The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 07, 1897, Image 4

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    NS SS
THE CENTRE REPORTER
FRED KURTZ, Editor
TERMS, One year, $1.50, when pald in advance.
Those in arrears subject to previous terms, $2.00
per year,
ADVERTISEMENTS. —20 cents pergine for three
insertions, wind 5 cenws per, line for each subse
quent inse: tion, Other rates made made known
on application.
CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS, Oct. 7.
THE DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET,
For State Treasurer,
MICHAEL E, BROWN.
For Auditor General,
WALTER E. RITTER.
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET
For County Surveyor,
J. H. WETZEL.
For Jury Commissioner,
J. J. HOY.
The Hazleton riots will cost the state
no less than $125,000,
wa——— ei — —
The expenses of the state under Re-
publican rule are double what they
were under Gov. Pattison.
colt
IT is a noteworthy fact
in
WAS
enacted
church
gislation of this state,
a church. Of course,
not to blame,
was
the
melasma
According to the latest
7,900 murders and hom-
legal and
Every year for ten
in the United States
have exceeded the legal
It is a horrible fact to face
tistics are
ring the year,
cides, 113
lynchings,
the lynchings
executions
. but the sta-
before us,
Be fp a mem
most
he fleetest ste
The greatest,
cent and apparently t
largest,
nights ago, 5 days,
5 minutes out from South- |
harbor a
hours and
ampton,
Her
(frosse,
few
4
t+
a record
is
never
name Kaiser Wilhelm
— en
Senator Hanna has announced, for
the benefit his Ohio boom, that
Immigration bill is to be passed which
will protect American workmen from
the tramp labor of Europe. But
tramps from Europe are but a handful
in compa tramps
bave been made such in our own coun-
Of
rison with the
try by acts of C ONETess,
ES
testimony has received fur-
the Luetgert trial in
Expert
ther discredit in
Chicago. fragments of
which ope expert identified as parts of
a woman were declared
‘he bone
the skeleton of
by another expert to be bones of a hog.
Until the experts can agree better than
this, it seems scarcely worth while to
take up the time of the Court with
their expensive testimony.
The offici
tain seven columns, to be used by the
tepublican, Democratic, Prohib
Bocialist Labor, Liberty and Indepen-
li Al ——
al ballot this year will con-
tion,
dent parties, and independent voters
who may not desire to vote for any of
the candidates of the several parties.
messages from every
globe,
quarter
mses arian
Speaking of Carnegie's
abroad, the Providence Journal
It is noteworthy that Mr. Andrew
Carnegie has admitted that he prefers
to live abroad. He has announced
that he will spend most of his time
there hereafter. This devoted patri-
ot's concern for the American work-
ingman, and for the great fundamen-
for the forging of the best of armor for
the ships of the American navy, will
not be lessened by his separation from
all that he holds dear.
RN.
Deputy Attorney General Reeder
furnished Auditor General Mylin with
an opinion relative to assessments in
it will not be necessary for the com-
missioners of that county to make an
assessment in the spring of 1808, as
be made
to
for
hereafter all assessments will
in the fall, but that they will
make their triennial
1898 before December 31, 1807,
have
assessment
- cts"
A prominent New York
has been making a calculation on
clergyman
the
of the
of America
cost missionaries the
send to foreign
that the Bap-
tist missionary, is the cheapest, He
in any land fi
while a Methodist mission.
lands, and he figures out
can subsist heathen nw
$200 a year,
and
The writer
Alliance
pitches into
it
of its mis-
Christian because
spends $499
a year on each
Whether
one denomina-
we presume, will rightly de-
to the
al systems,
eredited
ecclesiastic
- > —-_
early
First impressions and
Hon.
many
Galusha A.
shinin
and ye
our
government is the tendency
to
Years a
“that the greatest evil in
’
| to give office those who are
there are
and that it
old
the
ourselves.’
The
leaven of Democracy that was in
man in his earlier and
condition when he was
more
first sent to
to represent a Democrat
11
still
itself manifest. There is hope fi
contained 11
ever
in the REPORTER office,
columns and was the largest
ted.
VOo-
san ise .
LAST week New Jersey voted upon
several amendments to the Constitu-
tion, one of them being to prohibit
gambling and horse racing. At first
it was reported that this was defeated.
A —— se
LATE news from the Klondike men-
HIS of
Dawson, fi
r food for
miners fl
tie starvation at
thousand miners having
weeks only,
and
death,
perils of snow
awful some having dared the |
> 1
trails to escape
and
bound
1 eset t the
going (oo get
i
A camp is said to have be
ers others
}
pestilence of typhoid fever and se
Prospectors are to be
e Yukon and
reported
on th unable to go either
WAY.
Hung
{ the large number of
ger and death are inevitable f
City. They have waited patient
£
Hl
get food up the river, but by this time
have learned that not
can reach even Circle City
of low water on the Yukon flats,
A winter of terrible suffering is inev.
In addition to the
this winter, the
another steamer
on account
s food famine
health
itable
outiook for the
ing. Dawson is built on a
will be unconstitutional.
One amendment was for woman's
winnie fs
the
IN Greater New York situation |
of a mayor,
lican citizens’ organization nominated
Professor Seth Low. Boss Platt's reg-
ular machine Republicans nominated
Gen. Tracy. The independent Demo-
crats have nominated Henry George,
and the Tammany Democrats have
nominated Judge Van Wyck for may-
or. Each of these organizations has a
strong following, and the outcome is
doubtful.
in———————
Mr. McKinley exhorts the Ohio
:
moral. He does not explain to them
a disreputable New Orleans negro dive
keeper to high office as payment for
that dissolute person's services in bri-
bing delegates to support the candida-
cy of an Ohio church member. But
that is what Mr. Kinley’s public rec-
ord means.
Tue well-known originator of the
Maine liquor law, General Neal Dow,
died in Portland on Baturday after-
noon, surrounded by his family, He
had steadily failed for a fortnight, and
in his latest moments of consciousness
seemed weary of life.
General Neal Dow was born March
20, 1804. Without education otha
than that to be obtained in preparato-
ry schools and in judicious reading, he
had lifted himself by his steady devo
tion to principle to world-wide fame,
and when the warm
comes out
checked.
sun of May
disense will rage
- a
NO ONE DENIES THE CHARGES,
There is every reason why every |
| port the Democratic state and county
ticket this fall.
In the first place the candidates are
foisted upon the
people by a boss-controlled convention,
Such a condition of affairs is, happily,
a thiog of the past.
These men are worthy the support
of every good citizen who believes in
wresting from a disgraced and shame-
less party the power in state affairs it
has betrayed.
The history of Pennsylvania tells us
of no more reckless and plundering
body than the legislature of 15867,
was largely Republican; it was chosen
for specific purposes—that of electing
a United States senator and moulding
into shape laws for the corporations.
expectations of Quay and the corpora-
tions he favors, no one ean doubt,
history of Pennsylvania legislatures.
The people know it; the Republican
party laughs about it and is not asham-
ed; the Prohibitionists point to it as
the crime of the nineteeth century.
But what do the people who are to go
to the polls next November think
about it?
The offices of state treasurer and aud- |
itor general are important offices and |
should be filled by worthy men.
DE ae oe
FINANCIAL DOCTORS,
That the money and curreney ques-
tion is an uppermost one in the minds
the number of commissions now en- |
gaged, on one authority and another, |
in attempting to doctor it. The New |
York Sun groups them together as fol-
lows:
The sound money commission.
The currency commission,
The Indianapolis commission.
The monetary commission,
The greenback retirement
sion,
The Edmunds commission,
The Hanna commission,
No mention is made here of proba-
bly the most important of all, the Wol-
cott commission, authorized by
comm is-
Con-
status. The commission appointed as
outgrowth of the Indianapolis
sound money convention, and of
which ex-Senator Edmunds, of Ver-
mont, is at work, and the
various important divisions of the sub-
. Ject has been divided among sub-com-
mittees,
an
is chairman,
Their reports will be passed
upon by the general committee,
| will eventually find their
where they
shelved,
and
way to Clon
be
| gress, will
safely
probably
The subject matters of investigation
confided to the
first, ‘Metallic
in the question of
sub-committees are,
which will
standards
I'his
radical goldites
forth in
“The
(tovern-
Currency,”
take and
the silver problem. committee
is composed of three
Their
ads
$3 3
COnciusions may be set
ance, The second question is
f the
is commitlee
Demand obligations o
will undoubit-
for the
and
words
ment, T
suggest a plan retirement
demand
my
reenbacks other
i
in other the of ersion
| of a non-interest-bearing debt of
UX), XK tnto interes
| No proposition of this
adopted by any party.
the only
and they don’t
The third problem
iT
2 report on
an bearing
kind will go
American people + be
The gold Dem-
committed to
t fein
Lis
wn with
{ OCIals mre
OLes
{ it, amount to a p
Ihe
understood
arty
Bankis
t hho
ii
is
eet
sui IRAVOring
10 per cent. tax
} f
Hshment of a stat
ale DanKing system
guarded so as to secure the noteholder,
Federal supervision,
National ba
favor the
| and possibly with
the manner of the nk-
n
| ing system. Some liberaliz-
of the
ling
PL
nit the
tr (as
¢ demand,
wand
of
HOF IRC
ommena
Delley
would
od thy
{ bett
ter banking facilities,
o south
h and west in
gross wi uld have
sand 1
none
inotsiruct
#§
*
the
Ha agitation.
+ from wo
ommissions it
y problem of
+ itself on two sharp lines ©
On one
side ft
here will be
id for the remonetization of silver
vernment
is and
paper issues—the
re-
extension of greenbacks,
n the other side the retirement of the
leg
notes will be
of the
al tender advocated,
currency supply by
banks, and the
of the gold
used only
The drift is
| rection of the battles of
They stand
of the
Pittsburg Post
- -»
CORUAN
the National perma-
int
pinlenanoe
nent ma stand-
{ ard, with silver as a subsidi-
di-
on
| ary currency. the
i
the future
for the
two
these lines, radi-
teal conclusions money
i schools
A Breezy and Interesting Account of What
Has Happened
| Miss Emma Burd has gone to Lew-
| isb urg to remain an indefinite time.
Mrs, Hartman,
{ the welcome gues!
F.
of Laurelton,
of the family of R.
Vonada over Sunday.
Miss Maggie Young, who has been
making Mifflinburg her home for some
time, circulated among her friends at
this place over Sunday.
A large number of our people went
to Lewisburg last Thursday to attend
the fair. They returned in the even-
ing by special return train.
Rev, Wolf is in attendance at the
sessions of Central Penn. Bynod of the
Evan. Lutheran church, which
venes at Newport, Perry county.
Mr. Crouse, of Aaronsburg, shipped
| two car loads of potatoes from this sta-
| tion this week, the first of the season;
was
con-
them.
W. W. Coleman,
who had been in
of Bloomsburg,
weeks ago taking orders to enlarge
| photos, came to this place last Tues-
| day to deliver the same. He succeed-
| for a second delivery, which proves
| that people were satisfled with
work for the first delivery.
ies ot pecs
BRUSH VALLEY ITEMS,
—————
What Has Ocenrred in this Fertile Valley
the Past Week,
Noah Bierly, of Chicago, Is visiting
his relatives in our valley.
C. O. Mallory, of Kreamerville, will
move into his new house at Rebers-
burg this fall.
Some mean rascal started a moun-
tain fire about three iio eugt of Walls
store, last Baturday night,
Superintendent C, 1. Gramley and
wife, of Rebersburg, spent a few days |
Charles Krape and wife, of Clinton- |
dale,
near Rebersburg, over Bunday.
Charles Heckman and wife,
were the guests of Clem Gramley,
of
were visiting their
near |
: rel-
atives in Rebersburg over Sunday.
Luther Frank, of Rebersburg, left
for Williamsport on Tuesday morning, |
w here he will spend several days.
CO. C. Loose, of Rebershurg,
been on a western trip for the last two
who has
weeks, returned home Baturday even-
ing.
Cyrus wife, of Balona,
of their
Friday
tote and
were welcome
Brush valley friends
urday
Clarence Long,
guests many
at-
and b
last,
of ockville, who
was married a few weeks ago,
sick with typhoid fever, It
ond case of typhoid fever in Rockville
this fall
David
is very
en
is the
Saturday
stock;
8.
last
attended his
i
y sell
Mey er's sale
well
which he was obliged U
was fairly
aon
t
th
count of the burning of his large barn,
was sold cheap.
John H. Meyer,
left on Monday
in 1
Mills, who
Ff A
of Centr
morning fo 8 New
place nion county, was one
ost succes
er's mill for
ry to see hi
young man, wit
iness
prina
tinued suc
The Boy for the Viace.
boy and young man
ted and when vaca:
and other
posit
3 i : ¢ ’
POW REL G0 BRA 10
A straight
HF. ROSSMAN,
RING MILLS,
MORE LIGHT,
barns
venta a
farmer to buy
Clover Seed,
We buy and sell (
Fanning Mills,
We sell Fanning Mills, with different makes of |
seives and riddles, to clean farm seeds, as well as
Ciover and Timothy seed: but there has nev
been a device made to separate all the Bockhorn |
from Clover Seed, i
Seed Seives,
We have a few of the Dildine Adjustable Seed |
Selves for sale—the last that are In the market
Up to Date Dairying Supplies.
The Delaval Cream Separator was tbe favorite |
Cream separator shown at the grangers’ pienie |
where the sample Baby Setaretor was od We
Baboock’s Milk
over Seed
or
i
keep in stock Batter Workers,
and all other dairy fixtures, including parch
ment paper for wrappiog butter,
Household Fixtures and
Sewing Machines.
Clothes Wringers, Washing Machines, Refciger-
in-
cluding the best make of Sewing Machines,
which we sell at prices ranging from $12.50 to
$25 Wench. Those in wantof Sewing Machives
will protect their own interests, as well as save
money by calling ou us,
We are agents for the Columbus Buggy Co. ~ihe
in
Other makes of
quality and Jowest
the market— hand-made
Sleighs and Sleds.
A great variety of blankets, robes. horse blank:
oe, Hvighs and cutters, of the finest make is the
Boy cutters and fiyers, Farm and Lum-
or Nieds the very best make.
Builders’ Supplies.
Fire and Red Brick, Flag Stones, Lime, Roofi
Paper , Plastering Hair, Sand, snd Victor Paten
Nan Plaster, ing:
udiog nod Plaster.
and Rosen ic Cements in quan
to sult buyers,
McCalmont & Co., Bellefonte, Pa.
Shortiidge 4 On, Stab Uo
i
i
other uses.
und
dupli-
None
now be devoted to
de
sting contents are
Jity and flavor in
it, a pure, whole-
ly made preparation for
pies, fruit and fruit
1
VONE SUCH
MINCE MEAT
the housewife long
Ome and
can
Its
lightful
lig smelling
such
some,
Bie e cake
"|
£31
AAVeS hours
work
wear
A tag
A packag
Que
two large
t Take no s 1bstit
sire a
the re tefy
we ow —
e “Mrs §
MERRELIL-SOULE CO.
Syracuse, X.Y, :
Star Store.
WANTED
Apples Potatoes
Onions.
Butter, Eggs, Lard,
* HIGHEST PRICES WILL BE
PAID.
i: PERNSYLVANIA STATE OOLJ
LEADING D EPARTME NT:
nd
TURE
EN IR LING
ENGINEERING
i ENGINEERING
od wilh ve ry extensive
in the Viel
oR Are
Bhop, snd the
y POL
ART
and
ITICAL RCIERCE
AND DERIGN
LITERATURE: latin
Ferman and English ire
ued through the
ws hy
MATION and ASTRONOMY pure
ARTS
three years’ course
MORAL and POLITICAL 8C1
Constitutional law and History
Eoonomy, ele.
tady,
EERE Xe Es
12
: %
e i practical
gervics
12. PREPARATORY COURSE: One year
Fall term opens Sept. 11, 1885
Sept. 13
Calaingue or other information, sd
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D., Prest,
State Onllege. Nentre a. Pe
For
STED-TRUSTWORTHY AND ACT
ve genliemen or Indies to travel
tablished house in Pennsylvania
and expenses, Position steady
Enel selfaddressed stamped ens |
The Domicion Company, Dept. ¥, Chi i
Monthly $65
foretoe.
velope
CARD
WANTED AGENTS
BOTH MEN AND WOMEN Ifyou are willing
o work, we can give you employment with
GOOD PAY, and yon oan work all or part Lime,
&t home or traveling. The work 3s LIGHT AXD
EARX. WRITE AT ONCE for terms, otc. to
THE BAWKS NURSERY COMPANY,
sop'Mm Rochester, N. Y.
SALESMEN WANTED
To sell our High Grade apd Fresh Due Sock,
Specialties controlled br us, Highest i or
Onmmission paid weekly, Suendy om loyment
the year around. Outfit free. Exclusive tere i
tory. Experience not necessary. if pay nase
od workers. Don't delay. Aly her
Allen Nursery Co,
Rochester, N.
Ay
i Sangin
STRATOR'S NOTICE ~LATTERS
A Ao Ain rluittration oh the estate of Hen.
of Centre Hall boro,
Da beet Ea peaks x to the un -
ed, he would Tq est all
thethesiner the « w
par ose haviog
—_———
vA RK
R. R. Divisio
hern Central Railway,
Time Table, in
PENNSYLVA
and Nort
flocd June 20, 18y7
TRAINEE LEAVE MORTAXKDOR,
¥ am Frain 20
Harrisburg, striving at
New fork 8.40 p. m., Ba
ington 147 p.m. Thr
phia, Baltimore sud Wee:
A. in~Train
ikwbarre, Harrivi
Week days fou
EABTWARD
lays for it
iviphin, 12.59
ore 1
comely
tury
Pe 1
Wash
oF i
Boi 1:
y ;
intermediate sia
Hazleton,
York
| Aesenger
Ore
wid
Baltimore,
coaches 1
Ww
A cedays for »
Hezieton, Pottsy]
slations
New York
ui
Aaeiphis
Jim and Ha
V evkduys
Liki
4
"yma l
Vi
nigtlon
$
RONE RAILROAD
Eastward
A M
ger Ag
F PENREYLVANIA
Tal
sey Rho
; Wm'PO'T
FHILA
Allantic City
NEW YORK
Vis Tameqgas.)
NEW YORK
Via Phils } i
Are 1m ip
Lee. a. m
Week Days 6 00 p. tm. Sunday.
10 10 a. m, Sunday.
Philadelphia Bleeping Cars sitached to Bast:
bound train from Williamsport 81 1130 pm. and
inatlil 30p m.
. GEPHART,
General Superintendent
LLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD,
To take effect May 25, 1586,
EASTWARD
248 | 4 ETATIONS
{AM IAT,
108 §
1028
6 16.12 58s
6 10112 bei 3
6 05412 40'S 3
“WE STWARD
1 | 14
A is AN | PH
16 50110 3014 2
ral re iv
Bellefonte
« Mortis
Whitmer...
Hunters...
«Fillmore...
Brialy..
§ sala Sie
3 Juhi3 2 85 8 1 ~Sootis Crossing.
JArumrine....
Struble....
D Ann.
State i ‘ol lege...
RERZEae
5 wiz ao oo
°
Morning trains from Moniandon, Willa
Leck Haven and Tyrone onnect with train No.
7 for Smite Coliege. A flornoon traios from
tandon, Lew insarg
Train No.
$Daily exou Bunday.
" F, H. THOMAS, Sapt.
JO FSIRABLE PROPERTY AT PUBLIC jCSALE.
wd, on which isa snail darn
hd j Sholoe fruit
ho do dig pm of
seres of
other
tain waier
Centre Hal