* VOL. LXV. 1892. NO. 48. NEWS OF CAPITOL CONGRESS CONVENES IN LAST SESSION. Congress Ready for Business, ~The Presi. dent's Annunl Message Already Pre- pared to be Read, WasHinagTON, Dee. 5.—"“The House will please be in order,” were the words of Speaker Crisp as the hand on the big clock facing the Speaker's chair eame together over the X11, and they were accentuated by a sharp rap with the gavel he held uplifted in his rightjhand; and the last session of the Fifty-second Congress was open for business. The attendance was fairly good for an opening session, although the number of empty seats on the democratic side was entirely too large fear that absenteeism may give the party leaders as much | the last. shaded for those who trouble at this session as at However let us not the view of the future, but rather democratic members the House credit for sufficient love of party and patriotism to that a democratic quorum is not lacking at any time when it becomes desirable to have it present, and that is practically all the time, Mr. Harrison's annual message will not go to Congress until tomorrow, but your correspondent has read it, al- take give the of SOC decide whether that extra session will have to be held in the spring or wheth- er it ean safely be postponed until the fall, mine —— A Charming Souvenir, We have received recently a little Souvenir Book, illustrated in colors and devoted to the description of the business of Zhe Youth's Companion, and especially illustrating the new Building, which is just completed and occupied. Every one who is interest- ed in the paper, and we know that the number of families in our vicinity who take it increases year by year, will de- sire to see and read this bit of history concerning a favorite paper, While Zhe Companion is one of the oldest papers in the country, having been started in 1827, it is one of the freshest and most vigorous of all our publications and has attained the un- {equalled circulation of six hundred Its prospec- announcements of year 1563, aining the SCOSSOrs. Any new subscriber may obtain the through its more than 15000 words, and not a pleasure. It strikes me being in the nature of a skillful as legislation and an together useless and unnecessary administration and for the of the republican congress, one, the people— case nearly a month ago. al style of the that of those previously Mr. Harrison ;jbut, the circumstances under which it The far written message is by come to think of it, was prepared were such as to make it un- fair to criticise it from a literary of view. It demonstrates very clearly. Mr. Harrison still « to and republican ideas which were so overwhelmingly condemned by the American voters on the 8th of last month, The attendance at the opening sion of the Senate was better propor- tionately than that in the House, but that may have been largely the fact and by a resolution adopted at point one lings protection other Hv owing to the last session the anti-option bill was made the regular which it will be has al- ready passed the House, the right of way unfinished until it shall have been disposed of or the sion shall come to a close. There is a decided difference of opinion to whether this bill will be disposed of by vote of the Senate or by the the session. Its opponents claim that enough Senators from the south have changed their minds about the bill make it certain that they ean defeat it on a direct vote, but all the same they are now scheming to prevent a vote being taken. There are a important measures, from a stand- point, which may be brought forward and passed by the House at this sion or may be held until the begin- ning of the Fifty-third Congress, just as the democratic conference or caucus shortly to be held, may decide. It order for today, remembered ns business PR be close of to number of democratic 508 is can Senators willing to vote with the democrats to repeal the present silver law, provided an agreement can reached on a substitute, and some of voring a return to the Bland law nothing more satisfactory can be ranged. No help is expected by ocrats from the International tary conference, now sitting, in ing the silver problem. ar- Mone solv talk it is probable that the House bills for the admission to statehood of New Mexico and Arizona will be taken sion. al reasons, not the least of whieh send democratic United States Sena tors in time to take their seats next I ‘inter, The cholera scare is being worked for all it is worth to work up senti- ment in Congress in favor of a suspen- itis to a certain extent succeeding. Once convince Congress that there is real danger of the cholera getting a foothold in this country next year, through immigration, and the vote will be unanimous in favor of suspen gion, notwithstanding the efforts of the steamship lobby. A majority of democrats in this con- gress appear to think that present in- dications point to the necessity for an extra session of the next congress, and those in a position to know say Mr. Cleveland is of the same mind. It is “the work of this Congress which will The 1st including Numbers, Price Mass, subscribe now, $1.75 a year. Boston, po AARONSBURG, Asronsburg the Scene of a Quiet Wedding Other News of Interest, Rev, tracted Addams is conducting a pro- meeting in the Reformed | Mrs, paying her niece, er n visit. James Rupp, Linn Zeigler, of Bellefonte, Mrs. James Etting- is was married to on last Thursday the Cornet band, of member, assisted by al gave him a rattling serenade. i On last Sabbath Rev. Wolf, of this | place, and Rearick, of Rebers- | burg exchanged pulpits, The Heformed people this year bring | up the rear with their Christmts festi- val on the evening of the 25th inst. | Well, better late than never. i Squire porkers i pounds. James Runkle, esq. , evening, and which he is a tev. dressed 888 | of near Cen-| totes he furnished the shoats, Prof. Thomas J, Kiester will leave for Chicago in a few days where a first rumored awaits er half goes with him. | RES YT SIERO NRA class position, it is him. His bett How Chinese Set Bones, In setting a fractured limb the JChi- | nese make no effort to bring the bones | into opposition. The Chinese medi- ft cine man simply takes a lot of red clay | and envelopes the limb with it. Then he takes some strips of bamboo and in- | dents them’ into the clay. Bandages are wrapped around those strips, and in the outer bandage he places the! head of a live chicken. After he has | secured this bandage he cuts the head | off the fowl, allowing the blood to] flow and penetrate the fracture. He | then takes the chicken’s head from | beneath the bandage and covers the exterior with a coating of glue. The reason given for applying the chick- en's head is that it nourishes the brok- en or fractured limb and is “heap good medicine.” tif rarer ~ RSandow’s See Saw, Sandow, the strong man, is still en- tertaining Londoners with exhibitions of his remarkable feats of strength. Some time ago he had a bad turn, and on two occasions came near being His newest see-saw horse trick. He seems as strong as ever, heavy-weight horse, trained by San- himself, plays secsaw on the Sandow's thousand-pound ual. He twirls the bells as if they were feathers, Bo pc May Strike Again, Since the Homestead strike has been men have been taken back. A meet- ing was held on Wednesday night, which was attended by about 500 strik- ers, Bpeeches were made in favor of ealling out the union men in the mill, but in the absence of the leader, David Lynch, no action was taken, —————" —— Court adjourned early last week, lasting only about three days. Either the people of Centre county are becom- ing better, or there is a greater dis- patch of business in the court room. We opine it is a little of both, If the people would quit quarreling and fighting we would need no courts at all, ~=A complete stock of boots and shoes can always be found at Mingle’s shoe store, Belletonts, PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH, More Like the German Language Than Very Many Suppose, There are those who ignorantly us with much show Pennsylvania dutch is no language, but is a mere corruption of normal German after its arrival in that a Pennsylvania German knows nothing about German literature the high German tongue, and a native of Germany cannot understand the Fastern Pennsylvania dialect; that it is 8 mere nondescript patois or vulgar lingo, unworthy of being learned and unworthy of being called a language. literature, to be sure. It is not language of she German schools, not the language Luther Gaothe or of Hegel. It is at best only a spoken jut who that speaks the English tongue speaks like Addison, Macaulay, or Shakespeare’ It is a language, and it is the German language. Pennsylvania Dutch, it must be admitted, is today like the German of Luther than Eng- lish of today is like the Chaucer. Is modern mere corruption of English after its arrival in this country ? Pennsylvania Dutch is the ordinary colloquial speech of the German pi it is of of or language. more the normal Sh rounded pebble at the bottom of brook, though the sharp edges have worn smooth, is still a stone. Or asa in a in mixture brought found today It isa ierman dialects, are | of the South ( | from the region of the Upper Rh but what of that? Are there in other vorda the in “ high German ? Turn to German and g one letter you find der Accent, der Agent, der Alarm, Ambition, Anekdote, der Architect, der Aristocrat, lancing down der der der Addresse, Appetit, Artikel der dns die Arithmet alphabet. It is not so much the fon of new words detrition in therefore, nor the of words through dialectic unconscious to transfer the spirit and structure | language into another that attempt gives I — tax in the fact that Jay Gould, { mated to be worth a hundred millions, 000 personal property and on his resi- dence, not amounting to £25,000 in all. It is estimated the inheritance tax on his estate, going to the State, will be basis of his wealth { amounting to $75,000,000. Mr. Gould {living evaded the taxpayer by ail methods known in the art. The pro- | posed income tax that would reach the dodging millionaires, would seem to be the right thing. If all incomes above $10,000 were taxed, the rich would be reached, instead of slipping clear, and leaving the farmer and oth- er poorer classes to make up for it. ER —— a. A Sare Thing. A witty individual one morning wagered that he would ask the same question of fifty different persons and receive the same answer from each, says the Cincinnati Enquirer. The wit went to first one and then to another, until he had reached the number of fifty. And this is how he won the bet. He whispered half audi- bly, to each: “I say, have you heard that Smith has failed 2" “What Bmith ?”’ queried the ‘whole fifty, one after another; and if was de- cided that the bet had been fairly won. We think the next administration willbe one that will have an eye towards giving the farmer and the other toiling classes beneficial legisla- tion. Itis time the consuming and toiling masses that make up the bone and sinew of the land, receive the at tention they deserve. The trusts, mo- nopolies and capitalists have preyed long enough upon the people. Reclalms the Wheels, A novel swindling scheme is being worked in some towns in the state. A man comes into a town and sells as many bicycles as he can at very low figures. A few days later another man turns up, proves the wheels were stol- en from him and takes them away. «When in need of boots or shoes #0 to Mingle's shoe store, Bellefonte, you snd at reasonable prices. ' RAILROAD NEWS ONE HUNDRED MILES MINUTES IN SIXTY Electrie Space, Tralus to Annihilate To Run Between Two Great Cities, Electricity as a motive power in long the front, not only as a possibility but a probability of the near future. It is a new factor that cannot help being of interest to all local railroaders, ally the trainmen, for it would mean a revolution of the present methods of transportation. In this that Mt. enpeci- the Louis stock of the Chicago & Company. already on the amounting to § is The ht to know what i about, for the The project is to furnish rapid transit between Chicago and St. This 7,000,000, market, Mail, which oug talking is authority statement, enterprise has The possibility of running trains at the uninformed. The electric rail- ure however, taking no ‘ars have hour, The line from Chicago to St. is an air line. Ho swi in fact, none of those coidents so often on the run 100 miles the hours, railroads. Its trains will 1 an hour, accomplishing two cities in 2i road is divided into twenty-five see tions of ten miles each. The cars in the intermediate section: so that it will be absolutely impossible within ten miles of each other. This will prevent any Ty There will ultimately be at first only / laid. The anywhere will be and four tracks, two through tracks thro between nigh cars will the unnecessary to travel therefore two cities, It no through for mail night and freight, express The car is a long, low, of compact ce AT, pairs driving wheels, ing driven by a separate motor, di- HX Fhe driving wheels are six feet in meter and are capable of making a minute, in Mail, terminal ities have been acquired in both The has purchased the finest equipped coal mine and brick and tile making plant in the State of Hiinois, Coal through which the road passes are capable of yielding of It is The Fhe road Is now course of eon- uction, says the and cities, company fields Fy * pons 1 00, 000,000 tons coal, practically level for 200 miles, Chicago Journal says the but that has been denied. linia Never friend unheard: or without letting him know his accu- sor his crime. It is a common thing to say, “Do not tell that you had it from me; for if you do I will de- ny it; and never tell anything again.” set together by the ears, and the former slips his neck out of the collar, Admit no stories upon these terms; for it is an unjust thing to believe in pri- vate, and be angry openly. Some make it their sport to do ill offices; others do them only to receive thanks; there are some who would part the dearest friends in the world; others love to do mischief, and then stand aloof to see what comes of it. The above was written by Seneca near two thousand years ago, and is sound logle today. poms - New York Presbytery met last mon- day in the University Place Presbyte- rian church to examine Mr. Bruce W. Cronmiller, a graduate of Union Theo- logical Seminary, and a candidate for lecensure. The examination proved to be satisfactory to the committee, and Mr. Cronmiller was admitted. The Presbytery will meet again on Monday to continue the investigations in the Briggs case.—N. Y. Observer, 24th ult. Mr. Cronmiller is a native of Aaronsburg, and x son of John Cronmiller, formerly of that town. fi Mo The Prisoner Risked His Neok, Constable Lucas, of Centre county, was taking a prisoner from Bnow Shoe to Bellefonte, on Friday, and when near the “school house crossing” the prisoner leaped from the train and eaped. The train was going at full speed, consequently the constable did not risk his neck by following the es terprise, condemn a ser you KILGORES INCOME TAX BILL, {°C ine Kilgore of Texas, the man who put his foot through the door of the house at Washington during the reign of Czar Reed, is agitating the question of imposing a national income tax, Like all his utterances, the one on this matter is foreible apd to the point, He shows how the rich men of the country escape their just share ation because they keep their wealth locked up in stocks and bonds and in other ways that cannot be reached by the present tax laws, and he eries out loudly against the injustice of such a state of things. The poor man who has managed by and self-denial io possess his property as if he paid rent, millionaire, hardest off coupons with almost as burdensome while the whose pays nothing own, the country Ifa man is active life oy giv- ing employment to labor and skilled artisans, he is forced to pay a business tax. It is his ahso- lutely, with nothing due in business, and leads an He is not allowing his money to vaults and strong-boxes, and therefore he must pay. But the cou- to anyone but himself, escapes all this, toward meet- When itl gore returns to Washing- ton the chances are that he will intro- a ation income tax bill, and it with will make that he That determination it tell the such in house, llama State College Church. The BSiate Centre county, James Heaney pastor, een new members at its lege Presbyterian Pa., Rev received four- last commu- and five pro- The very happy relations ex- isting between pastor and people and the more perfect Srganizytion of church work lately effected fruit- ful « The well-direct- ed energy of*the Young People's So- church, nion, nine by letter on , have been f the best resulin. ciety has also been blessed by large ac- cessions to their ranks, a deeper inter- that ch est in religion and an attendance frequently taxes the entire seating pacity of the church. mil ———— Items of Local Interest A party from Buffalo Valley, en- camped along White Deer Creek above Run, killed a bear weighing about 250 pounds on Tuesday. Th of Hartman & Aumilier, located at Cherry Run, was recently destroyed by fire. The loss will $3,000; partly insured. The fire is supposed to have been incendi- ary. C. K. Sober, Esq., has shipped to Dr. Warren a large number of pheas- ants to be mounted for the W Fair. e steam saw mill be Gfia» ——n Those who have not given the sub- Jeet close attention will be startled to CO 0 R30 were added to the rolls last year, the total number on the rolls June 30, last, To meet the demands of this list not less than £165,000,000 will be required next year. Adding to those now on the rolls the claimants whose cases have not yet been adjust- ed we find nearly thirty years afici or bounty. Could it be possible at this day that all of t h ese are legitimate claimants ? SA —— Jay Gould, the millionaire railroad king died on Friday noon, last. We rich folks will die as well as the rest, and the world will move along all the same. Mr. Gould was born May, 1830, Hl Rain. Rain set in Tuesday night and it rained moderately by spells next day. We need much rain to fill the ground and help the springs and streams. Doing a Big Business. The Racket store is doing the biggest business in Bellefonte, and is also the biggest newspaper advertiser. See? A Table Works Destroyed by Fire. The Montgomery table works, Montgomery, were burned on Friday. Loss, $20,000; insurance, $12,000, 03. New '88 will soon be ushered in. It is a lucky figure to have on your Re PORTER address tab. See that you get the "98, Make Note of It, Now is the time to put your Christ- mas ad. in the CENTRE REPORTER. A pS A A —— THE NATION'S FINANCES. Treasurer Nebeker Presents His Annual Eeport- Interesting Figures. United States Treasurer Nebeker has submitted his annual report to Becre- tary Foster. The net ordinary reve- nues of the government for the fiscal year were $354,037,884, a decrease of $37,670,668 as compared with the year before. The net ordinary expenditures were $345,023,330, a decrease of $10,340,- 364. The surplus revenues were thus put down from $37,239,762 to $9,914,458, Including the public debt, the total receipts for the year were $736,401,205, and the expenditures $634,010,289, Analyzing the true condition of the treasury, and setting aside the trust funds, the treasurer shows that there was a working balance of cash and de- posits in banks amounting to $207,110,- 451 at the beginning ot the year, and to §165,718,150 at the end. Of the for- mer amount §116,000,000 and of the lat- ter $i14,500,000 was gold. The amount of the public debt is given as $1,845.- 30, 1861, and $1588, 464,144 on June 30, 1892. The loans resting on the credit of the United States were cut down from $1,005,506, - 560 to $668,218,840, while those secured by full deposits in the treasury increas- ed from $540,190,081 to $620,245,5804. According to the the total stock of money of all kinds in the country on June 30 was $2374.- 334,049, an increase of $150,000,000 in the year. By eliminating that part of the paper currency which is purely representative, consisting of certificates of deposites and treasury notes, the ef- fective stock is found to have been §l,- 753,958 845, an increase of $70,000,000, The issues of United States paper cur rency amounted to $376,717,583, exceed- ing those of any previous year. The nearest approach to this total was §310,- 000,000 in the year before, and the next nearest on! oon, 000 in 1563. sm fs Ml en WHERE AREYOUR GIRLS, Shield Your Daught ers From the ‘Taint of the Streets revised estimate, No greater peril than that of allow- ing young girls to be out at unseason- able hours of the night, of permitting girls just out of their teens to prome- nade alone or in couples in any part of the town after nightfall, could be con- ceived, because it subjects them to pos- sible insults from which every right minded parent should strive to shield them. There is neither prudery nor affectation in striving to shield girls from the taint of the streets after the city is shrouded in darkness, because it is then that snares are set for the in- nocent and allurements flaunted for the wayward. To warn parents not to subject their girls to such entice ments is certainly doing them a good service, but the trouble is that moth- ers who need to be advised in this way never accept the advice however hon- estly it may be given and well meant it may be in the tender. People who observe the condition of the sidewalks the postoffice and the railroad station any night from 7 to 9 o'clock cannot fail to notice the large number of girls just in their teens, wandering listless ly alone, or in twos, threes and fours, talking loud and laughing merrily as they pass along. There are men (7) who regard it a good joke to flirt with such innocents who forget that in such an act they are sowing vile seed and beginning work that pollutes bod- fes and breaks hearts. Keep your young girls at home, mothers, if you really want to escape regret and re morse, an —————_— Good Looks, Good looks are more than skin deep, depending upon a healthy condition of all the vital organs. If the liver be inactive, you have a bilious look, if your stomach be disordered, you have a Dyspeptic look and if your Kidneys be affected you have a Pinched look. Secure good health and you will have good looks. Electric Bitters is the great alterative and Tonic acts direct- ly on these vital organs. Cures Pim- ples, Blotches, Boils, and gives a good complexion. Soldat J. D. Murray's Drugstore, 50c. per bottle. The RErorTER'S caloulator has as- certained that if the comet had met thie earth and struck the great lakes first, the splash would have caused a Johnstown flood all over the country. The comet seeing the ducking it was likely to get, turned back. Jay Gould was worth seventy-five millions and was not any happier— perhaps not near as happy as numer. ous other people who did not have sev- Sniysiive sundred, aiid hie died young: er than many who don't own a house even. on AL, “For want of a nail the shoe was lost, for want of a shoe the horse was lost,” says poor Richard; and for want of Bull’s-Head Horse and Cattle Pow- Sot many hoses afe dally. lost. Price