The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 24, 1890, Image 1

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER
ED KURTZ, EDITOR
r has been
invent. a
Now since smokeless powdae
invented, let genius
smoke and odorless cigar.
RSNA SSA
some
ree
fhe Administration the
Fair to Democratic New York, aod now
begrudged
Chicago has gone Democratic, too.
————————————
In Berlin, Germany, sixteen thousand
Berlin shoemakers have They
demand a working day of ten hours and
sirack,
wages not less than sighteen m irks per
week,
ATTRA IN SILER
off the
it seems much to Quay 'a chagrin,
Delamater has been forced
track’
and Judge Paxson i8 to go on
instead. It looks
have Hastings in any event
thd
the track
«8 if the bosses will
n-t
Col. Coburn woun'd have a ¢ aim to the
adjutant generalship Hastings
become governor. The
that officer, howeyer. is most
devolve ppon Wm, A. Wal
—————————
is t!
which
should
apt ointment of
likely to
IRC,
birt! we intelli
Pa
and Laplized
church
at a
dale
Four babies
gence from Seotl
born Feb. 12,
bath in the (
postpone taking the
1801, for further returns to come in,
————————
of Bell=foa'e,
s for the Republican nomination for
Well, sthe Republicans
ashamed of such
were
atholic Bete
censt
next
is a can
k Stover,
: ran
33
Cit
comuieiontr:
i not
they have fit men, and such only
woul pend feel
men,
auld be nominated.
ATO
Pha farmers of Montgomery, Backs,
counties, met at
week, and
being work
their
riing
d Delaware
one day
the
Chester at
Norris last
formed a union,
for legislation that wi 1 benefit
class. They declared ngeinst supp
lawyers for offices.
iW 0,
ot ject
Recalls ¢ld Time Polities,
The death of ex-Governor James Pols
lock is aunounced at Philadelphia iu the
eightieth year of his age. He served six
years in congress 08 » Whig back in “the
forties,” bat the mewo:alie incident of
his political life was his election us gov-
ernor ofthe Sate in 1854, That was the
year of the KnowsNothing uprising,
when the “dark lantern party” reached
the climax of its brief life. Mr. Pollock
was nominated by the Whigs and in-
dorsed by the KnowsNothings, (iov-
ernor Bivler being thejDemoeratic cans
didate The Knows«Noth-
indorsed Valeotine Mott, the
candidate for canal m
missioner, his opponent being George
Darsie of Pittsburgh, 8 man experienced
in public affairs and of marked ability,
but who had the misfortune, for the
temper of those days, of being born in
Seotland. For supreme Judge the
Know -Nothings determined to test their
a straight-out nomination
and put up Judge Baird of Washington
county; Judge Jeremiah S, Black was
the Democratic candidate and there
| was 8 Whig candidate also in the field
[ Mr. Pollock, by the aid of the Know-
Nothing vote, being probably 8 member
of the order, was elected governor by
7 000 majority. Mott, a KrowsNothiog
lin Democratic disguise, defeated the com-
for re~«lection
jogs also
| Democratic C
strength by
ty of 180 000, while Judge Black was re~
20 000,
Know-
elected to the supreme bench by
The se-recy with which the
Nothiogs conducted their operations in
this canvass was extraordinary. The
membership was sworn, and on of the
igations was to deny affiliation with
the order. Moving in secret with effec
tive organization, they easily pominated
candidates for both parties, who were
anthorized to lie out of any suspicion of
connection with thesecret order. When
election day came around people's eyes
were opened to the rascally game, and
the Know-Nothing lodges soon got to
uarreiing among themselves, and the
demoralizing machine wen? to pieces. It
ot
EIA SEIN
The of Moscow, R
teen shocked by the discovery of the |
of a family
The vic
city in has |
18sia,
self annibilation a to
the sufferings of poverty
a ho were the widow and five
jocked themselves
time, |
r officer, ia
tunrued on the gas,
from #t
a room and
overed were dead 1ffoca- |
all
i ————]
Indiana state central commiliee
card
ye 58
ed 8
rata of ti
township
at
1
congratuiatiog
hes
demo ate upon their victory |
The card
from
Mons ay’ s election of 1s
012 townships into which the state is |
ed the d
gaining 118 township trustees,
elections
compleis retorns
ghow that out
divid amocrats have gai ed 908,
and have |
a majority on the total vote of over 17,
000,
PT RT S———
The ehnrch trouble in the E vangeli ical
denomipation 18 now ranni ing into the
sad some riot-
ous scenes in churches have resul ted
,@ two factions, This is tobe |
deplored; this denomination wes pros,
perous and inflaential, and essing now
to be rent beyond nealing, and the nuts
most bitterness exists between the two
rival wings io that church.
a —.——-—————————
eongregtaions in the west, a
between U
We notice that in the counties of Un-
jon. Northumberland, Snyder, and sever
other counties, the chairmen of the
connty committees, do not reside at the
county seat. In Centre county, in filiy
years, there has only been one chair.
man ouiside of the county seat. The
same custom wonld apply to a state and
national chairman, that a resident of
Harrisburg and Washington be chosen,
which would be absard,
TTS IO II
The English chuocelior of the exche~
quer finds himself with a surpios this
year of pearly $18,000,000, the revenues
being estimated in round numbers at
$452.000,000, and the expenditures at
$134.000000. There is no fooling over
there with a surplus, and the chancellor
at once proposes reductions of taxation
that will leave the money in the pock-
ets of the people. In the last three
years the national debt of Grest Britain
has been reduced $116.600000, and is
now abont $3,475,000,000, or about $700.
000,000 less than the highest figure the
debt of the United States reached in
1865,
The Philadelphia Press throws up its
hands in the most hypocritical manner,
at evéry little inaccuracy of an election
fo the swith, real or ‘magicary, mostly
the latter, which f ean trump up to
shose the Democrats over. Bat it grine
over, endorses and supports any steal of
congressmen, that its party in congress
is guilty of. The conduct of the Repub
licans in this sort of wickedness and
wrong, is so manifest and glaring, that
it issimply to be viewed as a party of
outiaws which has forfeited its claims
upon justice.
was probably the raost dishonest episod e,
its paomerioal strength, in
| American politics.
The election of 1854 was the last heard
the Whig in Peansylvania.
The next vear saw the organization of
but Pennsylvania
lin 1856 gave its electoral vote to Buchan.
an by the astonishivg majority of 83,200
| over Fremont Governor Pollock, after
his term expired, held lucrative Federal
party
Delamater Of.
The Washington correspondent of the
Pittsburg Post, rays there is no longer a
doubt of Judge Paxson’s for
the republican nomination for governor,
and he has been informed by a strong
Quay congressman from the east rn part
of the state, that Delamater is out of the
race. He writes:
“There is now no longer any doubt as
to Justice Paxson’s candidacy for gubs
ernatorial honors in Pennsylvenia. He
is out for the job as big as a wolf, and is
supposed to have fixed things with the
candidacy
boss while here yesterday and to-day,
g Q
From a stro Jnay congressman in the
end of the state, who knows
what he is talking about, the [Fost cor
respondent was informed that
Mr. Delamater was out cf the race, and
bad not been in it for a week past.”
“Mr. Delamater has been shelved posi-
tively. Of that there i8 no doubt”
the gentleman,
week ago because of the intense
eastern
to-day
paid
“He was dumped over a
feeling
stirred up aguiost him, and he will not
be in the fight when affairs
come to the focus”
“Has Mr. Delamater submitted grace
fally to his ehelviog?”
“Well ”and the congressman
slightly’ “be is not delighted, of
but I don’t imagine make eny
vigorous or public protest. Judge Pax-
gon is & good man and would unify the
republican party, I think. Of
Mr. Delamater in his withdrawal
is not going agriost Mr,
In fact the senator acquiesces
solution of the difficulty. 1am notin a
position to know whether Justice Pax-
gon is Mr. Quay’s candidate or not, As
soon as the fact becomes established that
Paxson is 8 candidate the field is or
to turn lose on him with the intent
of putting his boom to sleep
3 i
political
sm iled
CONTE
he will
course
Qoay's wishes,
in this
riain
n
-
—
from
leaders of
tes to the Times,
The
not
M'Clare wri
Washington, as follows
the party in power do.
disguise their disap siatment at the re-
Col.
atlempt
cont elections. snd they feel greally dis.
couraged sbout the fall ele
the pext House. Iadeed, !
pext House is general
Republicans, and they bo;
pected defeat of next fall
them to pull themselves
1802. A majority of th
leaders really desire a larger
than was given in the Mills bill, and
they confess that adherence to
wool,
3 {OAR
COND ded by the
le ex-
may
tog
Republican
free
} ¥
ater lor
“
tad
laxes on
hemp, iron ore and
| offices in Philadelphia for a period of
50 years, His sncogssor as governor was
| William F. Packer, in 1857, and Penn.
| ay ivania did not see another Democratic
a quarter of a
Pattison.
| governor aolil the election,
| gentary later, of Robert E.
-
The embargo placed hy the striking
| carpenters on building operations in
The weto
on labor extends not only to all of their
| awn craft. but now embraces nearly all
rades employed in architectural work
| At the close of work eveniag of 15, the
| great majority of the bricklayers, lathers
| painters »nd plambers were laid off in
definitely. There was no work for them
to do. All lines of work had reached the
point beyond which they could not go
without the assistance of carpenters
Nothing was done next day, The bosses
did not even attempt to start ap.
Some signs of disturbances manifested
themselves on 15 add there were a num-
ber of arrests made on charges of intefer
ing with workmen. The strikers claim
that the contractors are the real in-
stigators of any trouble that arises; that
they go about armed and threatening to
shoot anybody that comes to talk to the
men they have at work, and seem, the
strikers allege, anxious to provoke a
quarrel, in order that the odinm of it
may be thrown on them,
.
The farmers are catching it all around,
and will hardly be persuaded everything
is lovely by an increa ed duty on corn,
potatoes and eggs. Imagine the Kansas
farmer protected by a duty on corn which
is produced in such excess that he uses
it for fuel, and of which, as against 70,
000,000 bushels exported last year, we
only imported 2401 busbels. It is the
same with wvearly all the breadstofls
which we export so enormously, The
8t. Louis Republic counts 90 advertise~
monts of the sheriff sales (in most of
which mortgage companies are plain.
tiffs) in a single issae of a county paper |re
in Kauss. The immigration commie
sioner of Vermont estimates the total
area of vacant farms and onoceupied
lands in that State at a minimum of 500,
000 acres, exclusive of timber lands, In
every agricnitaral connty of Pennsyl-
wania thore lias been a large increase of
farm mortghees, assignments and shers
ifs enles of farme the last two or three
years,
So Ea
Old Oentre should have either the
next congressman or the senator,
terials will array against
dastries they profess to protect,
are so serioosly complicated
paign coatributions and
they dare not attempt ho
but they
by
promises
Cam.
th
that
tariff re-
defeat.
the next House
nest
vision until after they suffer a
It the Republicans lose
their leaders will at once
woll and free raw material generally,
and the next tariff bill, whether made
by Republicans or Democrats, will be
lower in duties and larger in the free
list than the Mills vill. The complica
tions over free raw materials will pre.
vent the passage of aoy tariff bill this
session and the real tariff’ battle of the
nation will be fought next November in
the election of the fifyy-second Congress,
divide on free
»
It having been asserted that Prince
Bismarck was the author of certain fierce
attacks upon the new chancellor of the
empire this is denied, but itis added that
Bismarck will soon be heard from by his
enemies. He will soon appear in the
upper house of the Prussian parliament
and also in the German reichstag. “It
would be a great mistake,” say his friends
“to imagine the exchancellor as old and
broken down, or to soppose that
he will remain a passive spectator
of events. The German peoples have
a right to know the prince's views on im-
portant questions. There is no reason to
doubt that Bismarck is nursing his wrath
and that there w ill be an explosion after
while which will shake Germany and
probably Earope.
The Republicans find themselves in a
hole on the tariff question. The Morn-
ing Patriot thinks the proper course for
democrats in congress is to let the
McKinley tariff bill seveiely alone,
The bill has cansed mneh unexpected
and adverse criticism from republicans,
and as the tariff is their special hobby
to them should be left the work of tears
ing the McKinley bill to tatters. The
republican party macagers promised to
revise the tariff, they admitted the
necessity for a revision but/claimes for
themselves the prerogative of being the
only persons capable of makibg a revi-
sion that would meet the approval of
the people,
- ow
The Democratic State execulive com-
mittee will meet at Harrisburg April 50
to fix the time for holding the State son-
vention, The Republican conyention
will be held the latter part of June, and
the Democratic convention later,
A).
Charges that Must Be Met,
Here are certain
of Pennsylvan a,
yy the New York
ey are, put
allegations respecting
Senator Quay
were published |
Here ti
journal,
tion
forth broadly by that
without disguise or
from the Peansylvania State Treasory
and lost itin stock gambling. He had and
associate in the transaction one J.
Walters, at that time cashier of the State
Treasury, Walters,
himself to death,
State Treasurer,
subsequently drank
Noyes, the
long
to
Amos OC.
died
aud his death
due largely to his fear tha
might be discovered. Q
was for months the
terror.
not afiers
ward, have
wan said
been fhe
Lt the r
ber ay Lim
of guilty
A new State Treasurer had been
and ¢ A
Loebiel
drunk
at h
golf victim
elected
friend who visited
House Harrisburg found
and debating whethe
xposture was imminent
him at the
bim
r he should «
in
8
throat or jump lato the aun
friend visited
case before hum,
Busqus
Don Cams
and thal
whie
wonld have done great damage to the re.
public Pennsy
buied over $100,000 to make up the deficiy
The
plied by Quay and Walters,
“In
by be
offic {
mera'v
River. This
eron, iaid the
statesman, to avert a scandal
in party in ivania, contri-
rest of the sum Necessary Was supe
1885 Quay secured a 'v
indication’
to the
was not
ag nominated and elected
Bat |
jon Quay was
f State Treas rer.
vi
514
naical
other ¢ t
got
and
wanted
Lance
and
a
availe ime
before To pay for
shares of the North
he
Treasury
BOM
Company took $
» State and
Jank in
Kemble,
years bef
1iler
deposits
ie People’s
filam H
a few
Board
ire y
i of bribery, was
bank. The $400. 000 remain
le's Bank; the Ch
ivered to Q
gu
the embe
Presd-
i Were qe AY.
keted
id them at a high | the
ed fands
re, po
ts, snd restored Lr
» State Treasury.
perfectly responsil
is found
wejcharges are calumnious
» pstab before a
rithont It wi
Mr. Q
"i
the Ti is
Hehed
delay.
t answer for
with
an atiack Enoe.
>”
ner Hen
the Weaver premises
enmmissio
nose aronnd
he want to be a witness in
to swear how many sieps It
bie re 10
and
in fr
there and from where
draw for each
and « top of it
MIMO alt
place, then PAY day
HHSIOn er,
for the «
is about the size of it naless this police |
puts a check on him.
witness
in this the cor
rapt Gazette would defend him, same,
as we are told, as it does his neglect, io
the turnpike case. Why did he not,
as one of the castodians of the county's
interests, busy bimeelfl in that case and
in behalf of the coanty, and try to pros
tect the interests of the tax payers? to
put in almost every day as commissions
er, doing next to nothing, simply that
hie can draw §3 per day, there should be
little good to show for it, so
his eorrapt organ could have a little
truth to build apon, when it undertakes
to screen him for his shortcomings, in
consideration for which it gels unfaiz
printing contracts at the tax-payers
pense, Bab!
at least,
fl
It has been learned from reliable sour
ces that the South Pennsylvania railroad
company has been reorganized mainly
in the interest of the Reading and the
Baltimore and Ohio railroad. While it
is reported from New York that the
Vanderbilts will not antagonize the
Pennsylvania's interests, it is stated io
Baltimore that the construction of the
South Pennsylvania road will be coms
pleted to gratify the ambition of the
Reading for a rival line to the Pennsyl-
vanis weut of Harrishurg.
Some years ago Robert Garrett, then
president of the Baltimore and Ohio, and
President Wood, of the Western Mary:
land, were in negotiation with the late
William H. Vanderbilt for connections
with the South Pennsylvania. While
the death of Mr. Vanderbilt put a stop
temporarily to the arrangements, the
scheme was recently revived and wil}
now be carried through. Baltimore and
Ohio and Westerd Maryland officials are
reported to have already held conferences
with the new management of the South
Pennsylvania. As the latter road is bes
ing connected in an air line direction
west from Harrisburg, it will probably
be conuected with the Baltimore and
Ohio at some poist on the Pittsburg
division of the latter, betwesn Cumbers
land and Rockport,
SS WI Ar SSA:
Blair conuty, after a warm contest,
went for Hastings.
i
i
i
i
or
UL
For the
Febuary,
24, 1890,
eight months endiog with
the total immigration to the
United States was 218.650 ~a
Ope
7265 from the total during the corre:
sponding period. in the previous v
Blight as this decline is, it
tinued abatement in the tide of ims
migration to The only
noteworthy increase is from Italy, which
contributed 18,015 to the country’s pop+
ulation in the eight months, against 11,
590 for the corresponding
ATIer year.
Car
indicates a
these shores.
period of the
Bat as the total immigra-
tion from Italy in 1880 was 27.710 it is
not likey to be much exceeded by the
fignres of 1800, While there is also a
undesirable emigrants
Huogary and Poland,
vearly a'l the other countries of Europe
show a decline,
small increase of
from Bobemia,
New York Tribune has
It is that in
city sends
The
painful discovery.
delegation that
there is not
made a
all the
to congress
one good speaker, conse
tly no one who can fitly set forward
GGUeT
ju
World's fair. This is unfortunate. Now
let the congressional orators of Illinois
go into training. Wind their native
breath. If they cannot outtalk the rest
of the sountry it will be their own faull
is
It is nos only from Great Britain, but
from all Europe that capital is flowing
to America to be invested. The
be the belief across
water that it is only a question of
time when Europe will be involved in
and the in-
In that
reason
common
the
| dustries will go to destruction
vested in the only spot where they are
, in the richest, most powerful and
globe, namely,
United States.
A Oh Hashan 8 Complaint.
A Philadelphia Chinese }
brings a wer ous charge against American
washermen.,
“Talk of cheap Chinese labor,”
“The American man he have
sam laundry.
au a half,
laun
said
heap
He wash collar for cent
He
he
Chinaman poor wash
i
{
i
i
ww collar. American washerman
down prices so Chinaman
laundry
cant
live,
bBleam men
“ay
China:
one white s!
lose on Sunday.
er have only
'e
1
in late in week 10 be wash
ay. If Chinaman no open shop on
lay morning, customer no get w hite
Oh, nol
1
i
hirtea Chinese laundrymar
t shut uppee shop on Sunday.”
Cattle died in Berks county,
a contagious disease. The owners threw
dead beasts into the creeks and
Now there is an epidemic of
typhoid fover in that part of Pennsylva-
| nia. What gught to be done with people
| who thus give their fellow citizens ty-
phoid fover?
Pa., from
Sil) a now veo ds popomd for electric
Eghts. It has been suggested that they
be attached to horses’ heads in dark
nights and in fogs that carriages may not
come in collision.
Losses by fire in Massachusetts Zone
amounted to $20,000,000 last week. The
Thanksgiving blaze in Boston was the
most destructive there since 1572. A
strange circumstance is that the district
burned out on Thanksgiving day is very
near where the fire in 1872 raged.
The new fast mail train from New
distance in 43 days. Soon there will be
no more pleasure in travel because of
the swiftness of locomotion.
The first name of provisional President
Fonseca, of Brazil, is Deodoro. It sounds
to our ears too much like deodorizer to
be altogether pleasant,
— ——
General Hastings put his polifical foot
in it when he said he would support any
man who obtained the party nomination
for the office of governor. He has dies
counted his own and his friends’ valve
as political factores in the race for the
nomination because if he is to run inaand
help his lucky competitor regardiess of | man
character, Quay will find that to be the] ere
best use to which Hastings can be put.
He will defeat him and put him on the
stamp for Delamater,
The above is the view the Morning
Patriot takes of it, and so do many oth
ers of both parties,
The fact that Chief Justice Paxson is af
flioted by the buzsing of the gubernatorial
bee in his bonnet explains some of the
remarkable opiniones on the liguor gues:
tion which he has recently handed down.
It #ould add to his reputation if he
where to attend to the duties of his high
station and leave politics severely alone,
we Altoona Tribune rep,
Tat, tat, sister Tribune, you musen't
speak out in meetin that way.
NO. 16
little of Spunkes Beed's medicine
A
tered to the Republicans in
the Ohio house or representatives the
other day. The question wae on correc’.
ig an omission in the journal. The He-
publicans refased to vote, and the Dem-
ociats found themselves withont
B® qnor-
no.
Bot the Democratic speaker was
equal to the szcasion, Follow ing the
ruling of Speaker Reed of the national
house of representatives, he eounted the
lepublicans present as voting
clared the journal corrected.
Republican
and de.
Leading
legislators denounced
: the
speaker's action as arbitrary
and revo
tionary, but the journal was corrected all
ie
the same,
. —-
At
mnch condem
last the mu
med t
to the house
.
ch talked about ar
ariff bill has been
d
re
we find that
McKinley and Lis sssociates
COnTrage
rf i 3
ported nd
hadn't the
to retzin in the
provision imposing a duty on raw
It Was
Western
measure he
hides
their reward
intention to ithe
abtia
cattle for
growers their con.
tribution to the campaign
leather manufa
abandon
fond
turers com pe
thie
lel them to
and
Ar, at
their determinat
or free trade
les are
On to
come out f
as hic
go f least
concerned,
-
Delamater is said fo pve boiling
with indignation at his enforced
ment from the fight and
ith doudle-dealing and general
The outlook fora tremend:
in the Pennsylvania republican
worse than the one at ant
ing them—is brig
bor
0D
retfires
Quay
faithless.
charges
ness, HE FOW
ranks
presse convale
ht.”
tp A
On 17, in Montpeliar, James 8
Caswell, who was convicted of the mnard-
er of
ws
vi,
George Gould, was sentenced to
prisonment for life, and he
to Mrs. Laura Gould, the
murdered
ims
was married
wife of the
pe
tan. The
place through the bars of Caswe
Caswell and Mrs. Gould live
wile for twenty
m
é
8 irunk
Ary iage {0k
11
gE 4
years prey
Gould's marriage to Gould.
En ——
A
Case
Wisconsin court bas been
is which a clergyman
with getting $235 {
worth not $100
mao
trying a
8 ol
unsound
aroed
a
ir AD
horse
Doubt
wd and
less his ciergy-
Ea go woriby man ir
other respects, Lat in swapping i
it i y hard
some traces of the
politicians dec]
es, and a jockey «
like other jockies
z ia 8 horse trad
Work not 1
old
are there ia
Adam
polit
think
cheativg
ergy iIines
there
-
A Bible has just been rediscoveredin
the Vatican library which is in Hebrew
It is supposed to be the oldest in the
world and is valued at $100,000. It 3 ]
weighty that it requires two men to lift it
the binding being in heavy metal :
- oe.
The Dabomeyans have made two
vigorous assaalis upon the French posi-
tious in Dabomey. Four French soldiers
stationed at outposts were captured and
beheaded. The French retaliated upon
the Dshomeyans by beheading five of
the female warriors of the King who had
been captured.
A
wwe BW, Galer Morrison, Democratic
candidate for recorder, was in town this
morning.
—See ad. in another column
Union clothing co. at Bellefonte.
of
—AGeorge Wells, of this place, lost a
horse last week.
~The interior of Wolf's store has
been greatly improved by coat of paint,
weThe Sugar Valley Journal says: A
yodicate of Eastern capitalists bave
purchased seven thousand acres of tims
ber land below Woodward, Centre coti-
ty, and propose building a branch rail-
road to Coburn, on which to ship the
lumber. They expect to have about aifts
een years work cutting and getting out
umber.
YI MIR 5
Words of Advice
Jo those whe require a stimulant. There are
to whom we could recommend you. We
think there are just as many honest Liquor eal
as there e+= 2oalem In wny other clas of mers
handine, and we belie that there sre
many who soll w or any other commodity,
A e hive boticel that our
have Shr tantimon iEhly recommended
therefore we say his is
helmet,
a Bim or Kix
When Baby was shek. we gave bar Castorta,
When she was Child, she cried for Castors,
When she beoame Miss, abe clung to Castoria,
When abe ad Children, sbe gave them Costorin,