* Beno Ehe @enine PorrrTicAL aspirants for next year are slowly bobbing up. The woods in Centre county will be full of "em. A —————— ErLpEr WANAMAKER in the Cabinet and Boodler Quay there too—*‘birds of the same plumage simultaneously con- » gregate. Ir there were no Democrats in the late war why are the Republicans alarm. od about them starting a little G. A. R. of their own. Apo a A —— Gov. BeAavER is to be Chief Mar- shal at Harrison's inauguration. The Keystone State always manages to get in for a lion's share of the honors on such occasions and we are proud to hear 3at a citizen of Bellefonte will receive the hanor on this occasion. A A hunting party composed of Land- toed Brandon, Doc Geissinger, and Ar. thar Taylor, took the Wednesday morn- ing train for a deer chase up at Ben. sors Run. The party will be gone un- til the end of the week when the atmos. phere about Bellefonte will be laden with the sweet savory of venison and oth- vr game. ——— Tue beauty of the high protection the. av can be appreciated at this season of {he year when th the mines and ore banks who were com- pelied to vote for high tariff, must | wollens for their most twice more worth. ¢ poor laboring man in families then they are { . Ir certanily must b to the workman down works and the w stone quarries ol compelled to vot —_—— little « at Cut rkman in the £ nesesaries of Ul these coral their wags to become les Ps 14 Ar the recent L 1 shire the Democrats cut th ean plurality down to 2,284, agai 063 in 1884. And the Democratic vo increased 4.256, or 10.86 per cent. against an increase of only 2478, oi 5.70 per eent. for the Republicans, This shows that the “free-trade” scare did not reach New Hampshire. One more campaign of education will do the work in that State. tion is -_— Tue emperor of Germany says that his efforts have been unceasing to pre serve peace and no doubt he is quite sincere in the belief that only by contin. ual readiness forjwar can peace be kept. He may even carry this idea a little fur ther some days and , declare that the peace of Europe cannot be maintained without a war with France whose Repub- licanism and general “cussedness’ keeps thewhole continent in a stew. This will probably be the end of the continual preparation, and if no better excuse can be found will answer every purpose though Germany would like to put France in the wrong of the quarrel if it can be done. —— Tue eruiser Atlanta, one of the Roach eruisers completed by the government has been ordered to ‘go on a three years eruise around the world and show thy stars and stripes in remote parts where our regular cruisers do not go.” Though not in any way up to the standard of the navy the Atlanta is by no means a dis grace to the flag and has a very formid. able appearance, so that in the course of its rovings nations that have not seen our ensign for many years will form exalted notions of the people represented by this steel war ship with electric ap- plianeces and search lights, machine guns and her battery of six and eight inch rifled breech loaders. She is not very fast and her armor does not thoroughly protect her. but these things need not be talked about to foreigners. No vessel has received a roving commission like this for ten years, the voyage of the Ticonderoga, the Africa and the South Sea Islands being the last of the kind, ws Tur Philadelphia Record says that men cannot be held together by a thread of recollection. Their form of associa- tion. to command allegiance and res. | pect, ranst have reference correct economic policies or present social con- ditions. The great events of a war bee esme material for the historian, and be. to individaal experiences of valiant men sem but wearisome and thrice-told tales. Thus it appears natural and in. evitable that the Grand Army organiza. tion should begin to differentinte to some extent into inharmonious factors, and that these divisions should be along Hines marked ont by political parties, But, no matter what pressure of this sort may be brought to bear, the veter. ansought to resist it, As brave sol diers, who risked their lives for an hn periled country, they may command per- coat, MN at it aa al} i | addressing his pupils, | ous wavs of doing things,’ he remarked, SSAA SU SEE a SE "FOES OF LAW AND ORDER. ACTIVE ANARCHISTS SECRETLY PLOT PING FOR REVENGE AND REVOLUTION, The City of Chicago Contains Many Ne © Or ganizat ons— Preaching the Doctrine of vio. lence and Revolution-—-What a Reporter Heard and Saw. mt— Apropos to the tableau presented at Lake View on Sunday night,in which an anarchist was represented as trampling the stars and stripes under foot while waving the blood red banner of anarchy aloft, T made the tour of the anarchist , sections of the city to learn the views of | the radicals upon the matter. Milwau- kee avenue swarms with anarchists and their svmpathizers, for along this thoroughfare and in its immediate vie- inity lived Lingg, Parsons, Spies, Engel and Fischer. Strange as it may seem, since Inspector Bonfleld’s utterances predicting a formidable uprising next July, the anarchists of the city have not taken the precaution to conceal their movements or intentions, and go openly about the organizations of “Sunday and other societies, the avowed purpose of which is to teach their ad- vanced socialistic doctrines. At the same time they disclaim any intention Schools using dynamite again -during this generation at least. Their children, they of say, must avenge the executions of Nov. 11, 1887. Paul Grottkaw, the head and brains he reds here, runs a ph tograph gal- on the bomb of He was seen there to-night im about ‘A went rood deal.” he said, merely laughed. a higher dyes and the state.” Albert Currlin, the most bitter and outspoken of all the aparchists since Editor Lum left, was greatly pleased with what he termed the “Lake View “It showed the temper of the people.” He said : “1 and all other men of intelligence know that the time must come when the ranks will be level. od : when one man can’t be worth ten millions while a thousand others are starving. To a starving man a flag with stars and stripes on it means nothing What he wants is bread for himself and family, and bread he will have. Dut time will bring all things right. An archy, or what ever you may choose to wasn't crushed out when the incident.” call it, four men were strangled in the Cook county jail a year ago. Mark that.” Editor Christiansen, of the Arbeiter- tions forward vigorously, They hav adopted new constitutions, in which it is stated that the objects are to organize the proletariat in order to free it by edu. cation, sud to inspire independence and fraternity. The societies propose to spread the teachings of “Modern Econ- omy among the people, and show them that success can never be attained until capitalistic robbery is abolished.” The Arbeiter Bund has 84 members now, and claims these will be increased to many hundreds in a few weeks. * ~ % * CiicaGo, Nov, 28—-The Criminal Court-room was crowded this morning when the Hronek dynamite trial waste sumed. The liveliest interest had been awakened by the testimony given yes terday by Frank Chleboun, one of Hronek's confederates, who turned State's evidence, and who swore that during the visit of President Cleveland to this city Hronek told him he had a bomb ready to throw at the Presidential carriage, but was dissuaded by the wit- and another conspirator named Schneider. When Hronek took his place in the prison dock this morning he looked worried, and shifted about ner. vously in his seat and eagerly listened to every word of the testimony. -— ness AS TO THE MINISTER. The life of a clergyman says the New York Herald is sone is born that way, unendurable. peculiar, unique and, unle If an ordinary business man were 0 rier gt places with the ordinary mi nrobably M probably i 1 i ister they WOoll is made 1} 1h ont three months, Unless a man | 3 4 he right male rial he in a pulpit as: Zeitung. who is being weaned from his conservative views of men and things, is not yet hardened enough to gloat over the desecration of this country 's flag. “Such things do more harm than good,” was his reply to my question ; “there 18 no sense in such a thing. There a sense of propriety which should be ob served, and the flag of the country should be respected-—outwardly at least. is ! We know this banner does not float over happy homes and prosperous communi- ties. but it is our duty to educate the pecple up to the proper standard,” Eugene Leidner, who teaches one of the anarchistic “Sunday schools™ in the rear of No and makes rabid speeches to the boys and girls there every Sunday, exhorting them to revere the memory of the “martyrs” who died that socialism might live, was not so rabid in his talk with me as when “There are vari. 58 Clybourn avenue, “Phe temper, or whatever you may call it, of the community should not be vio lently shocked by such demonstrations as that at Lake View, becanse they do no good. Until the workingmen of this country are thoroughly united they must yield to the yoke of the oppressor and must not make a display of their feelings.” Leldner was formerly a pro- fessor ino Berlin university and is as well educated as a deeply read man, The idea of the anarchists in organiz. ing “Sunday schools” and perfecting thelr societies is apparently at present | simply for the purpose of getting them. fore many years the campfire stories, | selves iy the petty details of campaigning and the | 1 shape to do something, though none of them appear to know exactly what. It is evident the resumption wlations between the fire-eating ( ‘urrlin and the conservative Christiansen, editor of the Arbeiter-Zeitung, means some thing. The new organizations are dis guised under the names of workingmens societies, but the prime object of the numerous meetings now being held is to unite the forces under one banner, An earnest endeavor is being made to bring the various Catholie societies wn- ts influence, Regarding this dwarfed, ‘ in sort i would drive twisted, brok ment series 3 most men into the madhous for respite recreation. He f the honey that attracts all the bores and 3 a day's travel deeming tne wo double back action, patent lever reforms spiritaal crankism in its infinite viriety each more stupid than the by people who were jnisances within the radius of New rid in twenty-four hours: whemes for re. of shapes, last: revelations foreordained to turn the world upside down. and who want to begin the work next Sunday in that minister's pulpit— these are only specimens of the ugly. outrageous, bungling matters with which he has to deal. The reverse is worth looking at and without it he would perish from collap se. | He has a library and lives iu the compan- jonship of the noblest souls of all genera. tions: and earnest men and women who understand the scope of his work, its dig- nity, its value to mankind, and are ready to lend a helping hand; congregations which listen with applauding and harty admiration, and above all the conscius- ness that he is doing something in either a large or small way to drag an unwill ing world up the steep of progress toa higher place of living and thinking. Clergymen on the whole area long- lived race. They are above the politi al earthquakes, the commen ial collisions, the harrassing cares and miseries of busi. ness. and are not subject either to the overstimulating ambitiosn or the tremen- dous depressions which make other men old before their time, white haired at 45 and kick them over the precipice of gout or appoplexy or heart disease into an un- timely grave. Still the clergy are overworked and un- derpaid. They geta good deal of blame which they do not deserve and not half the praise they do deserve. We hardly know how we should get on without them, and are by no means ready to try the experiment. - THE SIX-DAY RACE Littlewood Makes the Remarkable Score of G23 34 Miles Again the championship of go-as-you- pleas! pedestrianism has shifted and this the honors, if any there be, for human endurance have fallen to George Little. | wood as a plucky Englishman, who has made 6231 miles in 142 hours, beating the record [Albert's 611 miles], and seor- ing his third victory in America. It is estimated that 10,000 people in the Mad. | ison Square Garden at 10 o'clock when | Littlewood accomplished his rernarka- ble feat. to the performance of which he was all the evening cheered by the most uproarious applduse, Ina box, looking at the championsh ip fading from his vision, was James Albert, necompanied by his wife: but the vanquished cham pion was not backward in enthusiastic. sun or profes A io that remained dead in pionship of the world under the condit- jons that each man entering puts up #1000 to be divided between the walkers in ad- dition to one half the gate receipts, All the contestants returned to the track between 9 and 10 o'clock, Flowers were showered upon them, and (they spurted around the track, Littlewood came out, and though limping very badly, he went around the track, being cheered to the echo, When the pedest- rians had finished their tramp at 10 o'clock they were taken to the hotels in the vicinity, THE CHAMPION BELT. The champion belt is of silver. with a golden centre-plece or clasp. In the centre i8 a fox's head, the eyes of which are diamonds. Surrounding this head is a horseshoe, studded with six dia- inscription telling the meaning of the belt and the name of the donor. of Liberty, an Indian THE SCORE, 23.6 Littlewood... | Goldens. .......52 605.0 | Mason.cceerens po; 563.0 | Campana 546.0 | Taylor «542.0 | Elson 586.0 | Peach... | Smith...... 536.0 | Moore Cartwright. Noremac: Connor 556.0 Howarth....... - WHAT THE AMERICAN CITIZEN DONE, HA Having come to the mpaign ana r a term of fou ay now nature AK a i VERTIS ‘ than tis | I twentv.live nited States years, and the party that reduced ed the strongest weakest, He has provided for the prosperity of the country by continuing for four years to come, a tariff of customs that BAYY i the world to the taxes the na. manufact- and every man, women and child in tion for the benefit of a few urers. that breeds “trusts” of the necessaries of life, that has all but destroyed our foreign trade, and that renders commercial progress impossible ~gxcept to the favored few.— Puck, lh THE COUNTRY DEMOCRATSC, The Washington Post makes up the majorities in the several states for Cleveland and Harrison : States, Alabama Arkansas........ California ...... . Colorado Connecticut. Delaware......«. Florida Greorgia Illinois Indiana Dem. 60,113 17.210 G.108 ca—— 336 3.306 6.500 630.003 | Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine - | Maryland «o.oo Massachusetts. { Michigan | Minnesota «...... | Mississippi | Missouri ! Nebraska oR! phe! | se 4) ol Ta 22 006 =Bo17 31.006 1.400 | New Hampshire 2.284 New Jersey : New York | North Carolina. { Ohio { Oregon { Pennsylvania ... | Rhode Island ... | South Caroling. | Tennessee....... - | Texas Vermont Virginia cones | West Virginia. ! Wisconsin o1 (x RAKK) TORS § 5%) 52 (m6 19.264 185.000 21,269 | Totals .cvie 4THA02 540,150 | This shows a majority for Cleveland | over Harrison of 70,788. Four years ago | Cleveland had a majority over Blaine of 61.4576, 18 KLIK TRICITY MAN FACTURED? Although philosophers have never been able to determine whether elec. tricity isa condition or a thing, the | court has boen asked to wrastle with the | knotty question, and a case will be tried | by the Courts of Daupbin county next | month in the hope of throwing light on a very ancient dispute, Under the act of 1885 manufacturing companies in Pennsylvania, with few exceptions, are exempt from taxation. The State su. thorities have refused to recognize elec. monds. On the clasp is an engraved | vere 1.0 } following table of official and estimated ! A A EI Business Notices. ae S. &A. Loeb’s General Store. +—}o}~ * ~OUR SHELVES ARE ALWAYS FULL. ~~ We Keep a Full Line of Dry Goods, Notions, Grocriees, On the | Several plates of silver which form the | links of the belt are emblematic figures a pedestrian in full run. a Liberty cap, sheaf and sickle, Carpets, &c. | Rochester Clothing FF thin 1 reach of a Prices S. Allegheny, Street. r TORSEMANSHIP in all its br 1} king, Froth we Mouth, Dis. Nose, Hide-Bound { Ru Wy of Ewe ; Tossing Head. Diricaniai it Line, Cribs tad, Balking. Shying. ET] charge af the Qaouraindg., {nt other | illegal combinations to raise the price | : H orses Having Diseased teeth, 11 being bard to keep in condition, produce Indigestion, Cribbing, Colic. ; XC. | ment they become good driversand keep in good condition. &# No charge for examination al office Hadley's Condition Powders for hors. | | es and cattle; Hadley’s Egyptian Oint- | ment for man and beast; and Hadley’s | Cough Medicine are prepared | and sold at my laboratory. also Achenbach's Bakery. 10 WEST BISHOP STRERY | LADIES’ LUNCH AND OYSTER PARLOR. Shell Oysters a Specialty. Int i the best way to obtain the delicious valve in all its native richness and « soellence They will be opened for you and jelivered at your door | PRES TAFFY KINDS EACH DAY OF ALL | Call and see me. BL AUCHENBACH PATENTS FRANKLIN H, HOUGH, SOLICITOR OF AMERICAN & FOREIGN PATENTS, Near U.K, ; ’ Patent Offies WASHINGTON, D.C. the United States o | wsarke and labels registered. Rejeotad | revived and proseented, Inbwmation end advios o | to chintning Patents cheorfully Parnished wif! o Rend shotch or model for Frew opinion a Wp» L entalility Ne in the United States " pda Jr pn a Railroads, PrINSYIVA NIA KE. B TIME TABLE In effect August ith, 158%, Pennsylvania Rail: road Division, EASTWARD, Daily except Sunday Seashore Express leaves Johnstown. .. _ By ¥ } ’ EN TOME oii bead arvisburg.. 11 Philadelphia. sg Iraily Pittsburg Allooni.. Tyrone ... Harrisburg. at Baltimore Washington... Philadelphia New York comms wvuEe =SE325 arrives at A local train Day Express leaves arrives EESSEDES CRUE wewTTeRE EEEEEEER A through train Daily. Pittaburg Mall leaves ; " Altoona | Mall Express leaves ol Specially, & A, Loeb, After having undergone my treat. | Leaked EER woe EEES “ arrives Tyrone. : Harrisburg. Dally PILSDUTE connnrirnes Altoona... - TYTN oirnes Harrisburg = u at - EB arrives at poonme (FER A local train Daily. § leaves Pittsburgh sous d 50 pm HE pm ME pm wd 100 B10 Eres at Harrisburg. Philade ph ow Bh NEW YOUK .. cummed 308 1M ranches at Greensburg, La An Express few 104 VESTWARD Daily New York. Philadel phi Washingion Baitinue % 4 Harrisburg I yrone Adtanssen Pitisbur ow LF § en 1245 phn Blairs Alo gh Tyrone , Greensburg 2 Prof.J.E. Hadley i VETERINARY SURGEON, Eh pm stown, Hunt wi, Biadre VALLEY a 11s - PEXXSYINA daily ezeept Bun EASTWARD pm US 1066 LE am Lotk HAVE comms 11 Mill Halleon Beech Creek Howard ass 10 LT UTTIN cnmnen MIEN I nnn sonsennl Bellefonte wand? 52 Milesburg.. i shoe Intersection... @ MIOW ruugeany 28 4 18 Ba CH] Hus i : t —r An lteter RE RP RSV thm { | @NOW SHOE BRANCH DAILY EXCEPT i Sunday | WESTWARD i pm £00 £15 3 am EF +1 BelICfONE cnr ® 85 § 11 ‘ TIT ATe— Snow Shoe Intertection....s 3 sens SOOW Shee. pened) 45 4g) 154 100 & TYRONE RAILROAD Nittany & vemont — Daily ex 3 EWISBURG Bellefonte cept Sunday WESTWARD Am am 1015 580... Montandon.. 102 615... Lewisburg... 83... Vicksburg... 1. Miinburg. 5 se MATION oe oo B I FT #0. Paddy Mountain 52. LLoburn ee LTDY wovanmns Ring Spring... . RE Cave 5 entre Hall... 3. ers swell PORE eenanmwms we Linden Rall... Oak Hall... I 0 woe Dale Summit Pleasant Gap...6 sures, ASCII ose OF Bellefonte... 6 80 al trains tears Lywiabaeg & $20. am 25. am and 710 pm: re Lewisburg st 921, = amatly tgegElsg - ET HENRRURY xp. £00 mater Bn B® Raha yes EPEIRRAWEN at bh adobe 2 tandon al turning leave Montandon of am, 600 p mand 73pm BELLEFONTE & BUFFALO RUN RAIL road. Om and after Wednesday, August 1, 1586, trains will run as follows, tearing the § BOL serersreSlB0 OOLIORO nnn ATT Pennsylvania Railroad station. ARD, 5 pm a Ts i : 3 k 3 ie i. i3 : . L Trains will stop st stations : EASTWARD npr when signal is given or notice manele. ; Tran 3 ogunoets with trains east - ; wesw a BAF unis Bellefonte... dv 8 ph ree SORIES cmrravicssrsnirinl ones MOTTE Frisians eer WHILINOE Feces Hunters... A EUME=RE EE" ana wosnsiin TN Stil co Sootia Crossing Fo Re 18 Th a " pm BEV.R and 8. 8 Branch, Train pects with trains east on BL EK. V. RE ARSE. Branch. THOR. A. SHOEMAKER, Supt. "JAS. SCOFIELD, Manufacturer & Dealer in HARNES I have always on hand a fine stock | of Whips, Lap and Buffalo Blankets, Fly-nets, an
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers