The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 17, 1890, Image 1

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    VOL. LXIII.
THE CENTRE REPORTER
ED KURTZ, EDITOR
After the election they will eall him
Fiedler got into the “original pack-
nges’ at the Qany conv ention, the other
week, and, oh my, but they say he went
On,
RTARTA
Hon. Chas. 8, Wolt, the independent
Republican leader, has announced him-
gelf in favor of Pattison, He says he
ean tell enoug ne haif hour's speech
to rain the Republican party.
TIS WTR a
The people of a great many
looked at their populiat thro glasses
of great power, aod on the
lasses and finding the pile much smalls
er began to cuss the census takers,
———
5 in%
1 ing
towns
ion
removing
In a ringing letter Henry C. Lea, the
wealthy and influential Philadelphia
publisher and Republican, comes out for
lobert E. Pattison for governor aud not
3
Delamater as the Republican bosses had
heralded.
RT NRC
The train which went throogh Range
Creek bridge, near Collinsville, Texas,
last Sanday, was I and
liquors. The natives from the gurrounds
ing country were not | learning
how much liquor was going to waste, and
in a few hours nesrly whole town
ship was drunk. What a glorious pic.
pic t 1d have been for Fiedler,
a
aded with beer
mg ia
the
his wou
We Lear it in the Republican circies
that those people are discussing the pros
priety of nominatiog the strongest po 88 i>
ticket + Dee
nominate a ticket with
yrds render
idates. Let Democrats
bead off that thing
inty , anticipating
ble eon
miocracy may
: . . 1
men on it whose re vill
them weak cand
be as wise an iio
by nominating men of unassailable ree-
ords, gnd we will give "em a 1500 major”
d off.
TS BT ORT SST
ity Ret
President Harrison says the published
3 Veg © “yr §
letter purporting to be a copy of
by him in response to an invifas«
one
written .
Grrangara
Car . 18 an out and
His declination of the ins
by Private Secretary
that owing
tion to attend the National
exhibition at riisle, Pa
forgery.
vitation was written
Halford, and merely
to the pressure of business he
«would be uns attend. Evidently
a been making a fool of the
picsuio mavagement, or
MAnAZe
the people.
ont
stated
pablic
ble t }
some one ba
William
je connemed with
have tried to fool
OT
sgrove
some oi the
ment must
There is a big hubbub in Quay’s con
grssional district over a bribery of con
ferees. Will Reed's force bill app'y in
this esas? But one can see in this audas-
cious bribery of Beaver county Repablis
can politicians (} day's methods coming
No iotellis gent man can
1sy as leader without accepting
his political morals, and they include
bribery and theft, The bribery that has
exposed in Quays and
among his strikers, probably indicates a
widespread and secret corruption. The
boss planted and the Beaver saints are
reaping.
tan Q
been county
I ERTS
A call has been issued by the Farm-®
er's Allionce for a very important con-
vention to be bel 1 at Columbus, August
13. All alliances, granges and farmers’
clubs in the Stats are expected to send
representatives, and the privileges of the
floor will be graoted to none but fally
accredited delegates, The cbjectn of the
meeting are not made specifie, It will
have a political bent. There will be a
great deal of discussion, in which the
over-taxation of farm lands and the low
market prices of farm prodaocis and farms
will receive a great deal of attention.
About 3,000 people are expecled to be
present.
gressional nomination was
away from Townsend,
straight. Three conferees, Tate, Down-
ing and gobaffer, elecled to support
Townsend, were purchased outright to
vote for McDowell. They each received
8650 in greenbacks, and $250 was pad
as commission to the go-between, thus
exhausting the $2,200 raised in New Cas-
tle to buy McDowell's nomination. The
rascals confess the bribery, and one of
them makes affidavit of his crime.
hat will be ample
Hon. William A Wallace who sailed
on the steamer Majestic for Europe was
seen at the Gilsey hounse in New York
city by a staff correspondent of the
Patriot jast defore he went aboard the
vessel. On being asked about the pros-
pects of the democratic state ticket in
Pennsylvania, Mr. Wallace ssid that the
outlook, in his opinion, was favorable to
the election of the ticket. “I shail be
absent from the country until the latter
part of August, or the first of September,”
said he, “and on my return will do my
part toward the success of the ticket. My
friends will not be backward in giving it
their support.”
Do you know Mr, Wallace, that Ex-
Congressman William I. Scott, wrote a
letter to a prominent democrat of your
state in attendance at the Scranton con-
vention to the effect that if you were
nominated for governor, he (Mr. Beott)
would have an independent democratic
ticket put in the field against you?
“Oh! yee,” replied the ex-senator, “that
is an open secret, Mr. Scott not only
wrote that letter but said in it that the
address:e might show it to whom he
pleased. Bot that kind of procedure
would only have been in keeping with
that gentleman's past political history.
He openly opposed the democratic state
ticket in 1881, It does not matter,
though, what Mr. Scott threatened
against me. I shall not imitate the bad
example he proposed to set, The demos
cratic state ticket is composed of worthy
men who are entitled to the support of
the democracy and that fact is quite suf
ficient to secure their support by old
line democrats like myself.”
Said Mr. Emery at a Republican con-
vention at Bradford, in a speech proe
testing Delamater's nomination would
disgrace the Republican party and in-
vile defeat.
I charge that George W,
pare hased bis election to the senate of
this State in that he directly
bribed citizens of Crawlord country to
vote for him at the general election, and
that when a memorial had beea cone
te plated, § to be presented to the senate
State, to prevent him from taking
the oath of office, he paid large sums of
money for the suppression of the aid
memorial.
I charge that George W. Delamater did
take the oath of office, thereby commit-
ting the crime against the good name
and the statutes of the Commonwealth.
I charge also that during his service in
the senate George W. Delamater attempt-
ed to alter a public record by framiog a
conference report on a bill before it had
been properly considered, contrary to all
rules and practices, and signing or hav.
had signed the names of alleged
members of the committee, and in so
doing offended the dignity of the legisla
ture and the law of the Commonwealth.
And, said Mr. Emery in conclusion:
‘I make these charges without fear of
contradiction, an] court an action at law
whereby 1 may set my proof before the
people oathbound.” Although called
on by the Philadelphia Press to answer
‘the charges of Mr, Emery, Delamater
has made no sign,
a
Congressman Mills, who has gone fo
bis home in Taxes for a month's vaca-
tion, said before he left that the result of
the actions of the majority in the House
this session would be an overw helming
Democratic victory in the fall, “We
shall carry the next House,” said Mills,
“election law or no election law, We
shall gain in the North so greatly that
we cannot be counted out successfully,
Of course, the Federal election scheme,
with its paid election agents and its res
turning boards, will be an issue in the
campaign.
“We are not going to let them obscure]
the tariff question, however, That wil
be fully discussed before the people, and
we are steadily gaining everwhere on that
issue.
Delamater
18846,
of ih
ing
Whether or not Mr. Blaine is the“X,
M.C.” who wrote the scathing article
on “Speaker Reed's Error” in the North
American Review, there can be little
doubt that Mr. Blaine must approve it,
whether as a parliamentarian or as a
politician,
The article is a very complete demons
stration of the falsity, the unconstitu«
tionality and the danger of Mr. Reed's
method of counting a quorum, but as
these have been quite thoroughly dem-
onstrated before, the particular interest
clared thet they had not beea in the
Capitol at the time, Some day this ri-
diculous assumption will result in serious
mischief,
A fire in Constantinople, a few days
PA.
In the “X. M, C.” article in the North
American Review, generally credited to
ox-Speaker Blaine, the arrogant preten-
gions of Speaker Beed are thoroughly
used up by a master of parliamentary
law, We quote one of the illustrations
bearing on the point to which we refer:
Speaker Reed’s method of counting is
fairly illustrated by the following: Sap-
pose a measure pending and the hounse
comes to a vote, A quorum is a major-
ity of the honse-—one more thao half the
whole number of representatives—the
number made necessary by the constitu:
tion “to do business.” At present it is
166 members, If 120 members vote for
a measure and only one against it [the
precise vote by which the bill to admit
Idaho as a Btate was declared passed by
the speaker] Speaker Reed's ruling de-
clares the measure carried, provided the
clerk of the house can fill the quoram by
counting 36 members present in the hall
in addition to the 130 who vote in re-
sponse to the roll-call. These 36 mem-
bers whom the clerk couuts are sitting
io their seats, walking in the rear area
standing in the aisles, bending over
desks, engaged in conversation on both
the Republican and Democratic sides of
the house, commingled
bers and with non-members of the
various classes, who to the number of at
least 2,000 have the privilege of the floor
of whom at least 250 are constautly in
Washiogtos; and a considerable number
of these are daily exercising their privi-
lege. A vote rapidly counted in this
way lacks the certainty and security of
the call of yeas aud nays. The wrong
man may readily be taken, and not hear-
ing his name read, does pot correct it
the vote thus becomes vitiated and the
exact result is produced which the call o
yeas and nays was constitutionally provid-
ed to prevent. * * * If the clerk can be
trusted to count and record a certain pro,
portion of the names, he should be trust.
ed to count and record all the names
It was never designed that there should
be two ways of counting a quorum on a
yea andenay vote!
with ex-mem-
APA IASI
On the 4th, at Northfield, Mass, Mr,
Moody, made a plea for toleration, He
explained the Gospel of Luke, discussing
its leading characteristics as outlined by
Canon Farrar. Speakiog of the
ment the Roman Catholics and the
receive from the evangelical Christians
to-day, he said that the prevalent meth:
od of abuse is wrong
“He that warmeth souls,” be added, is
wise. Christ gave us an example in re.
gard to this matter. See how he treated
the Publicans and Samaritans when on
earth. Do you know that the Jews
treated the Samaritans just about as the
people in California treat the Chinese?
Isaw a Chinaman in San Francisco
walking along as quietly as any man
could. Out came a hoodlum and catch
ing bold of his queue threw him to the
ground, When I attempted to remon-
strate against such brutality the roflian
drew a koife and I nearly lost my life.
“I wonder that the Chinese do not
rise up in their wrath and drive every
American out of China because of the
hellish things done in this country.
We call China and Japan and India and
Africa heathen nations. Let us drop
that word heathen, I believe we are
more heathen than they. America will
have farther to answer for in the day of
judgment than the nations we call
heathen.”
tr eal
Jews
Asin
The Republican senatorial caucus on
night of 10 was a stormy one. It was
also decidedly unsatisfactory and ended
in much confasion and without anything
definite being done. The talked-of
opposition to the Eederal election law
was as large as described in these dis.
patches recently, Senators Wolcott,
Teller, Stewart and Farwell spoke against
the passage of the bill with mach vehe.
mency. This provoked retorts from
Chanaler, Hoar and the other extremists
on the question, and for three and a-half
hours the battle raged. Those in favor
of the bill's passage were in ths majority,
and it soon became apparent that while
the opposition was considerable it could
not hope to stem the tide in favor of the
bill. There was much discussion as to
the best method of pushing the bill. The
suggestion was made that the rules be
changed a la Reed, but the suggestion
was not kindly received.
Henderson, who mismanaged the coun-
ty affairs and squandered the county's
surplus, is for Delamater.
Johnny Decker, who helped Henders
gon raise the valuation on farm lands
and spend the county’s balance, is for
Delamater,
Cook, whe took illegal sheriff fees in
addition to the fat fees allowed by law,
is for Delamater,
Fiadler, who demoralizes the society
he moves in and has been getling zig-zag
boozy at every gathering he bas atten.
ded, om the Susbuty Yetattn. fo-auien
A Hot Place for Quay.
Monudsville, W. Va.—~Sam Jones
a number of national characters
course of bis remarks,
he eaid:
“Talk abont wickedneas,
Quay. There you find
fire dieth not.”
Turning atiention to President
Harrigon Jones observed: "He's small,
I saw a picture of him under his grand:
father's hat a few days ago. They
might have put the whole Harrison
family under that hat and still have had
his
lots of room.”
He eulogized Cleveland in picturesque
language, saying at one time: “There's
as big as that
It he hadn't so much epine
he might have been President yet.
i»
a man with a backbone
pillar there,
Hy in
ted States is the Rev. Dr. John Atkinson!
who lives near Benton Harbor, Mich
He was born in Flemington, N, J. in
1707, and was licensed to preach in 1814
In reviewing bis life the other day the
old gentleman said: “I knew Jesse Lee,
the first missionary appointed for the.
New England States, and heard him
preach; 1 knew Joseph Pitmore, one of
the first two missionaries sent by Mr,
Wesley from the Leeds (England) con-
ference in 1747 to the province of North
America, and I attended his funeral
Philadelphia, 1 was converted
the ministry of Joseph Totten, and
ed the church under John Walker of
Trenton circuit, I want to tell you a
gtory about Joseph Totten. One day he
rebuked two young
a prominent lawyer, who made a point
of disturbing the servicie by entering
the church late, He said: “Here you
come praaciog in with the devil's toy.
shop on your heads and hell's bells in
your ears”
a»
Mugsoz, constituting a special o
from Spanish
ocmmittee
government, have
visited Washington within the past few
days and their movements have been
very mysterious, Last night a corre
spondent Slagovered the mission of the,
strangers.
the
is a quasi-diplomaticone to
ascertain he Toeling, both on the part of
the government of the United “tates and
the Caban residents here, as to the event:
ful annexation of the
the United States,
New Yorr,
During their stay in
where they arrived last
city,
in favor of annexation.
O00 006,
cmt
penalty of from §1,000 to $5,000 if
the United States
reached by them and by the State el
tion officers,
boards of canvassers of the congressiona
cus measure should become a law.
A
plan for connection by rail,
tions are to be oined with Portland
cement, which not only preserves iron
but is impervious to water.
will be about $75,000,000,
Ae
Harrison's secretary of state, doesn’t
printed yesterday, he very distinctly
17,
The other day, while in Cincinnati a
prominent wholesale merchant of Char.
{leston, 8, C, who does not wish his
{name to be nsed, talked freely to a re
the federal election bill.
He gays the people of the north have
no idea of the intense feeling that existe
among all classes io the south over the
proposed measure, There is no disposi+
tion to talk about it or to make threats,
but the passage of the bill will be the
signal for the creation of the extremest
bitterness —a feeling that will undo all
that the years find manifestation
tion,
First of all every norther: products as
far as possible will be boycotted. Fol-
lowing this will come the most exten-
sive and effectual boycott on class labor
the world has ever known Arrange
ments are already under way to secure
abroad thousands of white laborers, and
every negro employe in the south will
be discharged and no southern man will
innder any pretext give one of them em-
ployment, the object beipg to drive
them into the north and west,
>
Beven hundred people were killed in
Arabia, by a wheirlwind last week, In
Mnscat many buildings were destroyed
and the inhabitants buried in the ruins
The greatest damage was done in the
country districts, whole hamlets were
swept away.
Many plantations with the farm houses
were leveled to the ground, and the peas-
ants killed in their frantic effort to ess
cape the fary of the storm.
Survivors who are straggling into the
city report the destruction complete in
the path of the tornado, which extended
in a zigzag direction for a distance of
forty miles.
At least 700 persons were killed, and
thousand by were injured timber
and falling trees, which were uprooted
ir iwisted off by the force of the wind.
>
Reports from across the Atlantic are to
the effect that the English wheat crop
will be the worst for years, that the grain
crops are practically ruined throughout
Northern Germany, that the French
crops have been ruined by a month of
storms, that doubtful secounts come from
Russia and that the Indian yield is 200
000 tons less than even last year inferior
harvest. Wheat is now §1.30 a quarter
more in England than it was a year ago,
and a continued advance is predicted.
While homanity bids os sympathize
the consumers of Europe, selfsin-
terest will lead American farmers to
quielly rejoice over an advance in the
price of wheat. Perbaps this is a Hutch
scare,
in Acs
flying
Under Henderson. Decker rule in our
county, the surplus left by Greist and
Wolf, bas disappeared ,
The same is true with the people's
surplus in the National treasury, which
was wriog from them unnecessarily and
unjustly, is fast disappearing, and that
the deficit for the present fiscal year will
reach many millions of dollars. Even if
the river and harbor $i fails of passage
Uncle Sam's treasury will be depleted to
the extent of $19,000,000, and if that
measure and the outrageous force bill
a shortage of gn 000, at ieast.
i MS
A Methodist church at Towel, Mass, ,
has decided to nse water instead of wine
in the communion service. One of the
members, who had been a drunkard, ace
cording to his own statement, and had
twioe returned to his old habits through
temptation placed in his way at the com-
munion service was the cause of the
change. The minister said he could
never pass the wine to him again, and
the church unanimously consented to
use water instead.
emai AI AR
The South is leading the country in
its increased proportion of development,
The Railroad Gazelle prints this year's
record of railways built in the country
and shows that the Southern States con-
tribute fifty-four per cent, of the whole.
Georgia leads all the States in the amount
of road built this year. Throughout the
Union the record of 1800 leads last year 's
when 5,300 miles were constructed. The
amount this year will probably exceed
6,000,
Mr. Harrity having declined the Dem-
ocratic state chairmanship, Mr. Kerr, |™
congressman of this district, whose home
position,
MB SING MRNA
Charles L. Colby and some other gen”
tlemen are on their way to the far north
to study the question of bridging Bhering
Strait for the railway across into Siberia,
in the interest of which Gen. Butterfield
issnid to have made his recent visit to
Russia,
Sc MY IMLS sis san.
Death ot Rev. Stambach.,
NO. 27
The Miners For Pattison.
John BR, Paisiey, a labor leader or the
Clearfield distriet, and said to control at
least 2,000 votes, in un interview em-
phatically declare against Delamater and
the Quay system. He said: “Our min-
ers are disgusted with Quayism and
think Pattison their friend. A careful
canvass reveals that a general sentiment
among the miners is in favor of Pattison .
We do not expect anythingfrom Quay or
any personal representative he proposes
to make Governor. He is too closely
allied to corporations. Our little ones
have at times appealed in vain to us for
bread when capita] oppressed us and we
do not propose willingly to sgain put
Our enemies in power,
“We want 5 Governor who wiil place
an intelligent veto on acts that may in-
jure our cause. We have struggled long
and nobly as laborers, and we are jealous
of an enemy like Quay aspiring to a posi-
tion in which he may injure us Pat
tison favored a revision of the miners
laws, listened to our petitions and always
had a practical miner representing nus in
conference,
“As a representative of a pumerous
labor organization, I may truly easy that
the mining vote will go to Robert E. Pat
tison, the Kepublican miners, as well as
the Democratic ones, being agsinst Del
amater.”
A ————————————————
Henry M. Stanley, the poor house
waif, the peripatetis newspaper corress
pondent and more recently the great ex
plorer, whose name is famous now the
world around, has linked luck and fors
tune, in Westminster Abbey, with Miss
Dorothy Tepr===t, the charming lady
and accomplished artist of London.
Boon after Mr, Stanley's return to Lone
don and bis debut there asa » ciety lion,
the engagement was announced, and the
story of the wooing goes back to a period
before he started into the jungie to res~
cueEmin Pasha and the equatorial prov-
ince from the hands of the barbarians,
It is probably unjust though interesting
to accept the story that he was refused,
when he urged his case at that time, bee
cause he dyed his hair. At any rate it
is known that Mr, Stanley and Misd
Tennant were acquaintances before the
last great exploring tour began, and the
story goes that they met on a yachting
eéxcarsion, when “Africanus” wee intro-
doced to the fair lady of his later affec-
tion by the Daroness Burdett-Coutts.
Whether Stanley proposed or notisa
watter of tradition, and it he did pro-
pose whether he was refused or pot is
also deeply eaveloped in the mist of love.
When the years of exile were over.
fwough, Mr. Stanley seemed to have lit~
ile trouble in reinst ating himself in the
lady's heart, and the wedding day was
set.
Announcements,
TREASURER,
We are authorised 0 ansounce Samuel J.
Herring, of Gregg wownship, ss a candidate for
Treasurer, subject Ww Deamocrstic usages,
We are authorized to sunounce that J. J.
Gramiey, of Mies township, will be a candidate
for Treasurer, sulijett 0 Democratic usages,
Wo are suthorised to announce Jacob
huth, of Millbelm, as a candidate
subject to Democratic usages
We are
Bian poo
vosuty
Eisen
for Treasurer,
authorized asnounce that James
of Harrs Township, as 8 candidate for
reasurer, saljoct to Democratic usages.
COMMISSIONER
We are authorized to announce that Daniel
Heckman, of Buflsio Run, will be candidate for
Cossaisgioner, subject w Democratic usages.
Weare authorized to announce that G. IL.
Goodhart, of Potter township, will be a candidate
for Commissioner, subject to Democratic usages.
We are authorized to announce that B. ¥. Sto
ver, of Bellefonte, will be a candidate for Come
missioner, subject 0 Republionn usages.
We ore authorized to announce that Daniel ©
Grove, of Marion township, is a candidate for
Commissioner, subject 0 Democratic usages,
We sre authorizon 0 announce that A, J. Long
of Harris Wownseip, will be a candidate tor Com.
missioner, sulject 0 Republican usages.
We are suthorized to ansounce that Samuel
Frank, of iy Xo ply] will be a candidate for
O to Democratic usages.
ABSEMBLY.
We are authorized to announce, John T.M Com
mick, of College township, ss 8 candidate for Ass
sembly, subject to Democratic usages.
We are authorized to announce that J. H, Holt,
of Snow Shoe, will be 8 candidate for Ass robly,
SHERIFF.
We are authorized to announce Thomas J. Dan.
J I a cendidate for Sherif, sub
ject to Democratic usages.
We are authorized to announce W. A. Ishier, of
— = wy
We are suthorised fo angounce that W, ©,
Heinle. of Bo Bellefonte, will be » candidate for
Sheriff, subject to Democratic usages.
We are authorized to announce thet A. M. But
Rij io De ge Sherif,
woship, will bo & oud
, wubject to usages.
ws Sundidase tor Sherif,
urager.
En
We are
EY
se