She Centre 2 DIRECTORY. DISTRICT AND COUNTY OFFIOERS, Congress, Hon, Jo, PATTON, Btate Senator, Hon. W, W. Berrz, Clearfield, emoceat, tracts from the volume, which was is- sued in 1868, from General Davis publishing establishment at Doyles. town. The book was entitled “Scraps from the Prion Table,” and the pa- pers quoted such extracts as Colonel Barbiere's characterization of Lincoln “He ie a man of high discriminating intelligence, an orator of great fluency and is now contribating a series of tariff articles in the Bucks County In- telligencer which are creatiug con siderable wtiention in Bucks county He will take the ee that the Hon, James Jackson, Jr., York superintendent in western New former state and of works, had come out for Harrison: public the rounds of this city and county one ofthemost prominent Democrats | Ropreseutatives, Hon. J, A. Woonwannp, Hon. L. Ruoxk, Pr sident Judge 19th Dist, Contre and Huntingdon Hon, A, 0. Funsr, Bellefonte, Associate Judges, Hoo, 0. Munson, Hon, Daxiet Ruoavs, Conaty Commissioners, Jxo, CO, HENDERSON, Jno. D. Decks, M.D. Fripien, MATTERN, “a dirty dog and fanatic.” Commissioners’ Clerk, Sheriff, Row'r Cook, Ju. Deputy Sheriff, R. K. WiLsox, Prothonotary, L. A. SoHARrren, Treasurer, Cyuvs Goss, Register and Clerk Orphans’ Court, Jo. A, Rurr, Recorder, dno, F. Hanrin, Dep puty Recorder, Perlstine istrict Attorney, J. O, MEYER, Coroner, Dr. H. K. Hoy, ,Cup't A. MuLinw had written six years before to regret or take back. THE “PRESS” BLOWS HOT AND COLD. The Philadelphia Press led attacks, and ou the day afler Colonel these thguty Deective | Barbiere's appointment in 1885 had | | he The new Pension Davis, has found a clerk in the son of Joseph Barbiere, the like of LODGES, the following to eay about it: gel'efonte Lodge No, 208, A. Y. M_ meets on Tues Agent General Ay 1 ght on or before every fall moon, ’ Balle o Chapter No, 241, meets on the first Fri sy night of every month, Donstans Commandery No. 33 K. T Yiday night of every month Centre Lodge No. 153, 1. 0. 0. F. mest avery Thurs | lay evening at 7 o'clock at 1. 0. 0. F. Hall, opposite {jn 0 op withholding pensious from the sush House. di { sig Bellefonte Encampment No. 72, moots the se ond | | uion Soldiers before. This Barbie- and fourth Mondays of sach math in the Hall op- | . . . 1 PL posite the Bush House. [re has written a book, from which we Bellefonte Council N . of every Tuesday evening in Bush Area Logan Branch Counctl No. 141, Junior Ord M, moots every Friday evening. per , on the second whom uvever had to do with distribut- U. A.M. meets de, or U.A Bellefonte Conclave No. 11,1. 0. H. meets in Har | of all men who believe in observeing | ris’ New Building the second and fourth Friday eve | . . . . . ning of each month. (the ordinary decencies of life, with Bellsfoute Fencibles Co, *B," th Reg. N the reflection that the man who pub meets ln Armory Hall every Friday evening. 4 . | lished the book is now at the head of 2 Ga. pr CHURCHES, Presbyterian, Howard street Pastor Services every Sunday at I MN. Sanday School (Chapel) at 230 » Meeting (Chapel) Wednesday at 7-30 r. ¥, : ; Li {the Pension Agency for the Philadel | Rer. Wm. Laurie 30a x.and7 » | phia district, and the man who had | x. Prayer | . this [the heart and brain to concieve M. E Church, Howard and Spring Streets, Rev. D farrago of foul abuse of the « Monroe, Pastor, Services every Sunday at 10-30 4. | . . 4 A wand TP. %. Sunday School at 3-30 vx. Prayer [ADA its great defendcrs is his cle Meeting Wednesday at 7 P.M, | rk. | tor i Traly the times have changed, and | Si. John's Protestant Episcopal Oharch, Lamb and Mg . 4 | Allegheny streets, Rev. J. Oswald Davis, Rector. | treason in its most offensive manifes- | Bervices every Sanday at 1030 A. x. and Tr, x | Prayer Meoting Wednesday and Friday evenings Bt. John's Roman Catholic, East Bist P. McArdle Pastor. Maw at 6 and servi wad Trow Reformed, 1 Enyler Pastor and 7 rm, Sunday Meeting Wednesday evening at 7-30. | Lutheran, East figh street, Rev. Chas. T. Steck, | prominent Repablicans and Pastor Bervice indsy at 1030 A. and Tr a. Sunday School at 330 r, N. Prayer Moosng at 1-30 Wednesday evening ( tations is no looger odious to th the sn Rtreet. Rev y yo. x | Who distribute patronage and os 19 | administer the powers of the Federal | | streets | dav at 1 (Government | ” . with n and Borin Sery viry Bun School at 2-30 » i 1 ' In a few days interviews pOme | $s every B the appoint the Gras Dem serats denouncing went, also extracts from i High and Thomas Streets LJ es every other Sunday at | Army Posts’ proceedings, were pub | nday School st 9 a. w. Pray | | of > “ 0 P.M. { lished, and the Press followed up its | | attack as follows : A more unfit appointment could United Brother Wertman. Pastor 1030 a. x. and Tr. Mesting Wednesday at 7- Bervi A. M.E Church, West High Street, Rev. Norris, Pastor. Services every Sunday morning and evening | Y.M. C. A, Spring and High Streets. General Meeting and Services Sunday std r w. Library and | Reading Room open from 8 a. x. to 10 r. x, daily | not be made, - and avowed hatred of the Union |its defenders, put oa record three i ky 3 | His rabid secessionism | and yee HIS SINS FOLLOW HIM Sinee His Conversion fo Republican- 15am Colonel Barbiere 1 Being Pie years after the war closed, make his | selection for a place in the Peasion : t " Wa Ad M ~ : als ‘ ’ | Bi : 1 Hee u ‘ ¥ mon tured as a Sant, | Uf po a ie ver a dier. General Davis, i The conversion of Colonel Joseph | ate friends’s | Barbiere, of Doylestown, late of the | destitute of bo Confederate army, to Republican. | common decency, an 38m, and the flutter of delight it has RB Created in Republican circles, is one | him to be nse wok shows i) ta common ne 8h ald ¢ ), i FD TX So fiercely were thes the camwpaigo in| ,p by the Repub Colonel Berbiere has | (rand Army Posts th § A of the features « Bucks county. been made an editor of one of the | hire was compelled t party orgaovs, the Intelligencer,and has | he did on A gust 1¢ been taken under the protecting wing | then fired (his partio of the Grand Army of the Republic.| Barbiere hd He has been selected to represent the | lieve General D Republican upon the tariff. with the Pension OM Three years ago Barbiere was ap- | cred his resignation, whic pointed a clerk in the Pension office | promptly accepted. This in this city by Genel Davis. Being | should have been done muc then a Democrat no language was thongh it was hardly b 100 strong to express the detestation theta man who had and disgust of the Republican press | ment as to write a rebe and of the Grand Army at his ap- pointment. de nounced for the selection, and Colonel ca 4 » 4] 4 ha a : Das Li League in the debate | which attache! 1 i= nell h to 8) had discretion Years after the rebellion should enough to retire promptly from an of General Davis was je overcon b Ave Barbiere was the target for bitter per- | fice in which his presence gave off sonal and political attacks, He had | gnd could not fail to written a book while a prisoner at injure those who were responsible for Sandusky during the war, which he | his appointment. bad published three years after the close of the conflict. the base of the Republican attacks upon him. The grand Army Posts held meetings, denounced Barbiere personally and demanded that he should be dismissed at once. The Meade Post of this city was espe cially severe and adopted resolutions | worded in the most bitter language, | characterizing the appointment as an outrage and an insult to the Union soldiers of the war and the great lead nese embarrass and APOLOGIZING FOR TREASON, This was made | how ihe Republicans expect to gain . any comfort by the conversion of a Colonel | band man whose patriotism, decency, com- mon sense and judgment they have so long and vigorously denounced. The Republican press is already, now that Colonel Barbiere's talents are em- ployed for the party, beginning to apologize and explain his book. A | special dispatch in the Philadelphia | Press from Doylestown thus lightly ers who bad fought for the 1 niony | snd airily disposes of their new con whom he kad coarsely abused in his | vert's Confeds rate record, It says: book. Some of the Grand Army | “Colonel Barbiere was born and Posts even went so far ms to declare | 00d in Tennessee. and that unless Barbiere should be re. turdy Henry Clay Whig ancestry. mes from i» moved General Davis should be ex- | At the outbreak of the rebellion his pelled from the Post. Since that time boyish enthusiasm and local pride Barbiere has lectured under the sus ir ofessad Republicanism would seem | northward and there performed VArie indicate that so long as he shall | ous jouraalistic work at Doylestown, stay on that side of the fence he will | po book he wrote about the “Lost satisfy the men who control the Confederacy” has been a source of re- Grand Army of the Republic in this gret from soon after its publication te, because they are nearly all Re- up to the present day.” publican politicians, The writer of the dispatch also SLANDERING THE NOBLE LINCOLN, |gives the Colonel the following in ~ The Republican papers quoted ex. !deriem nt: - as “a political scavenger,” Stanton as “the arch military fi nd of the War Department” and Wendell Pailips as The preface of the book was also quoted, which, written in 1868, said that after six years of reflection the author had found nothing in what he {give extracts elsewhere and which we | | commend to the thoughtful atteution | Union |’ | done it. trust organization which the lean workingmen | most loudly shouting ar Confeder- | and | ip sition whi been | The Democrais are now wondering | 4 % | precipitated him into the caus of the | pices of Grand Army Posts, and his | Confederacy. After the war he drified | political circles. was lackiog in “judgment,” had not " “common decency “common sense” has sud lsaly become a “man of high discriminating intelli gence,” The sitoation is full of em harrassment, — Record, - { The Democratic Party the Labor ing Man's Friend, | The Cola stump for Harrison and Morton, and otherwise do effeclive campaign work.” It appears wond.rful how a man who, according to the Press of 1885, and was void of | .s . | | Republican fiiends are loud just now | Mr, Jackson hal been absent from the city, but on his return yester day he denied that he ever stated that he was for Mr. Harrison, Said Mr. Jackson: "Soon Harri- son's nomination I was asked if I [ replied in the after did not know him, affirmative and made some compli- mentary remarks concerning him, construed These, no doubt, were into the idea that I would support 1 4 ¥ n thim, No, sir,I am for ( leveland, and J {firmly believe in him aad the Demo | ferati latform -> Bill Nye on Foldiag Dads. {in there profession of friend:hip for | | | American labor is a false pretense. | It is an epidemic, aad i " | them periodically—nee every four comes upon years, They present a high tariff as the | panacea for all the ill of which work men © Sach a tariff does nit unpliain, neces«arily increas: wages, because | the matter of wages, depends largely | tapon divers other questions An in- elligent workingman well stated the other exact situation the day when he said: Wages depend upon supply and demand, and not on tages. When you see two men after one boss, Are low: when you see two bosses after one mau wages are high. That is the of it, theory, principle and practice.” whole No political party properly cisim exclusive credit bocause { of the wages which American work ingmen enfoy to-day. Taxes have not Political platforms have not Bat the system of Ameri accomplished it themselves have or- ganized and maintained have proda ced the result, and they, and they alone, are entitled to the credit. ’ is a fact clearly established by statis. tics, and it should not be forgotten his that these trust organizations have the persistent and united opp sition of : shes h : 3 1 1 °F + nstituted against violent, been that class of employers who are now for a high tar ts to , protect” not themselvs, but the OQ | “poor workingmen.” f we give the credit h him ad mechani for the the American ! ne t he oC uy f the world ne hi Ig th | am | Th Bub i | Republican party refused to during all the years | ine Wer originally re. $ 5 | 8 immigration in *d Years Every the interesis of it has passed m that party by 2a and against the " " 15 UA : n of its prin AlLives, n party is, indeed, ection. It has ‘protec. r monopoly in the country. and favored raid upon the p yrotected every Has of iplic Treasury. It has ‘protected ale ' and sustained every fraud of to corporati It has protect the public lands railroad ns ed every “trast” ‘combination and re It { “protected” the thieves who stole (he fused to legislate against them Presidency from that hosoraple and | illastrated man Samuel J. Tilden, The best men in the Republican | party have at times seen its pressing necessity and advocated it The Hon. | Hugh Me Calloch, the ablest finan. cier in the party aod | Secretary of the Treasury in the ad {epublican | ministrations of Lincoln and Arthur, | recomended in one of his latest offi ' cial reports: 1 That the existing do. | | pe used in maoufactures should be re 2. That the duties “npon the ties upon raw materials which are to | moved. (articles used or consumed by those who are at least able to bear the bur ! laced | Secretary Folger likewise recommen den of xtaation {ded a reduction. Presedent Arthur | made a similar recommendation, | President Graut who was jes goes directly 10 the coast of the tarticle when manufactaredjhere, and must be paid by the consumer.” Thus it will be plainly seen that the Demo: cratic party is the friend of the me chanie and laboring man, Not for Harrison. o———— Lockronrt, N. Y,, July 22.For tome time rumors have been go'ng [the workingmao. The fricadship for | Wages can | good au | thority for Republicans said: “all du. | formation, We consider a blackguard. ing from that travelling combination of | feould be paid this paper. Any | that doesnt warn its readers g jrapet ining such arrant quacks and humbugs as they were falls short of its duty, and displays { # lmentable want of courage. | derstand that the fellow made a great | bluster about his honesty and the high standing of the stuff sold, A he 1). ents thought will convinee any sensi ble person of the ridiculousness of this NO | needs a pair of “dudes,” ' really medicine inet ur pretense, rood accompanied brazenfaced to pull for 14 [| by a brace of females teeth crowd give a free show and nothing in order to draw a { listen to a harangue of bragging non- | sense about its hawled out by an Virtues vice and fraud the highest compliment | We un- | FARM NOTES. | A chaoge in food will be relihed by the sheep just as well as by any [apimal on the farm, Nature is a { bretty sure guide in such matters. | There may be aod is a choice of foods | among those that sheep will eat with {& relish, says an exchange, bst it is a | mistake to feed what they do not rel- | ish, | Pulled wools rre largely used in | the manufacture of flanvels, an { one | reason of their beiog 50 used is be cause the procees of pulling (either by burning or sweating) destroys the felting properties of the fibre and so | better fits it for use in flannels, which | will not #0 readily shrink in wa.hing. William H irne, L ri grog ¥ i | | | widely-known wri'es that in io Ziving hens d, be has n cholera, may fi ary "i, Lanny years exreriencs barley as a part of their fo never had There 1s no doubt that barley A CRE OF CLICK | often be profi ably substituted for corn Folding beds have their advantages i * {and their disadvastages, also there | ul says Bill Nye in the [ New York World They are more es pecially affected by people who desire rise and f; : to economize room, especially in the | cx ¢ flats and thickly set led partions ol 14 } t the ! it #, LO T0101 1 ur args citi 1 il8 i . g-oe we | Coming a power in our social economy, | which threatens to up-end some of our | greatest minds, | Whether you would naturally feel { 80 pressed for room at Hannible as to | warrant the perchase of folding-beds I do You must be your own judge in that [in large quantities, not koow. { matter. I cannot intelligently advise you without koowing more your surroundings and home life. ato other Folding-beds seem to fi some {lives first rate, while in cas they are different. You do not state weather you are mar ried or single } , 10 Jal, ¥ not say All things I should kaow in order to give h which sex you hail from these you su advise as would reimbarse cance led and left you for the postage which | in your letter. 1 caonot sail in blindly give advise right and | without knowing something about the case, It has only been a few weeks since | a vis {ac Trespoa lent. who wished to earn a livelikrod, to go west and break bronchos, as it paid well and afford .d much calm enjoyment to Afterward 1 vind had passed the meridian ho the contemplative mind learned that my res 1! ni was a widow wh of Ps ald al ways state their for advise x. It does do so, and alating value io arriv. Ife ‘ write w ’ pot take but 8 moment in may be ing at a conc usion In Washiogton the folding-bed 1s greally in favor with the girls who Aty- pical American girl in Washington will tzke a hall bedroom 84 month, ned Are in Goverment em yl amtold igh 0 k | furnish it with a richly capari } ao. had whiat : folding-bed Ch Acis as a bo ] \Z. ease during the day, and with disgais washstand, 60 cents worth of chin 85 cents worth of cheese cloth, a per of tacks and a bunch of violets, pa- t she will make the establishment look more like home than the 830 room of a great coarse man who tries to furnish his apartments by means of a hair cloth lounge and a meerschaum pipe. ly oaght to know whether » before 1 suitably advise you. There are many Sol rea you are a man otherwi 1a varieties of folding.beds now claim. of ing attention, several of the manu ’ * facturers of which have ask me to 8 ments, but with oul naming any spec- ial one, let me te built bed with force and and patend cut-off is a good machine Be careful not to select a thick set or wak a good word for there instru clinker brace ty that ft asthmatic bed if your room be small, Nothing is more annoyiog than to have your fulding-bed suddenly ex- | [ten | itsell and bog for air while you are entertaining friends at your : | apartments ID) not use a patent pil | : 3 w-sham holder at the head of you, bed, for it is apt to the night and smite of nose Ni in the you while rot loose I middle of across the bri lge tha asleep. Never foul h the lavention [unless you want to wake up in the |m wraing and find your counterpane {deloged with your rich, warm braias, - ADDITIONAL LOCALS. This tle In which Harr Willbuns doos up a street fakir, its a little rough bat the vigor of the lang. wage i to be admired, We ne told that the orator of the Madico-Minstiel com, pany smarting under the exposure in the Ledger of his swindle devoted about an hour of his windstorm on Saturday night to abusing the editor, Our “phe. fare not hint In the ede by thls ine i wt Hinx' whose faith in the great Asiatic ivi Kiy pi ' | ash salts mixed with It weighs bushel and as much It is excil led by corn in favorable seasons’ but it can be grown with so moch Jess nearly or a food where land is cheap and labor dear. Many d ad | vautage 1o use kainii or Grerman pot- superphosphate, {in feeding all avimals { forty-eight poun’'s per | will commonly produce WeIgOL per acre as oals { labor than corn thai it quite as economical jarmers have four it an “1 The mixture seems to be best a iapted "Lincrease the damage of to sandy soil, in which potash is gen~ | erall deficient. We baveal ways found | good resulting from using unleached | wood ashes, as far as they would po, | in applying superphosphate to wheat, | and this, 10, on heavy lsod that we know to have plenty of potash. The very small quantity of ashes applied probably helped the crop by making | the phosphate more available, Dry » help t ar the dull tubes when damp pbosphat i more ashes a's ¢ isl y. maxing ’ ’ L disiribule » £ i ves Some of our exchanges are objecting to extensive underdraining on the fal will enable the rapidly aod thus floods The trut that the underdraiu uly restores to the wi ils original capacity of absorbing and storing | large amounts of water, thus sllowing | it to pass off gradaally. Cultivation | without drainage hardens tk: surface by destroying vegetable matter, and at the same time destroys the natural | waterways through untilled It is where the soil is ne naturally | oc artificially ungerdrained that rains | and melting snows are obliged to pass iacious idea that it rainfall to run to } h is, however, : BOIL. ther 4 | off in floods over the surface N Tue Bic Rarr.—-The Scotia timber raft, whese big 17 Owners are Leary the : Le nol alarme i at the fat soon by 0» : | : : launched and start. It is raf. wil ed on its way made of 30,000 making a raft 25 Ww sticks bound togelher, 700 feet long, with spars from 175 feet in length. It wi but will also be manned and rigged to sail Womex 1x Tae prize fight between two young women, for from $500 to 81,000 a being arranged in Buffalo Leslic a young married variety f H Prize Rixa.- side, Hattie per- 18 wrmer, who is a skillfal wrestler, is sued a challenge to engage in a match with fists, under prize ring rules, and it was ncoepted by Peter Bagley, of Bradford, Pa., on behalf of Alice | is a professional swinger and athlete. Mrs. only 20 years old aod and Miss Leary is 24 now swinging clubs at the Comique, but will go in to training in a few days under the direction of a local sport named Jack Kehoe, John Leslie, the challenger’s husband said that a meet. Leary, who Leslie The latter is [heatre {ing would be held to sign articles of | : agrement, - A Goon ScueMe Oa Jenuary 15 | Mr. Havens, a photographer of Jack- sonville, Florida, secured a cigar b x in the top of which he cut a small slot sufficiently large to admit of the in. | sertion of n ten cent piece. He and { his wife then agreed that every ten | cent piece that came into their 1 i pos session in the ordinary course of busi. | | ness should be deposited in this box, but that no extra efforts should be made to secure dimes for that pur pos, Last Saturday, after five and makiog these deposits, Mr. Havens opened the box, which bad become rather heavy, and fonnd that it con. tained 1,035 dimes, representing $103, 050, which had been saved in this way, Mr. Havens, encouraged by the ex- periment, proposes to keep the prac. tice up fa TE Lea be towed, | Al club | ‘one balf moothe had been spent in | Cuatworms. —Catworms sre often | very troublesome, because they remain { concealed during the day under the | ground or any object which affords shelter, and emerge in the yight on their errand of and wanton | destruction. We lonk upon | their work with greater leniency if they would climb to the top of the plants and cat only what they need, but instead of t they select our choicest and tenderest plants, and eat them off just above the surface of the ground, so that h2 entire top ls over and wills in the next dav’s sun Nothing can be more anuvoying to go | out in the morning and discover the devastations of the caiworm. These insects belong to a large fam- | ily of moths known as the Noctuidae | of which there are more than fifteen hundred different species in the United States, They vary in their habits, but are distructive to our cultivated crops. There is only one way to rid yourself of this enemy, and that is early every morning take your men out, and go over the whole Geld from hill to hill. You will soon see which hill to stop at, and digging down with a small stick, you will flad the pest just beneath the crust, kill the same by pinching the head. 1 ! misChiel ( 8, 844 Exercise for Colts—One of the mis. | takes made by the breeders of horses is keeping the colts confined in stables and in stable yards in winter. They | may be ever so well fed, but food is not enough to develop colts. They | need abunaant exercise and if they { have the run of the fields and are well | fed they will play and take a great deal of exercise. This play developes | not only muscle and bone, but lun and heart, and gives tone and Ry and growth to the body. If facilities { are not at hand for giving colts the | freedom of the fields the exercise should be given them by the owner Colts may be driven with benefit at a | much earlier age than was formerly [sapposed. We do not mean that they { should be hitched to heavy loads st | a0 early age. Bat we do mean that | at the age of one or two years they may be driven hitohed to a light ve hicle several miles a day, with beaofit. If they cannot get the exercise in some other way, Do not kil! cola by | kindness, any more than you would { by working them too moch. Observe | that golden mean which is 80 neces. | sary bo the highest success in all un- dertakings! We know of many val- unable colts whose power for usefulness would be greatly increased if they could have the right kind of training the present winter. Kept ia their stalls and stables their system suffers for the want of the pure and that phisien! exercise required for the ealthy development of thsi via! forces,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers