- | of money and jewelry, and this fact gives 7 000 rise to the suspicion that the bridge was ——————————— purposely fired in order to cause the dis x aster and furnish opportunity for robbery. The excursionists hailed from points in central Illinois, the bulk of them, however, coming from Peoria. Some of the passengers came from tan, 11 Paso, Washington and, in fact, all stations along the liae; some from as far West as Burlington and Keokuk, Ia, A apecial and cheap rate have been made for the excursion, and all sorts of people took advantage of it, Three miles East of Chatsworth is a little slough, where the railroad crosses a dry ran about ten feet deep and fifteen | feet wide, Ower this was stretched an | ordinary wooden trestle bridge, and as ing to form a'great whiskey pool with a! the excursion train came view of controlling the wholesale liquor | down on it what was the horror of : | engine 3 gine whe trade of the United States The capital wp A ! ayiae when represented by the members of the pool is estimated at $25 000,000, An exchange says August is the me- teor month. Pshaw—we found we could meet-her any month in the year. SAI pals about § In Wyoming Territory capital punish- ment is inflicted by shooting. The caution of Fred Hopt on Thursday was conducted by a marshall and a firing par- remarka- | exe VArious ty of five men. The case is a ble one for the Western territorial re- gion, where punishment is swift and not always according to the forms of law. The crime was committed in 1880, and seven years have been spent in the law's delays. EAI The distillers of the West are combin It is propos- Had there taken There was no chance to st yD p. been warning it would have ed to monopolize the production of lig- \ 3 “ nor in this country and regulate prices, Incidentally the combination will take the | wood, iron and human lives, and part in resisting the growth of “temper- | train was within 100 yards of the will the | tongued messenger of death before they 4 a : . a flashed their fatal signals into the engin- passage of laws “calenlated to injure the eet’s face. ut he passed over in safety, the first engine keeping the rails, As it went over the bridge fell beneath it, and ance fanaticism,” and oppose trade.” The temperance canse will find a new and powerful enemy in this whisk- dol- | : | of the train which saved the lives of the { engineer and his fireman. Down in the ditch lay Twenty-five million lars is a large sum to fight against, ey monopoly. the second of the | blind leading the blind, or of the potent | influence of the money of the “American | Protective Association,” whena conven- the aboli- | tion of taxes on whiskey and a perpetua- | It certainly looks like a case Applegate badly injured. On top were piled the three baggage cars, one on top of another like a child's card house after he had swept it with his hand. Then came the six day coaches. They were telescoped as cars never were before, and three of them were pressed into just | enough space for one. The second car { had mounted off trucks, crashed through the car ahead of it, crushing the woodwork aside like tinder, and lay there resting on the tops of the while every passenger in the front was laying dead and dying underneath, Oat of that car but four people came out alive. On top of the second car lay third, and its bottom was smeared | the blood of its victims, {| And to fight the fire there was | drop of water and only some fifty bodied men who still had ‘ miod and nerve enough to do their duty. The only ligl wi ing bridge. ¥ tion of laboring men calls for tion of the war taxes on sogar, salt, cloth- ing, and other necessities. Do these men ever stop to think that every its monopoly | of which they complain has grown ' up and that every loss of employment” and | which they lament | has occurred under the high tariff which | they plead to have kept at the war max- | imum ‘reduction of wages . ' : with Fetich w hin ia } halo or etichh worship isnot a heip to progress, not a able- The White River Utes, under old Col in Gar- The set eeing to Meeker and the near- est towns for safety orow, are again on the warpath fi i Xo} i Hea county near the Utsh line. And with so mach of its aid tlers are fl the fifty men went to work to fight ti} flame. For four hours they fought fiends, and for four hours talp. | hung in the balance. 2io- | . . The ranchmen have the vit already organized a volunteer compauy. Gov. Adams received most urgent FIGHTING THE FIRE WITH EARTH grams from Glenwood ¢ . . ior prote 14 Springs, He has telegraphed asking the | War Department the nature of the troub- Farth was the only weapon with which the foe could be fought, and so the at- tempt was made to smother it out, There was no pick or shovel to dig it ap; baskets or barrows to carry it, and | desperate were they that they dug fingers down into the earth, which long drouth had packed almost as as stone, and heaped the precious hand- fuls thus hardly won upon the encroach- ing flames, and with this earthwork, built handfal by handfal, kept back i foe n. les, and hopes to obtain the assistance of United States troops from Utah, no BO : The reports from the frontier are still an hard 1 quite meagre, but the Indians ae said to have fired on the whites then reservation for and to have sent to the more warriors, $4 ile TI RESTA I. The great conspiracy case in Chicago | So. stieY dug up the earth with their ; : 3 s . | hands, reckless « he 1! tre ing has ended in the conviction of all the ac- | bands, r ck ess of the blood streaming The | | out from broken finger nails and heap- ie iatter ling itup inl ttle mounds, while all the while came the heartrending cry “For cused parties. include an ex- Warden of the Cook County Insane Asy- lum. f of I's sake don't let us barn to death ! i } lly the victory was won, the fire mem- 1 ont after four hours of endeavor- ing, and as its last sparks died away a light came up in the East to take their place and dawn came upon a scene of 1OFTOT, . While the fight had been going One of the twelve | men had been dying and there were pleaded guilty and his sentence has yet | 80 many wounded take out of wreck as there had been foar hours fore. Bat in the meantime, the country had been aroused; help had come from Chataworth, Forest and Piper City, and | as the dead were laid reverently aloog- | side of each other out in the cornfield, ns loca - * | there were ready hands to take them in- » The eleven officials were equal- | 1, Cn gteworth, while some of the wound- ly guilty and should have been served | ad were carried to Piper City. One alike, but one juryman voted to acquit | hundred and eighteen was the awful poll them all, and could only be brought to | of the dead, while the wounded number an agreement by a compromise which let | four times that many. : No sooner had the wreck occurred th off four of the convicted men with a arred than slight fine. Bat Chicago will be rid of a scene of robbery commenced. Some band of unspeakable miscreants, went seven rascals for two years; and that fs | Into the cars when the fire was burning something gained. EIS | fiercely underneath and when the poor COAL BARONS AND SERFS. From the Chicago wr ex-members of the Board County Commissioners and seven The verdict | the jury fixes the punishment of four of the convicted men at a fine of $1,000 | h, and { bers of the present Board. of f seven others at two years in ol » . mn, ntiary. not the he nen t to to be pronounced. Considering the enor- mity of the offence the sentences inflicts ed are very light, especially the four | fines. The verdict affords another illus- tration of the loose workings of our jury system, them “for God's sake to help them out,” THE stripped them of their watches and jew. THEIR ey. When the dead bodies were laid out in the cornfield these hyenas turned Herald Pennsylvania is a nice State, which in variably shows up a majority of Mr. Randall and of 79,999 other Republicans for the protective idea. The Hazelbrook and that the plundering was done by an that this morning out in the corn field miners are Republicans, too, and as for sixteen purses, all empty, were found in . 3 d one heap. protective idea, why, they fairly dote on | and had the plunderers been caught this it. It is literally the breath of their | afternoon they would surely have been nostrils, For if coal mined by the | lynched. pauper labor of Europe were allowed to | enter the country and compete with them they would not be able to continue | out more horrible than all of those hor- ; | rible scenes, In the second coach in their role as friends of the Ameri : i d Hi Libor ao J) ‘Tienda oy I a man, his wife and little child, would they be able to tax the people of | the United States $6,250,000, as they did | the other day in a little back room on | . | broken woodwork, Finally, when relief Wall street, by adding 50 cents to the | came the man tarned to , friendly price of coal. The Hazelbrook and other | and feebly said: “Take out my wife first. mine owners are stout Republicans of | I'm afraid the child is dead.” Bo they | carried out the mother, and as a broken the Foraker kind, too. They think that | i was ta ' ken off her crushed bress the rebellion shoold be suppressed and | the blood which flowed from her an slavery wiped off the face of the earth | told how badly she was burt. They That is why they import cargoes of white | carried the child, a fair-haired, blue-eyed slaves from Hungary and Italy and forge | ¢ i oad Jd he Pw eotufleidy the chains of absolute dependence about | Then they went buck for tue father and them in the mines. They havea “com. | brought iin Gat, Both hii gs wore ” | broken, but he craw through the e rn puny slore a well as a company doctor. | to the side of his wife, and feeling her 9, no, 8 a very tiresome story | |oyed features in the darkness pressed this, and who should panse to listen | some brandy to her lips and wskec her when he has only to incline his ear | how she felt. A feeble groan was the Ohioward and hear the lively fictions { only answer and the next instant she of Mr. Forker about the wicked 30,00 Whe man felt the forms of his dead Georgia Democrats who hold their 270,- | wite and child, and cried out: “M 000 fel w-citizens in bondage. ¥ A HUSBANDS SUICIDE. There was one incident which is said he got on at Peoria, When the accident occurred the entire family of there is nothing more for me to live for now,” and, taking a pistol ont of his pocket, pulled the trigger. The bullet wont surely through his brain, and the three dead bodies of that little family are now lying side by side in Chatsworth | waiting to be indentified, —_ . . A CHAIN OF BRIGHT RESORTS, OF WHICH SEA ISLE OITIESIS A SHINING LINK. seaside resorts on the New Jersey are on islands? From Sandy Hook | and twenty-seven miles, is a stiring of resorts, folly seventy-five in number, For at least two-thirds of this i Is now sandy beaches out in the sea. From on the main land. These include Branch, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Ocean Beach, Spring Lake and Bea Girt, and a dozen places not as well From Bay Head, at the top of side the chain of islands. | wide Park, and Island Beach. City Beach, Harvey's Haven, and Sea Haven Cedars, Across Little Bay, Brigantine Island being Brigantine you eross the famous inlet and find vonmself at Atlantic Though the Throughfare and your takes you to Longport at the end of boat at the northern extremity Great Egg Harbor Bay and you Peck’s Beach with Ocean City. throughfare carries you past the to Corson’s Inlet at the northern end to call ane Y J f FURNITURE EMPORIUM OF more complete than ever. | examine. | er! | even if Yo Parlor u do not buy. We have an attractive -of all the fashionable styles They are in Walnut f Ash inave Store. Cx Point and Cape May. What a marvelous coast this where can anything like it be And a'l these resorts have been possible and been developed by the Pennsylvania Railroad. It touches | everywhere. Some syndicate purchases a strip of beach and improves it, Next we hear ofa Peonsylvania Railroad branch penetrating it, and lo! it blossoms forth into a full-fledged resort with hotels and cottages. Before many years there will he a continuous line of rails from Sandy Hook to Cape May Point, withnol a | mile of unoccupied beach land, Among these resorts you can make your choice. There is the fashion of Long | Branch, of Key Fast, of Bea Girt, and Spring Lake; the less fashionable but still gav and temperate Asbary Park; the | great Methodist camp at Ocean Grove; the restless, crowded cosmopolitanism of Atlantic City, and the quiet elegance Old Cape May. Then there is the grand fishing and sailing of Barnegat Bay and i the resorts of the neighbarhood, and the is ! | Atlantic City. Everybody | lantic, and rich snd poor jostle other on the beach and in the ohbies, But if voa would berid of | that: if you woold travel with a bag | stead of a trunk, and enjoy a free and easy life free from the dictates of fashion, go to Barnegat City Beach, Longport, | Ocean City, Sea Isle City, and Angle- BER. One of the newest places is Sea It is of easy access, and express tr over the West Jersey road rake vou rectly toitin two hours, It only about five years old, and yet it rejoices in several hundred cottages and varieus hotels. Many of these are built almost upon the very edge of the sea, being separated from it only by a sea wall five or six feet high. The beach is hard as a plank. Itis of peculiar qoality., The dazzling white of 80 many beaches is absent in this, Fine black sand is mix. ed with it in such quantities as to make it enay for the eye. And there is no safer beach to be found anywhere, Its sea wall is a novelty, The wall makes it possible for bonses to be built cle to the water, something which is very rare, Atlantic City and other resorts might take an idea from Sea Isle. A like wall at Atlantic would utilize many hundreds of acres, You can do as you please at Sea sr fashion will not dictate. If you are ired of the hurlvyburly and wish to es cape the crowd there there is no better place. You ean be comfortable and en- joy life by the sea in its purity. Fish. ing, sailing, and crabbing will give you diversions on the water, and excursion trips to Cape May, Ocean City, Longport, and Atlantie City will help you pass the time. At- each hotel all in. goes Lo Isle, Ring 1 a is Isle, f f EGOMMON SENSE Tells anyone that it is an ut- ter impossibility for a mer- chant to sell goods continually eee A-T C.0-S.T eee . A never be conducted on such a legitimate business can | basis, as taxes, rent, insurance, | etc., must be paid and a living We do earned. not conduct | our business upon such a prin- | ciple, and we only aska rea. all sonable advance on our ‘goods. We believe in | FAIR AND SQUARE dealing and know that our goods and prices prove what we say. Give us a call and be convinced. HARPER & KREAMER, Centre Hall, Pa. yme and see our Stock, H* HICKS & BR onl sto fro you R3, BELLEFONTE, PENN he largest stock at the prices of any store in our lice of ss in Centre county. Now that ephone Connection direct to our} re, it will more than pay you to order We ship} or the Im us. guarantee prompt and the lowest H roe Pi 1 os When you can save money 1 will certainly take ads HICKS & BRO Reac ie “REPOR .50 a Year. 1TYAY1Y HW ~ :R COM » menoed. 2 weaving all with equal fac are all woven plumb, 5 Because the best wire and picket fence, 6 Beosuse repair, 2 7 Becanse it is made 9 Because it is securing the slat in suc is impossible, 10 Because the 11 Betauss by weavi not nailing the » board a a of a : #OON at 12 Because all kinds THE IMPROVED MON SENSE REASONS WHY THE IMPROVED I8 THE BEST AND HAS NO EQUAL. lity. of the best materials every farmer. machine that forces the slat or and completely obviates all danger of inju past the post, and fastening the wire i posts, thus Xooping the wood parts mplgrare or rot. lh in ys J and oooasion continued expe: repair, ah material can be tsed for making new fence SHIRES Chal © THE GOON SENS T NE-EIGHTH OF A MINUTE. ww 137dN0D 3 1 -o- 1 1 3 § a fire. and extremely handy for lots of osber Min d3Q 3uUid with at ind v § Beady for action in Q al i3AlY WORTH FIFTY TIMES ITS COS if you need it to pu LN3 oa samen gwen Tel pte A Boergetic boviness men wl .BLATCHLEY trol of muita CHARLES G MANUFACTURER “%; Offips: BN KE City Hall Bre Opp. Broad BL. Blation ¥. 5 3 Pa, NJ oorded con all sizes Woon yp nd ny} Pa. it sink ia Philadelphia, PESKBYLY ANIA aud Erie Divi ERIK MAIL loavi LF i leave Mq pmand 7 80 pm CHAS. E PUGH, General Manager, THE Keystone Mutual Benefit As- sociation. wnsnsssn { ) J ssmscusssne ~~ ALLENTOWN, PA.— Offers the cheapest and best — LIFE INSURANC In ambunts from $500 to $8000, 0 AGENTS WANTED, — Address as above feblim Send for Circulars, 24 APurgubar’s Standard Bagiom & Baw Bile he \ : Bend hw Diustrated {