The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 30, 1894, Image 4

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER.
FRe®. KURTZ, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER,
TERMS. One year, $1.50, when paid in advance,
» Those in arrears subject to previous terms, $2.00
per year.
ADVERTISEMENTS, 20 cents per line for three
insertions, and.b cen. perline for each subse.
quent insertion. Giber rates made made known
on application,
CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS, Aug. 30.
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For Governor,
WILLIAM M. SBINGERLY.
For Lieutenant Governor,
JOHN BS. RILLING.
For Auditor General,
DAVID F. MAGEE.
For Secretary of Internal Aftairs,’
WALTER W. GREENLAND.
For Congressman-at-Large,
HANNIBAL K. SLOAN.
J. C. BUCHER.
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET.
For Legislature,
ROBERT M. FOSTER.
JAMES SCHOFIELD
For Jury Commissioner,
JOSEPH J. HOY.
For Associate Judge,
THOMAS F. RILEY.
DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL
FERENCE.
CON-
The Democratic Congressional con-
ference which was held at Ridgeway
last week, did two things—one was
wrong, the other was right.
The nomination of Aaron Williams,
of this county, for Congress, was right.
He is a straight Democrat, has been a
worker in the party, and is conversant
with public affairs, and will, no doubt,
represent the people of his district
faithfully.
The other thing done, the setting
aside of the rule of Centre and Clear-
field counties giving the party its rep-
resentation in conference according to
its strength—known as the Orvis rule
—was ignored, and these two large
counties which furnish the Democrat-
ic vote of the district, except a small
fraction, were called upon to bow to
the little counties of Forest and Elk,
with a little over 500 votes apiece,
while the counties of Centre and Clear-
field roll up several thousands of
votes each.
At the last conference held, two
years ago, the Orvis rule was recogniz-
ed by admitting our conferrees upon
the basis of the Democratic vote—nine
for Centre, and twelve for Clear-
field.
Last week our conferrees, without
authority or right, permitted them-
selves to be pared down from one man
to one third of a man each, although
sent to conference under a rule of the
party regularly adopted and in full
force.
The giants were swallowed by
dwarfs,
This is a humiliating action, and
the Democracy of Centre will not like-
ly endorse this doing of the confer-
ence,
the
A BUSINESS revival is noted all over
the country since the iariff question
has been definitely settled. The panic
is over and prosperity only is ahead
for the country.
PresipENT CLEVELAND does not
take a fancy to the Senate tariff’ bill,
as neither do the many Democrats
who voted so long for tariff reform.
Traitorous Democrats in the SBenate be-
trayed their party, and the reform
looked for is bound to come event-
ually.
| TWO KINDS OF SUGAR TAX.
The ad valorem tax on raw and re
fined sugars will be collected at the
custom houses and go into the treasu-
The differential duty of one-eighth
of one cent a pound on refined sugar
will prevent the importation of refin-
ed sugar. It will be added to the price
charged for refined sugar by the sugar
trust, and go into its pockets,
Nobody objects to paying the ad va-
lorem tax on imported sugar. It is
necessary to raise money to support
the government, to pay salaries, pen-
sions, army and navy bills, interest on
the public debt and other legitimate
expenditure,
Everybody objects to being obliged
to pay money to the sugar trust sim-
ply for its own emolument,
Paying the sugar tax collected at the
customs houses is like paying for one's
dinner. The money goes for necessary
outlay.
Paying a tax to the sugar trust is
like, after the dinner is over, paying a
compulsory tip to the waiter, who has
rendered no service. It is a mere im-
position,
Now the difference between the
Democrats and Republicans, and be-
tween a tariff for revenue
and a tariff for protection,
is clearly illustrated in the compound
ad tax. The oper cot ad valorem
nb
One tax is legitimate and fair; the oth-
er is a patent and intended fraud.
One party insists on tax ation only for
the use of the government; the other
party would tax sugar for the benefit
of the trust. The tax for the use of
the trust was forged into the Gorman
bill by the aid of three or four recreant
senators, who carried their point by a
threat to defeat all legislation unless
the sugar schedule should be arranged
to suit them. The greater tax for the
use of the trust in the McKinley act
was put there by the common consent
of Republican representatives. It is
the thing they call protection.—Phila-
delphia Record.
sm fc -
WELL, well-Wanamaker advertises
now that the new tariff has reduced
the price of goods. Surely every voter
will be glad over the saving.
ia pn
UNITED BTATES Senators should be
elected by the popular vote of the peo-
ple of the State they represent. Sev-
erel States are aching to get in touch
with their Senators, and a direct vote
would cause a radical change in that
august body.
re fs
THE NEW TARIFF LAW,
The fact that both houses of Con-
gress have unanimously agreed to ad-
journ at 2 o'clock on Tuesday after
prominent members of both houses
had conferred with the President,
clearly indicatas that the new tariff
will become a law without the ap-
proval of the President, remarks the
Times. The ten days during which
he could hold the bill expired Monday
and on Tuesday morning at midnight
the new tariff’ bill will go into opera-
tion.
The contest for the passage of the
new tarift law practically began on
the 19th of December, when Chairman
i
sheep have diminished and prices for
wool have gone down. Already the
price of domestic wool has increased
in this country since the passage of the
Benate bill. A month ago American
wools sold in New York and Boston
for from 19 to 84 cents a pound, accord-
ing toquality. Since then the demand
has increased, and the prices now
range from 22 cents to 87 cents,
Clothes will be cheaper because the
tax on imported cloth and clothing
has been reduced. As wool is free, the
old compensatory duty is abolished.
Under the McKinley law the rate of
duty on cheap woolen cloth was from
150 to 168 per cent., and on dearer
cloth from 89 to 99 per cent. Under
the new bill it will be from 35 to 50
per cent. The duty on knit goods was
All nre Needed,
If all people were farmers, there
would not be a market for a cent’s
worth of produce or grain,
If all people were shoemakers or all
tailors, there would be no customers
for shoes or breeches, either new or for
mending.
If all people were merchants, there
would not be a store with a customer.
If everybody was a butcher, there
would not be a purchaser for a pound
of meat,
If everybody were a carriage maker,
there would not be a demand for a sin-
MONEY
LOAN OR
gle carriage.
would be no work.
would be no demand for mechanics.
from 82 to 160 per cent.; it will now be
from 35 to 69 per ce nt. The tax on
it will range from 25 to 40. On flan
nels the rate was from 85 to 104; it will
be from 25 to 50. Women's dress goods
paid from 87 to 109, cloaks 81 per cent.,
and ready made clothing 80 per cent.
Carpets paid from 61 to 83 per cent.
They will pay from 30 to 42},
We have been considering
cloth worthy of the name.
woolen
Cheap
country, but cheap all-wool cloths are
not made here. As the manufactur-
ers could not buy the foreign
needed for making cheap cloths, they
The conse-
that the
average American woolen cloth is
about half shoddy. Moreover,
shoddy business has grown as the bus-
other substitutes for wool.
der the high protective system. Amer-
icans who have wanted good and dur-
imported cloth and pay the tax. There |
of February. The Senate committee
held the bill more than three months
to reconcile the conflicting elements of
that body, and after a debate lasting
twenty-three days the amended bill
passed the Senate on the 3d of July.
A joint committee of conference was
appointed and after several weeks of |
earnest effort an agreement was found |
to be impossible. In the
the conflict between the President and |
certain Senators make it perilous
permit any bill formulated by the com- |
approval, and on the 13th
the House settled the issue by
the bill from its committee and
curring in the Senate amendments.
The contest for the McKinley bill
when the Republicans had clear work-
COn-
battle over the Wilson bill. The
to the House, but it kept Congress in |
session until October, as the McKinley
tariff’ bill was not approved until early |
in that month. In a
interests, a general tariff policy is
i
}
ures to formulate, and the delay
passing the Wilson bill is simply
tory repeating itself.
his
ssamssnoms AM SAAA
THE TARIFF NOW A LAW.
The new tariff’ went into operation,
President, who didn’t sign it because it
contained features which he did not
favor, while in many parts it met his
approval.
The President wrote a letter to Rep-
resentative Catchings giving his rea-
features of it worthy of approval,
while others are not in line with hon-
est tariff’ reform.
The President denounces the trusts
for their share in securing the defeat
of some of the reforms that were pro-
jected, and adheres to his belief in free
raw materials. He believes the fight
is not over, and that it will go on un-
til further reforms are enacted that
benefit the people to a still greater ex-
tent.
Bs A SB
GOODS CHEAPER,
Wanamaker advertises that the new
tariff has made goods cheaper, and he
advertises reduced prices in all Phila-
delphia papers. That's admitting
what Democrats claimed, and what
Republicans don’t like. Cheaper
goods for the masses—Wanamaker
comes down to the facts, and the new
tariff is beginning to work for the gen-
eral good.
CHEAPER CLOTHES AND HIGHER
WOOL
Free wool will make cheaper clothes,
benefitting all the people, and will in.
crease the price of domestic wool, ben-
efitting the farmer. This may seem
to be paradoxical; It is not.
Under our old-time free-wool policy
flocks increased in numbers and the
price of wool was maintained because
there was a demand for wool. Foreign
wools are needed for admixture with
our own wools in this country,
when their is diminished
by a tariff duty the demand for Amer-
lean wools necessarily falls off. Under
$
3
f
i
§
in
with free wool,
In 1883 our woolen goods and car-
material.
and the
their raw
and carpets
Certainly |
under |
51.5651.
saved
of $36.4
be
| the new bill.
st fA A
| Wanamaker's reduction of prices, and |
or-
gan, the Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph
“The
it says:
the manufacturing interests
the
{and the party that should
| another general shake-up and tarift re- |
ss I A
STILL a great many Republicans are
finding fault with that * Democratic
Congress’ for giving protection to the
sugar trust. They ignore the fact that
the House passed a free sugar bill by
a big vote and that the Senate Repub»
licans killed it with the aid of eight
Democratic votes. Eight Democrats
do not make a Democratic Congress
protection from: the sugar trust they
had the opportunity when the free su-
gar bill came to the Senate. They
killed it. The Republicans have not
the common honesty to acknowledge
that their representatives in the Ben:
ate killed free sugar while demanding
it, but the record is there.
Savs the Pittsburg Chronicle- Tele-
graph: The conspicuous exhibition
given to the control which Trusts ex-
ercise over legislation through the
unique privileges of the Senate, pre-
sents a new issue which political par-
ties must confront. The American
people may be humbugged and eajol-
ed, but they cannot be defled. The
audacious mastery of the Sugar Trust
will not be borne. Itissureto be an
issue in the next presidential cam-
paign. Of course each party will put
the Sugar Trust over the United States,
but each party will have to pledge it-
of monopoly. The Senate privileges
which now shelter corruption will
have to be torn down, and the party
which is able to command popular
confidence in its pledges to carry out
these reforms will command the fu-
ture.
Don't Fall to Go,
The patronage of the Sea Shore Ex-
cursions arranged for by the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad for the this season has
been so flattering to the Company that
an additional excursion has been ar-
ranged for, the date September 6th,
rate for round trip $5.25 taking in
either Atlantic City, Cape May, Bea
Isle City, Ocean City, Anglesea or
Wildwood. Tickelg good for ten days
and good to stop off in Philadelphia
returning within limit.
A ILA SAA,
«A light summer suit from dewive,
Bellefonte, will do much seeping. cout
If all did their own washing neither
| the wash-woman nor the laundry
| would have a shirt or collar to work
on,
And so on to the end,
and vocations,
of all trades |
one must be this, the other that,
creates what we term business
up in different pursuits and by being
life,
piness and comfort, and life, instead |
| of being a miserable,
| shift, is full of enjoyment,
| ambition to excell.
}
One occupation is as honorable
pursuits, just as our lungs need air to
sustain life,
Let none despise the other his
STATE BUILDING AND
MONEY
BORROW.
LOAN ASSOCIATION,
| BRICE D. BRISBIN.
1d
4
Mi.
Davi L. Barrars, Du. (
Tells Its Own Story.
INVESTOR.
i The following table shows the cost +
{ of our Running Stock to the investor
| No. hares, Tedal ¢
i §
Chet per mo
£0
1 Bi
a 00
6 0
90
12 00
15 00
BORROWER
i
Estimated cost to Borrower
=
SRM E ED
Cosh Bed, Oot per io,
$1 { $160
Xi
Shares
iy
6 40
¥
¥
| those who will follow a needed
| beneath our false dignity. If we were
{ not publishing the REPORTER, surely
i
i
i
! tfc e————
i
!
Hecent Deaths
| At 10 o'clock, on Wednesday
| ing, 22nd, George H. Noll died at his |
{ home at the mine bank, near Belle |
| | fonte. He was unmarried and aged |
| about 45 years.
Lewis Zimmerman, aged 71,
| near Hecla Monday morning, 20th,
| kidney disease. A wife and
| children survive him.
| Miss Jennie DeHass died at Howard |
on Tuesday of last week.
In Lewisburg, on Aug. 19th, Rev.
E. Kohr, aged 70 years, 10 months and |
26 days.
On Aug. 4, at White Deer,
Mrs. Mary Shannon, aged 77 years,
| 1 month and 20 days.
died |
i GO.
sm———————
Saw Dust Instead of Sand.
It is not generally known, in
| section at Jeast, that sawdust makes a
| better plaster than sand.
| been used, we understand,
years, We
instead of sand, and any one who
are told that itis more durable
sand. Raftman’s Journal,
A Good Recipe.
this manner, and, consequently do it
very imperfectly. This is the proper
way to peel tomatoes: Cover them with
boiling water half a minute, then lay
them in cold water until perfectly cold,
and then skin can be pealed off with-
out difficulty, leaving the tomatoes
unbroken and as firm as they were
before being scalded.
———
A Wild Man in Potter County,
A giant wild man is terrorizing the
inhabitants of Potter county, accord-
ing the Galeton Gazette. He is de-
scribed as a giant in size, with high,
broad shoulders, extraordinary long
arms, large head, and his whole body
covered with thick, dark hair. He is
probably the same wild man that was
reported as having been seen over near
Hull's last spring. His appearance
has set the county in commotion.
New Trial Granted.
A new trial was granted on Tuesday
by Judge Saddler in the case of the
Tyrone Manufacturing company vs.
James Cross. The case has been pend-
ing in the courts of Centre county
since 1884, was tried four tinies in our
common pleas court and twice in the
supreme court, and this granting of a
new trial places the contestants in ex-
actly the same position they were when
they began--minus the boodle they
put into it.
~Whether you want a suit made of
order or one ready-made, you will find
Lewins $8 to $5 cheaper than elsew here.
All information ean Ix
SOOT PCL
PA, HOME OFFICE.
We can
Collar. and |
any |
Mass Laan
Omanica
and do it too in a way that he will i ke.
Every man that wears ¢ and cuffs
should know about Te C LLULOID '"
Interlined. A linen collar or enff cov-
ered with waterp roof LLULOID
They are the o 1 d Collars
and Cuffs m: wy
They are the top notch of «
neatness and economy Ti
through the day w
shape, no matter how hot or how
ou get. You can clean one yx
in a minute, withont «
busy wives, unskiliful hired girl
certsin and distant laundries, Simply
wipe them otf.
ihe piece is marked as fo
es Chi
Yon must insist upon goods sc
MARK.
and take nothing clsc if ye
satisfaction.
If your dealer should not have them,
we will send you a sample postpaid on
receipt of price. Collars 25¢. each. Cuffs
Soc. pair. Give size, and specify stand.
up or tummed-down collar as wanted.
THECELLULOID COMPANY,
42729 Broadway, NEW YORK.
wre awd
HOTA,
«11
ii EO
good
UUsY
§
wryelf
7:6 OF un-
LOWS :
y marked
u expect
Mifin Co. Deaths.
Recent deaths in Miflin
were:
Elizabeth, wife of Joseph Campbell,
of Union township, in her 66th year,
Mrs. Mary A., widow of Conrad
Mull, of Decatur township, in the 70th
year of her age.
John Price, of Lewistown,
most 74 years.
Jacob Btuck,
aged 66 years,
Mrs. Mattie Swartzell, of Lock Mills,
in her 17th year, and only four months
after marriage.
Joseph Wagner, whose home was
near Milroy, aged nearly 69 years.
A ——
“1 know of an old soldier who had
chronic diarrhoea of long standing to
have been permanently cured by tak-
ing Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy,” says Edward
Shumpik, a prominent druggist of
Minneapolis, Minn. “I have sold the
remedy in this city for over seven
years and consider it superior to any
other medicine now on the market for
bowel complaints.” 25 and 50 cent
bottles of this remedy for sale by Wm,
Pealer, of Spring Mills and 8. M.
Swartz, of Tussey ville,
ne SAA
Out of the Race,
The DuBois Express Is informed
that Matt Savage, the Democratic can-
didate for the nomination for the Cen-
tre-Clinton-Clearfield district for state
senator, is out of the race. It is report.
‘ed that he has been promised a job in
county
aged al-
of Derry township,
A
AG etaber oy rit a slaty of $2,600 | or
r attached.
CLEMENT F. DEININGER,
For the Person with Money,
Eo nd ne
"EEO REES 3
- mE
"GEN AGENT HOLLIDAYSHURS
McGALMONT & CO,
Supplies
far
Jopea(]-
-ur s
Road
Caaity.
atic
ana
We invite patronage.
McCALMONT & CO.,,
BELLEFONTE, - . PA.
UBLICBALE -THED NDERSIGNED Wii 5
offer his farm at public sale, on the prem
fees, about one mile south of Centre Hill on
Omey BATURDAY, SEPT 1888, Owey
Atl o'clock, p.m, the following valuable farm,
comteinieg
yy
wd
68 ACRES,
aboul f sores being woodland, all in a good stale
of coltivation, and clear of stoves. Therson
erected a good twostory frame house, all needed
outbuildings, and hank barn: a good orchard
and choice frulta. Never failing well and &
spring wear the buildings. The farm adjoins
Sinking Creek. and i= No. 1 in every respect.
Terms made known on day pris
choice and complete line of Nar
J. B. ROYER.
WANTE sery stock snd seed potatoes,
Highest salary snd commission paid weekly,
paying and permanent position guaranteed
sucess assured 0 good men, Special Indooe-
ments lo beginners, experience bot §
Exclusive torritory and your own choloe of same
given. Do pot deiny.
A NURSERY 60.
Growers & Propagators, ROCHESTER
MEN WANTED
lecting. Ex OP 1500 BOORSRTY
ployment. tt terme. Write st once
cure choice hed:
ALLEN NOReRy ©0., Rochester, N. ¥,
mardl-im
ENERGETIC MEN to sell our
any
Totake orders. No
delivering or col
me
pg
inorder 0 make room new
stock we jrices wo shoes low-
or han aver, You c's afl ton