Tlemaor at. F. E. & G. P. BIBLE, Preprictors. “EQUAL AND EXACT JUSTIOR TO ALL MEN, OF WHATEVER STATE OR PERSUASION, RELIGIOUS OR POLITICAL wdoBeres yg TERRS : $150 per Annum, in’ B— Adva *™ VOL 9. | BELLEFONTE, PA.. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1887. NO. 10 tis on The Centre Democrat * Torms81.50 per Annumin Advance FRANK E. BIBLE, Editor 1887. Democratic County Commiattee, waves HY Stiteer, Edward Brown, Jr, James Schofield, «A Weber, «A C Witherite, «A A Frank, wD J Meyer, «LG Herlinger, «Howry Lehman, werd J Graham, wA J Gredst, Thomas J. Frazer, Bellefonte i Howard Bore.......... Milesburg Boro Millheim Boro Centre Hall Boro... Ist W... ~ dW... J aw, Unionville Boro Benner twig... Boggs twp, N do Be do Philipsburg ~MBMgan Walker, ‘ «H L Harvey, Burnside twp... Anson V. Dougherty, College twp... wJohn I Williams, Curtin twp... wDavid Bric kiey, Ferguson twp, BP... .....Henry Krebs, do twp, W.P... Frank Bowersox, Gregg twp, 8. Po... «Hiram Grove, do N.P Josiah CO. Rossman, Haines twp, E. P William BE. Keen, do w.rP aolivorge W Keister, Half Moon twp wo Willam T Bailey, Harris twp... . Frank B Wielaad Howard twp John Glenn, Huston twp William Irwin, Liberty twp we William H Gardner, Marion twp. John Ishinr, werd N Corman, vse © Bokley we Wm H Kreamor, «F A Foreman, ~W W Royer, wersed ooh M Clare, weesnned Chin B. Howe, wesAndrew J. Lucas, dames Redding, William Woods oes Won Calderwor wadohn H Beck, G J Wook Charles McGarvey Penn twp... Potter twp, N do 8p Rush twp, 8. P do N.P Snow Shee, do Spring twp... .. Taylor twp - Walker twp......... Worth twp Union twp H, Y. 8niraen, Secretary. JAMES A McCLAIN Democralic State Ticket. For Judge of Supreme Court, J. ROSS THOMPSON, of Erie. State Treasurer, BERNARD J. McGRANN, of Lancaster Democratic County Tickel. For Associste Judge JOHN GROVE Treasurer, JAMES KIMPORT. Sheriff, JOHN NOLL. Ragister, JOHN A. RUPP Recorder, G. MORKISON. Commissioners A.J. GRIEST. M. S. FEIDLER. Auditors, H. A. McKEE. W. A. KRISE Ww confession (2) week whole Suarer's in Gril « of of was a lie last the published simply to sell Sheriff May told loth, and was hat out ! be Pay (rit man that the Liat are charge to against them [hey guilty and the crime arc imno publ poisoned by ia } in the papers, not be - STRON ure is being b Dress to bear on Governor Beaver an extra session LO pass ¢ venue bill ! i Anger g an IS ( PR ticket being the republi swamped bes sins the legislature and the republican Pp is leaders are anxious to patch u It al it SCSs1on November that but things before party necessity alone the doubtful whether an 5 loudly on bosses, is extra would save their ticket. let let the legislature do § people. However us have an extra session and te i duty to the -— W. J. Curms, the lightning manipulator of the Bohemian oats swindle, is said to be carrying on his business in New York. A gen- ‘tleman of our town has received letters of inquiry as to Curtis’ standing and as to the Penna. Sced Company of Bellefonte. Anyone of Mr. Curtis’ many victims in our county would pronounce him a fraud and swindler of the first water. His Penna. Sced Co. is a fraud, his bonds are a swindle and Curtis himself is a grand rascrl. He is wanted here for his swind- ling operations and if any of his victims desire his address we will furnish it to them the made | | i | Company which means Jay Gould | has gobbled up the B. & O. Tele. graph system and now there is not |a line in the United States of any magnitude to compete with the | great monopoly, The B. & O. sys tem may not have been a &nancial |success, but it was a valuable prop- lerty and with proper mamagement | would have paid. It was the means Lof reducing to a fair compensation | the business of telegraphy between [the cast and the west wherever it came in competition with | Western Union | 1 those companies were alene in the , where either of | . business rates were high Western Union wages ne : : | warfare on its | fy buys them up, the B. & O } HAs 1 the The ruinous little rivals it quiet. {gone the way of many another good lintentioned cor poration, ave 5 It gre ie general tendency of busine 4 11 if all kinds is to a ce ation of in the h the pital and business tel ever | el ph lephune lin their infand {don’t know exactly what the “up- | It | Or | | ! | IADCT, | circular purity or the purity that | ¢ | porations {busines {borer | Sr — mae Tue Bellefonte Republican i [afraid that Judge Grove will “drag {down the upright purity of the interest of the liquor men. We is. right purity of the bench” may mean either Judge Furst | Judge Muns« Judge Rhoads, or ay be « of Baile ¥ { If the itm ne ’ ghar that Ji tt Aovars Fag it Gown in N '4 yen A Repub an Savs 1 ti OL 44 DOULHIDEY horizontal purity, the at an ntler Mr (rrove 10 ge {the Lutheran church and is honor- {ed and respected at his {all classes. home by He is not aristocratic | nor wealthy, but he is honest fear- | | : ibench” and manipulate it ia the i | nm, Or it may mean | | among less and censcientious in the dis. | He will no be or charge of every duty. of faction but will dischage his duties as becomes a Judge. under the control man — —— Joux Rurr our candidate for Register is admitted to the most competent man who is run. ning for that office, both by Repub. licans and Democrats who know him. Men who have been raised with him know his qualifications for that office and will give him their heartiest support. When the votes are counted Mr. Rupp will be emphatically vindicated from the slurs and insinuations of his enemies, —— Tue seventy-five cents per day business is so thin that the Gusett’s readers are becoming disgusted be i with it, Tue Western Union Telegraph What Would Follow ‘Tariff Re form By putting coal, iron, ore, wool, salt, flax, hemp, juice, chemicals, dye-stuffs, and the rest of the raw materials of labor, on the free list | other | with rice, fish, and certain necessaries of living, an annual re- oo would be R30 OO duction of $20, : made ncurrent revenues from cus toms. Ex-Secretary Manning in- dulged mn no exaggeration when he said in his Treasury report of last that repeal of the duties on wool alohe would afford December a more relief to the workingmen of | this comntry than would the total 1 internal taxes on repeal | whisks Yet the duties on wool last year did not much exceed $5, | . . 000,00a, while the internal revenues *, nearly from whisky amounted to . The whisky taxes public Treasury mw mater fon 1 manufac for Against Free Speech. New York, Oct. 8 | sive Labor party held a ratification The Progres- meeting to-night on the plaza at [the north side of Union The districts Square. delegates from the general to the | bodies, bearing torches, several red moved square | flags and transparencies with such | flag i ; | mottoes as “No harmony between { capital and labor;” “More public | schools and less armories.” they { On the reaching that the plaza of {usually lighted when mass meet- t found row 18-1018 wr gi ings are held there were not Tl it light {ed 1s provoked their but was mnch increase v park hold a they were told by a i ) {that their permit to I meet- {ing did not entitle them to platform ing on the the of the pi lowed, and finally allowed the to American | industries the ble amount It is sasd, how f duties 1 and thus « customs s not warraat this con- port ations 11 i o this country have been made 11 is under the highest rates | Free maw materials would emable American manufacturers to com- home and foreign markets: and wns t this Amen sent abroad, der the influence of change more an fabrics le fewer wi is would be of the Import d. { advocates of y m would redud ury Ca tations and wenaiture: extravagant « xX} i needless burde in in the d and has earned for him self an acknowledged his fellow He sober, honest, industrious and apa- | men, is ble and will discharge the duties of his office faithfully. On Mr. Nol the Republican batteries are being trained and imported workers have been travelling the county among | the labor organizations in the inter. ests of Mr. Cook. Mr. Cook may | be as his friends claim for him al Knight of Labor, but when did he Join, where, and what for ? Besides is he running as a Knight of Labor or as a Republican ? Who ever knew Mr. Cook asa laboring man ? Is he a carpenter, a stone mason, a glass blower or a day laborer ? Neither, he is a first class livery man keeps good horses and rigs and is sharp and shrewd at a horse trade. There is nothing wrong about My, | Cook or his business, but we think | he should either run as a Republi. can or on his wellknown record as a horseman, and not pose as the cham: | pion of a class with vhich he has nothing more in common than any other man in his position in life, Experience, | of duty, | pete with European rivals both in | uld deminish lubbes i crowd MC ai ng ottage to out of ind the plaza was almost entirely i . way, ina mi serted, Po. { lice Captain Re illy, in whose pre- i held, : came to him and told After the meeting was over cinct the had i i meeting een i dsnid a man 3 him some Gy Vv HEC men werd is {turban warrant the pol nt twenty MM 4] and 'ntieman capable, LO a | h worthy of the to which he aspires, We want to say Mr, con mest and the same for his competitor (Goss. Let the campaign be ducted without any lying or slinging, is mud We know such a thing to the Gawtle man's nature but a little self restraint im. posed on his otherwise wild and untamed character will go a great foreign | way toward making his paper de. cent, — ——_ R- Tur plain duty of every demo- crat in Centre county isto go to work for the state and county tick- ets. Every man has his influence, some more, some less, but be it great or small it should be exercis. ed for the ticket. The republican managers are making desperate ef. forts to wrest the county from demo. cratic management, the courts are already in their hands and an at. tack is to be make on the commis sioners and sheriff's office. With either one of these offices in the hands of our enemies we are likely to lose the county at the presiden: in | poli £1 position i {tial election. Can we afford that, We Let us keep our ranks firm | Democrats of Centre? not, and allow no break or we will be for 1888 No crat has anything to expect off od in better in bad shape demo from n 1 a republican i county to be put shape Bellefonte which has been unde: republi ter ol { debt 0 an control lor over a quar A century gre under a MALTY & &14 i f i ooo while Centre wider democratic free ounty ur | ment 15 entirely from debut, | i to make any stateme | Do you want to put the county in | 0 Make any statement ) ) | the same position that Bellefonte assessed every dollar of all IIS 3 5 8 § vou do on have ti urn the « to Messrs loners Hender - n X I M In Chicago ymmitte took lent and reception pl wes on the stand ning address A fatig hours rest. 1} It was 1:2¢ when the be MISC gan to dis; There was such 3 the i ) tl [he wile of the president graceful as a memento of 1 ly complied and while the specta- tors went wild with enthusiasm, displayed her trophy proudly to the ladies at her Cleveland shook President with doubled vigor and an actual count side. hand: re at \..is juncture showed his gait to be forty-seven handshakes per minute, This rate kept up without intermission until the time fixed for the reception to end, and not a person in the line was missed A low estimate of the number who marched past him is 6,000 persons, but they were the fortunate few, Thousads in the corridors and thou. sands upon thousands in the streets failed even to catch a sight of his face. "As —— C— — - New York, Oct. 11. Thomas C. Manning, United States Minis ter to Mexico, who has been in this city for the past ten days died sud. denly at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, shortly after g o'clock this morn. ing. Mr. Manning ‘was a resident of ta: state of Louisana, think | Manage. ancer | Borough is in? Do you want to be anger, | : { burdened with thirty mills taxes on valuation’ Mavor Roche | that he count of cosrm— Jay Gould's Turn New York, October 6 Jay Gould left his office in the Western 4 i f conference, Balt more and Ohio Telegraph deal, he sald “We have more and Ohio Telegraph; we have or arranged to do Union building at . this afternoon, after a brie iv i When questioned about the bought the Balti. paid for it, five officials and the price is Although Western Uni the . : . mn Telegraph decline i ormally in » regard to the B, & O. matter. it givén out by the officials in an f il way under is malicious criticisms o Nothi could p possibly have sai | 3 | cager partisan cenemics done w averted their i A “~ he recallec howing the won- Ct aeriul growth of es visited { by him he was accused of having thrown the cyclope ¢ hands dry '} ped and tates | mi yO + 1d Cleveland d he Western ¢ {io O en. peo] st ¥ I in regard to any mat- 1 everywhere to all the peo- the ( ows how lit hildish fi y AHS tt led, — Record need be —— | Sudden Death of ex-Gov. W. B. Washburne, D, Mas., October William B. | of Greenfield, dropped dead on the { platform in City Hall at this morn. C, Washburne | ings session of the board of foreign missions, a little before 10 o'clock. I AIO— — W. Garter Morrison, will make one of the most efficient and agree- able officers that has ever been in the Recorders office. He is a beautiful peoman, and gentleman ly and accommodating Don't for- get that he is running on his merits and not on his misfortunes as | some of our cotemporaries would have you believe. The Record says: President Cleveland when in Indianapolis. told Mrs, Heedricks in a casual conversation, that Mrs. Cleveland did not snub Governor Foraker and his wife, and had no intention of showing them any discourtesy. Governor Foraker says he did not
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers