THE CENTRE REPORTER FRED KURTZ, Editor. TERMS. One year, $1.60, when paid in advance, Those in arrears subject to previous terms, §2.00 per year. ADVERTISEMENTS, 20 cents per line for three insertions, and 5 cen per line for each subse- quent insertion. Giher rates made made known on application. CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS, Sept. 24 DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET. For Coagress, L.. SPANGLER. For Assembly, R. F. FOSTER. JAMES SCHOFIELD. For Sheriff, W. M. CRONISTER. For Treasurer, C. A. WEAVER. For Commissioners, P. H MEYER. DANIEL HECKMAN. J. their superiors, Our standard bearer for congress, Col. J. L. Spangler, meets with warm | approval in the county and in the dis- | trict. His ability and Democracy are | unquestioned. Messrs, Schofield and | Foster, for assembly, and intelligence. For sheriff a No. 1 gentleman in Mr. For commissioners we have we have and P. H Rumberger has proven in Daniel Heckman G. W. tions, Meyer, discharge of his duties as register--no flaw there, Of the others, Weaver for der, and Wetzel for surveyor, men of and for the people. we ses fl BARDSLEY PARDONED/ 5 Bardsley, who stole over a million dol- lars of the public funds! The pardon was asked for on the Bardsley’ count of his imprisonment. What of For Register, W. RUMBERGER. For Recorder, C. HARPER. For Auditors, FRANK W. HESS, B. F. KEISTER. For Coroner, W. W. IRWIN. For Surveyer, J. H. WETZEL. Dr. WE have a supplement with this te sue which farmers and others shoul read carefully - tt A goldite called a silverite erat when promptly in reply he was called a polecat which shut golderat., a popo- ‘h up - Wc fp All the evils, past present and yet were blamed by the Republi- free trade. They that and now swear the free of silver has been the root of LO come, Cans on have all evil. itp snicomo— It will be perfectly in order now for the and Republican, to take Democratic up cuss the records of assemblymen Har- ry Curtin and Phil Womelsdorf, printed in this issue of the local stump speakers, and r As — ly LAST week's issue of the REPORTER was an educator upon the silver ques- ible facts upon the important phases | of the This week give further silver literature which the seeker after truth should study. money we issue, — tel ctf every few furor is That's fun- they The goldbug organs announce that the Bryan “heginning'’ to grow less, ny, since in the kept two months Bryan have show This is like their old ery that tarift would now they swear silver is going to it. We have yet read, in sacred or profane history, that any man or any man's business has been ruined by having too much silver money. It is all the other way, the fermer, work- ingman and business circles would be only too glad if they could get at more silver dollars. past saying didn’t at all. a low bring do | not sia There have been several failures re- cently, and the goldbugs blame it on the belief that Bryan will be elected, yet with the next breath, when some new enterprise starts up, they explain it the opposite way and declare it because of the belief that McKinley is will be elected. cians. The real truth like to dodge it—the cause of the rising prosperity of the couniry is the work- ings of the Democratic tariff policy which the Republicans for fifty years kept swearing would ruin the country. The real truth is the past business pan- ies of the country were largely caused by robber tariffs and the demonetiza- tion of silver, the crime of 1873. ff ————————— ALL free silver voters, Democrats and Republicans, must bear in mind the importance of supporting Col. Js L. Bpangler for congress. Bryan must have free silver men to stand by him | in congress. Our nominee is pledged to that. His opponent, Arnold, if elected which he will not, would be an abject tool of the goldbugs, trusts and monopolies, in congress. There is not a single thing in Arnold’s record to make him deserving the votes of the citizens of this district. We are even told that he has appeared at some of his meetings with a “load on.” De cency and Arnold's own good require that he be kept away from Washing- ton, it is a thousand times more cer- tain to be the ruin of the man than free silver is to ruin & single industry of the country. Spangler stands for the good of the toilers, bear it in mind, while Arnold stands for the opposite. —————— AIM A SOIT TAA OUR LOCAL TICKET. The county Democratic ticket com- mands the respect and it should com- not pardon them also? But the who got a share of the stolen millions. Hence Bards- This is an outrag the the honest { tion of the Republicans denounce this | pardon in the severest terms, We are glad to say God save the Commonwealth,’ Ap SILVER WON EASY | Continaed From First Page. the act were one-half dollars, f i autherized by 3 | 170 dollars, April 2nd, dimes and balf dimes, of fractional parts of a dollar which they ~that is, half dol were the equivalent in value represented two one dollar, and so on. These cooing wv 3 pp A Fins Fy sfeiniciare full i {¢ : 1 1 ght, f K and those o ss than weight were legal tender at values pro portionate to their respective weights It will thus be seen that as all these smaller coins were full viele they should } be doll (Lyi the Carlisle's report rhit a inida, sliver coined, “The silver 34.1 31.2 full d befo pieces “AYE: amount coined “$5 4 This makes a of full fractional pric belng added to the $5.0 total of $84.71 : der silver dollars coine “By ht of the y | was reduced welg 8 £1 i v 4 ir to 1553 was H ar Bs "js i sum wo AV legal wre 1855. 1853, oy wl y the act of February th welg fractional coins the LilE known full sliver for $ 1 and then time they were made what is 1 i as subsidi le A) { ot r h t} nelr leg y coin, and only $5. al tender i e sadder t amount of jut the of since been raised to $10 The Judge of the w figures thus prov red that the 70.000.000 times out ‘ay on Continued applause than that” “for in addition legal tender silver had up to 1856, Peruvian dollars, French five frane pieces and Spanish milled dollars, and small coins to the amount of over 000 in full circulation tender doliars, for under the constitu- tion of the U. B. which says, gress shall fix the value of the foreign coin,” this point ! “Bat it is worse Mr. Whitehead, these millions of dollars Mexican said to coined, we dollars, foreign silver £100 (0), - and full legal “Con all this foreign silver coin was full legal tender money until it demonetized in 1856, Judge Furst said that ** prevails you people If free silver in your graves before you will see any more To which Mr. White- head replied, by informing the Judge that by looking up the official reports that there have been no gold dollars coined for six ycars or since 1889, Judge Furst stated that this whole silver movement was for the benefit of only five states in the Union which produced silver, and that Nevada, the leading silver state, was today one of the least prosperous states of the Un- ion, To which Mr. Whitehead re. plied: “Silver was found in 23 states in the Union, and that the only reason Nevada was not prosperous was be- cause the Republican party (that boasts of protection to American in- dustry,) had by its legislation demon- etized silver and ruined the industries of Nevada and the other silver states. What right has our country to destroy the industry of the silver mines and all the working people and farmers de- pending upon them for their labor and markets, and advance the value of the product of the gold mines? Bat for every dollar that the silver miner has lost by this destruction of his industry, the farmer and the working man by depreciation in the value of his farm and crops and of the working man in his scarcity of work and reduction of wages—has lost more than $25 1" The Judge alluded to Washington's farewell address in which he called at- tention to Washington's warning will be gold dollars’ pel the hearty support of the Demo- cratic voters as well as of every Repub- lican who favors free silver and the in- terests of the masses. In all respects the nominees are the equal of their op- ponents, in many respects they are against sectional and class prejudices to which Mr. Whitehead replied, “That it was late in the day for a party that for so many years had waved the bloody shirt to talk about sectional au- the audience that in his afternoon talk tou’s farewell address in which he said, | “My countrymen, beware of entang- | ling alliances with foreign nations,” had up- on “an international agreement.”’ “An international agreement,” Mr. Whitehead said, "means an interna- tional treaty, and under the constitu- | tion of the U. B,, a treaty cannot be vi- olated. The only international agree | ment that we can get with the Roth- [ ¢hild Jews and the gold kings of Eu- rope will bea gold basis, and when once the agreement or treaty is fixed Leven if every voter in the U. 8. should vote for the free coinage of silver we | could not get it without getting down | on our knees to these foreign powers, because we are bound by the treaty. I'he only way out would be by a bloody revolution. The idea of the sons of | revolutionary fathers, 70,000,000 strong { being down upon their knees, beggiog | Queen Victoria, the Prince of Wales | and the Hessians, "Do, please tell us, | what kind of money can in the U. 8? Judge Furst alluded to the | going to the war to maintain | tegrity of the country. “Yes,” said Mr. Whitehead, “we soldier boys went | to the war to sustain our country and | our country’s flag, and we are talking voting today as much for our country’s honor and our country’s flag | | as we did in those days. We say, ps | did the old time Republicans, “The dollar ti pay | the soldier is good enough to bondholder.” There is not | government bond today | gold. we have soldiers the in- £1 { and to pay a payable in ‘arlisle’ int was good enough Reading from Mr. ( “The ris i any bonds Ja raiment Fide i has their 10 i {rnterest cither principal ir yin or ver « | 1 h ere {| pay these Kid ir, if we f the | Of can be no repudiation bonds in the SOCOINY money contract, viz, | De Witt C, | afternoon, i De Witt had said ridiculed the idea in that bonds with anything else but gold, rhieh Mr Whitehead replied: the “British bought 1 had our ernment 10 f ¥ a dollar's worth of bonds, | with gold or anything else, she had after debt £4,000 Ox) (xx) the England have her | gov ¢ ernment bonds or of now had over The bankers, ¢ | standing. gold kings o | ponds and do today The or = held individ: they iI and bought as nls on. i ly.’ facts are the | it ir hid §0¢. on the dollar and i greenbacks i bought the government the the atl the bonds soldier which paid Hepubliean party as snnexed ft bankers of England, | to force the people of this country in gold.” Judge Furst after cl | Eng og i pay that our siming held Bryan shoul Admiral this # Tish FOOT IITER { Mr. English Ti an | maid hat | ted come ] 4 | eleg sailing over to an En Cou niry | the Treasury of the U. 8. and ask pay- ment of these bonds held by his gov. ernment, and when Mr. Bryan would hand him out silver dollars in pay- ment of these bonds this English Ad | miral would say: "What are you giv- ing me? Wedo not recognize that as money, and will not take it as money, and if you do not pay us gold we will bring over the balance of our fleet, backed up by the fleets of France, Ger | many and Russia, and we together will train our guns on every city on our seaboard will batter them “To which Mr. White head laughingly at first and afterwards in a burst of patriotic eloquence said: as before, "The English dos not hold a dollar's worth and we fa down !! government of our bonds and if our ancestors, only three million strong defend old England and her Hessian allies, the Americans of today, 70,000,000 strong can not be scared by any English High Admiral The Only One To Stand the Test. tev. William Copp, whose father was a physician for over fifty years, in New Jersey, and who himself spent many years preparing for the practice of medicine, but subse. quently entered the ministry of the M. E. Church, writes: “I am glad totestify that I have had analyzed all the sarsaparillia prepara tions known in the trade, but AYER’S ris the only one of them that I could recommend as a blood-purifier. 1 have given away hundreds of bottles of it, as I consider it the safest as well as the best to be had.” Wa. Corr, Pastor M. E. Church, Jackson, Minn, AYERS THE ONLY WORLD'S FAIR arsaparilla When in doubt, ask for Ayers Pilly imosities, or the British red coats. We are the richest and greatest nation on the earth today. We propose to lead and not follow, The American people, American money, and American flag against the world, and three great na- tional political parties have it inscrib- ed on their banners today, ‘Free Coin- age of Silver, 16 to 1 without the inter- vention of any foreign country and led by that second Lincoln, a plain man, “of the plain people,” W. J. Bryan, we are going on to victory as sure the sun will rise on these hills row morning.’ Lincoln himself said, ‘you cannot fool all the people ail the time! The people are now awake and no mistake, It is a plain people’s campaign. During his address Mr, Whitehead | was interrupted throughout with ap-| plause, and when he had finished the audience made a break for the stage In a recent letter to the and pandimonium broke He | ers Mr. W. F, editor of the was congratulated and dragged about | Spectator, Rushford, N. Y., “It and carried from the How dif- | may be a pleasure to you to know the ferent it was with the advocate of the which gold standard, whose pet theories were by all exploded and were as chafl before | Your own state, where the wind. He was not to be found. | best known. An aunt He left the stage discomfitted and dis- | resides al Dexter, heartened. A sadder and more gloomy lot of gold bugs not tound | leaving home wrote me, | any where than upon Grange Park, | They precipitated the conflict and | not she were overwhelmed in their arguments, with her, It will take a dozen campaigns for the | W ithout Republican party to recover the ground | they lost in this single battle. —— POTTERS MILLS What Our Correspondent Across the Valley Has to Say, The people of this place have settled | down to work since the picnic, ing at Alex, McCoy's, Franklin Palmer spent Sunday with his parents at this place, William McKinney, rier was quietly married last Thursday our mail car- | evening to Miss Lizzie Moyer, tre Hill, On Baturday hie brought his wife home and the boys helped him celebrate the oceasion by a lively serenade, Frank Royer and Charles Lelste left lon Thursday last for Juniata for | peaches and returned on Monday and Pd a fine lot of them. ne tomor- evening Arf of —— manufactur- loose, lenjamin, BRYS. stage, Chamberlain's the people they must of | high esteem in medicines are held who t« mine, Towa, was about could be t i sold here, that were stating would 1 did The i red to are Chamberiain’s were Wing as she not like them." Cough Re Ids Balm Wg famous for its cures of Vy back, | edy, 0 | croup; Chamberlain's Pain Great Triamph, | vheumatis “Ili, lame pains Pid Instant relief and a permanent cure by the great remedy, Otto's Cure for Ch Lung and Throat diseases. Why will | bowel you irritate your throat and lungs with a hacking cough when R. | larthol- omew, of Centre Hall H. of Spring Mills sole agents w ill | hish you a free bottle Its your slera and Diarrhoea Remedy | medic | ie, complaints "hese have been in consts in lowa 1 simost a quarter of a century. it} Long i that fur- this SUCCPNS , and G. people have learnes they ef cies Of great worth and merit, and i f 1 satnple Q equaled by by Wm. Swartz, ‘| guaranteed remedy is | sale Pealer. M. | tholomew, i | simply wonderful, druggist { will tell you. | bottles 50¢, as Musseyville, and Hall Spe Sample free, Large Centre and 5c. 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