THE CENTRE REPORTER, FRED. KURTZ, Eprror and Pror’r a9 ay Cextre Harn, Pa., September Democratic State Ticket. FOR SUPREME JUDGE: J. ROSS THOMPSON, FOR STATE TREASURER : B. J. McGRANN, Democratic County Ticket. Associate Judge—JOHN GROVE, Sheriff —JOHN NOLL. Treasurer—J AMES KIMPORT, Requter—JOHN A. RUPP. ea a AY GREISE ommissioners— M 8 FEIDLER. tuditers | B A McKEE. Audders {pp JAMISON, 1887. ia DEMOCRATIC COUNTY COMMITTE E. H Y Stitzer, = WwW Edward Brown, Jr, W W.........James Schofield, Howard Boro... . ...A Weber, lesburg Boro. A C Witherite, heim Boro... .A A Frank, Centre Hall Boro DJ Meyers, ( GG Herlinger, Henry Lehman, ..A J Graham, +A J Greist, Thomas Frasier, James Coakly WMilligan Walker, ..H I. Harvey, Anson Dougherty, John 1 Williams, David Brickley, . Henry Krebs, ..Frank Bowersox, Hiram Grove, Josiah Roossman William Keen, a ge M. Keister, ..William Bailey, Frank E Welland, sohn Glenn, ....Wm Irwin, ..Wm Gardne~, John Ishler, eA N Corman, «J C Eckley, -..Wm H Kreamer, F A Foraman, W W Royer, NW Bellefonte 1st W 2d WwW dW. Unionville Boro.....cueens Benner twp “ Boges twp. N P.. do WP. do EP. Burnside twp... College twp Curtin twp Ferguson twp E do wr Gregg twp 8P.. do NP Haines twp E do Ww Half Moon t ssa asa. HAITIS tWP. cvrirnrarranisn Howard twp... Huston twp.... Liberty twp... Marion twp Miles twp Patton twp... Penn twp..... Potter twp N P.. do SP... Rush twp, 8 P.. wend M Clarr, do N P....coorsnenennendohn Howe, Snow Shoe W Po... do BP. Philipsburg 1 m Calderwood, John H Beck, i J Woodriz Charles JAMES A, McCLAIN Chairman. Union twp...com H. Y. Stites, Secretary. The losses by the collapse of the San Francisco wheat deal are now given as seven and a half millions of dollars, and of this peat sum the millionaires who own the Nevada Bank stand to lose all but about a million. That sort of fun is too expensive, even for such high rollers as Mackey, Fair et al. - Jonathan Bell, of Oglethorpe county, Ga., had his coffin made a number of years ago. He told his friends a few days ago that he would soon die, and to send for his coffin. He then ordered it made water-proof, and he had the maker to fill it full of water, screw the lid om and turn it over and over. They did so in his presence, and he was satisfied. He died the next day and was laid away to est. a And now an Iowa man who has spent fourteen years upon the problem claims that he has made an anger that will bore a square hole. His invention is simply projecting lips, which cut out the corners in advance of the chisel. The rest of the machine is an almost exact counterpart of the old style boring machine. It wil cut a 2x4 mortise in from four to five minutes with perfect accuracy, that a car- penter cannot complete in less than half an hour, . nt - Henry 8. Ives hae begun to talk, and is letting out by piece-meal the secrets ofthe B, & O. deal. He has said enough already to put a different face on some matters which have borne hardly against him in the public mind, and justify the conclusion that be has been as much sinned against as sinning. The manner Ives in the B. £0. sale and the causes which led to it are not such as to crown him with glory, but rather the reverse, Garrett, it is known, was hard up, and so was his corporation, and with loans fall meet them, he was given the alternative of breaking with Ives and placing the B & O, property in the hands of the other syndicate, or being forced into bankrupt- cy and having the road put into the hands of a receiver. The ethics of Wall to say the least, New York has a Saturday balf holiday law. The N.Y. Observer gives ita opin- a regular inatitntion will have to be aban, doned for the present, or postponed un til the world has more leisure than it has now. Business men and generaily are revolting against the ens- tom and refasiong to observe it any long: er. The fact that Saturday afternoon was constituted a legal holiday by the last Legislature makes no differance in the aspects of the case except in banks and exchanges, The enactment of the law was plainly a piece of folly and was done simply a8 a bid for the favor of the so-called “laboring class,” and not from any humane or philanthropic motives, A half-holiday on Saturday the year round would be a good thing if it could be brought about by honest and rational methods, but the attempt to force it uvp- on the business community by a statute framed in the interests of truckling poli ticians will do the movement far more harm than good. VETOED PENSION BILLS, | The recent agitation of the | vetoes of President Cleveland show a re- | markable degree of ignorance on | part of those who criticise him in regard | to the exact natnre of these vetoes. That from prejudice is so easily disproved by | able illustration of ignorance, coupled | part of claim agents, { and their cligne, | President Cleveland vetoed 1256 pen- | sion bills, 124 being private bills and the | other the dependent pension bill, The pension grabbers has already been shown that it was not a | dier, The private bills vetoed and the | reasons for their disapproval can be read. i ily classified, The Pittsburg Post editorially remarks: Elsewhere will be found a dispatch | from Washington giving an analysis of | President Cleveland's vetoes of private pension bills. These vetoes | the alleged excuse for the treasonable | demonstration against the president by have been | the pension grabbing contingent whose | chief exponents have heen Tattle, Fair- | child and Foraker. The of | these creatures has been only equaled by hypoericy their malevolence. It wasa cheap and the dent had vetoed 124 private pension bills | handy argument to say that presi- and was thus unfriendly to the soldiers, But in no instance bave the facts upon which the vetoes were based been giv en To have done this would have to bave given the president credit instead been of blame. The list shows deserters and dishonorably discharged soldiers asking favors of the government; sufferers whoss disabilities were incarred before or after the war asking to be placed on the pen- gion roll, even down to the man who had the effrontery to attribute his weak eves to chronic diarr hora, If such in- stances as these do not justify the presi dent and expose the extent and ter of the pension grabbing | the it take the locks off the treasury vaults and let the looters fight charac- paid vpon treasury, then wonld be well to among themselyes for the spoils . A NATIONAL MONUMENT. Governor Beaver presided at a meet. and ex-Governors in Parlor A of the Lafayette Hotel, Phil- adelphia, to consider the advisability of the erection of a monument in commem- oration of the adoption of the Constita~ tion. ing of the Governors Ex-Gov. Pollock formally opened the subject, He was followed by ex-Gov: Cartin, Governor Richardson, of Bouth Carolina; Governor Wilson of West Vir. ginia, and others one sentiment that prevailed was for the erection of The a grand national monument in Indepen- dence Square. ‘The subject will be furth er considered by the Governors. Which ?—Under this caption the Phil- | adelpbia Record raises the pertinent questions: There is not a ha- man cannot live without whisky and tobaeco. saries—luxuries, On the contrary, men, {| women and children must be fed, cloth- ed, housed These following being who They are unneces- warmed necessities to living. and are The so-called protectibnists want free whisky and cheap tobacco in order that they may keep up the prices of clothing, food, coal and lumber. The revenue reformers wish to retain the tax on whisky and tobacco, knowing that only those who use them pay the At the same time | they desire to put an end to overtaxation by reducing the tax on necessaries, the | most important of which are the taxes on the raw materiale—wool, hemp, jote, iron ore, coal, salt, lamber and dye stuffs, The tax dispute in a nut-shell is: | best te have free whisky or free woo taxes upon them. Is it --——— Perhaps none of the papers read before | interest than the one by Dr. Cyrus Ed of Cities.” Milk is the chief food for | children and an important element in | the food supply of adults, but no other | article of food, he declared, is so much adulterated as milk, whose physical prop- erties are such that it is easy for the une | scrupulous to tamper with it. There are numerous methods employed to conceal | the water mixed with the milk, and many of the articles used are deleterious to health. The water itselfis frequently | of bad quality, and it is his experience in the country farnished water fit for Crinking { that not one well ina hundred adulteration of milk, and there is scarce- or Liverpool, without guile, Numerous cases of ty- phoid fever, scarlet fever and diptheria eonld be traced to the milk supply. It is the first duty of the Government, he thought, to protect the health of its eiti- zens, and to this end each city should have a milk inspector far at least each 100,000 inhabitants, and the State should have a Veterinary Board to examine the condition of cows. A ——— An important amendment has been added to the state revenue bill. Ex- Speaker ; Boyer succeeded in having adopted an amendment which will be known as section 10, making it unlawful for any person or corporation to require a borrower to pay the State tax on loans, Col, N. H. R. Dawson, Commissioner of | Education, arrived in Washington from Alaska, where he went to investigate the | question of Indian education and inspect the schools established and those about to be established in that far off country by the United States Government. He reports great progress in the work of civilizing and educating the Indians. At Sitka there are two United States Gov- ernment schools, one Presbyterian mis- sion and one Russian school. The na- tive Alaskans are very docile and sharp- witted, and the children learn rapidly. Col. Dawson says that Alaska is a superb country, but developing There are already a great many salmon. canning industries and three or four gold mines worked by syndicates, which are realizing splendid fortunes for the inves- tors. There is quite a mining boom jnst at Sitka, The gold mine known as the Treadwell on Douglass Island, is one of the richest and most United States, The mill on Douglass Island cost $500,000 only needs present, particularly at profitable in the and comprises 120 stamps, The prospects of gold mining in the vicinity of Sitka are very Many tests of the quartz, which is composed of sulphurets + i I promising. and free gold, have been made,and I am the that the rock assavs as high as $6,000 to the ” » y informed, said Commissioner, ton. > ——- The number of aged fou ble. There are scores of men and women Mormons to be nd in Salt Lake City is very remarka- who have reached the allotted threescore years and ten, while many of them are It fond of hesitate well on in the eighties and ninelies, may be that Mormons are so wholesale matrimony that they to go forth to a land where there is giving whatever may be the reason, itis a no buat, fact Mormon- “We live mArriage nor in marriage, in A prominent Mormon says to Official records show that that longevity is prevalent dom. Mormons believe it is our daty past seventy.” a large number of Mormone do their da- ty in this regard. It would seem at frst b sight as though a man who was liable to receive curtain lectares from six or sev- en different sources would be anxious to ff this mortal coil at a thrust ¢ COMPAara Sach, 5 not institatio however, the fact and polygamy as an tively early age. n does not geem to have a depressing fect on the men and women under its in finence. --—— The six-year-old son of Bernard Green, 3 nat £5. near Bennettsville, Ind., was recently run over by a heavy wagon and had his The father knew that the leg must come off, and, after trying toget a right leg crushed. vainly determined to He had no instrument, with the exception of a surgeon, perform the operation himself, razor and a small meat saw, but with eg nt these he took off the leg neat boy recovered from the shock and | ing well, Sargeons say that the | bh as successful as anyone could ask - A cheerful view, if not a strictly core rect one, istaken of a seeming misfortune It a good thing that the cattle in Texas are by a Texas paper, which observes is dying off, for when they die off they de- crease in number, when they decrease in number they become more valuable where they become more valuable their owner becomes wealthier. Therefore, it is a good thing for the cattle to die off. a - Rio get both extremes in a very short space People living along the Grande ago the river was is of time, Two weeks rnoniong dry; now it overflowing its banks, - Philadelphia Times Philadelphia honored The people of themselves by theireqnally enthusiastic welcome, when ever opportunity presented, of our ! Democratic President and our Republi. Philadelphia has no par- tisan brawlers in any party. a - GIVE THEM A CHANCE! Also all can Governor, That is to say, your lungs. our breathing machinery. Very won. | derful machinery it is. Not only the larger air-passages, but the thousand of | little tubes and cavities leading from them, When these are clogged and choked with matter which ought notto be there, | your longs cannot ha!f do their work And what they do, they cannot do well, Call in cold, eongh, croup, pneumonia, eatarrh, consumption or any of the fami- ly of throat and nose and head and lung obstructions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just one sare way to get rid of them, Thatis to take Boschee's German Syrup, which any druggist will «il yon at 75 cents a bottie Even if everythiog else has failed you you may depend upon thisfor certain. - a. NOTICE. | From date of this notice chop grists { will be ground only on Tuesday and Friday of each week, In order to make gure, please have grists in by Monday and Thursday evening or early morning | of next days, Kunrz & Sox, Sept. 1, 1887, ESHER SALEBY VIRTUEOF A WRIT of Fieri Facias, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre county, Pa, and 10 me directed will be exposed at public sale, at the Court House, in the Borough of Bellefonte, on SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1887, “1 o'clock, p.m, the following property to All that certain ,lenement and tract of land situate in th, Centre Co. described as follows, to wit: On I orn. pds a Jn 2nd Rh . or the y Ini er, on the onst Walnut street, and on the west by lands of am. tel Reber, con aining 6 acres, more or less, There. on erected a two story frame dwelling house, barn, wood house, corn orib, and other outbuild. ings, also an orchard thereon. Selsed, taken In execution, and Ww be sold as the property of J. HH. MeEiwaln, TERMS-~No deed will be acknowledged until the purchase money beh as, Sheriff's Ofc, Bellefonte, Pa., arger Than Ever FURNITURE EMPORIUM OF =» v a W ®. CAMP, Bishop Strast, Bsllsfonts, Pa. Is now more complete than ever. Endless variety of I respectfully invite the people of Centre eonnty to call and examine. In purchasing these goods I have taken great care in selection, and purchased the best for the money. My prices are in strict conformity with reli- able goods, Our Store Room is fall and is worth seeing even if you do not buy. We have an attractive line of Parlor Saits—of all the fashionable styles. Chamber Suits are equally attractive. They are in Walnut, Ash and Cherry. Besides goods enumerated above we have everything that can be found in a first class Furniture Store. Come and see our Stock, W. R. Camp. Bishop BELLI. ONTDL., PA. HE HICK! Elard~