» xX <4, deliberate scheme to do so. * v * 3 F. i. & G. P. BIBLE, Propric tors. UEQUAL AND EXACT JUBTION TO ALL MEN, OF WHATEVER STATE OR PERNAUASION, RELIGIOUS OR POLITICAL J in Advad VOL 8. BELLEFONTE. PA..,THU ISDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1886. ‘Lormsil.50 per Annumin Advano® vi e . FRANK E. BIBLE, Editor, A MERRY Christmas to all, but don't forget the poor printer. tha Tag Harsisburg Patriot is again in hands of B. F. Meyer, with Mr, Nead, of Harrisburg, as managing editor. - Tue protection Democrats want “free whiskey” and “free tobacco” in order to keep the tariff on sugar, | wool and woolen goods. T- J. Duskre, Esq. Deputy col- | lector of this district has tendered his resignation to Collector Staples to | date from the first day of January, 1887. He will be succeeded by W. C. Heinle, Esq. Jr - - At the South Pennsylvania meet- ing iu New York Tuesday, it was de- cided to go ahead and build the road, and that active operations will be be gun at once, 80 that the road will probably be finished in & year. so W A—— Now for a tariff bill “az iz a tariff | bill” one of those old ward bilis that strike out sholder, a sort of Bill McMullen with & Sam Randall enacting clause, from Oh! San, give us a bill that will pass, - AccorpING to the constitution of | this commonwealth Mr. Cooper is iv eligible to the position of Secretary. | This being the case it would not be | good policy for Gov. Beaver to start his administration with a violation o the organ is law of the State, [4 - Prestpest RoBerTs of the Penva. | Railroad is «determined to brake up | the free pass system on his roads. The reform should begin with the | President of the road and run dowa | through all the different grades of | officers, then strike the politcians, Judges of the Ccarts, Members of the Legislature snd Editors of Newspa- | pers. Make everybody pay for bie rides and reduce the fare to one and a half cents per mile. It would pay the Penna. Company to reform in this | P way. Of course editors would travel | just as muck because the railroad company woukl pay cash for its ad- | vertising and the editor would be able to travel. Ir jurore are to be drawn on poli tical lines then the filling of the jury wheel for 1887 has been a decided success from a Republican stand point. The Democrats have a ma- jority of eight hundred in the county and on the basis of numerical strength would have a majority of jurors. But such is not the case, The Republicans are largely in ex- cess of the Democrats. There is no possible way in which the wheel could give as many Republicans to the town. ships of Miles, Penn, Haines, and Gregg, as Democrats except by a It looks very much as though some one was runping the jury wheel with an eye single to Republican juries for next year. Er REE, Tue Republican party scored its third victory over its Democratic op- ponent on Saterday, in the refusal info oy bn of he House 'n com mitieo of the whole for the consideration th Morrison bill. Of course the Re. publican papers consider the defeat of Mr. Morrison a rebuke to Mr, Cleveland apd his administration be. cause the policy as outlined by President Cleveland and Secretary Manning looks to a reduction of the surplus through an adjustment of the tariff on A fair basis, It was a de. feat for the administration and the Democratic party. It was a square slap in the face of the President, but f Ol our Republican friends can not claim ,n the credit, Twenty six Democrats contributed to» the “rebuke” Mr, Randall and his followers are enti a to as much glory ss their Repub can allies, Let justice be done, time Fourth | the | bill | Collector. erally and in its strictures, assailed | | | W, CO. Heinle has been appointed | wip), Judge Furst. The DEMOCRAT Deputy Collector, vice Thos. J. Duv- | {4 neither the apologist or excuser of Tho appoiutmeunt dates No ppointment made by Governor Cur: | kel resigned. from the first of January, 1887. {and in publishing “comm unications” a tin in this county has given such gen- | to { of his constituents as the appointment of Mr. Heinle. | rerving Democrat Yin the county than | he and none better qualified for the | position. Since his boyhood he bas labored earnestly for the success of the | great party of which he is an honored eral satisfaction the rank and file of its This is the rule with all {endorse the sentiment cor- respondents, i " . i I'here is no more de- | | : ” | porary the Watchman, There | times when the courts are proper sub | not the prerogative of the pressto cou tatantly find fault with the courts and { member. The position which ho holds ¥ io the party, at thebar and in weiety, | | be has carved out of the rock of neces. [sity by the hardest of blows knocks. | respect he has reason to be proud of his It is but a few vears since our bitterly judge. | . and | neighbor was assailing a A eclf made man in every | deliberately missrepresenting his maker. Guvernor Curtin has | actions. | done himself an honor and his friends | present court there is perhaps as justice by this appointment, For | much personal feeling as there was iu the [0 neither case | eight years Mr. Heinle has battled for Mr. ‘Curtin without the { thought of personal favor or prefer In that like others who are now under the bau of | assault on a Democratic Judge hopa or | was It { ends of justice, but to gratify the fee! | ment. period many ings of tne Wate! man editor, — a — \ Valuable Suit of Clothes | his personal disfavor, he has spent | Mr, Hugh 1. is his time and money and made n say | It | recognition of the unselfish services of | | Mr. Heinle in Mr. f the Democratic party litical : ; | Inman, of $ wemtes EV poittical enem'es, 1s a deserved 816.000 suit of } $y im only $2,- Ga, i clothes, wearing The suit cost | the interests of Ol } ~~ n { Curtin and rising. Le £16 000 and is stil If things of the county, | v..O4 AN ’ go on as gow it will be worth $100, 000 before he has 10 patzh iL, As and salt judiciously mixed, with the We can say to Mr. Staples that he | will f have no cause of complaint the suit is a comw . : np against Mr. Heinle as he is in every | way thoroughly competent and quali We congratu Heinle, Mr. Curtin | | and the Democratic party on the ap- It the It was richly It is a finger board 5. 3 ordinary cutaway coat, it may interest fied for the position. : ; some one Lo know how it came to « Iate our friend him so much. During the last bo Mr. Ioman paid 82 500 cash for sume pointment. gives heartiest 4 i } . } i . i ; | sl it he Shethe imp em satisfaction. merited, CX 10 the improv ent company. After the drop in that Mr, an, in disgust pointing in the right direction projected city which followed ® Seney's failure, Mr. lus | traded his holdings to Mr. Bob Riel ——A—— PEruAPS were one to go down to bed rock Democratic House for the resson why the | ards for a suit of clothes, has pot fulfilled its The stock which Mr. Richards pledges made to the people four years | ago, of a reform in the tariff laws and $16,000 and is increasing at the rate a reduction of surplus revenues, it | of $1,000 a week. The history of Shef id Charles Collier invested $2.000 in Sheffield stock go, He would be found that the failure was | § is a strange ope. Alderman because of the struggle of two men for the Mr. Morrisen are dividing po litical leadership. three a Mr. Randall Democratic party of the Nation into evening for $9,000. Back of Mr. | $100,000 cash Democratic | Sheffield. of 3,000 acres of land and years | and the two very unequal parts, Morrison stands the pledge made at Chicago, the Demo | cratic administration, and one hun’ has been invested in Improve - ments, The first three day's sale of dred and forty-two Democratic Con- | land lots brought $283,000 or three gressmen, representing every Demo- | times the origional capital. Some of cratic State in the Union and many of | this has ben invested in public im the Republican States. Back of Mr, | provements. The stock which cost Randall is the Philadelphia Times and | twenty cents is now selling at $1.90. twenty-five Democratic(?) Congress- | The 3,000 acres with the improve men, fourteen of whom are from the | ments that have been made from the Republican States of Pennsylvania | original $100,000 and the land sales Ohio and Illinois, and some of whom | are valued at $1,900,000, or morte doubtless owe their election to Repub- | than $6,000 per acre. The population lican tariff votes. The preponder | of Sheffield is about 500 souls. ance of weight influence and a sacred | What gives it this enormour pros. pledge to the people are with Mr, | pective value? Morrison, and the leadership which| Two iron farnaces building and six Mr. Randall is trying to wrest from | more under contract, him, was forced on him because be| Two iron furnaces made Anniston a | was in harmony with his party on the | place of 6,000 people. Ten iron for- tariff. Mr. Randall can alw ays com- | neces made Birmingham a city of 20+ mand the support of Republicans to | 000 people, defeat a Democratic measure, but he : cannot command a single vole vutside | his twenty-five satellites for 8 measure New York. Dec. 20The lasi of hia own, not a single Hepuhlican | ack 10 clo McQuade {will vote jor Mr. Randalls bill should | he offer ome. In the Fiftieth Congress | Mr. Morrison will not appear. If | Randall were absent, say on a foreign mission, the party might redeem fits pledges and rest from the struggles of these leaders, A —— AOI 4 53555 vs . ‘Our neighbor, the DEMOCRAT comes out this week as the excuser of Jndge Furst for his partisan action in the O Connor ease mentioned in the Watchman of two weeks ago, ete, ete, w= Watchman, The article complained of by oor esteemed contemporary was a “com- | munication” for which the editor of | Democrat RESTS ho responsibility, supreme court which meets ext month, The Watchman editor was not satisfied | This will have vo effect to prevent | with the punishment meted out to | the prisoner from being sent to Sing | those engaged in the Blaine riot and Sing. A] A—— McQuade Bei tenced ror a seemed have more inierest fur the public thao the scenes of the trial. This morning Chambers street and the approaches to the brown stone court house of the general sessions were thronged with hundreds of people, After the read- ing of several affidavits the recorder refused to graii prisoner a new trial, sod McQuade was arraigned for sentence. After briefly reviewing the case, Recorder Smythe sentenced the defendant, ex-Alderman Arthur J. McQuade, to undergo seven years im- risonment and pay a fine of $5,000, cQuade’s counsel late this afternoon served District Attorney Martine with a notice of appeal in his case, to be taken to the general term of the | W. 0. Heinle Appointed Deputy | proceeded to pitch into the court gen. The Centre Bemocrat, : . ‘ | the Democratic associate judges along | | the court in anything which is wrong, | ) Bed ; | this fore oon into a full-fledged panic Lin some of and the { |it mssumes no responsibility for the | » . . | correctness of facts stated nor does it | | panicky feeling to a good many better papers including our brilliant contem- | are | particularly when there is some per- | sonal feeling between sn editor sod a | { alized by the Democratic Judge in this county, and | [n its coutroversy with the | to farther the | Atlantas | 500 cash, but it now stands him in for | in | picked up for this trifle 1s now worth | could have closed it out yesterday | As matters stand | Ty * | I'bis includes the purchase | Wall Street. Panic. New Dec. reigned supreme in the stock exchange York, Lo lay of The semi-panicky condition yesterday evening was developed the cheap sto KK, great decline of these exteuded the { properties, though the decline in these was comparatively small. There is no question but that the | . brought about partly through design {. fo tat §a gu 3 ww | jects of newspapers criticism, but it is | A few | known to 11.1 ni taliat : well-known Capitalists Are have called Hu | and this forenoon money loaned up to | twelve o'clock fifteen and eighteen per cent, per anuum. The sterling exchange market was entirely demor- on tha money qualalions for i The New sometning pressure marker, and regular : sterling were impossible. Eoglaud elect 4) also had ] , y to do with the panic, Ih Bost parties who have heretofore controlled | property, finding that they bad the i been sted, immediately to K rout Pan {throw tl overboard, and weir sto | New York parti a who now contr the road, knowing this. determine | be ahead doubtedly mean ack The i acing « { 18 Hu ssibie to CATV }.q \ | thal stock, and endeavored in vain wo do at once what they have been doing { graduslly for several weeks past, viz. PP ri L » OCKS Must iach al IL. Mark & Co., was 1! lest ™ Lhe DroKers st | when the failure of | was announced there Al | mated feeling subsided somewhat, dnd ie wi excell wit 2 o'clock, the an ment the market began to assume a normal | condition. I'he situation at | was much firmer than could | bes il expected at the : ’ ’ ’ [ | excitemer of pr m Miiise Of & 1 Irrow, A prominent broker ssid this eve he the i ning that t hreak in morning was conservative policy banks for the past week or more in re gard toloans. They have been charg ing 6 to 7 per cent. on specialties, su stocks at these figurs, called on the | holders for more margins. : | breught out large selling orders, 2 1d | | | resu ling to-day in almost a panic. The present break may therefore be credited to tight money, and not to any ioherent weakness in the stock itself. The reserve being down to such a low figure as $4,000, 000 was another unfavorable of the situation, market feature - can— — . Banded For Rapme and Murder CaarvestoN, N. C., December 15. ~The correspondent who has been | investigating the death of the boy John Lee Good, in York county re cently, reports an alarming state of {affairs in that county, where he says an organization exists among the | colored people which cootemplates | marder iu the event of suy meniber lof ¢ ow it | acous rime, are er arrest. The inquest on the body of the murdered boy brought out all these facts. One of the negros turned state's evidence and another admitted that he killed a man who was murdered in that county 18 months ago. Several of the colored witnesses at the inquest swore dis tinctly that they had a club or clan in the county for the purpose of steal- ing cotton, provisions, whisky, ete. Members were to steal whatever they wanted, and if detected were sworn to kill the person who detected them, One ofthe witnesses has given a detailed account of the murder of the poor boy Good, and also the names of the accomplices in crime. Talk of a gen- eral lynch has abated, but the indig- nation is intense, 15. —Confasion | flurry was |, large loans, | that brokers, being unwilling to carry | Tis | | as prices fell more stock came out, | Twenty-six nogros | Washington Letter The Pres rheumatism an dent hs vered from } ha ered his old time vigor lie rece pions 3] Were use during the The produce ion nf H company, haugh's Opera eG Barrett and h past week was a grand dramatic as We WNC al BUOCHRS The play was ¢ Haly mounted, and the leadir ‘8 of the COMPANY HwoqU $4 ives with credit Seldom assembled at a single gathering a mo re distinguithed audience than that whish greeted Mr, Parrett upon the ris { {the ng o curtain on Wednesday evening. One of the ‘ower box~s Mrs, occupied the President and Cleveland ac mipanied by Mrs, Postmaster (General Col. directly opposite Vilas, Mise Vilas, and snd Mes bamont, The aa Oecuy ‘hiel Justice ites, while the faces of General Sherman of the , General! Sheridan and several prominent Cabine or: and members of 1ODs Were consg icuous More than two thn \ 1 And persons were present, and the su lience was made up of the leading soc ula of The nat) of the ladis sing in ful nal Capital, levening dress Inst he railroad ong A Washing f the art be gress durit 4] npr 12 Das been well 1g the il wee ' at K, & attendee i ia that the packages are not VAAN Aan interest to th is somelhing of a ery. Fow } ' ’» the perchasers have the irage to open ft! * Tin N } i ] IL JACKagos belore leay ng the sale bul awa! an opporiunity to retire to some quiet corner in order to discover { what Dame Fortune has brought to Ibe bidding seldom exceeds dollar upon a package. | them, A more miscel- Ianeous and varied a collection of arti- | cles could hardly be together, The work of demolishing the build- g® occupying the site of the new Con. | gressional Library is rapidly progressing, During the past week, in tearing down the walls of the Carroll buildings, which occupy a portion of the site and are {| among the oldest in the city, the wall collapsed, carrying with it six of the workman, all of whom wore seriously injured. . {1n The Carroll buildings are fraught with reminiscense of ye olden times, After the battle of Biadenburgs, during the war with England in 1812, they were used by the British as a hos- pital. In the course of the late Civil War they were a part of the noted walls there are found many souvenirs of their former occupants, among whom Are raany notorious characters, It is said that necessity makes strange { bedfast. No better illustratioagof this pdage can be nad than {the Night Lc “Tramps Hotel" as it is familiarly called, where during the recent cold snap many of the disappointed office-seekers and others stranded in the Capital City found shelter from the weather, Al- though the Indging Houses was only established a few years ago it has grown 10 be one of the features of Washington, When a visitor arrives he is required to give full statistios concerning himself, after which a hearly supper of hot soup and bread is served; he is taen required to take a bath—this feature is one of the invincible rules of the house—after this being completed he is given a com- fortable bed for the night and break fast In the morning. K, ~The jury in the case of ex- Alderman McQuade bas brought in a verdict jof guilty, The jury wae only ous fourteen minutes. When their y srdict was given MeQuade remained unmoved, bE fing Hous hb, OF has there | Pra | $ {with the engine ! hy | ' 3 { resulted in his death, Waite | which | thundering along | escaping steam from own tran preventsd {and many | made a! 3 Capital prison, and in taking down the | afforded by | Instantly Killed. Huxtixopow, Pa., Dee, 17 of William mwa, freight conductor ew 234, g nt Altoona, met wit! instant in thie place about kb f-pact 6 $s evening, It had tras seen that Mr, hed off take stingdon the tending ewik's train been sw m the south Kk inorde to on a ear of cattle from the P Toy ratirond, fairies train were + shifting of the car Messrs, J Long, hat mgioeer and fireman, er Ar qd I. SN one- D roceeded to the wg r plug at | | the station to takeon ssn ly of water Condnctor Lewis had al st. gone to the | { station in order to make out his mani- gin It was on his return to his train | that the awful aceident occurred which After procuring { his manifesta he procesded in the diree- | tion of his train, walking westward on oa the north track engine He had just reached the when Chicago limited, was a few minutes late, came It appears that the the engive of his Mr, from mited advance of the Lewis the approach of the hearing while walking In latter train he was struck bef re he { be warned of his dar ger, Reveral standers an well a he members of Oowr ETEW ODSOTY i were at the on remains Company Ag 2 ) mere, General sltimore and Oh Ea at Newark, O., Thursday. seph Blackwell, colored, was COI ~ Wed- £3 n oor Eg ted oulragi nighly respec Woman. Fhe Mexican Cor warned oo the measure April La g the Silver Crisis hill table in the Sepate, and that w Il now have to go over to £ the SOusOn, ine “Little Church Around the Cor- ner’ was filled yesterday at New York friends the late | Operil 10 attend his funeral. Houghton officiated, with the of Signor Rev. Dr. Fred Smith, a popular merchant of | Paint Rock, Ala, was shot and killed | in hiv own store on Tuesdsy night by Alfred Hawks. The cause of the sssas- sination is not known, William Rowan, a hackman shot and killed Michael Dolan, sleo a hackman during a dispute at San Francisco re- garding their hack stands, derer was arrested. Frank Hess, 15 years old who had charge of the window delivery in the post office at Meriden, Conn., was ar- rested on Thursday, charged with steal- ing letters conlaining money, William A. Niblock and Alexander H. Reed, dry goods merchants at Haver hill Mass, were held yesterday by the Grand Jury for maintaining a gift en- terprise under the system of guessing the number of seeds in squashes, James McCord, Saperintendent of | the Sutter Sireet Railroad, surrendered The mur { to the city anthorities at San Francisco lon W wdnesdsy #5 #00n as he heard that the Coroner's jury had charged him with the murder of Hews. He was immediately released on $10,000 bails H. Robertson who robbed the post office station at the Produce Exchange, New York, on September 20 of $2300 worth of stamps and money, was arraign- ed yesterday in the United States Cir- enit Court, Judge Benediot decided that if Robertson would pay back the difference between the amount recover od and the amount stolen he could go, Robertson made restitution and was discharged, a A si = Female “druwmors” are fast com. ming to the front and are a success for their employers, It seems they have soquired the art of mixing brass with songs and are applying it with good ef feet ia the asking up of cheek,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers