FRED. KURTZ, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. Those in arrears subject to previous terms, $2.00 per year. ADVERTISEMENTS. —20 cents per line for three insertions, and 5 cents per line for each subse quent insertion. Other rates made made known on application. CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS. SEP. 22. FIGURES FOR THE FARMERS. ing upon the tariff question. They have not been furnished by Peck, but Equalization. This Board and in its report just published but $569,000,000 in 1890, decrease in value of $115,000,000 in ten tariff. The manufactures tective the population increased in decrease more than a fifth. ing every campaign but the benefit which the farmers are receiving from in all parts of the county. property is an unpleasant reminder to them that the tariff is not making them richer nor conferring any ad- and it is this consciousness that that they derive no denefit from a tariff which takes more than it gives; it causes, truth of the above facts. : a —— ————————— James GG. Blaine did not vote at the recent Maine election—he forgot register. Where forgetting bliss "tis folly to remember, rr ———————— May the soldier boys have a good, and ever to be remembered, time in Washington this week. to is A CRIMINAL STEAMSHIP COMPANY. Much of the blame for the influx of objectionable immigrants into this country is due to the greed of the steamship companies, they bring over, it is their interest increase the immigration. they use every means of stimulating and encouraging it. Terms of trans. portation are offered and inducements held out that attract the of Europe and send it journeying to the United States, the European continent gather up this trash for the profit of the steamship companies and the affliction of the United States. Among these avaricious corporations dregs crime of bringing over the cholera ed in New York bay. August, two days after the contagion made its appearance in Hamburg, the that it would ship no more steerage immigrants in its first class steamers until the danger was passed; yet two days after it sent out the Normannis with a full steerage, carrying with it the seeds of cholera, which broke out during the passage. In a few days after this the Scandia was sent with more than a thousand steerage passen- gers, who were also affected with the disease, A ——————— Candidate for assembly Hamilton, took in a speech per phonograph dur- ing last week’s picnic. Wonder wheth- * er he will rehearse it on the stump we did not learn whether he caught up an oration by Patrick Henry, Dan. Websthr, or some other orator. No doubt he is now brim full of eloquence. i ——————— — ———— President Harrison will write a sup- plement to his letter of acceptance, in a few days, covering subjects which he had forgotten in his first letter. It is supposed that the supplemental let- ter will not occupy more than four columns in fine print. A a A AIBA THE FOUND AND THE UNFOUND, Senator Hill has been found, and when last seen was in Brooklyn, pro- elaiming: “let us close up our ranks and buckle on our armor for the fight, with the determination to do all in our power for the triumph of our party and the election of our honored stand - ard bearers—Cleveland and Stevenson. James GG. Blaine has not yet been found; when last heard from he hadn't voted because he forgot to register, Czar Reed is supposed to among also, ! Ima Reed was re-elected to | The Bellefonte Gazette had a voting | shed on the pienie ground last week, | and although there were thousands of { voters on the grounds, according to | the Gazette's own report, less than a hundred voted. The Gazette will learn from this that very few people care about taking instructions from that quarter as to how they shall vote, and even the Republicans kept shy, and | into the Gazette's voting shed, | they know why. fe Mm is abating in Europe. The shadow death is lifting, for cholera’s dead last 000 if the returns are approximately true. amounted to about 7,000, and the its intensity in that stricken city. Russia, however, there has been mark- ed to become a great scourge. continues to lence is subsiding. elfen Honorable T. W. Palmer, President { sion, has our thanks for an sition, Chicago, October 20-22, We tp of recovery. The President has sympathy, rin nated a mormon, F. J. Cannon, CONZTess, match to the anti-mormon plank the tepublicans used to put in their plat- forms. — | pienic is not complimentary. Quite | numerous in the direction | individual expressions. same are ——— te — Senator Hill made his great speech at Brooklyn, Monday night, immense audience, and amid the wild- est cheers of the assembly, endorsed “our honored standard bearers—Cleve- land and Stevenson.” EE a. JRE The railroads are taxed to their ut- most this week in hauling grand army at Washington, from all country. {200 000, - fo i According President Harrison McKinley tariff. It is evidence of pros- 40,000 during { August were on a strike or locked-out? perity that workmen | cent? ! for capital? | admissions: We have never known a period | the history of the American iron trade | when prices have been so generally low and un-remunerative as during the past 12 months, and yet production 1s never been so gréat. The explana- tion of the continued low prices is that our producing capacity is still beyond our enormous consumptive wants. Does not this enforce the necessity of looking beyond the home market to dispose of our surplus? Is it not an admission, coupled with conceded facts that McKinleyism has forced down wages and brought about low and un- remunerative prices, the lowest “in the history of the American iron trade?’ a —— AN To Cultivate a Gossiping Spirit. If you wish to cultivate a gossiping, meddling, censorious spirit in your children, besure when they come home from church, a visit, or any other place where you do not accom- pany them, to ply them with questions concerning what everybody wore, how everybody looked, and what every- body said and did and if you find any- thing in this to censure always do it in their hearing. You may rest assur- ed if you pursue a course of this kind they will not retnrn to you unladen with intelligence; they will by degrees learn to embellish in such a manner as shall not fail to call forth remarks and expressions of wonder from you. You will by this course render the spirit of curiousity, which is so early visible in children, and which If rightly direct ed may be made the instrument of en- riching and enlarging their minds, a vehicle of mischief which shall serve only to narrow them. The Kansas farmers are contributing wagon-loads of 60-cent wheat to help along the canvass in that state against Harrison and MeKinleyism. A sin. gle county gave 28 wagon-loads—a load for each township. The wheat is sold and the money put into the cam- West than in the COBURN, Interesting News as Glven by our Coburn Correspondent. James A. Cooney and family, and Mrs. W. W. Rishell, were the only ones from this place who had tents at the granger picnic last week. Over 450 tickets were sold at thissta- tion on last Thursday for the picnic, Mrs. Leathers and Mrs. Garthoff, of Mt. Eagle, visited friends at this place on last Thursday, having been at the pienie. { A Mr. Bmith of Union county, ship- { ped a car load of potatoes from here the other day, paying forty cents a bushel for the same on track. The po- { tato crop this year is not very good in this section, Andrew Vonado has his cider mill in operation now, but not very much | cider has as yet been made, owing to the scarcity of apples, and the poor de- mand for cider, the people having an | over abundance of cider last year. | One of Luther Guisewite's heavy | sorrel draught horses has been very #ick the last few days, but at this writ ing is improving. Our schools will begin on Monday, | the 3rd day of October. Several sheep belonging to Linda- j man Wingard were killed by dogs on | last Sunday. A few weeks ago sheep | belonging to Jacob 8, Meyer, near the toll gate west of Millheim, were killed in a similar manner, Now is the time to look after the filling of your coal bips as the price of | coal is steadily increasing. mesial e— Fired the First Gun. It is claimed for the Twenty-sixth Pennsylvania Emergency Regiment, monument was dedicated at | Gettysburg last Thursday, that it did theiheroie part of firing the first gun which led to the great battle. The regiment was composed of men who responded to the call of the Govern- men in its time of need, and one of its companies was made up of students of Gettysburg College. The Twenty- sixth’s monument differs from all other monuments in representing a figure partly in United States uniform and partly dress of a civilian, suggest. ing a young man suddenly called from civil life to defend his country. With this explanation the incongruous garb | of the marble figure is understood and appreciated; otherwise the stone would ever stand as a cause of wonder as to what was the matter with the design- er, w hose smn f— tn THE VETERANS AT WASHINGTON, | Half Rates by the Pennsylvania Rallroad, The national encampment of the | Grand Army of the Republic will be ! held at Washington September 10th | to 24th, 1802 will un- { doubtedly attract the largest number The cecassion of veterans ever assembled on asimilar | occasion, and the review will be the most demonstration ever | witnessed in this country since the | historic review of the army in 1865, It will be the event of a lifetime, as never imposing | again will there be so large a gathering | of old soldiers in any city of the land. In order that every one may witness | the grand spectacle the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion | tickets to Washington from all prin- | cipal stations on its system, September until 1862, at a single fare for | the round trip. Stop-over will be al- lowed on these tickets at stations south of and including Harrisburg. | 13th to 20th, valid for return i October 10th, seri ot an— Drank From the Wrong Hot tle. Henry Crow, a farmer living near Reynoldsville, is dead from having taken poison in mistake. The DuBois Courier says: Crow had been on a lark about a week ago and happened to be keeping his bottle in the same cupboard in which his wife kept her bedbug poison. He went to the shelf for frequent draughts and on one oc cassion took down the wrong bottle. He is said to have lingered in great misery until Tuesday. —————————— Death at Lemont. Mrs. Busan Decker, of Lemont, died on Thursday, September Sth, aged 54 years, 6 months and 28 days. She had been a resident of that place for the past nineteen years and was a consist- ent member of the Reformed church. ss AA os Women's Thumbs, “If a woman's thumb has a long first joint she is stubborn as a mule; if a long second joint she is as stubborn as two mules; but if the first and sec. ond joints are short she is no more stubborn than other women’ § Basket Plente, A union basket pienic will be held in Joseph Rishell's woods, at Beaver Dam, on Saturday, September 24th. All are invited to participate in the event. New Postofiee, A post office has just been establish- od at Penn Cave, Centre Co., with Mr. Jesse Long, proprietor of the hotel there, as postmaster, 4 A A AP OA a os About the Last, Sixty Million Bushels of Wheat, —A HBushl for every Inhabitant of the United States. The Kansas Crop of ‘92, Never in the history of Kansas has that state had such bountiful crops as this year. The farmers cannot get enough hands to harvest the great crop and the Banta Fe Railroad has made special rates from Kansas City and other Missouri River towns, to induce harvest hands to go into the state, The wheat crop of the state will be from sixty to sixty-five million bushels and the quality is high. The grass crop is made, and is a very large one; the early potatoes, rye barley and oat crops are made and are all large, The weather has been propitious for corn and it is the cleanest, best looking corn to be found in the country;to-day. Cheap rates will be made from Chicago St. Louis and all points on the Santa Fe east of the Missouri River, to all Kansas points, on August 30 and Sep tember 27, and these excursions will give a chance for eastern farmers to see what the great Sunflower State can do. A good map of Kansas will be mailed free upon application to Jno. J. Byrne, 723 Monadnock Block, Chic- ago Il, together with reliable statistics and information about Kansas lands 3 ————————— Tourist Trip. Round trips to the Pacific Coast, Short trips to the Mountain Resorts of Colorado, The Great Salt Lake. Yellowstone National Park—the most wonderful spot on this continent, Puget Bound, the Mediterranean of the Pacific Coast. All reached via the Union Pacific System. For detailed information call on your nearest Ticket Agent or ad- dress E. L. Lomax, Gen, Pass, & Tht. Agent. Omaha. Neb. a ————— A Cure For Paralysis, Frank Cornelius of Purcell, Ind. Ter., says: “I induced Mr. Pinson, whose wife had paralysis in the face, to buy a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. To their great surprise before the bottle had all been used she was a great deal better, Her face had been drawn one side; but the Pain Balm re- lieved all pain and soreness and the mouth assumed its natural shape.” It is also a certain cure for rheumatism, lame back, sprains, swellings and lame ness. 50 cents bottles for sale by J. D. Murray Druggist. t———— tb ———— Homeseekers' Excursions, Two Grand Excursions via Union Pacific on August 30th and Sept. 27th, 1592, to points in Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Texas, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, New Mexico Montana, This is a great opportunity to see the magnificent tracts of land offered for and sale by the Union Pacific at low prices and on ten years time. For this oc- casion the Union Pacific will sell tick- els al the rate of one fare for the round trip. Bee your nearest ticket agent. sep. 25 Wo —-— An Elegant Souvenir, “The Western Resort Book,” a fine ly illustrated publication descriptive of all the western resorts along the lines of the Union Pacific System. Sent free upon receipt of 6c. instamps. Ad- dress E. L. LoMax Gen, Pass. & Tkt. Agent, sep. 156 Omaha, Neb, . Slatin For many years Mr. B. F, Thomp- son, of Des Moines, Iowa, was severely afllicted with chronic diarrahosa. He says: “At times it was very severe; so much so that I feared it would end my life. About seven years ago I chanced to procure a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It gave me prompt relief, and I believe cure me permanently, as I now eat or drink without harm anything I please. I have also used it in my family with the best results.” For sale by J. D. Murray Duggist. sail sustlf amimamimisinen Cider Mill Shook’s cider mill at Luse’s planing mill will be in operation hereafter un- til further notice, Tuesday and Thurs- day of each week. MusicAL CoLLEGE.—The Fall Term opens Sep, 12 in Vocal and Instru- mental Music. For catalogues address Henry B. Moyer, Freeburg. Pa. A DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.~LETT ERS of Administration upon the estate of ted to the Sndoned Poe so plat Dt Sh Ke Fred Kurtz, for settlement, —all parties interested aro req to RC at once, Ly ar he ST NTA, SES a aad FRED KURTZ, AUDITORS NOTICE TIE AUDITOR AP Ee ida lnc he . bia ; | | BELLEFONTE, B Pa. Be “ABSOLUTE In order 10 introduce our ELEG A your friends, we make you any member of family, we wii ~~ YON PO Go. tied COPY & CO. NOTICE. Cut this out and return our fpest three-quarter | YT ADSOLUTELY FREE OF CHARCE. back of the whon you send Tony Ww Foray STE - & Co., Sew Tork AGENTS a TAC] Oregon, Washington and the Northwes Pacific Coast. The constant demand of the travel ing public to the far West for a com- fortable and at the same time an econ- omical mode of traveling, has led to the establishment of what is known as Pullman Colonist Sleepers, These cars are built on the same gen- eral plan as the regular first-class Pull- man Sleeper, the only difference is thet they are not unholstered. Taey are furnished complete with g5.4 comfortable hair mattresses, wa n blankets, snow white linen, curtains, plenty of towels, combs brushes, ete., which secure to the oo- cupant of a berth as much privacy as is to be had In first-class There are also separate toilet rooms for ladies and gentlemen, and smoking is absolutely prohibited. For full in- formation send for Pullman Colonist AMAN..... Always seck tomake in- vestments fromwhich he can receive the most in return in benefits or dividends. $1.50 + Harvest Excursions. — Hall Rates. ——— August 30th and September TIA, The Burlt Route will sell round ia At bal rate good 3 , 0 the 4.4 rm South aon Ticket NEBRASKA FARM LANDS, Bend Fri bah Ka fo pam and that of your friends to Fie clay and of ep ah, ang 112m .