F. E. & G. P. BIBLE, Proprietors. RQUAL AND EXACT JUSTICE TO ALL MEN, OF WHATEVER STATE OR PERSUASION, RELIGIOUS OR POLITICAL. —Jeflerson TERMS : $1.50 per Annum, in Advan VOL 8. BELLEFONTE. PA.. THURSDAY. MAY 13. 1886. wa———— NO. 19 The Torms $1.50 per Annumin Advance FRANK E. BIBLE, Editor, 8. R. Peale of Clinton is a candidate . . for congress, and will announce him- self in Centre county. ——— A—— pass of Thermopylae sputters and burns in little Greece yet. -— Eigury-rive speeches are to be hurled head foremost at the new tariff bill. is a profitable business in Washington Speech writing for congressmen Me. Epwarp C. been in business fifty years, was ten- KxicaT, who has dered a banquet by the business of the city at the Urion League Clu men i } of Philadelphia. ele } 6 Sant 17 en is by husbane Tax dispensers of age will soon have a new for the fall campaign, whi preparing ) { Terms of on application. sale and price senatorial r a “dummy” candid who carries the will carry it “for keeps” and Paste that in your hs trade. of ammunition. Id have been a waste n if both had been xilled to fi would take it a re ght a duel and had our choice we la HenriRochefort. No nodertaxers in ours if you please, - Tur greatest enemy that the labor- ing man has, is the loafer and mer who advocate the cause of the mills of great cities; the loud mouthed on the street corners and in gin apostles of laziness, men who earn their bread by the industry | . y “ {in practice. of their wives, or flourish through the eredulity and gullibility of their fel low man. To this class belong many of the men who have been foremost in | the recent strikes, They are men of the Martin Iron stripe, and the sooner the labor organizations of the country get rid of the noisy biatherskites who have fastened lixe barnacles to their various orders, the better it will be for all, - Tur Knights of Labor should cut off one or two Kuoights of leisure who | are hanging on the ragged edges of the organization in this neighborhood. It is said that a certain gentleman in town, who is best koown by his cor- ner loafing habits and his hearty dread of labor, has been trying to in- duce the men at Mann's axe factory to strike. That fellow should be led out of any industrial establishment be enters, and should be booted by the men until he gets sense enough to get in out of the rain, . ————— — ‘ i Centre Bemocrat, - | district the most casual observer can | see the demoralized condition of the | | | perhaps local others incidental to sen Tue Clearfield Democrat says Hon, | | success, | : bum- labor | born tired,” | Looking over the political condi tions of the Twentieth congressional demo zratic party. There are many causes for this domoralization, some atorial and congressional troubles. In the coming campaign harmony is of { the utmost importance to democratic | the | : d liatri ive ti {soweth so also shall he reap; if he iri i i 2( 't who can give the party | THE spirit that animated Leonidas | © Ith district who can g part) and his three hundred Spartans at the | There are two men in entire and perfect harmony, make the election of the county tickets in each | county a surety and gave a democratic district Curtin and Gen | congressional from wreck, These men are Gov. W. H. Blair. retire as he promised, two years ago Gov. Curtin when he sent a certain gentleman in- to Lewisburg with that olive branch to Hon. A. H. D should retire because he is not regard. Gen. Blair ed as a democrat by the democrscy of in } hail CL, RG: DOLD —— Tue apostles of dyoamite who un- dertake to spread abroad their devilish doctrines in English-speaking coun | tries will have the largest liberty of speech, but not a grain of toleration | Free speech and fair play run yoked, but there is no fair | play in the fight of the dynamiter. He | lis a skulking miscreant there is no | govern themselves, — Record. i — A— | Ir the various rumors afloat concerning the Laces : which are | properties in the vicinity of Bellefonte were to be taken at a discount of fifty per cent. the margin would be large | enough for a boom in building lots and a corresponding increase in rent, s—— A —— Hox. Hexry L. Digrresnaou, of Lock Haven, has been appointed As sociate Judge of Clinton county, by Gov. Pattison to succced W, W, Rankin, who resigned to accept the Postmastership of that city. This is a well deserved appointment. i Tux Philadelphia Times regards Powderly's address as a dynamite bomb to the Anarchists, should | | to na engines and a trait building of fur |" ® ' and the sale of valaable ore | Lynch Law Advocated. Prrrspurc, May 9.—Rev. J. T Riley, pastor of the Fifth Avenue M, E. church, last evening delivered the last of his series of sermons on “Cap- ital He and Labor.” took several {texts for his sermon, the first being }ehold the husbandman of the earth;” James v: 7, * waiteth for the fruit second, Gallatians, soweth the wind he shall reap whirlwind,” ete; third, II Corinthians ix: 6, “If a man sow bountiful so shall he reap bountifully,” ete., and Eccle- slastics, vil: DO, he had heard he de Preliminarily he said who had paid Mr f one manufacturer was tired of ley nounce capital, and he ntontment s Contentment, CAreiessness in mn leaves of of Ameri facts #00 a Cf upon as hi story rds them without sad emotion ‘he haste to get rich has led people He the Haymaker homicide at Murraysville, ignore the laws cited two rival rporations met each armed mobs. They sowed of lawlessness, yet cry out when they reap the fruit He also referred to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, which : : + * | eried out becavse it could not get into | room for in countries where people | That at a point in Ohio where another road Philadelphia. same company wanted to cross its track placed four the track. The rival up with three great “mogul” engines and, he of cars came on was glad to say, pulled the four b. & | O. engines and cars out of the way. That corporation had men there to violate the law. The great corpora tions of the country violate without stint the laws of the country, and hire men to violate them. He referred to the effort of a company to get a pipe line under the West Penn road, and had 100 men hired to violate the law. Out West great capitalists were vio lating the law by grazing thousands of cattle on the the nation’s land and the territory of the poor Indians, When the President said that by vir. tue of the power vested in him they vi: 7, “What he | the | should move, if it required the whole It ax move, they moved under protest. {is a wonder that we are as quiet a nation as we are. The great dager heen When capital 1 {is from the top, as it has never | from the bottom of society. | the great Mogul turps off | cries out, yet it has lived, taught, | compelled men to violate the laws. | [it any wonder that 1 metimes | violate them in their ow ey Ei I / way He referred to the ndard Company and | Company. The er of the Houw the dnes Hie Xin i try | | p ration ¢ would see at! honest officers "eople t them.” be fg od, honest me ‘But we can’t ge that they could { there are plenty « yblained, who will execute the laws, even at the point of the bayonet, and if they had to lay down their own lives. The third remedy, a cultivated class to lawmakers { of voters; intelligent men stand back of the law, the the officers, and see that all are He was in favor of the and good, rich being { made obey the law, and of the wage worker keeping the law, ——— A A——. - Lixcowx, Neb,, May 9. Patrick Egan of America, has this evening forwarded the following cable to Mr. Parnell To Charles 8, Parnell, London: The statements of the Standard, Globe, Daily Telegraph and St. James’ Gazette charging our countrymen with instigating Social- istic riots in Chicago, are unfounded libels, Not a single Irishman was among the Anarchists, while most of those who fell defending public order where of our nationality. This latest evidence of malice on the part of the English press has greatly helped our cause among the American people, Parniox Foax, -— ~Subseribe for the Democrat, United States army to make them | President of the Irish National League Chicago Again Enjoying a Rasign of Peace. All resumed operations Cuicaco, May 10 the rail- WAYS Iu Lhe Cily this morning, and all ¥. Br CArrving offered witl lim Oh iretght out iL. Baltimore and WOrk this mormn nil Hour workin i WIE mm ning be fore they struck At the Chicago and Eastern Illinois U8 fre ight h ome « taken back The only mill in the Ie BLT ikers were lumber district P. Woehler & Here 80 men went to work at 8 to start up was that of Co. hours with 9 hours’ pay, Later in the morning all the sash, door and blind factoriesin the district elarted up. work. They will get 9 hours’ pay The planing mill start up, could not, as they are dependent on | the lumber yardo for material. for 8 hours’ work, men said they would DW AI Pirrenvnon, May 7.—Considerable ex. citement was occasioned in the lower wards of Allegheny and some parts of this city to-day by the distribution of anarchistio circulars in large numbers, The circulars were printed in German and English and urged the working men to revenge the killing of MoCor- mick’s men and to burn, pillage, wreck and destroy and to eat and drink and be merry, The circulars were distribu: ted so cleverly that no suspicion of thoir character was entertained until a thousand of the copies had been given out. In this pity thers are seven grou of anarchists with a total membership of not wore than 150, About 150 men went to | but | Washington Letter Wa B.C. May The attempt on the part of the work. HINGTON, mgmen Lo secure the adopt of option i | y i eight hour rule in Washington ha united in an almost complete prostrat business thi vel with the exception of niarests, A wee) | since genersl whieh person he the ave conceded the eight hours ving ngs under slion 10 ma igh hundreds the prosp et lex 0 exa engaged offensive partisa; d by Albany Republicans vnst Matthews, the o Nistriet. will f course delay, his | will continue Fred or some time 10 is lo take nfirmation of his suc lhe warm and pleasant weather His resignation eVect eker, had the effect of reminding Congress men that the season far advanced and that it will be necessary to expedite business in order to reach an adjourn ment before the summer has passed Two or three night sessions have been | held during the week, and work upon the appropriation bille is being pushed along as fst as possible The $800.000 mail subsidy bill b passed the Senate by a much larger ms jority than its friends had expected | The chances of securing its passage in | the House is considered extremely | doubtful, and the enemies of the scheme declare tha they will be as much sur prised if they are in the minority in the House of Representatives as its friends would have been had they fail- od to carry it through the Senate, Washington has long been the recog. nized matrimonial Meoea of America, and the prerent season has witnessed no decrease in the number of bridal irs who seek to seclude themselves in the sylvan shades of the National 18 Capitol. The numerous public build. ings, parks and grounds d rare ad- bow to toutats of this character, and ihe Nie House for sore unse- eountable reason, appears to be just at present particularly attractive to brides,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers