The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 17, 1892, Image 1

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    |
VOL. LXV,
Fish stories
April 15.
will be in season after The Tarif Debate Opens.
The debate upon the free wool bill
began in the House, the participants
being Mr. McMillin, of Tennsessee,
and Mr. Dingley, of Maine. The re-
port of the two speeches shows that
—— :
The anti-Quay fever is beginning to
run high among Republicans,
Woy
It is too early for the liar
snakes—they won't wriggle yet.
about | the ¥ were not confined to the subject
actually before the comunittee of the
a whole, but took a wide range, covering
Wages have gone down in all indus-
trial centres. Charge it to the MeKin-
ley tariff act.
the whole general subject of the system
of revenue from duties upon imports.
{ Summed up in a sentence, Mr. Mec-
|
a |
- Millin’s speech was an elaborate ex-
From different sections of the North- | posure of the unnecessary high rate of
West come reports of persons frozen to | duties levied by the McKinley bill,
death in last week's blizzard.
{and Mr. Dingley’s as elaborate a de
thet i fense of it as could be made under the
If the arifl’ question and free coinage |
of silver settled, the
could get along right well
Years without a session of congress.
circumstances,
Limes Mr. MeMillin's
| strongest point was his challenge to
were country The Bays:
for five
| the Republicans to show that the far
ner had
. 4 toed
WLC Batu
a ived more for his wool
req
England has a great coal
hand. Over 100,000 men
out, and many of the great
in
me | since the passage of the McKinley bill.
Even Mr. Dingley
have been obliged to shut down. Much | challs nge. The that
the laborers’ home, the tools
rer any advance wages
have gi
iron works did not meet
second charge
distress will result, among the middle! t}
1.
ie cost of
and lower ¢ ANSON,
he works with and the clothes he and
a { his family wear have been
The other day the New York customs | while his w
authorities discovered l i
- «1 oy» its x i mm
a clever device ary, was likewise I'he
unanswered.
to convey goods into this country.
One of the cabin
steamship Saale, from
passengers on ths HICasurnre free SULAN-——WHas
i
fi
dremen, | a shown to In
il
quantity of diamond jewelry under
porous plaster on his back.
much more than offset by
al
Mr.
the farmers had not been benefited, as
MceMillin's figures showed
- Wo fp gy
The Philadelphia Zim
17th year a few days ago.
s closed its
It is proud | th
fe
» of
the bill and the number
of its success and has a right to be, for | of sh y decreasing rather than
ites a power in the state and nation. a
favorite with all,
ls
other
, while shoddy as an ingredient of
and displavs first- | th ning of the masses had taken
pia)
ass ability in its editorial department fleeces of 29,000,000
and elegance in its ty pography. { sheep since the adoption of the high
'
WOOl.
ey GULLY on
That would be a good law introduc Mr. Dingley’s re
ed in the senate by Senator All
ply was ingenious,
SOT argumel
tative, By deduet-
compel railroads to equip tl x he duties formerly levied on suga
list
average duty on
but 21
idler the
er Cal
with automatic couplers within a cer-! and other
tain time. The bill makes it
for any railroad to
coupled and imposes fines for violatior
of the act,
free
articles now on the
ft tl t
ciaimeda that toe
Hse ear yt (3 | fli HIPDOTis Was per cent.
. a. '
2 per cent. ur old law
11
ler the Mills bill of
| per cent.
a has i
Hard-
reference
Mr. Dingley evidently
Auditor General MeCamant's report | genius for figures tl
that mislead.
on finances for the past yes mvineing
Ar nore o« his
Was
the receipts were unusually heavy,
to our increased « Xxports, which every-
ing an increase of £5,200,000 over the
The
of this increase comes
of the direct tax by
Government an
corporations, : E10 sophistry n
mi
tha
person
body knows were due to our big crops
preceding year, portion | of orn and a crop failure in
refund | Europe, and not to the McKinley bill
ncts is
he
statement
INCreases
must
Et .
There Was an increase of
$£900.000 in
more beaten, and
Mr.
$311 §
iii The
the State
property. There ine
of $500,000 on the collateral inherit
tax,
companies,
tax on Dingley eredited to the McKinley
If Providence
rier
LEN
Providen
¥
was also an rease Hs % 0 probe
have
the
ANnce ALIV DECALS © failed to
i
$40 000 of
representative on the floor
from foreign insurance
B72 000
from bonus is¢ to expose the fraud.
charters, and considerable from lia SS da
licenses, Cleveland Will lan
¥
vs
that
'
i lets
candidate
nd has written a
Vi. 2. 2 » he will be a
I'his is not a free country any more 3 ; : )
‘ : Fates, : moeratic presidential nom-
-there is no use in talking. Just see: i : :
ination at HICREO,
I'he
from Hon.
Cle
A fellow gets a eramp in his stomae
a griping of the bowels or
States belly-ache, and if he
druggist for a half-pint of whisky to
cure himself he must first be for :
with a prescription from a doctor be- aiid says :
“I cannot, however, refrain from de-
letter WHS In to one
E. 8S. Bragg, who asked Mr.
veland his intentions.
ourse of the letter Mr. Cleve
: FeSO Tse
the United hon
TOs to the
4
fortified
fore he can get the cure. Another fel
low only feels a little dry in the throat
not
ailings, he ean go into a saloon or tav-
ern five
claring to you that my experience in
the president of the
United impressed me
with of the trust and its
I
bring myself to regard a candi acy for
plac
personal strife and active self-assertion.
“I hav that the presi-|
is preseminently the people's of-
. % 5 rent ties of
and does have any of the above Bit office of
Slates has =o
times a the solemnity
pint without any prescription at all.
The equality of the citizens is destre wed
~this is no more a The
Declaration of Independence sf
aside. The druggist is not tle equal of
the saloonist, and the thirsty has!" : : ]
rights not enjoyed by the fellow with hee, and I have been sincere in my
constant advocacy of the effective par-
the
part of all our citizens, consequently 1 |
day, and get a half- :
awiul responsibilities that cannot
thie € is something to be won by
ree country.
is
¢ alLo an idea
one »
the belly-ache.
ticipation in political affairs on
-
. -
The Philadelphia Ledger says Penn-
sylvania’s Ballot law has
many faults, due in part to the nee
essity of reconciling the
believe the people should be heard in!
an s . , ¢ ‘
wiorin the choice of their party candidates,
and that they themsleves should make |
Australian
Ballot law to the numbering provisions
of the State Constitution, but the op-
position to it started by the Prohibi-
tionists appears to be unreasonable
When the State undertakes to print
the ballots there must be some regula-
tion directing what candidates’ names
shall be printed. The law recognizes
the right of every party casting three
per cent of the votes at the preceding
election to name candidates,
nominations, ax directly as is consistent |
with open, fair and full party organiza. |
tion and methods,"
py
GREENLAND ISTHE MAN.
i
is
e Gets the Appointment of Adjutant Gen. }
eri of Vennaylvania, !
Governor Pattison Tuesday after |
noon appointed Colonel Walter W,
Greenland, of Clarion, as Adjutant
General to succeed the late William
It pro-| MeClellend, and 0. E. MeClelland, |
vides, moreover, that other candidates superintendent of the middle division, |
may be nominated and have their Pennsylvania railroad, as Quarter.
names printed by petition, and finally | aster General on the Governor's staff’
i
that each bailot shall have blank space |
whereon the indidunl voter may write |
the name of the person he desires to!
vote for. Thus no one is shut out from
to fill the vacancy created by the ap-
wintiment of Colonel Greenland,
He wis born in Cassville, Hunting-
don county, but at the time of his ap-
a free choice. Elections are left “free | pointment he lived in Clarion county,
and equal,” and the printing of the | und has quite a military record.
ballots is simply regulated in a reason-| (olonel Greenland was among the
able way. To abandon the regulations
would be destructive of the system, for | ing the terrible calamity at Johnstown
if the bars were let down each individ | in 1880, and remained there six weeks
ual in the Btate could demand nid to Adjutant
the | rendering valuable
printing ballots for his specinl use, and | General Hastings,
even the time limitation might be de | mi A
i
The Keston the Winner,
clared an interference with the free |
A Lancaster church gives a medal to
The law is every person that misses neither a
and equal right of a belated citizen to!
have his ballots printed,
not a model enactment, but it is entire: | church nor a Bunday school service
ly reasonable and fairin the particular during the year. Only one was awar
sections attacked by the Prohibi- ded for the past year, and the sexton
Getting Ready for Valverizing
It is apparent from ecablegrams giv-
ing the latest advices from Moscow
and St, Petersburg that the Czar of
Russia is making preparations to do a
little “pulverizing” on his own account
if necessary. Mobilization and equip-
ment of troops with new firearms is
going on at military stations in Russia
in preparation for the transfer of an in.
creased force to the western boundary
of Russia, if reports
are true, a quarter of a million infun-
try, ten thousand cavalry and a heavy
artillery force have been moved to the
i line of
{| Austrian
i
Since January,
fortresses along the German-
frontier, and as many more
{ are likely to be sent thither in the next
| few weeks, War between Russia and
| Germany is not anticipated in the nea
{ future, but be
f
i
there can
but that the Czar intends to
no quest 101}
be ready
for war, either defensively or ageres
sively.
The German Emperor in a recent
- - -
Wiser But Poorer,
A Uniontown, Pa., dispatch of the
ad fact Jacob
Prinkey, a wealthy farmer of Wharton
details the follows:
HE
1
township, this county, is wiser, sad
and $2000 poorer than on Tuesday.
to
ed that
rallroad |
his
he
METI
place and
with
that
morning i
Wiis connects i
built through
section, ‘
Yeste rday
told Prinkey that |
it as foolish {
the
three nights he had been at his house
w
Ar
yela strange thing that for Inst
he had dreamed each night of a certain
tree on Prinkey’s farm that was filles
with money. The
the tree minutely
stranger deseoribu
.
%
and Prinke
nized it and said he could lead the
to it.
that there was no
FO
UCHR
WAN
The alleged rallroade: persisted
iis
oa
thing in
HE i5
dream,
nicl
14
but Prinkey was interested
took
him to a tree
When the
iy \ res1l Frist: 4
ing silver rolled from t
down
tree fell great
he hollo
lo
ited and
baskets and
tree. Prinkey was greatly exc
procured sacks and
tal was taken
When counted ther
precious mu to his hou
i
they
were 84.000 i
The agreement was that
divide, but the stranger
»
not i
1 carry his and ask
give him paper money
so and the
Pri
i lost was
man vanisiu
NKey became susp
mmnde
found to Ix bogus,
- »> -
New
The new si
old gis ou ple nity of =
Silver Coinage.
iver coinage added to the
money, five,
ten, twenty-five cent pieces,
tl
§
to business men, reli wm from
the inconvenience which they suffered
for a while, because of its scarcity, The
dime saving tubes, which withdrew so
of the old
pieces from circulation are too small to
large a quantity ten cent
admit the new piece of
tion. Unless
that denomina-
a new tube is produced
to do this the new ten cent piece. os
not be hoarded in this way.
- . -
Divided into Three Precinets, :
The viewers appoints d for the erec. |
tion of three precinets in
Miles town |
ship, have reported in favor of same. |
The west precinet will have Madison-
burg for its capitol; the middle pre- |
cinct Rebersburg, and the east precinet
Wolf's Store,
——
Public Sale,
at
William Holderman
public sale on the Mrs Curtin farm,
near Linden Hall, on Monday next,
March 21st, at one o'clock, live stock,
farm implements,
will offer
household goods,
a —-
Good News for the Depositors,
The statement is made that Receiver |
oo.
Big Fire at DuBois, i
DuBois, Pa., had a £100,000 fire aj
The opera house and |
DuBois were the buildings destroyed.
No insurance,
a
Cold Snap,
Monday was cold with high winds;
at night'much colder and flercer winds,
The fields, thank Providence, are pro-
tected by a good mantle of snow,
rca ac ra—n
To Meet in Bellefonte.
The Methodist conference adjourned
at York, Pa., this week, to meet In
session next year at Bellefonte,
oli ———
Died.
Pine Creek, Mary, wife of David Kor-
22 days,
A 5M 5 A ee Rade 4
If there were no session of the Pentre
sylvania legislature for ten years, the
SPRING MILLS
A Peculinr Manin Developed Among the
Young Folks, Other Interesting Happen.
ings the Past Week,
C. P Long now lives in the mansion.
The new meat market
on Saturday,
was opened
J. D. Long has bought the Hanna
farm in Georges Valley,
Sue Long and Lillian Krise erossed
the mountain Belle-
fonte,
J. R. Bnyder and wife were to their
home over Sunday,
snyder co,
on Tuesday to
in Centreville,
Miss Sadie Breon is staying at
{ professor and a sick aunt,
i R. B. Bartges, working
at Centre Hall, has become the father
who is now
of of a bouncing boy baby,
Centre Castle, No. 168, K. G. E.. in-
itinted two candidates and reinstated
| tae
A party of town ar
y members last Naturday night.
e going to Belle-
it said that
| they are all going to stop at the Hotel
{de Is
! Samuel Waits’ sale
fonte on Saturday. is
hler
was largely
the
ere bought by persons living in this
al-
tended, and a number of horses
| w
end of the valley.
Rev, J. H, Hertz, who will be the
| Evangelical minister for Spring Mills
14
Xt year, will move into town soon.
He will occupy the hous
Pus
WEY
vacated
*
by
Kennelley.
fr
id
itely
riend aa
M
a
townsman,
fir li
i114
has | become
i He will take charge
Milesh whither he
fin-
Hiinister.
iy
4 or
it MIA,
ve as soon as his school is
AVINg a mania
NOtne
ald
dead Jo!
Oe
1
i
res
ur town prophet
x that soon ey hitching
rot
«ide
I have
af tin present
Bol
METHODIST APPOINTMENTS,
The List of Appointments
the
Showing Where
Ministers Go For This District,
lowing appointments h
the Aloona
Methodist
Prost
tills of fs
conferenoe
al York, Pa
Elder.
5 WEA
B. Hamlin, Presiding
P.O. 1
Supply,
yn, Asbury, J.
uj
"hester
yrone
Li. LL. Logan
H. McCord,
WTTIUNerary.
A Ve
As
A. BR. Miller
enue, H. R. Bender
j Williama Moses,
First Church, D Monroe,
L.. F. Smith
impson Church, R. E. Wilson
W. A. Houck.
J. B. Stein.
Hirmingham, J. B.
i. DD.
Coalport, L. M
Curwensville,
l
le,
nae,
Ave nue,
.
Bellefo
Bellwood,
nite,
irenneman
Clearfield, Penepacker.,
Brady.
M. Smyser
i E. King.
Glen Hope, Bupply, (Job Truax).
Half Moon, A. P. Wharton.
Hastings, Supply, (W. H. Closson).
Hollidaysburg, E. T. Swartz,
Houtzdale, W, F. ID. Noble.
Howard, N. B. Smith.
Irvona, Bupply, (G. P. Sarvis).
Lumber City, C. A. Biddle,
Martinsburg, and Woodburg, A. W.
Guyer,
Mcekee's Gap, Bruce Hughes,
Milesburg and Unionville,
Warren.
Morrisdale, CC. W. Rishel.
Mountaindale, H. K. Ash.
New Washington, George Trach.
Osceola, M. C. Piper.
Penn's Valley, R. W. Illingworth.
Philipsburg, T. 8. Wilcox.
Pine Grove, J. W. Glover.
Pleasant Gap, F. W. Leidy.
Port Matilda, J. C. Young.
Ramey, F. 8. Vough.
Roaring Spring, F. M. Welsh.
Shawnut, Hugh Strain.
Snow Shoe, J. W. Forrest,
Tyrone, First church, R. H. Gilbert.
“ Second church, William Brill.
Wallacetown, E. WW. Wonner.
Warriorsmark, J. W. Ely.
West Clearfield, E. H. Witmun,
Williamsburg, H. N. Minnigh.
Woodland and Bradford GG.
Bouse,
A AS AAA
|
Duncansvi (:
George
Ww.
1892,
WASHINGTON LETTE
§
Ma
Mr. Harrison certainly ha
0
In,
From our Begumr Cor 1
WASHINGTON, rch 14, 1892,
ably impressed the majority of the re
of the Behrings Sea matter in such a
Way ar to create a war seare, whatever
| effect it may have had in other qua
ers. Senator Sherman, who is chair- |
For-1
{ eign Affairs, expressed his opinion in
| very fom by
contention
man of the Senate committee on
words HA war
the
saying:
or even a between
United States and Great Bri
| cause so trivial as one year's
1 seals, would be a erm against cis
{tion.” A prominent
{1% a warm personal friend of
i Blaine, sald Lo-da
| aflair had bw
| rison without
i Bl
sick
ine, wi
to
that when
had been dog
: 3
{ take advantag
thint
an
4
Li
tion
persuaded to chang
not i
EET
oy
fii
1 1
to pro
Office,
Cotnniissoner of
pelied
patents
4 .
Dot oniy
facturers, owners of patent
Business men who for
another often find it importa
copies of certain
patents.
Ciread business pressure
brought to bear on the Hottse commits
tee on Rivers and Harbors, in favor
ih posed ship channels conned
fhe lakes,
hundred Representatives, from North
hi
COoln-
0]
fir
§ I
i
ting
great and more than one
ern, Central and Western States
to the
mittee, strongly endorsing the scheme
and asking that it ix
House
The
will take a formal vote on the bill
the admission of New
Wednesday of this week.
favorably reported, and it
AVE
i signed a letter addressed
IY ported to the
House committee on Territories
for
Mexico,
It
1%
:
on
will Ix
belies od
Hous *
will
that it will certainly pass thu
but the indications are that it
“hung up” in the Senate.
9
Senator Hill's southern trip appears
a lot of
He goes in response to warm
to be giving the republicans
trouble.
and pressing invitations, and he is cer-
tain to meet a welcome worthy of his
| distinguished for, his
| prominent position in the democratic |
i party.
So many members of the House wish
SOrVioes and
| to make speeches on the free wool bill,
{ now before the House, that it will
| necessary to hold night sessions this
| week in order to give even a few of
{ them a chance to have their say before |
| the vote is taken, next Monday. The
| present arrangement is to have the!
| debate closed by exSpeaker Reed, for |
| the republicans, and Speaker Crisp,
for the democrats, i
be |
| Two things will occur on Tuesday, |
Services During the Week, { March 22, in which democrats every- |
Rev. Baskerville, pastor of the Pres- | where are deeply interested. At Wash- |
byterian church, every evening this ington the House will take up the |
. 11.
lepresentative Springer is slow ly re-
but
his physicians do not
take any further part in the work
Ha
mission of Arizona
reported this week,
due time be passed by
ho .
The Pennsylvania as a Disbhburser,
torial in Philadelphia Press, March 10th, '92 |
Hoberts at
Pennseyl-
ia Railroad was interesting
1
The speech of President
annual meeting of the
in giv-
of the
hie
' $1-3% : g
vel and #iriging iden .
Hu portance to business interests of :
GInmun Al COTY
wiration, The
ef
ity of a gre:
Lind ortion in em-
apt to regard
ty
CHIC nam conoern which
ght and carries pa
CArnings
Isis,
a large
Pew and a
further
ind trade in
of the Penn-
wirse, much
hat the
President
I
nsyvivania
n
the
gImnmon-
$52 000
£1.000.000
1 three
# whose
sim,
« but
a
of the
Hnmensity
ng capacity, as
millions were
line outside
do need
il
important a
the community the Pennsyl-
hie figures not
They
how much and how
ola har §
HATH §
ation. demonstrate
O11
f
part of
vania Railroad is, and point out its in-
timate relations to all matters Pe riain-
ing to business in a most striking Way.
The
constant, and timely expenditures can-
ultimate effects of these large,
not bo cont mporaneously known or
pointed out. { generation
We of this
woe that they have added
i
can only
largely to the convenience of the pub-
lie,
that they have made the city more
‘ceskible to freight shippers, that they
have increased our coastwise and fore
ign trade, that they have added to
our manufacturers, and in hundred
ways built up and promoted the stabil
ity of the city and Comuonwealth.
President Roberts and his able lieuten-
ants are to be congratulated on hav-
ing done so much toward the develop
ment of commerce and the promotion
of all that tends to a broader and more
beneficent civilization.
a
ssi
' DEATH.
Farmers Mills Again Visited by the Grim
Messenger.
The vicinity of Farmers Mills was
again visited by that grim messenger,
Death, on Monday, and from ite midst
was plucked a fair flower. The vietim
this time was Miss Elizabeth Ream,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ream,
whose death occurred on last Monday.
She was aged only about 22 vears, She
SAL
sore time past, but her condition was
not at any time considered serious un-
til a few days previous to her death.
She suffered from heart trouble, which
with other conplications ended in her
week will have services in the church,
Communion services next Sunday af-
ternoon at the usual hour,
A ——-—
Bring Low Prices.
Horses are low, because nobody wants
any. Pigs are high, because everybody
wants ‘em.
tsi ——
[ weed Ihe reason we lead the shoe trade
{is because we best satisfy (the people
for a genuine bargain, Mingle, Belle
fonte,
we Mingle's shoe store receives new
fair and reasonable.
tionists. #ot that one.
people would not miss it.
we Apples wanted. —G. O. Benner,
Bland free coinage bill, and Austin, | demise. The funeral took place on
Texas, the legislature in special session
will begin ballotting for a Senator.
There are three candidates here—Sena-
tor Chilton, who holds the position by
gubernatorial appointment; Repre-
sentatives Mills, and Culbertson, who
declined the position of Interstate
Commerce Commissioner to which ex-
Representative Clements of Georgia,
has since been nominated, because of
his desiring to enter the Senatorial
contest, and it is greatly to their credit
that all three of them propose remain.
ing here and attending to their Cou.
gressional duties while the contest is
Wednesday morning, Rev. Fischer, of
fleiating.
A
Not Recelved.
One of the factions of the Evan-
gelical church sent a minister to Mill
heim to serve the Evangelical brethe
eren there, but he was not allowed to
have their church for his use in preach-
ing. al
wef in need of anything in the
boot or shoe line don’t | that
Mingle, Bellefonte, has the finest lire
in the state from which to select. He
guarantees all goods and you have
good returns for your money. ;