VOL. LXV. er paper the Homestead strike and the war will be over. pty mr——— « There is only one eandidale for As- sembly on this side the county, name- H. McCormick, which will not it difficult for our people to choice, . - In Philadelphia number of women working in a oy Ww 1 ¢ il Woe wit k, quite a laun- dry, struck, not for higher but the proprietor put in some machinery Wages, or that wages were lowered, because increase of busi- fools, emptying to accommodate the These don’t see that they and the Ness, women be are oil from their lamps. > a During the trial at Versailles of four anarchists charged with stealing a quantity of dynamite which was used in the explosionsfof last May day one of «fold of the prisoners named Etievant wa by the judge to stand up. Instead order the prisoner and imp up yourself, Why de complying witn the remained in his seat dently replied: You get Hae mt up?” The judge made answer: magistrate and need not rise to you." Thereupon Etievant retorted: man is as good as another. Get you want to speak to me; tl § The owed the example Etievant solent mein toward t 1e1 ri get up, too”! other prisons r= fol- Ol sgt bravado and adopted an equally he judge. E in turn began a violent harangu tried to expatiate on the subject The judge, fused to listen to their anarchism. howevi after a scene of considerable succeeded in silencing them. am It is a striking f; i - act that race is some day judging from the number of young and middle who wear glasses, w onclusion that mank ‘ith many, worn for style, remarked to his look professorlike There are cer of Deane wend i need them, and a pair of y wearin sense will a he or she enough to 4 r orlasses 3 I' FiASSesS § wea not require ti wold be to a full head of - wear have » -— A seriou ranks of the Homestead it is now confidently expected that be # break has oceurred in Sirigers, and fore the end of the week, t be running with all the Carnegie Company 11a) cept. On men including several members of p x 3 of the old Monday thirty- ix the amated Association went back to work. Amalgs The adv isory Comittee ques tions the number, but admits there has been a break. have been secured from outside places and Superintendent Potter confidently within all the departments will be running on double turn. The locked very anxious, and it is now believed that if no concerted attack is made upon the Homestead works by the strikers the other Carnegie mills, there will be asserts that ten days out men are Wy at a grand series of foot races by the men to secure their old positions. En ————— A oy ACARD, In order that the Democrats of Cen- tre county may not be deceived, and my friends be misled into voting tary, which I ask at their hands, I de- culation by some of my opponents to the effect: the office in good faith, that That I am not asking for I have been induced to seek the position for the benefit of others, and if elected would not assume charge of the same, is utterly false and withoutany foun- dation. I am a candidate in my own inter. est and for my own benefit, and ow- ing to the shortness of time alone, do I adopt this method of refuting in print the false statement intended to prejudice my candidacy. There is no man in Centre county that would hand over such a position to another, the idea in itself is absurd, Let there be fairplay. C. R. Kuntz. ANARCHY RAMPANT, THE CASE OF PRIVATE IAMS | i General Snowden Gives the His Homestead Affair, Views on Major General George R. {and several members of his staff, | eluding Surgeon General R. 8. North, Cullinan i Koper, ( olonel (4, H. ant Colonel R. 8. and tonel Charles Green, returned | General Snowded went to his home at | 1432 Pine he i headquarters, street, and took a rest made his appearance at brigade headquarters before he was asked ment of Private Iams, of the Regiment, by Colonel Streater. In re- gard to the latter he aaid: “1 have on the matter at this the. no official opinion to give I may bx My is that inflicted called on later to give it. indi- vidual opinion, however, " of Iams was in inishment murder, reoeiiion, d of treason, The effici regiment and to repre 1: inf s §i at i OF 11ST a mutiny. { men and the are offi- by the ind discipline of a of its commanding enlisted the men hands of mumander, A report of the ircumstances in Iams’ case was made ne alter the event and I was asked should It was then the dispositi of Ji be made it I made the o «i. 1 have 0 sav on the subject.” der already publishes FOR THE TROOPS and the be- camp havior of the Stats troops atl stead General Snowden said: never a better camp peace. from ina camp, and equally and Ofcers en orp gE greatest Was ©XOoeis Wile REY of the ME yunmand of Wiley. ¥ ampls t weral Wiley , and his troops may {5 i= is a good ace should tial Wiley's command, as has been affairs mm that loeal- y is very b and threatening. ideas of law and order, respect for pri- the been vate property and liberty of 7 ens seem to have obliterated It seething voleano, ready to burst that reminds me Vicinity. at any moment. THE SITUATION MISsi sDERSTOOD., of ate do not seem to The law-abiding citizens other parts of the St ize the condition of affairs either or before the arrival of the troops at Homest To my mind it very evident that the authorities of the State will have to join in sctual battle with anarchy and the commune. The well make up their minds that the eruption at Homestead ead, is ax in the body politic, which extends far have any concep- tion of, and instead of criticising the efforts of spirited and patriotic officers to preserve discipline in their ranks bie to uphold them. 1 believe that | the hour is not distant when peace and order will have to be enforced at the point of the bayonet in obedience to the Executive. “The people of the State are not taware of the condition of affairs at | Homestead. The people there organ- { ized a revolutionary government; they i had their officers, their Magistrate, | their council of ten. They arrested | citizens without warrent, tried them | before this so-called advisory commit | tee, exiled them or inflicted such other | punishments as they saw fit. They { established an armed censorship of the press. The newspaper write rs were | compelled to wear numbers, like con- lvicts in a prison. They resisted the | Sheriff. They committed murder and they made war. Buch was the condi {tion of affairs when I arrived there. | “1 believe that every member of the {so-called citizens’ and A malgamated | Association committees that called on | me on Tuesday morning after the ar- crimes from murder ho came to me at Munhall Station on my arrival at morning, and said Ki) unex- i] without «O0n and How in pri 01, ANARCHY | RAMPANT] HAs our fathers fought for independ- | repeihion will our liberty have and ot dist fut ant utterly astonished ad at the during my Rapa Are quarters HAS we ean works we saw The bad long as the sit now the Seeon if their stay tO i First Brigade or may be called out again such of them as are on the ground as th NO] ann in the be, 1 ¥ IVY WOrks believe, tl . Yy WOrsKs wiil JONES VICTORIOUS The Straight Democratic Victory in Alas? Pieks ATL. Tf : The eviden the day, though Kolb has Cnt counties a - Intellectual Calisthenios, YA great deal of what tion is not education at all, vi J. Rellers, at the Southern ily pounded and languages are painfi ill into children who will never have use for them, while matters of importanos to the masses lected. Boys are taught Latin and left in com- plete ignorance of commercial law; they read Homer in the original, yet know of Herbert Spencer only by hear- gay; they know more of Euripides than of Shakespeare; are better posted re garding the demoeraey of Athens than | of the Democracy of the United States, | I have heard college graduates mouth- ing about Pericles and Petrarch could not tell whether Gladstone was | an English Liberal or an Irish police- man. They knew all about bugology and could tell whether a pebble be onged to the palezoie or some other period, but could not tell a subpoena from a search warrant, a box of vermi- | cell from a bundle of fish worma, so Mr. John Carpenter, of Goodland, | Ind, says: “I tried Chamberlain's | Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, | for diarrhoea and severe cramps and pains in the stomach and bowels with the best results. In the worst cases 1 never had to give more than the third dose to effect a cure. In most cases one dose will do. Besides its other good qualities it is pleasant to take.” 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by J. D. Murray. are ofttimes neg who a os A A A ABABA: Major Ringer Indisposed, Major William J. Singer, who re cently returned from Homestead to which place he was summoned by order of Governor Pattison, Is at pre sent confined to his house on ast Howard street, with sickness, This is unfortnnate for the Major as he is a candidate for the Democratic District RSDAY, AUGUST 4, [SIT SUICIDEOR MURDER AUTHORITIES INVESTIGATING THE DEATH OF A LEWISBURG LIVERY MAN. A Suspicion Weldensanl House Seton Fire eal the that John Killed nud the to Con rime, The poli concerning death of John Welder - WASHINGTON thie A Resume of Procee A Clu unkennees, He was on Saturday morning, taken from 16, found that ot found that he had comin ana on he ers vestigation, 1 was WHS shot in the al, hie iitted suicid This tragedy occurred in the hous iss, it sterdany it was a 5 nis sweet-heart, Ye Kate Neyhart, | skull had been erushed by means of a first instru Thi ii foul ping Nevhart, a handome brunette, strenu- nent wis thé intimation of pMthough i to the origin Ory i iN po ANARCHISTS IN MASS MEETING hey Denounes Capital and Lasd Berkman TH dern Hero ATLAl M 3 1 z Yoo A ft sander Berkm nna Goldman, Berkman's he principal speakers ’ i i y i Feed y § Resolutions { at di- presente ad He In apital were carried unanimou ainsiiti i OF « and wiv, Dut these re. hint 1 ii them delivered in German were solutions conveyed on as to the wn echoes, most of rater tame except inso far as thes held the of f incendiary to sence of a large force of policemen, Berkman up as one of heroes 1 he was part Is the epoch. absenee « language due £3 J pre Seite Tourist Trip. found trips to the Paeific Const, Si of Colorado The Great Salt Lake National Park most wonderful spot on this continent, Puget Sound, the Mediterranean of Yellowstone All reached the Union For detailed information eall via E. L. LoMaAX, Gen, Pass, & Tkt. Agent. Omaha, Neb, lp Iams Brings Sait, Informations were made Monday ex-Private Inms against Colonel Haw- king, Lieutenat Colonel Streator and Assistant Surgeon Grim, of the Tenth regiment, for aggravated assault and battery and assault and battery, War. rants ‘were issued. The charge agg- ravated assault was for tying Tams up by the thumbs and the assault and battery for shaving his head, A civil suit will also be brought for damages, and the attorneys, Messrs, Dickey, Trent, Jones and Watson say they are confident of securing heavy damages for their client and also of convieting the defendants on the charges made, RRS A A SN There are now over one thousand men at work in the Homestead mills, On Sunday preaching was had in the mills, . E Attorneyship nomination, n unprots i occupat y 1 {in which the average of wages his Iie the McKinley law was bakers oreased sine enacted ar blacksmiths, brick- 1.4 . lavers, cabinet makers CATH niers, common laborers, farm laborers, ma- i chinists, masons, iron molders, pain- tailors, The fifteen protected of wages has decreased, are bar iron, boots ava | ters, plumbers, stone cutters, and tin smiths, average and shoes, eotton goods, cotton { woolen goods crucible steel, flint glass, green glass, window glass lumber, ma- chinery, pig iron, steel ingots, steel blooms, steel rails, and woolen goods, | Mr. Carlisle called attention to another clause of the McKinley law which i= responsible through the rise {in the price of tin for having already | robbed the people of this country of $4,620 770, or more than one-half of the estimated value of the 508 tin plate work of Wales, thus showing that the benefit of this particular clause of the protective tariff’ is reaped entirely by the Welch manufacturer at the ex- pense of the American consumers, According to an official communica- tion Secretary Foster to the House, in answer to a resolution, on Treasury of- ficial either asked for or obtained leave of absence to attend the republican na. tional convention at Minneapolis. Then a good many of them were absent without leave, as they were certainly at the convention, The House committee on Agricul ture in a report upon the effect of the present tariff law upon agricuiture, confirmed the statement made in the Senate last week by Senator Vest, that the value of farm lands and products have beensteadily deteriorating under the several protective tariff’ laws in force since the war, while other inter ests have been more prosperous and re also : i {aril of 1846 ¢ prosperity, greatest I thie Luly been rajsed b a8 on the floo Tid rrinide by Repres nt of Georgi: x Wain on gn for Jacob Ei CHASMES, I THETITAN OF A Mile Long, he iver, in Arizo Deep, 13 Miles Wide, and Painted Like 217 Miiea a Viower. {srand {( he Colorado ime easily A has been established the At- vd, making the he most impos. than 12 round trip is only $20.00, and meals and com- gular stage ii “" « 18 Or ¥ Flag=tafl. 44 5 y is tic & i AURA trip from Od Arizona, on Ire less Ti ini MI An ing part of the Can hours, f The stage fare for the fortable lodgings are provided through- The afforded at route is the most stupendous panorama known in nature. There is also a trail at this point leading down the Canon wall, more than 6,000 feet vertically, to the river below. The descent of the trail is a grander experience than climbing the Alps, for in the bottom of this terrific and sublime chasn hundreds of mountains greater than any of the Al- pine range. A book describing the trip to the Grand Canon, illustrated by many fall- page engravings from special photo- graphs, and furnishing all needful in- formation, may be obtained free upon application to Jno. J. Byrne, 723 Monadnock Block, Chicago IL out the trip at a reasonable price. view of the Grand Canon the terminus of the stags are ——————— Anarchist Bergman may get a heavy salting. J. G. A. Leishman entered an additional information against Bergman, charging him with carrying concealed weapons, This with the charge of felonious assault and battery made by Inspector McKelvy and the six charges preferred by Secretary Lovejoy makes eight counts. The to- tal bail required was $24,000. If con- vieted of all these charges he will serve thirty-four years in the penitentiary. No attorney appeared for the prisoner. It is said a fund is being raised by New York “Reds” to defend him. na AA SO wee If you want a light spring and summer overcoat, the Philad, Branch, Bellefonte, ean satisfy your wants in a both
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