The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 24, 1896, Image 4

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    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.
Ap
—Rubscribe for the REPORTER. ir
4 ’
the
C For the whole family
Lively Liver, Pure Blood, Beautiful
Complexion, Perfect Health in
CANDY
CATHARTIC
CURE
C NEVER GRIPE CONSTIPATION
C 10c NEVER SICKEN 29C
C
C
Cl:
C
NEVER WEAKEN.
Purely vegetable, eat like candy, n of
never fail to inde ICE A Ratu n
the stomach, liver and bowels. Absolutely nae i to cure ¢
or ur money refunded. 10, 25 or soc. All druggists. Sample as
KW
Address THE STERLING REMEDY CO., CHICACO OR NEW YORK.
Ce
0-T0-BAG "425 CURE €
Over LKR (KD hoes eold 0 8% 1 ures prove Hs power to destroy the deslre
OT RNo-to-bae iv the greatest perve-food in the word Many wr
fails 10 wake the weonk fit ak SHI tg ;
lighted. Wo ex poet ve ¥8 What wy SAY
Jane. Bena 1 for « t “Tasty Toba
HEST ER
om LING REMEDY i, Chicage or Pa w Pn fas
WLD AND GUARAN T EED BY YOUR OWN DkUBGIST.
ral act
y |
i Lipa
wy
13
vd
wr ¥
yo i
wil
AN
New Spring Stock.
2006000008000
We
and Summer goods, a stock that is the
In Se
been reduced in price
have just received an exceptionally large stock of Spring
mii
ifiiian
' .
latest from the
tories, gros we have a finer assortment than ever, and they has
*
Ask
We think
(yoods
- : 4% 5 3
25 per cent; all shades and colors. to
: 80
them. You may want something in Underclothing. we
have
just what you want, a full and eomplete | line. and
i suc §) q1
A
in the window, 100 pieces, only
Dress Goods never were so cheap, and
i
startling. new line of China and
Straw Hats in abundance.
Queensware. The China Dinner Set
£14.00.
Cant be beat in price. Other line have as big bargains.
~ KREAMER & SON.
If you are able to
pay *100 for a bicy-
cle, why be content
with any but a
LIANE DF TH OL
baat B cho
There is but
Nincteen the ihe “clrainty of quaity ceed by oe
$
100 flicyelas ia Sse if You anil upon any
Art Catalogas of Soleil from us for two a-cent
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
TO ALL ALIKE.
[8
En
PENNSYLVANIA K.
Philadelphia & Erle KR. R. Division
and Northern Central Railway,
Time Table, 11 « Sect June 14, 1896
| TRAINEE LEAVE MONTANDOS
9158. m Train 4 Dally except sunday
| For Bunbury , Willkebarre, Hazleton, Potsvilie
| Harrisburg and rasrd p stations, arriving
| at Philadelphia st 300 b.. New York, be p
im. Baltimore, | FR pel ington Op. m
| ponnecting at Philadelphia for all sea-abore
| points Through passetiger coaches to Phila
deiphiia and Baltimore Varior cars wo Philadel
i pa A.
EABETWARD
as
Train Dai
Harrlsbnirg a1
Jp. In
¥
| Porn unbury
exoept RFunday.)
iter ted late sas
| tons, arriving st Philadelphia at 6,25 n Now
| York. 9.28 p.m. Baltimore, 600 p. mn, Washi
| von at 7 p.m Parlor car through oo Philladel-
phia, snd pas-euger coches Ww Pulisdelphia snd
| Baltimore
LIK p.m,
| For Wilkesbarr
1
a
14
Tiuln 13
Hazleton, VP
| Bait
{ Wii
NOT
Seabarre
ip m
| from Harr
| Philadelphia
| undisturbed
: a In rain
surg and inter
| Philadelphia at i
| work days
{m, Washi
pase Lger
7.008, m,
ur
i Harn
| care oO nger coaches 10
| Giale sLations
Niagara Falls,
and Kimira,
Hochester,
For Lack Haven
AREER Falls,
lo Kane sug
wher
5 aay.)
Sons
uBndasy)
and
ili
nig ial
bE od
A ial
iL
Lang
Dale
7‘ Pleasant 6G
WiARemant
ih Bellefonte
ional tral
iw ieave Lowi shu
1. R. WOOD
Pager Agt
PENNSYLVANIA
ab
TEE EE
Swi
ve.
0
45 e
Week Pp
mys #
110 10a m. Sanday
MIR meepIng Oars atin
m. Sunday.
hed to East
2p wm. and
p.m.
FG KP Ha RT,
General Superintendent.
epee 7 7;
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Full information for the asking.
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WHEN MADE WITH
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