The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 12, 1889, Image 1

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    REPORTER
EDITOR
FRED KURTZ,
¥
Mike Musser for associate judge—Je~
ru-sa-iem !
A SO TSO RW TT.
Wilkesbarre felt a severe
earthquake on night of 10
a ————————————————
shock of
A rise in diamonds, of 20 per cent, is
reported. REPORTER
purchase their winter's supply
A TO ST
readers had best
at ounce,
Noah managed to seer folks through a
one thovght of making Lim governor on
that account,
TI TS
For saving a man’s life about twenty
years ago a $10,000 remembrance clause
in a will gladdened the
man who did it, the other day.
nnexpectedly
The Repnblicans in nominating Mike
Musser for judge, may have made their
ticket top heavy; when at
Aaronsburg, a few years ago, there was
posimaster
loud and general complaint of gross neg-
ligence in the office.
—————————————————
M. M. Muasser's
Aarovshurg post
complaint wit!
Asrontbarg delivery in
Well « kind of
judge would he make?
management of the
a source of
within the
that town,
an associate
office, was
nearly all
ow, what
T.F. Riley isthe man von want for
assoc’ate judge, he never mismanaged a
post affiea—he is intelligent, striet busi.
ness habits and of good excellent charac-
ter and impartial
hitter, unreasone
He will make a safa
associate, and is not a
ing partisan like M. M. Musser,
a ————
Bellefonte papers
gevere with the setting commissioners
for not removing the canse of the flavor
from the rear of the court house, A little
consideration must be had, the toddy
sucker of the Gazette being around that
place so much the commissioners sup-
posed it was the smell of his breath.
TR
are disposed to be
Several cases of bogus baby swindles
are late inventions to raise money. One
is that of Mrs. Ray Hamilton, in Phila
delphia and a bogus caee in Boston. In
both cases large sums of money were ch-
tained. This may prove as profitable as
the oats swindle of a few years ago,
and is every whit as respectable, only a
little more amusing.
It is one ofthe “skin of the teeth’
majorities that promises a busy winter
for the deputy sergeants at arms who are
detailed to arrest delinquent members
in order to establish a quornm.
The unofficial list of members elected
to the Fifty first congress gave the Re-
publicana 164 members and the Demo-
crats 161, ro independent being elected,
a ——————————
A Minnesota firmer has just brought
an interesting and novel experiment to
a successful issue. Last spring there was
considerable controversy over the expe
diency of sowing frosted wheat, some ex~
perienced wheat men taking strong
grounds against it. The officers of the
state experimental farm, however, ad-
vised that this wheat be sowed and some
was put in the ground which waa so
shrunken that few believed that it would
grow, The crop has heen harvested and
it is raid both yield and quality are as
good as if from selected wheat,
A ————————————
Asiuming the rate of increase during
the lsat ten years, phen a'l the coudi-
tious were favorable, to be 34 per cent,
Clem. M,C. Meigs says that we shall be
found by the census of 1890 to have 67,
240,000 people in the United States. The
ratio is just a trifle above the aversge
ratio for the haudred years of the repnb-
li’ history; but is considerably under
the ratio on which our population has
incre sed within every decennial period,
except those where serious losses have
been suffered through wars and epi-
demica. We have had no soch draws
backs during the last nine vears and
eight months,
EI S——
The Williamegrove picnic this year
was a greater success than any previous
one. The exhibits were larger, the
crowds grealer, and the management
under Col. Thomas, more admirable
The addresses were excellent snd upon
timely topics, perhaps all, but one, as we
read between the lines in the Philad.
Times report, whieh was an old wail, an
annual rehash of the last dozen years,
avd regularly sent to the ReronTer every
year, years ago, to eponge off the news
papers notoriety for the crank orator,
fall of bad grammar and bad spelling.
The grange is making faster headway
than the head itsell, Senator Brown, of
York, Mortimer Whitehead, the Rerons
Tei, Gol Thomas and such are the life of
the Grange and keep it from becoming
stale vinegar,
Kick at Williamsgrove.
The Harrisburg Patriot says: Trouble
of no little consequence exis!s between
many of the agents for agricultural ims
plements, who have exhibited atthe
grangers picnics at Williams Grove ever
since the first of these big affairs was
held, and the men who derive pecuniary
benefit from the annual gatherings
which thousands of people attend, The
agents claim that they were not treated
right by the picnic managers in the mat.
ter of the running of trains and they de-
clare that they will not again take their
wares to Williams Grove,
dently mean just what they
They evis
say as they
have already begun a movement to hold
Mt.
Mr. Robert Coleman, the mana-
the next
Gretna
ger of that
and the
highly
agents,
meeting of Grangers at
place, has been consclted,
proposes are
the displeased
will charge them
nothing for exhibiting their machines as
is the case at Williams
will in other ways favor
other patrons.
One of the disgruntled exhibitors was
seen last night said: “We have
become tired of a few men making thous
of the
Grangers picnic by charging us big space
rates. They want the newspapers to ad
vertise their for nothing and in
short they are guilty of many selfish acts.
There is no doubt that the big crowd
will be at Mt, Cretna next year.”
This leads us to answer a question
put to us several times as to the Centre
Hall picnie, whether it is a speculation
for private pocket. We answer,
far as we know it is not; we
confidence in such men
terms which he
satisfactory to
Mr. Coleman
Grove, and he
them and the
and he
sands of doliars every year
rt
out
show
DO
have every
80
on the commits
tee as Messrs. Danberman, Dale, Arney
aud Giogerich that they would
guilty of sordid motives—the advertising
of the picnic is asked free of the Raror-
TER and other pewspapers, and granted
liberally, believing that it is no game to
skin anybody, but simply to pay legitis
mate expenses, anything else will be
promptly exposed when it comes to light.
not be
-
Changing the Face of the
Earth.
Natural causes are helping to extend
the territorial possessions of France, It
is said that her colony of Tonquin is
pushing out into the sea at the rate of
nearly fifty feet a year, so rapidly is the
alluviam brought down the many chaus
nels in the Red River delta filling up the
shallow ocean in front of it. According
to Chinese geographers, Hanoi, the eap~
ital of Tonquin, now far inland, stood on
the seashore ouly twelve hundred years
8go and il is certain that within historic
times a very large part of Tonquin has
been reclaimed from the waters,
I'he drainage area of the Yang-tse-
Kiang River is equal to one sixth of the
area of our country, incloding Alaska. It
is estimated that the enormous amount
of sediment poured down by this river,
amounts to the denndation of the entire
basin by one foot in No
wonder that with this mass of five billion
cubic feet of eolid matter emptied into
the ocean every year the people of Shans
ghai are able to see that the coast line is
rapidly advancing.
Some strange reminders of the land are
sometimes fished from the bottom of mid-
ocean. The trawl of a scientific exped.-
ition in the Southern Pacific a while ago
brought up some pieces of gneiss some of
them showing glacial making. These frag-
ments are supposed to have bee brought
far northward from Antaretic land by
floating ice. The influence of all the
great rivers can be traced on the bottom
far out to sea, The detritus from the
Congo ia found sifted over the ocean bed
600 miles from land. The bottom of the
Bay of Bangal and the Arabian Sea are
entirely covered with sediment from the
Gaoges and Indus. Oceanic depths of
water are pushed farther ont from land
opposite the mouths of big rivers, The
Congo seems to furnish a remarkable
exception to thisrole, The reason is that
this mighly river, whose steady outflow
is never for a monent interrupted by the
Atlantic tides has ploughed a big farrow
in ths ocean bed for a consideraple dist
tance so that deep water comes nearer to
the Congo's mouth than to the adjacent
parts of the continent,
— lb ——————
Death of Sunset Cox.
Congressman Sunset Cox died at 8:33
o'clock Tuesday evening, in New York
The ead was quiet, and the dying man
breathed bis last as peacefully as if falls
ing into a light sleep. Mrs, Cox, who
bad been scarcely away from her hus
bauds bedside for the past two days and
nights, held his left hand while his old
friend, Douglas Taylor, held the other,
He had been conscious all day, until
about a quarter of an hoor before his
end. Dr, Lockwood was in attendance
all the time.
es tc te te cr eE——
J.C. Meyer bas beén go efficient as a
district attorney that the gene:al senti
ment is he shall be re-elected. No
3,000 years,
change wanted there,
The Democratic Convention.
There was no contention in the Demo-
cratic state convention, Mr, E. A. Bigler,
of Clearfield county, a sco of ex-Govern.
or William for
State Treasurer by a two-thirds vote on
the first ballot, Mr, Bigler is a thorough»
jigler, was nominated
lv honest and capable Democrat, in the
prime of life. His nomination was not
effected by any set-up arrangement of
sgement. It was an unsolicited honor
which if ratified by the people and foliow-
ed by the reforms in fiscal management
demanded by the platform wonld re
dound to ¢
for iz almost Hawless, The Pennaylve
nia Democracy follow in the {
Ohio by an unequivocal
of Tariff Reform aod a reaffirmation
the position takea by the parly in
contest for the Presidency in 158K,
square nomistakable, man ful resolution
was adopted without a murmur of dis.
sent,
The position taken on the regulation
of the liquor traffic and in op;
Prohibition was equally frank and deci-
for its failure to enforce the provisions
of the cons.itution relating to railroads
and for ite mismanagement of the Sink-
ing Fund, is none the jess opportune be-
cause the grievances complained of are
moss grown, The culpability of willful
neglect grows more offensive the longer
it continues.
A pleasant surprise in the platform
which should commend it to everybody
but
mend
machine politicians, is the recom-
ati
on of the Australian ballot sve.
tem,
Demo
Pennsyivaria have never made
satisfactory bid for popu
Taken as a whole the rats of
a more
Ar support
-
—
There
Johusiown
is a new legal phase in the
heonol: t
Suit ore
digaster. was ught
on Saturday by Farney 8, Tarball against
the Pennsylvania railroad
$50,000 damages for the death of his wife
and three children who were lost in the
flood, He claims that the
officials were negligent
avoided destruction of
the train by obeying the notices that the
dam was momentarily expected to break
company for
Johpstown
railroad and
could have the
in his declara-
“1 purchased
He gives this statement
tion filed before the court
tickets for my wife and three children,
aged respectively 2, 5 and 7
Cleveland to Tyrone, Pa.
the Cleveland and Pittsburg and the
Pennsylvania On May 21,
when the train had reached Conemaogh
near Johunstown, the officials of the road
got notice from the flood
and of the dam.
in the midst of
all the danger for six hours, They had
ample time and fair warniog to avoid
the danger, but gave no heed to it,
A —
years, from
They went via
railroads.
of the danger
anticipated bursting
The gain was held there
They say we are bound to believe
everything the astronomers tell us
Their latest one is that our sun, the cen-
ter of our universe, is a star that is mov-
ing at the rate of 20,000 miles an hour
planets with him, He Is going at this
breakneck speed into the constellation
Hercules. But Hercules is so far away
that the sun and his train of followers
will not get there for a million years
yet. Let us be calm.
——————
Oue of the worthicst charities on rec
ord is the “Shelter,” in Philadelphia,
which gives food ana lodging to worthy
nechanios and laboring men out of em-
ployment
A learned Ruslan physician, Dr. de
Tarchanoff, has re
cently which should be enough to make
all brain workers take a daily bath, It is
made a discover
that all thought is accompanied by elec
trical discharges upon the skin, and the
more intense the thought the stronger
are the electric currents. These electric
discharges move the glands of the skin,
This is the discovery. What our physi
ologists can make out of it remains to be
een,
It seems as though the age of alumi.
pum is almost here. By a process known
in Europe the cost of it has been brought
down to a dollar a pound. One of the
greatest obstacles in the way is the diffi:
enlty of getting it in a pure state.
- -
If commissioners Henderson and
Decker knew how utterly disgusted the
people are with their incompetency, they
would resign at once and hide in a hay
stack.
sn MP I Ui
The ocean gol very rampant at Atlan.
tio city and other resoris the other day,
and by ite slashing and dashing did
much damage. Where are Hastings and
Spangler ?
Bs A YIM BB
We would advise our citizens to
rid up their premises and have them look
a8 tidy as possible so that the hundreds
of strangers next week will find every
thing neat as a pin,
Facts About Uligareties,
During last year the collections of in-
ternal revenue from cigarettes alone
amounted to considerably over a million
dollars, The Increase of the consump-
tion of these deadly small articles since
the year beforo is sufficiently startling,
The added revenue from them for the
year ending June 80, 1880, was $§144.-
467.08.
Lat us look now at the number of cigar
During last
year the boys, young men and a few
women and old men consumed 2,151.-
these As
ettes this increase implies,
615,800 of little paper rolls.
far as that is concerned, there are boys
rown who sometimes smoke as
The |
act is that while the population of
country i {
a half last year, the consumption of |
increased nearly 800,000,000.
by the internal revenue re.
8 sixty cigarettes in a day
TUALLY
iain |
nereased perhaps a million |
it is sl
port
i
|
Now as to the effects of constant cigar- |
smoking. First, as is sufficiently es- |
tablished, it creates a thirst for what has |
been called “the indiscriminate and use- |
le
Next, all |
1
wording to Profes- |
wa consumption of liquors.”
Cigaretios contain, as
.
sor Laflin, five distinct and separate |
POLSOnS, Three of these poisons are oils, |
one in the paper wrapper, another in the
nicotine of the tobacco itself, and a third
in material. The other
poisons are saltpeter and opium.
The cigarette smoker draws the smoke
into his lungs and puffs it out again
the flavoring
through his nostrils, If he were to blow
it through « white bandkerchief before
inbaling it it would stain the handker-
br This brown stain is left
his and
or rather the
isons mixed. In
£ hief JWI
contin throat
ftiniern oF
sUNES, and
ually upon own
itis a pois
essence of
all the five §
3 ik / 2 :
tains his complexion, 100.
tirpe it
The cigar is not so bad as the cigarette,
bec
tine,
suse it contains only one poison, nico
The 1 however, that the
cigaretto fatal a hold upon |
boy nen is on account of the |
have its effect
The little burn-
boy to soothe and
quiet him, while it is destroying the very
fountains of his life, A youth who has
become a confirmed cigarette smoker in
time exhibits the appearance and actions
of an opium eater, Insanity and death
Anson,
oblains so
and young i
m in it. This must
on the brain and nerves,
yor $2 , wf ho
ing taper seems to th
foow sometimes,
Royalty's New York Rents.
Queen Victoria owns a considerable
amount of real estate in New York city,
on which pay their rent
without dreaming who their landlady is
Yes, Victoria, buy all the New York
real estate you can. It's a good invest
ment. The rents and the houses go
higher every year. And some day,
when the British steed tosses up its heels |
and throws the royalties that have been
riding double on its patient back so long,
Just you come over here and be one of
us. Go to housekeeping in a New York
up town flat. We'll welcome you
We'll let you dry your handker-
chiefs on the fire escape. You've been
pretty much used to bossing things in
your own home; but over here you'll
find one person you can't boss, That's
the janitor of an American apartment
bouse. In three months’ time he will
have you reduced to a state of subjeo-
tion compared to which the meekness of |
Moses would not be a circumstance.
*
tenants
her
Yen
Boats Run by Electricity.
It is of much interest to know that at
boats and steam launches. The battery)
storage system is used At suitable
points along the river electrical stations |
are placed, aud when the batteries on|
the boats are exhausted they can be re-|
placed at these stations. The system |
works admirably so far, and ought to|
be tried in America. What, indeed, is/
to hinder the adaptation of electric mo-
tors of the same kind to canal boats?
Stearn has been tried and abandoned.
There is still, if we are not mistaken, a
large unclaimed reward which was onos
offered for an invention that would en-
able canal boats to travel rapidly, Per
haps electricity is the solution of the
difficulty.
The Hungarian governmentthas taken
8 method to insure the purityrof wines
which may well bo commended to other
countries. Samples of the standard
brands of wine are taken to the govern.
ment's own collars and thoroughly tested
before thay are put on the market. With
the official stamp as to their purity, they
are then exported and sold. The gow
ernment label isaffixed to thedbottles in
such a way that it is destwoyed when
they are opened. Here is a valuable
hint for California and other wine pro-
bo legal until July 4, 1800. The new
will not be admitted until next
winter. Tho law'says on thls subject
“Om the of a newystate into
the Union one star should bey added to
the union of theyflag, and addition
EE Say
Prohibition County
vention.
ft on-
The Prohibitionists of Centre County
will meet in mass convention, in the
Court House, at Bellefonte, Pa. on
Thureday, September 19th, at 10 o'clock
a.m. for the purpose of nominating a
County ticket, electing officers for the en -
suing year and transacting such business
as many come before the convention all
persons favorable to constitutional or
statutory prohibition are earnestly res
quested to be present. The fight will
not be given up until every American
#aloon is abolished. This eannot be done
in a nonspartiean campaign as was plain.
[ly shown in the election of June 18th,
{The Prohibition party #8 the only one
that stands pledged for the total over.
{throw of the liquor traffiic and the pres
our homes and insitotions.
Let every friend of prohibition help to
make this convention the grandest ever
beld in the county. Bee that every vot-
ing precinct be fully represented.
By orper County COMMITTEE.
a -
Half- Rates to Washington,
KE
The Triennial Conclave of Knights
lFemplar will be held in Washington
October 8th to 11th 1889, The event will
undoubtedly prove one of the most brils
lisnt affairs in the history of the National
Capital, The grand parade of brilliant
uniformed Knights, mounted on gayly
caparisoned steeds, will be, in itself, a
picture worth going miles to witness.
Besides this there will be receptions,
drilis and other features of interest to
others than Knights ,
For the benefit of visitors the Penn
eylvaiana Railroad Company will sell
excision tickets to Weshington from all
stations on its system October 5th, 6th,
7th, and Sth, valid for return until Octo-
ber 31st, 1850, al a single fare for the
round trip.
The specific rate from Centre Hall will
be $7.05.
-
Grangers Picnic at Mt, Gret-
na.
Mesars. J, G. Burney, of Utica; E. E
Kent, of Syracuse; W, E. Smith, of Wats
kins; T. A. Corpell and J. R. MoGarland,
of Harrisburg, representing the grangers
visited Mt. Gretna last week to examine
the park as ani asailable site for next
year's celebration. They have decided
to abandon Williams Grove and will
hold the grangers’ picnic at Mt, Gretna
Park next year,
-
Well Represented.
Prof, Deitzel writes ns Centre county
is well represented at ¥. & M. college at
Lancaster. She has three in the Senior
class, two in the Junior, one in the Soph-
wore, and one in the Freshman, and vne
Seminarian, of which three are from the
Centre Hall charge, three of the Rebers-
burg charge, one of the Bellefonte charge
and one of the Howard charge.
———
NEW MUSIC.
The very latest is “Robin's Farewell’
Caprice for Piano, by Fischer. This is
without question the best and most suc
ot ful of Fischer's late composition, It
is simply elegant and no doubt will, be~
fore many days, be played by young and
old the country over. Price50 cts. Ign.
publisher.
-
Centre Hall Mills
Fine granulated corn meal acd No.1
rye flour, at the Centre Hall mills. Also
all grades of flour, feed, bran, cracked
corn, hard and soft coal, ete. Terms cash,
or in exchange. Cow feed, 90 cents per
100,
— — “
Rebersburg.
Miss Minnie Oonser is at present visiting at
New Berlin
Miss Romig, who had been visiting her brotbhe”
Fish Romig at this place, has again returned to
ber home at Miflinburg.
Last Wednesday William Smull who lives at
Sootia this connty, arrived at the home of his pa
rents of this piace, and brought the sad and un.
expected intelligence of the death of his wife.
ease she was buried the following Monday. Mrs,
Smull was the adopted daughter of Jacob Mat
tern, living near Sootia. Mr. Smull is almost
prostrated with grief st the untimely death of
his wife a« they were married but one year when
death claimed her as his bride. Mr. Smull has
the sympathy of all who know him in this sore
bereavement,
Ou Friday afternoon, Daniel Dubbs one of our
most respected citizens, was prostrated with a
stroke of palsy. At last account he was much
improved.
Mr. Luther Frank, one of our enterpris ing mer
chants bas the carpenters at work remodelling
his bouse, which by present indications, will
present a beautiful appearance when finished,
Potatoes are rotting very fast at this place, and
the people will be compelled to obtain their main
supply from other parts.
Mrs. Adam Shaffer, of Reading, i« here ob a
viglt to her sister Mrs. Joseph Kreamer,
Miss Mary Kreamer and Elmer Bierly left tor
college Wednesday, the former for Bucknell Uni:
versity Lowisburg mM. the latter for Princeton
college N. J,
The Kreamerville town hall, which was begun
in the spring, is being slowly compieted.
nis A I. WP AI in
Linden Hall
John Carper lost a very valuable mare last week
by wind colic,
Mm. Chas, Krape, of Spring Mille spent a few
days with P, H. Meyer, and wife this woek,
Our R. R. director expects to bunk with E. B,
Westfall at Grange plenic.
Rub Page and John Coble are at Gettysburg
this woek.
Major Huss is our Shampien, aquiirel rontat.
We oan hear the of his
report every moraing
The party who had the fine evergreen tree out
down in front of his house to get & better view of
the property he had recently bonght, was a iitle
bit previous he ought to have whispered (0 some
one to knock it off,
NO. 36
BUCKNELL
UNIVERSITY.
An Institution of which all
Members of the Community
are Proud.
301 Students Registered Last
Year—400 the Number
Expected this year.
Ground will be broken in afew
days for a new Gymnasium,
and for a Chemical Labora-
tory,
Parents, give your Boys and Girls a
Good Education. Ii may be the
ondy inheritance you can leave them.
This College is prepared to
do as good work as any Col-
lege in the State. Read of its
advantages:
Good teachers, thorough instrucs
tion.
A healthfol location, beautiful scen<
ery.
Spacious buildings, large grounds,
ample appliances.
A large Library, open all day.
A large Museum used for study.
Excellent literary societies,
Expenses below the average.
A moral, Christian community.
Practical instruction in all
scievces.
Aun Astronomical Observatory, which
is used by the students.
Equal advantages to men and wos
men.
Free scholarships to aid the needy.
A large body of loyal Alumni.
A strong denomigation to furnish
financial support.
A Faculty ambitious to keep their
institution at the head.
16. Stndents who come to work.
17. The instruction is as thorough as at
any college in the Middle States,
There is no longer any need of par-
ents sending their children to die
tant schools. The total value of the
Universi property pproach
half 8 er A lars ($500,000,) "
the
1
12,
13.
14.
15,
BE All students not prepared for Col-
lege classes may enter Bucknell Acade-
my, or Bucknell Institute, in which in-
struction is given in all the branches
usually taught in Academies, Seminar
jos and Normal Schools. Students in
these schools have the use of the College
Museum and Library. Special attention
paid to those preparing to teach. Prac
Bros,
in wok.
GEO. G. GROFF, M. D,,