VOL. LXXII. BARNETT A (COWARD Deno ced by His Own Men as a Skulker, CHS ERY SOLDER QUALITY. Opinions of Several of the Tenth Boys Who Saw Him at the Rear, But Never in Front of Battle, The Philadelphia Record correspond- ent visited Waynesburg and inter- viewed a number of the Tenth regi- ment boys, securing enough unfavor- able reports of “Long Distance Jim- my,” as Barnett is called, to fill many columns, Following are some ex- tracts: “Where the —— is Lieutenant Colo- dyke fame? Where in the rear?’ Hayes adds: had a reputation for ‘cold footedness.' which means cowardice, But for Pop Hawkins I can't guess what would have become of the Tenth. 1 never knew Barnett to do a brave act. The | men could have almost killed him for | his tyrannical tin soldier treatment of | them at C vite, when Hawkins had | EOone sick to the hospital, and the lian. tenant colonel persisted in tin soldier drilling of the few t wit or sick, after they had return- | ima campaigning and were waiting | nbark for home.” HIDES BEHIND A MOUND. One of the many battlefield dents that had caused this against Barnett is related by John E. Clark, "When we were crossing railroad bridge at Guiguinto,” he Says, “the Filipinos opened fire on us from | the woods, hundreds of yards ahead. | Our fellows on line of scouts up | there dropped to earth. Major Bierer of the Tenth, was the first offi saw at the front, bu would he be but ed to er incl feeling a ¥ of this the the cer i I nel Barnett?” exclaimed Colonel Haw- ! Kins, of the Tenth regiment, mopping his face, overheated by leading his men { in the thickest of the battle at Gui- | guinto, in tne Philippines. “In the rear, as always, behind a rice | dyke,” answered some of his men, | whose only rebuke from the com- | mander was a grim smile. But pres- | ently he shouted to William T. Hayes, i of Waynesburg, and others: — him; go find him and tell him | to come up!” i Members of Barnett's regiment tes- | tify to these and similar outbreaks of | the commander's justifiable anger on | occasions of the leutgnant colonel’s | alleged skulking when he wasneeded tc help Hawkins in forming lines or ad vancing on the Filipinos. “1 declare most positively,” a Tenth man, “Barnett did not come near the Gui- | guinto firing line until all was over, | and many others in different compan ie8 Know this as well and they say so, although generally, from vari- ous motiy policy, they do not go iato print present.” RICE DYKE JIMMY. won says Private Crouse, of Waynesburg, “that Pittsburg, upon our return ception, the Tenth's boys exclaimed in the streets: Hello! Here Rice | Dyke Jimmy. Look out for the long | range gun!” Crouse adds: “I've been Republican, but I wouldn't for | that skulker, Barnett, He lacks every soldierly quality. No Republican dier und here will vote for if I can help it. I see that some claim for him 200 of the 300 the regiment. I do not bel will vote for him, and will constrained by what they are deluded | into regarding as loyalty to the party, | just as if the welfare of the party de- pended upon a coward’s political fate ACCUSERS CORROBORATED. | Company K men, of Waynesburg, al- | though part of Barnett's battalion, | censure him as severely as Company 1, of Greensburg, who tell of their see- | ing him lying well protected in the “Buffalo wallow,” near Guiguinto rail road bridge, some hundreds of yards | in the rear of where Hawkins and Major Bierer were forming the firing line at the fight's beginning. pany I men say all the rest of the regi- | ment were ahead of them when they | passed “the crouching lieutenant colo- | nel.” ! Company K men's stories, particy- | lary that of William T. Hayes, who | was detailed to the hospital corps, fit | into the narrative of Private John E. Clark, of Washington, who describes his helping to carry wounded and a | dying man of the Tenth far to the rear, where he saw Barnett “lying low behind a mound while Hawkins and Bierer, the latter being commander of the other battalion, were in the hot- test of the conflict, which ended a quarter of an hour later without the lieutenant colonel’s appearance.” The ) following statement is made by one of | the soldiers, a prominent professional man, as to the opening of Guiguinto's battle, about 40 miles from Manila: BOYS DENOUNCED FOR SKULKING. “We were ambushed about 6 o'clock p. m., March 28 or 20. As we filed | across the railroad bridge the Fili- i pinos opened fire from the thicket some | i i says as I do, 8 Of at “No der,” Albers even In for the re- | Comes e a lifelong | v ote 801- | him men | in feve that 50 | arc Yoles they be # Com- | hundreds of yards ahead. Before reach- | ing the bridge we saw Barnett standing | and watching the opposite side, where the insurgents were supposed to be, | saw no more of Barnett after that dur- ing the fight, but I heard many of the boys denouncing his disappearance when Hawkins, who was at he front, with bullets whistiing around him, needed help in forming the line. The boys didn’t have much respect for Bar- nett after that day, which inspired the song about ‘long range, rice dyke Jim- my,’ although it was not the first en- gagement which they accused him of avoiding in the shelter of rice dykes far to the rear. “The boys told me Barnett was lying behind a rice dyke in the rear, with two privates, whom Company I men or others heard him order to look up and see where “the niggers were,” or what they were doing. In a previous en- gagement, at De La Loma Church, 1 think, when in a like comfortable po sition, the boys sald that he made a similar request for a reconnaisance in his behalf, and one feilow exclaim- ed: ‘Let the —— wu look up himself.’ After the Filipinos retreated we camp- ed there that night, but I did not ses Barnett until the next day, although the boys were joking over his reap- pearance jus. after the fight.” BARNETT A TIN SOLDIER. Private Albert T. Hayes corroborates the story of the Inquiries of a person on a tugboat beside the transport Senator, in San Francisco “Colonel Jim,” and . t very soon Co Hawkins was there form t THIS TIME IT WAS A “After carry ing off ed man of Company C y ng MOL? hie fi a 8 I rety Taylor, of this town, three days afterward. back to a sort of scoope place among the rice that moment was 40 or of the firing line. To the only about 15 or feet protected behind a mound Colonel Barnett and one or men. “Barnett had his tittle o but was not using He nothing but Iving Hav Bierer were at the thing The fight when Barnett lay beh which was five or six and perhaps four feet 1 out, dy Res, 50 ya 943 iwWo other fh it, low front was at ind hi > EDITORIAL NOTES day, fi Thousa; Next election re a d Tuesday, Admiral Dewey is =O0n Hoe MeL oni of General R. the Democratic eandidate for Gove or of Ohio, and has her rh home in Moe and will con- hls on the the better of the British tinue victorious until the Englis now wav, | be a crusher for the fil- superintend If competent and en- right. In tests at sea of the Marconi tern of wireless telegraphy, Record, conducted under the In Towa there are eleven women ling the office of county we say, EBV Ss by experts on the cruiser New York aod the battles Massachusetts, uninterrupted commu nication was maintained between t hey were highly satisfactory. Ounly ten soldiers, out of 800 in Bar. neti's regiment, the 10th, could be induced to sign a paper endorsing his | conduet of hiding when his regiment was in battle, That should settle Bar- vett’s doom with every friend of the flag, on Tuesday. cs A MY tls BRITISH SURRENDER T0 BOERS, Two thousand British troops, with eight mountain guns, after desperatels defending themselves, have been cap- The British the Boer and 1000 men. This column losses not known, but loss is between 900 was on Sunday dis smith to protect his left flank in the battle of Monday. They took position on a hill, at some distance from Ladysmith, and were surrounded by the Boers. A severe battle ensued, by which both sides lost heavily. Joubert had set the trap, and the British were lured into it, surrounded and capitulated. ————— ———— Winter Exenrsion Tickets. On November 1 the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will place on sale at ita principal ticket offices excursion tickets to all prominent Winter resorts in New Jersey, Virginia, North and Bouth Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Cuba. The ticketa will be sold at the usual low rates, with the usual liberal return limits, The magnificent facilities of the Pennsylvania Railroad, with its many connections and through train service, make this the favorite line for winter travel. An illustrated book, descriptive of Winter resorts, and giving routes of travel and rates for tickets, will be fur. nished free after November 1 on appli- eation to ticket agesita, Married. Sunday evening, Oct, 22, at the home of the brides’ sister, Mrs. Seott Decker, Mr. Franklin Hirman, of Mingoville, and Miss Nancy Vonada, of ing Mills, were united in matriage by Rev, J Rearick. FREEMEN, TO THE POLLS! 7th, is election day { Every Freeman should go to the polls, Tuesday next, Duty to the Natjon, duty to the State, {and duty to the County, demands that every taxpayer, by his vote, shall ex- wess his approval, or disapproval, LJ men and measures that affect every in- { habitant of the land, profitably for the j few | { majority. | The Truts are impoverishing the | people as all are already beginning to i feel, These gigantic sharks are freez- ling out all the smaller industrial es- | monopolize by centering all in their own robbing, greedy grasp, to make of its members millionaires and multi millionaires, The Trusts are, as all | know already feel, putting up all necessaries to enormously by the is the sole cause of the and pri oH of Re {high figures. Legislation | Trusts, it has given them the mantle of protection, Voter, if you approve of these Trusts then vote the Republican ticket. If vote the Democratic ticket, party pledged to crush | Freeman, it being the Trusts. Our State, | aware, has been shamefully ithe Quay | been used for private | The Hew all are robbed by Its funds stock has offices with for many years, as machive, have specula- created bigh | ries, and almost doubled the salaries of the old offices, The | unlawfully deprived of a million dol- by There many similar flagrant wrongs, tions, machine a horde of “nin school fund was i lars Governor Stone, are If the citizens approve this record of the machine, then should vote uny Ww hich h jarnett, they ticket head tt machine 1 on Tuesday the name of whose regiment, the 10, of hiding in rice when battles were as for its ROCQ- wes him cowardice, dykes, fought near | Manila ticket the { machine had placed the name of Ad- for superior judge, who Known at the {ime to have been at the And on the same | ams, wae { head of several swindling companies, i The voter who does not approve oi { the above iniquities, will vote for the Democratic ticket at the head of which tands the Creasy, and | pledged The taxpayers of Centre county have honored name of * Farmer" , With every bpame on | it, favor Reform. : ! . : { been rewarded in having good house | keeping from Demoeratic commission- le r« in the past, resulting in the wiping i ld and burdensome debt of PF £40,000, and standing aside the build- {ing of a new court-house which would { have hung a new necklace of indebt- of $100,000 farmers and Under Democratic { siondrs the millage wit the o i i { ! Le upon commis the wh commissioners have raised lo ol hi rs. was reduced ; Republic it, besides the double rate put upon dogs If voters approve of the way eratic officials have conducted the af- fairs, they will Vote for that clean-cut, wholesoul- ed, generous Cyrus Brungart, for sher- if ; treasurer ; A. G. Archey, for register ; Vote for J. C. Harper, who has giv- en years of proof of his competency, for recorder ; Vote for those true, blemished gentlemen, Daniel missioners-this the important vote ; Vote for John H. Beek and W, Tibbens, for auditors, who will prov watchdogs over the public accounts ; Vote for Dr. W. U. Irwin, man held in highest esteem by all who | know him, for coroner, This is the REPORTER'S last appeal, fairly and honestly setting out the Take your choice, Election, next Tuesday, 7th. a — A Fair Crop. The farmers in our valley of recent years have given more attention to raising potatoes than formerly, which they find more profitable than wheat at the present prices. In the market the tubers bring 30 cents a bushel, and the crop has been a fair one this vear, Our townsiman D. J. Meyer put out about six acres from which he harvest. ed over seven hundred bushels. There are other farmers who have had a greater yield than this one. Thous- ands of bushels of the product are an- nually shipped out of our valley and ralsing potatoes is becoming no little source of revenue. Applicants for the Charge, A number of applications have been made by ministers to the Centre Hall Reformed charge for the position made vacant by the resignation and removal of Rev. Eisenberg. The con- gregations will make a selection in due WASHINGTON LETTER. THE CRITICISM OF OTIS ALARMS | McKINLEY. | Generals te he Sent to the Philippines to | have loudependent Commands. Sent. | ment Increasing Against the Un- Just War, 30.—That Mr. {, WasHINGTON, Oct, { somew hat McKinley {alarmed by the harsh criticism of Gen, has become { Otis, by the press of the country, gardless of party, shown by the] semi-official announcement that Gens, in Lawton and MacArthur, who are said | to be slated for the vacancies in the regular army, made by the retirement of Brigadier General Shafter the death of General Henry, w buried today lHington, with military practically mands in and Guy at ’ Brigadier ho was honors, are have independent the coming I'h the island of Luzon. are at is to say, CArTY out general plan Otis, but are to be left independent as to the their mands while in the field, think get the campaign as arranged by Gen, movernients of respective and free {do as they may best, having to first consent of Gen. Otis The administer effort towards © bending the against its Philippine #ailon is wnteractiog ad verse sentim policy, which it realizes is The Philippin ston toda met in Washing increasing. ¢ commission, which v, has been or. | i i i i the put nis ration #0 t before the Members of the Adi De sSchurman and Prof favor of adn policy, it ean be put public at once, { Commission Col. Denby, Worcester, present Prof. The held with closed doors. niral Wev, meetings are Gen. Fitz Lee is in Washington, on His in the keeps his mouth closed as to the ditions in Cuba, absence, position army Gon awful mix- up on the island, and his manner indi privately that there is an interest to cates that he could tell some ing thiogs if he were at liberty =i, John again, do | talking evi fost Sherman has been made it dent that the old man had neither facul- and what he said interest in Ohio politics nor the up the Sherman or ® ty of properly sizin situation in that state, Mr. i i i i : 3 which be said: “It cannot be sustain. ed io morals and is to the American declaiation and the who in of teachings that Inde. of the! instru- pendence, brave men signed ment.’ and of t tion to a continuation of Hanna's lead- ership. Mr. Sherman didn’t say that he would be glad of Republican defeat Ohio, or that resentment of his own t by the Haonna-McKinley was responsible for the attitude of any of the Republican voters, but there are some things that are fully | understood without being said. At the last meeting of the Washing ton branch of the Aunti-imperialist | League, Gen. Wm. Birney, a life-long Republican said: “Imperialism re spects no law. To it the Congress is nothing, the Commaunder-in-Chief of | the army everything. It disre- gards copstitut on and statutes and | transfers all power to Executive. The writ of habeas corpus does not exist in the imperial colonies. The prisons of Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippines | are vocal with the cries of men who | cannot be heard beyond the walls, Ime except the | caprice of the Emperor. It has the sword, it will seize the purse. Nay, it has already defled the limitations im- posed by Congress; it has expended two hundred millions where only eighty were appropriated. It has, without authority of law, transported immense bodies of troops to the other side of the globe, It has built up an immense patronage in its control of military appointments, It has used this patronage for political purposes, Its influence is used to discredit all the fundamental doctfines of American in- stitutions.” Another Republican Capt. O'Farrell—said: “We hear a good deal about the trade with the Philippines, It takes from a thous and to thirteen hundred dollars a day to coal each transport on the Paeifie ocean between San Francisco and Ma- nila, This coal is imported from Car diff, Wales, The beef supplied to our troops and the potatoes and vegeta bles come from Australia. Many of the uniforms worn by our officers and men, in the Philippines, are now man ufactured in Hong Kong, while the cost of our army and navy amounts to $650,000 a day. And the appropria- tion made by Congress for twelve months has been expended or wasted in five months. What a prospect for the American tax payer and working ‘man I" Inquisitive persons are asking if Mr, in treater telique MeKinley’s coachman is considered to The Mr. reason, vice? that Me- having for some tired had him given a place in the Pension Bureau and then hired a new Both men Men who have passed the civil with high per- but Mr. McKinley's coanchman can geu on the pay roll without any trouble, be in the classified se rea- son for the question is Kinley, ane are ne service examination, The call of Boss Hanna's Committee in Washington, i= panning out big. { failure of the administration and | the eivil service Commission to any eflective against the frightened move { ployes contributing, clerks and they are putting up there was law against political assessment of gov- 10g. i —- oo — SLOW WORK INTHE PHILIPPINES, A striking and definite estimate of the territory held the ir by Wi g HAYS Iphia Le can be said to be effectively by us in the Luzon we may say alarmingly dyer. is discouragiogly, small, when | compared with the area of the entire group, or even with that of Luzon, The ent agrees substantially in Tribune's correspond. his review of existing conditions with an Ww hose munication was published in the Ledg- Aug officer's vey of the situation, all ust last. This covering the of the but our “nothing what that posses. not by provinces, islands or miles, but by This letter was published on August t i semicircle, whose radius extended only three and a half miles from Jloila. officer's iviy neres,”’ points; on Cebu, He reported that on many of the in the actual territory whatever, and the officer was of the opinion that numerous outlying islands He estimated that i i i i “fairly firm foothold” in the region. — ip Marriage Licenses, The following marriage were issued during the past week: Joe A. Beek, of Wilkinsburg, Gracia Maude Houser, of Bellefonte, Epley R. Gentzel and Vangie Royer. of Zion, Harry Foree, of Pine Glenn, Mary Estella Weaver, of Moshannon. Andrew J. Kerns, of Benner ant Gap. Wm. W. Sexon, of Warrioramark, and May Bennett, of SBtormstown. Wm. Harris Miller, of Mt. Pleasant, and Edith Holter, of Bellefonte, Geo. A. Rouse, of New Bloomfield, and Alice Bergstresser, of Hublers. | burg. John A. Young, of Bellefonte, and Bertha Spicer, of Boggs twp. James F. Stott and Kate Williams, of Philipsburg. Thomas F. Wolf and Rosle Gertrude Hockman, of Miles twp. OF Interest to Pensioners, The pension department has adopt- ed a new rule requiring pensioners to to take their quarter's vouchers to a magistrate every quarter, The num- ber of the certificate is no longer in- serted on the voucher at the pension office, but must be written in by the magistrate when the voucher is exe cuted. This, therefore, makes it abso. lutely necessary for pensioners to take their certificate. Died at Salons, Mrs. Sager, an aged lady, died at the residence of William Nestlerode, Ralo- na, last week, Her remains were tak- en to Greepburr for interment, A MASAI, The Best Plaster, A plece of flannel dampened with Chamberlain's Pain Balm and bound on to the affected parts is superior to any plaster, When troubled with a pain in the chest or side, or & lame back, give ita trial. You are certain to be more than pleased «ith the prompt relief which it affords. Pain Balm is also a certain cure for rheuma- tism., Forsale by J. H. Ross, Linden Hall; 8. M, Swartz, Tusseyville; F. A. Carson, Potters Mills, H. F. Rossman, Spring Mills, i oy he Repro of NO. 43 LOCAL ITEM=, Cullings of More than Ordinary Interest from Everywhere, When Esch May Do as ile Likes, When that good time arrives That each of us who strives Along unpleasant ways today Muay choose from all the rest The task that suits him best, What will your fancy turn to, pray ? You who are weary now What time you guide the plow, Will you put on a helmet then ? Or will you cruise the seas, Or will you seek to please I'he world with chisel, brush or pen ? And you who wield the pick, And you who build with brick And you who toll with awland thread, What ways will you pursue, What great things you will do, | What high profession will you wed ? I know hefore vou say : When that delightful day { For which we sigh, for whic i Arrives, at last, we'll all Let pens and trowels fall, And never more do anything Me ¥ h we sing, E Ki Vote for Bpeer, 7 i i i 1 i on i | Election, next Tuesday, Nov. 7. Francis Reed, a pension, $17. Philipsburg, granted Coburn market : Wheat, corn D. H. of Aaronsburg, up with rheumatism. Oats G20 . 350, Rote, is laid seni. Arpney is still suffering from { his shoulder injured by a fall, Have not yet learned of any one hav- ing a brag yield of potatoes, Our esteemed townsman, A. B. Ker- is still confined to the house, Brush valley did | not get corn enough for their own use. i lin, Many farmers in The late rains did not help the creeks but cisterns obtained a fair supply of waler, er ii) A bear, weighing pounds, was in Roopdale, in Haines, by Jesse Soyder i shot of Hartl ill, James Musser, elton, for some | months seriously has improved i somew hat, From many quarters we hear com- | plaints that winter apples are not keeping well cooler weath- , much veeded with set in since Sunday | by the grain fields Quite a wet spell er, Charles Arney has a nice lot of pheasants already—Sober must look after his laurels, i “done up’ The business world recognizes that | no man who drinks is as good as he wotlld be if he never drank. A hindquarter of good beef taken at this office on subscription, December tor January. Report soon. Mrs. R. O. Diehl, of Rebersburg, is ill of typhoid fever and Mrs. C. Mallo- | ry is under an attack of grip. A 15 pound wild turkey was shot on | Saturday by a boy, Curtis Weaver, in the mountains below Rebersburg, { Millheim, with its bad water from | wells, keeps agitating the erection of | water works, #0 much needed there. Weather cooler since Saturday night | when the lovely, Iodian summer-like, | weather of the previous two weeks, | quit business, Rev. Rearick’s appointments, San- i day, Nov. Centre Hall, ¢ m mun- 10 a. m.; St. Johns church, 7 p. m. Cieorges valley, 2 p. m. 5: | lon, How totell a mad dog : The mouths { of dogs suffering from rabies are parch- ed and dry. Hydrophobia is not the only disease that makes dogs vicious. A farmer from the lower end thinks there will be an early slaughtering of | hogs on account of the shortage of the | corn crop, and that brag weight pork- ers will be scarce. Samuel Rowe recently purchased an outfit of pipe tools for doing all kinds of plumbing work. Samuel isa good all round workman and knows how to handle such implements. A quarter inch of rain on Saturday night, put out the mountain fires in adjoining counties and cleared the sky of the cloud of smoke that hung over our county all last week. "Squire Carlin, of Rebersburg, is im- proving his residence with a new coat of paint. That town has had some fine improvements witkin the past few years, in churches and An exchange, says some farmers cut their corn by machinery this year and are pleased with the experiment. Corn is now planted, cultivated, harvested and husked by machinery. (Still, it is eaten in the old way ; no improve } ment there.) One of the papers of notable interest in MeClure's Magszine for November, is one by the Hon. George 8. Bout. well, who tells, for the first time, the story of his own share, ns the then Sec- retary of the Treasury, in the great Black Friday panie, in September; 1869, when by Secretary own official action Jay Gould James Fisk were defeated. ina