THE p— REPORTER. | BOSS Washing ” Machine, 1. It washes clothes fectly clean, . It works ensy, It cannot clothes. i 4. It adjusts itself to the size of the wash, so vou can wash one shirt as well as ten, 6, No dirt ean accumulate in this machine as in others; opening onewnst cock removes it all. Your wringer can be at- tached right to the ma- chine, allowing water to run back into it. 7. It ean be thoroughly ventilated, so no damp remains Lo rot the wood, | 8. It is reasonable in price, { 9. Wringers sold separate, | McCALMONT & Co., Senator Quay does not want to see | General Hastings nominated but still | less does he want General Gregg to be | | the candidate. To keep Gregg’'s home TERMS. —One;year, §1.50, when paid in advance. | delegates from favoring Gregg was the | WAI i " FOR u | a E M EE Those in arrears subject to previous terms, $2.00 | purpose of Quay’s lieutenants and this | ® " » Per year, | could not be safely done by making a. _—_—_——————— ——————— Hastings the issue. Now that Greggs | | guns have been silenced at his own | | home the Quay hope is that Gregg | | will surrender. i | To kill off Hastings will be the work | | of the Quay guards now. Hastings is | | ambitious, more or less conceited snd | | quite popular. He isat that danger- | ous age when if elected Governor he | | might set up for himself instead of | | taking orders. Mr. Quay not | | want him for governor. He al candidate next year, just as he wanted | the same kind for years before, whom | | he can own. He not mean to} | have Hastings killed off at one stroke. i Quay is less daring than he used to be, his courage now often melting away to | | genuine cowardice. But he is no less | dange rous and no less hateful of op-| { ponents than he used to be. His in- | | clinations to stab in have de-| veloped if his desire to fight in open | | field has weakened. The knife is to be | | use «1 for Hastings, not the gun. But in killing oft Hastings the Sen- | | ator may find himself with a living | | Gregg on his hands, General “| regardless of the Berks county manip- | ulation, is likely to be one of the live- | | liest of Republican candidates for gov- | The last legislature in the State of | | ernor next year. There better | New York enacted a law reducing the | en in official life in this road tax to farmers, who used broad | 41.1 General tires on their wagons. Any tire be | raised up by a boss, low three and one half inches In |: down if he shakes his gray breadth in that state causes an iucrease | | and says nay. of road tax to the owner. As a set of | tires will cost no more=than twelve | dollars the reduction in tax soon pays | FRED, Ruri, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. pers gmooth and fear the ADVERTISEMENTS. —20 cents per line for three : {nsertions, and 5 cents per,line for each subse quent insertion. Other rates made made knows | on application. CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS, SEPT. 14, | 6. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET. For Sherifl, JOHN P. CONDO. For Treasurer, JOHN Q. MILES. For Register, GEORGE W. RUMBERGER. | For Recorder, GALER MORRISON. For Commissioners, GEORGE L. GOODHART. T. FRANK ADAMS. For Coroner, DR. H. EK. HOY. ‘For Auditors, H. W. BICKLE. W. W. ROYER. does wants New Yi rk purchasing our supply of goods for the Our buyer is at present in does Bellefonte, Pa. coming Fall and Winter season, and we Ww. ing and wearing apparel, which we will HYDRAULIC | CIDER. PRESSES, --~-HUYETT, MEYER & BOOZER —. Segre place on our counters, will be larger and morc complete than any ever before ré~ ceived by us. {ireoy, ——————————————————————————— TIEBES AND ROADS, are no state to-day | Gregg. He not | nor can one put head COME AND SEE THEM.- was Manufacturers Agents for Centre and adjoining counties, for Hydisulio Cider and Wine Presses, . . . . Tie REPUBLICAN hope to i the sheriff and two commissioners gobble | i .. Evaporators, Apple Graters, Cider Pumps h for them. The weight of the load car- ried where wide tires are used in- creased sufficiently to pay for the out- lay in a brief period. Another advan- tage is that wheels last much longer where wide tires are used, because side jars on the spokes are less frequent. Another benefit is sure to follow the use of wide tires, viz, will not be on the ragged edge so fre- quently and profanity will not be an adjunct of every load to town or sia-| tion. ter roads and better roads re- lief to the farmer and his hard worked horses, and any law that accomplishes this benefits agriculture and stands for progress. Why not agitate for a law in this state similar to the one passed in New York so that the narrow tire that cuts up and ruins our roads may gradually disappear and finally become a thing of the past. is means —— ro ——— BUTTING AGAINST THE PEOPLE. ers of the majority has cried out fear. The American Iron Association, of which the brated Benjamin Franklin sometime Chairman of the Republi- ean National committee, is President, and Mr. James M. Swank is Secretary, has sent to the Hon. William L. Wil once Jones, | Committee, a solemn and tariff. If Mr. Swank is the author of this protest, he ought to fine himself a fatile production. It goes back to an- | cient history, and gravely argues that the tariff should not be interfered by Mr. Cleveland in his message not now hold good. nue has disappeared to parts unknown, American Iron and Steel Association, tariff was made, higher, What is all this to Hecaba? The tariff revigion proposed by Mr. Cleve land in 1887, when he was still a pro tectionist, has nothing to do with the | destruction of protection and the mak- ing of a tariff for revenue only, the policy to which he is committed now. Wages and prices are not pertinent to the discussion of the tariff in 1868. The Democratic party is vowed to the annihilation of protection because, as the platform distinetly sets forth, pro- tection is unconstitutional and a fraud and robbery. The legal and moral ob- jections to protection are sufficient to overrule any purely economic argu- ments, if such there are, in its favor. The American people have decided that protection is robbery and a viola- tion of the Constitution. Mr. Jones and Mr. Bwank and all the other par- takers of the profits of robbery should prepare for the inevitable, submit to the will of the people, and shut up. In the light of the Chicago platform, the pleadings of protected manufactur- ers against the enactment of a tariff for revenue only, have much the air of resolutions passed by the Forty Thieves against grand and petit larce- ny.~N. Y, Sun, whereas wages ss HASTINGS AND GREGG, The success of Cienernl Hastings in the Republican primaries of Berks county has been heralded by some of the heated Hastings advocates as an end to the likehood of General Gregg's nomination for governor next year, A casual examination of the situation somario the Patriot | this county is not likely to pan fat at all. It is as much as that Democrats are foolish as well their Democrats of truest stripe, in order to place the coun- ty under Republican of the citizens of our county, of all ties, only so recently 80 own ticket, *+1 1a Fiat were Cookism and Hende does not want any more served up. raon rule , BI d Wc Mp — nD by the the managers of Fair will, ial for that express purpose next, the advisib i longing the Exposition until January 1 next. may bi | real blasts shall he egn over Jackson Park. The in midwinter, for example, | aight worth traveling } a ———— ——— BRIEFS AND COMMERTS Ne ceipts, OURAGHE heavy gat the at a spec meeting on lity discuss ¥ AVE i to blov Cairo street ght be a miles to behold mi A Clearfield pensioner who signed a patent medicine testimonial, certify- | ing that he had recovered his health | through a use of the preparation, finds his pension stopped on the strength of his This is a in took the wrong certificate, case | which the pensioner { medicine. The troubles raised the price of coffee two or three down in Brazil have pegs. This is too bad and our old lads with hold | friends will have to thin it out or mix it with rye, to | their own, until the trouble in Brazil has simmered down to its proper | “grounds.” Still are all glad that The new White House baby will be known hereafter “Esther”! This | old-fashioned name has been selected | for the child by the President and Mrs. | Cleveland. It is stated that the selec- tion of this name has no significance othet than the partiality of the parents | for scriptural denominatives and that it means “A Star”! and For tune,” and while we mention serip- | tral things here we have a case where | walter, we as Hood | a minister got tired waiting until his | departure for the “other side of Jordan’ came in its natural routine, conse. quently George B. Kegarise, a Seventh-day Baptist preacher and one of the best known men in Bedford county, com- mitted suicide by hanging, at his home near Salemville. Mr. Kegarise was sixty years of age. He held ser- vice the night previous and was in particularly good spirits, and fed his horses, as was his usual custom. Two hours later his family found him hanging to » cherry tree close by the house, A | p— Tue violators of the fish laws are catching it all around. From all parts of the state we see accounts of persons being prosecuted for illegal fishing. A ad Three Years for Tax Collectors. It may not be generally known, but all the tax collectors elected next Feb- ruary are to be elected for a term of three years, as per the act of the legis- lature passed Inst May, which says: “The qualified voters of boroughs and townships in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania shall, on the third Tues. day of February after the passage of this act and triennially thereafter, vote for and elect one qualified person for tax collector, who shall serve for three years, A A wweThe REPORTER gives you all the per year in advance. And we will parts. We want das ii displayed in these public to inspect IROCKERHOFF ROW, BELLEFONTE, PA. HE BREBUKES THE CHRISTIANS A Baddhist Says we Condemn Heligions of Which we Know Nothing. At the Chicago, congress of religions in arraved in robes of spotless of reason his swarthy countenance and index finger extended, and every with muscle of his excitement, Dharmapala, Judd hist priest and scholar from cutta, stood on the edge of the plat- form in the Religious Congress the other afternoon. The Buddhist had been introduced, after an address of remarkable liberality, by the Rev, Dr. E. L. Rexford, of Boston. He ex- pressed his gratification that an op- portunity had been aflorded him of crossing the water to participate in the parliament, and said that it mat- tered little what his theology, if he was only sin- vere and true to the light within him. Then, surveying the audience, he sud- denly demanded: body life of Buddha?" Five hands, four of them belonging to women, were held up. “Five only,” said the Buddhist. “Four hundred and seventy-five millions of people acoept our religion of love and of hope. You call your- self a nation, a great nation, and yet you do not know the history of this great teacher. How dare you judge us? [The audience cheered again and again. ] “You complain that you do not make converts among us,” he continu- ed, “you preach a God of love, but in your actions you are selfish. You make of an ignorant or an unsophisti- cated man a perfect hypoerite. You have used the story of a life-crushing, bloody juggernaut to secure the means to save alleged heathens, “Juggernaut has been popularized by Christian missionaries, and yet a commission composed of eminent Englishmen has declared that the Christian idea of juggernaut is a myth and that death and blood are repulsive to our people. This Christian story has been exploded. I has gone into oblivion.” And so the Orlentallst went on, scoring his hearers and defending his own creed. He asked how many read the life of Mohammed, the prophet of Arabia, and when four hands went up he asked why they should denounce Mohammedanisny, when they knew nothing of it or its founder. With avery séntence he carried his audience with him. « sm——————————— meniubuctibe for the Rkromzmn, Deserving Praise. We desire to say to of for years ir citizens, that have been Dr. for « onsump- tion, Dr. King’s New Life Pills, Buck Salv Bit. ters, and have handled remedies or that universal satisfaction. w pal ies we selling r's New Discove ry n tric ¢ and Elee never have given We do them every ready to refund satisfactory re- These popu- J. D. not hesitate to gaarantee time, and we stand ice, if sults do not follow their use Druggist. a . A Sayder County Snake Story Last Friday Mr. J. D. Wetzel, Snyder county, of while on wood, came across a den of copperhead He succeeded in killing six- ty of them in a few minutes. The | next day he requested W. H. Spect | and a number of other business men | to go with him to where he had killed | the serpents, which they did, and to their astonishment found eighteen | large and forty-two half grown cop! perheads which he had killed. Lal —— N\ Dissolution of Partaership was dissolved, on September | i 2nd, by mutual consent, the interest | of D. J. Meyer in above firm, having | been purchased by E. M. Huyett. All| persons having accounts with the said | firm will please call and make settle | ment forthwith. All collections will | be made by Huyett and Boozer, at their office. The business will be carried on as heretofore, by the new firm, trading | as the Centre Hall Implement Works. | E. M. Huyerr W. 0. REARICK. Henry Boozer. me —— ua, i AC Among the incidents of childhood that stand out in bold relief, as our memory reverts to the days when young, none are more prominent than severe s‘ckness, The young mother vividly remembers that it was Cham- beriain's Cough Remedy cured her of croup, and in turn administers it to her own offspring and always with the best results. For sale by J. D. Murray, Druggist. Buus Tulmese Spit oe or Gmoke your Life Hh aE seplé-it {remem 0 "DRAUL PRESSES FOR EVERY PDO YOU GOOD GOODS AT FAIR PRICES, Can’t Be Excelled ! For the execution of all kinds of Job Work, at low prices. We have new equipment throughout, including all the latest faces of type, new, fast presses, etc., and can furnish any- thing from a Wedding Invitation to a large poster. Try it.