<£ht Centre §motrnt - m* •■ BKLLEFONTE, PA. THB CENTRE DEMOCRAT Ujwb llihsil svsry Ttiurs.lsj niurulnii, *t BellsfonU, Csutrs i-unatj,Pa. TERMS-CMLILTISDVSDC. )*0 If not paid In silvaur*. >s uu A LIVE PAPER—devotsil to tbs interests of thn wkols psopl*. , ~, , Payments mads within three month* will he con sidered in advance. No pnper will he discontinued until arrearsgeeere twiil except t option of publithem. Papere going out of the coiiuty mull he pid for In peceon procuring as teucash lubecrihere will he leut copy free of cliitrge. Our extensive circulation make* thla paper an un usually reliable and prolltablemedium for anreMlalng. We have the moat ample facilities fur JOII WORK sad era prepared to print all kinds of Books, Traite, Programmes,Posters,Commercial printing, Sc., In the liuest style and at the lowest possible rates. All advertisement* for aless term than three month -.meant, per line for the flr.t three Insertion., and ft cant* a Una for each additional Insertion. Special notice* one-half mors. Editorial notice* Ift cent* per Hun. L.exi Norlcss, In local columns, 10 cents per Ine A liberal discount Is made to persons advertising l y the quarter, half year, or year, an follow. 1 w Okl ■ rack occt-riiD. Ous inch (or U line, this type) |A S*jS|i Two Inches ' V 1 ~ Thrse Inches Uusrter column |r • Inches) >• - Half colnmktor lolnrhe.) !-'' • On*coliimn lor Joliichesi t-io.mi t Foreign advsrtlsemenli uui.t he paid for before In sertion, - it • ally r *intra-i* ..hen half yearly p tymentsln sdvsui-i- ail-i e required PoUTICAt Voticr ■ ents p-i llu. emcb Insertion Nothing inserted for lea- than 60 ceuts. Brains** NOTICE- in theedltorislcolumun, 16 cauls psr line,sack insertion. Robbing Tewkshiiry Pauper* now TnE IfAR9IIEH CHARGED Till RECORDS TO CONCEAL TnEIR IN FA lI V. BOETON, May 3,— At the Tewkubury examination to-day Lorenzo 8. Fair banks testified that he had examined the books in which Charles B. Marsh had recorded the money of patients and there are fifty-four erasures and altera tions, forty-seven of which were of figures in the money column. These books cover the period from 1868, but for the first ten years ot the present management no books can he found. The Governor then took the "history" book and read that an inmate named Allen had died in 1877 leaving $46. ,000,000 of fractional j paper currency issued during and since the war $13,380,512 are still outstanding, and redemption have almost ceased. By an act of Congress passed in 1H79, $8,373,934, which it was estimated had 1 been destroyed, were declared cancled, and entered as paid on the treasury t books. A more correct estimate of the c government gain from this source would 8 have been #13,000,000, or more than 30 ' per cent, of the amount issued. The government gain on the $346,000,000 * legal tender notes will doubtless be very large, though a much smaller percentage J than in the case of fractional currency, i where the wear and tear was very great. < Whether the government or the banks r will eventually receive the benefit aria j ing from lost and destroyed bank cur ( rency is a point not definitely deter , rained, but it seems reasonable that for the currency lost while in the possession , of the people themselves, through the . government, should receive what benefit shall finally accrue on acceunt of this destruction. I A Bark Crime Unveiled TWO or THE IDITMI RARK MIRDERERS R 1.1 AD OCII.TT AND ARE SIXTIJH ID. 1 DCM.I.V, May 2. Patrick Delaneyand J Thomas Ceffrey, two more of the men charged with participation in the mur der of Cavendish and Burke, in Pho-nix ' Park, on the evening of the 6th of May, ' were arraigned for trial this morning. ' They created a sensation in court by pleading guilty to the charge against them. They were both sentenced by | Judge O'Rrien to be hanged on the second day of June next. In pleading j guilty Delaney said he was forced to go to the park by the society to which he j belonged. lie saw the murders com- , mitted but took no part in them. He , went to tho park in Kavanagh's car. Kavanagh and Carey, he said, apeak the truth. The murders were commit- , ted by Joe Rrady and Timothy Kelly, i and by nobody else. Caffrey said he had to go to the park under pain of death, and that he did not know what was going to happen until twenty minutes before the murder was com mitted. The sentence of I>elaney will probe bly be commuted to a life long servi tude. John Hanlon, one of the prison ers awaiting trial, has finally been ac cepted as an approver. He will confirm the evidence of the two Careys against thirteen priaonera in Kilmainbam jail charged with conspiracy to murder. Mrs. Haines Awarded $1,92(1,M1*. NEW ORLEANS, May 3.— Judge Billings to-day rendered an opinion in the case of Myra Clark Gaines against the city of New Orleans, on an exception to the report of the master in chancery. The report of the master is confirmed, and interest is- added. Mrs. Gaines gets judgment against the city for $l,- 926,667, of which $666,707 is interest This suit was brought by Mrs. Gaines to reoover rents and profits resulting from the occupation of property known as the Blanc tract, which the city has not had in its possession sinoe March 10. 1837. City Attorney Buck says the oaee will doubtless be appealed to the .Su preme court of the United .States. General Now*. George Bancroft, though past eighty two, still ride* on horseback and sits more erect than many young mon. Jefferson Davis is growing oranges on his Mississippi plantation, and believe* tho condition* there more favorable than in Florida. Mr. Horatio Seymour, of New York will bo seventy throe year* old May 31. of his four Misters tho youngest i* the wife of ltoMCoe Conkling. Kx-Uadet Whittaker ha* asked tho Government for a certified copy of tho record in bin case. Tho Government should give car to his request. Titian l'eal, a brother of Rembrant Peal, and one of l,ong's expedition to the Rocky mountains is still living in Philadelphia at the age of eighty-five. "As John Shermam never let* go his hand* until hi* feet touch the floor," says tho Pittsburg Post, "he cannot be induced to permit his name to be used in the gubernatorial race in Ohio." Mrs. Louisa B. Stephens, widow of R. D, Stephens, has just been elected president of the First National Bank of Marion, lowa. This is said to bo the first election of the kind in this coun try. Tho Galveston Aiim is of the opinion that the tariff question can only be got ten out of politics by a final settlement on tho stable basis of equal and exact justice to all, special and invidiof to none. Fngland intimates that the time is coming when she will have to take a ; hand in the Panama caual scheme. At present, however, and for some years to come she is likely to find enough to fill her hands nearer homo. The lowa Democrat* will hold their convention on tho'ith of June. They hope by presenting a good ticket and by putting into tho campaign a reason- • able amount of honest work, to make a handsome showing when tho returns come in. Tho London News report* that a vol ume of Mr. Sankey's hymns lias fieen confiscated in Armenia by the Turkish authorities, who, in their ignorance of Knglish, came to the conclusion that "Hold the Fort" was a patriotic song for revolutionary U"e*. Tom Lee, the richest Chinaman in New York, has hod his commission a* deputy sheriff revoked, because fie had j established a regular system of pay j ments to liim fur immunity from prosecution by the keeper* of Chinese gambling places, "allee samoe Melican man." James Ridgway, a Brooklyn lobbyist, was expelled from the floor of the New York senate chamber, having found Ins way there without a psss. Senator Jacob* denounced him a* an agent of | British steamships seeking aid from the legislature; but even P>riti*h gold couldn't save him. The Charleston AVin and t'ouncr de- j nie* tho widely circulated statement j that Senator Hampton will resign be j fore this present term expire*. The seat will therefore not be vacant until 18 s '), | and it is not among the impossibilities that General Hampton will he a can didate for re-election. . —.i ■ Tiierk is "one dark stain" which the Baltimore regret* to have ; fonnd in the administration of President j Arthur, and that is "the aid and com ! fort which it lias given to the Virginia Repudiationist*." The American state* in positive terms that "Mahone is now engaged in deepening that blur by bull doxing the employe* of the Norfolk navy yard into supporting tbe ticket which he has put up in that district in opposition to tbe regular Republican candidate." It say* that, with the ap parent approval of the administration, "this champion of financial dishonor is instructing those employes that they will lose their place* if they do not work and vote for his puppet," The American, which, it must be borne in mind, is not a "Democratic calumniator," but an able and earnest Republican journal, conclude* that all tbia "ia an exceed ingly shameful piece of business, and if the administration doe* not rebuke it Mr. Arthur will surely have cause for regret when the story of his official action* is made up." It i* becoming more and more evident every day that Malioneism is too heavy a load for any administration or any party to carry. And yet, it ia said, in effect, by organs of the administration, that Mahone's is the only hope of Republican salvation in 1884. Washington Pott. The Labor Trouble*. A STRIKS or AX IMMBHSE MAOHITUDB AX- TtCI FATED. An Vntuccutfvd Meeting of Manufacturer* and Employe* in Iron—Other Jjabor Trouble*. Pittsbceo, Pa., May 3. —Juat fifteen minutes ware required this afternoon to decide that unlets the or the iron workers recede pres ent position a strike of mag- nitudo will be inaugurated on June I. Tho committer of manufacturers, rep resenting thirty million dollars, and a si mil a r committer) from tho Amalgama tel AsKociation, representing one hun dred thousand workmen, met this after noon shortly after three o'clock to ar range, if possible, u scale of wages for the ensuing year from the first of next month. Tho manufacturers briefly slat ed to the representatives ' of the Ami! gamated Association that owing to the present condition of trade a reduction of from ten to twenty per cent, on the present scale was absolutely necessary if the manufacturers wanted to run their mills without losing money, and if the iron workers would not accept such a reduction, the mills would close down at tho expiration of this month and remain closed until a better condi lion of affairs existed or the employes accepted their terms. Mr. .larrett, president of the Amalgamated Associa tion, replied that the (juestion of ac cepting a reduction had been voted on by all the lodges, and it had been unanimously decided to resist any at tempt of the manufacturers to cut wages. "Hhers did not coincide with the iron masters in regard to the condi tion of the trade, and did not consider that the taritl reductions and the pres' ent outlook would justily any reduction. They were willing to work at last year's wages but not for any less, finding j that both sides were firm and that a longer session would he productive of no good, the conference adjourned Ain* ! die. No more meetings will now tie held, I and unless ono or the other weaken bo- I fore the date set for the signing of the scale a strike will ho the result.— f/ar- \ riiburg Patriot. Hi X' TRi- motors says the Philadelphia ' Record for railway trains hare long oc. j copied tho attention of electricians, and ' several entirely successful inventions j have been taken out in this country and j in F.urope for driving trains by electrici- I ty. The f>est known patents are those of Kdison, Field and Siemens. Recently, I to prevent a conflict between the two J leading American patentee?, Kdison j and Field, negotiations were begun to j secure a consolidation of their interest*, ; and, according to the New York Times I this consolidation has just lieen accom- ; plisbed. use not only on street railways but even on the railroads now using steam. _ . Tiir May Atlantic continues the re- ! markahle excellence attained by tbe I previous numbers for this year. Those who have read Mr. Howells's delightful story. "Their Wedding .Journey," will j read with peculiar rest his charming | paper, "Niagara Revisited, Twelve Years after their Wedding .Journey." J'r. I Holmes contribute* a three page poem, and one of the beat he ha* ever written, entitled "The Flaneur, — Iloston Com i mon, December, 1882, during the Transit of Venus." The Second Act of Henry James's comedy, "I>ai*y Miller," will have a host of reader*. Mis* Sarah <>rne Jewett ha* written a very engag ing two-part story, "A bandies* Farmer,' ; of which the first part appears in this number. Charles Kgbert Craddock. whose torie of Fast Tenneasee life have attracted so much attention, con tributes another, entitled "The 'Harnt' that walks Chilbowee." "Colonialism in the I'nited States" ia an admirable historical paper by Henry Cabot l-odge; "The Floods in the Mississippi Valley," by Prof. X. 8. Hhaler, cannot fail to en list the immediate interest of many tbousanda who have a vivid recollection of tho ravage* these floods caused; "The Kain and the Fine Weather" is a capital out-door essay by Rdith M. Thomas. Other poems, essays, reviews of impor tant new books, and three bright, short essays in the Contributors' Club con clude a very interesting number of tbe Atlantic. llorohroK, Mirrtix A Co., Boston. •.•"In choosing allies, look to their power aa well as to their will to aid you." In choosing a remedy for bowel, liver and kidney diaeesea, try Kidney Wort, and you will never regret It. If you are subject to ague you must be sure to keep your liver, bowels and kidneys in good free condition. When eo, you will be safe from all attacks." <{ulck Railway Time. Rockford, 111., Jan. 1880. I'/iii is to certify that we have appointed j Frank I', /llair, sole a'jent for the. sale of our j V*tick 'Pram Railroad Watches in the town I of RcUefoule. lb* KFORI! Wati ii Com-AXV. BY HOSMKR P. inn, LAND. Kec. I Having most thoroughly tested the | Rock ford Train Watches for the , last three years, I offer them with tbe fullest confidence as the best made and most reliable time keeper for the money that can he obtained. Ifulhjuuarant. > every Watch for two years. FRANK J' IfLAUt, No. 2 Ifrocktrhojj Jlow. All other American Watches at reduced prices. Dioiiton, Jan. 27, 1882. The Rockford watch purchased Feb. 187'J, ha* performed better than any Watch I ever had. Have carried it every day and at no time has it been irregular, or in the least unreliable. I cheerfully recommend the Rockford Watch. HOKACK B. HORTON, atlhghton l-'urnace Co. Tai nton, Sept, 18, 188], The Rocklcird Watch runs very ac curately ; better than any watch I ever owned, and I have bad one that co#t $l5O. Can reoommond the Rockford Watch to everybody who wishes a fine timekeeper. S. P. HUBBARD, M. D. This is to certify that the Rockford Watch bought Feb. 22, l-87'.1, has run , very well the past year. Having set it only twice during that time, us only variation being three minutes. It has run very much better than I ever an ticipated. It was no' adjusted and only cost $5). K. P. BRYANT, at tbe Dean Street Flag Station. Mansfield, Mass. Feb. 21. 1880. 19 tf. . New Atl vert l*r incut*. *AKIH C POWDER Absolutely Pure. Tlii* t)?r virtw A fe%rt*| r f ferity M thr> . th# nlinikM klf.'t*. %r>d t !• w l'l in <■ trjj#MOD ! (ft* muJtltuA# t.f Ir ' Jslsmfhtt# f * f*M Il < ID 'UI • K TAL Ha ft • mo Y ( I KM BAKHKR SHOP, \ I i ;. - i.... **- aa Baali BKLtrroxTK. r It. A. Iter/,, I'ropr, RESER VED lOR TIIK USB or Bowl Valrntitu, General Insurance Agent I i />. tiarwn polWOtri llwwa, DKLI.KrOKTK, KA 7EIIMMI 24 I'EK IiAV A ij'MAd |,Jr*ry altaaha* .)] I>UKII HOUSE, ' * J: i Lt.KPOKTI, PA , Puifilllo and alngl* (• ] l tb. r . s . r-ral travllrig public and n,mrr.r. lal man ar.|iii<4 t/i thla flrtpClw ll'.tal, wh-r. thry il| fi b .| |, ,m 6Mnfort at rama'Tubl* rata*. I.thral radmilon to Juryman and othara attandia* COUIT. W. H TEI.I.KH, PROP', " I >I "ITS iiorsK. I e (OurU'-r Alleghany A lli.t.f.p ,|r.f. , HKLLKFONTK, PA., X .I*. Jjihmaii. 'J*ropr, Tlila popular haul, uudtr the manag-iii.at of tba praaant proprietor, la better fitted than <•( fof tba eub rtallirnant of „ueta. Hal'. raa.mabl. ma. . MILLIIKiM HOTEL, Ml I.MI P.I M. CKM ill; COL'MTV, PENN'A AV . K. M I.'SSKK, Proprietor. Tba Inwr, ~f Millb.lm It located In P-na'. VaJlat aloat lo mile. from fol urn Putlog, i o tba Lavit bar*, 'antra and hprara I n.k llailr.md, aitb aui rounding. tl.at tonka it a PLEASANT SUMMER RESORT. flood trout flatting In tl„ ,ailuUala elclMl, A rah ruujl,, atarr trala At tba Millbeltr. mudatiou. ||| ba found Hint-lata and tarina modar *'* Jtltia SCI. IkTh-lya New Brockerhoff House. OROCKERHOFF HOUSE, * ' AI.LEAI lIKNV-PT , UKLLKFONTE, PA C. 0. Mc JIILI.KN, Prt.p'r. d Sample Ih.om on hml h'U*,r, •#-rraa Rata to and ft ta all Tralna. Hp* lal ratea UJ iiLMm nt.fi jar or*. 4. j S'ENTIIAL HOTEL, Vj (Oppn.ita tlia.Hallr.ad ntatiou t MILEsBt Rtl, ( KJS7KE CO I'M T, PA A. A. KOIILUKCKKK, Proprietor. TllKflt till THAt 1 I.MI- on tb- railroad UtK>lel Jtmi A Bunt, I'rwi'UM, J l) 4-tf II 7lfl fl IT# I-Ii th i i .tat fr W; \L, II I rill t,m * *na an I tbi Ho*. t u right in thHr 1 At} < at fto th w ri jr. j*rlt fr ! Urt. Tt> * ill i*;m rm thmn Um tim— vrAiumty f:i;rr>*M .tuft! fiirriihtii-: In+ K# • r:* h< tbcii'-a Ual* U' tua.k v,xwy r|.Uly Yum **u dptoU jir l tin t ' *"r|, r.fonly your ftfatr* m full ir.f rmmUoo ar. 1 all thnt >• w-rt fr*. A4 dr*M A 0r> M PortUud Mh.l*. 44t ly r 18 A SURE CURE I for all diaaaaaa of tha Kidnaya end ) i LIVER , 1 It hu tpficitlc rtic on thk> moot importnct | orgnn, RAbliAg 11 to Umrw off torpidity and | " tnnmicma •tlnnlnUng Lb# bmmithj mmrrmUoa of ' 2 Um Bil. nnd by krwptnf Um bowrte In fro* ' V oondittoP. rflbrting I\M nyular Atyhnry. ' j Mulfirlo If yon nrrvnflbrinc ftom | ifldlaila. ) J mrm bibonn. djmpptir, or aoxMttpntad. Sidney -2 Wort will tmrmly rtlim nod qninkly our*. | 8 Xa Um ffpnnc to clntni UM lyucn. rvary ' j on* nhonXd tokr • thorougk ocmrmt of it. I U BQLPBY DBUOOIBTB. Prto#il t j I gKIN DISEASES CURED! Itjr Ir. fmlrr't Magi' OlfeUMil rtiro# PT I y magi' . Vim).)**. Blnfk tit fimlo. Bh>trh ari l Rm(ti rit fti thr Imr*. |viDf tkr k)B rlMtr, hmlUtt Mifl AIh 'l!th Ith iluh. halt lit"nnt. Ring* m, ks)|>rt Li|*. cM, '4tirl IWi arid lofu, dc, BK IN MffKAfß F. Ibali#. R*; , c lrrrland. 0.. tiffrr4 <>ply j-aitfr# fin for akiodlaraaaa arar dtaroaarad Pant by mail on rnraltft '4 ptirm. Firrr Ctm lIKNItT A (Vi, Pmpr'a 2 Taaay Rt, Naar York. F"f Blind, B'aadirig. lUhing or l Pilw I>r tfillkaai'a Iwntan OraTamt u a wt* enra. Frtta f • u, by malt. For aala by iHnggirti ni l t