5 L] + “Pp VOL IL BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1889. Th @euiee Dens att. CHAS. R. KURTZ, - EDITOR TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION £1.00 per Regular Price year, When Paid in Advance When subseriptions are not paid inside of three $1.00 years $2.00 will be charged. These terms will be styletly adhered to in every case, - Speaker Carlisle says he Jooks forward with pleasure to giving up the cares of the office he has held =o long, It is gens erally conceded that he has made one of the most impartial Speakers the House has ever had. A clergyman of Elgin, N. Y. George R. Milton, has begun a crusade” against Freemasonry. Hesays that that and other secret societies are “the devil's agencies.” Some one should | have the kindness to wake him up and | tell him that he is in the nineteenth century. Rev. “holy . > YouNa E mperor William has pur- chased a 230.000 Pullman car for his | private use. An exchange thinks that he will never succeed in pursuading Bis- | mark to ridein the car. ‘Rather than make a trip in an American carthe old ! Chancellor would ride on the gravel | train and sit on the brakewheel.” - Tie abolition of slavery in Brazil is said to have had a deplorable effect upon the industries of the Empire, and a finan. cial crash is anticipated. The wants of the freedmen being few, they will not work steadily. Habits of industry and thrift are yet to be acquired. The finan- | cial ontlook isso unfavorable that bank | shares and similar securities have suffer- | ed a decline of thirty to fifty per cent. - Ture test of the fifteen inch dynamite guns of the cruiser Vesuvius, Saturday, demonstrated clearly that the United ready carried the latest and most ive weapon of warfare to a high st improvement. Large ch: charges and long d tances furnished ¢ the capacity of the dynamite gun. Government's new on States has al- effect ale of 1 Ai) 1 1iae ii vreres and nel n stances and short « mditions that fully tested The only thing i ibly lacking the test t K|onoee of a to make a pra first point where the dynamite «1 into the Atlantic. that we one’ that would have ensu now is : Have air 20d dynamite seded power and steel, planes but the col nmns of re spouted into the air enable s imagination to estimate the dama The question - Hades to the fact that thee isa before the House of Representatives, making sompul- 1 othe | nd thes An exchan ge a bill at preant SOY on parents and dren in charge to m least year; also providing sch to those unable to purch State should in ow uniform system of tex them free to all, tions: It would do away ¢hange of books. towns and borong! ing an entirely dif Aud the expense, trifle. Philadelphia free school book system and it like a charm. Why not make it affair and publish books. fixteen consecutiv [he 1 we them, opinion adopt ind ceriain t books make under restric. At presen whnsh Ww eont! ips, HHOHUS 44 are of text books. ¥ i rent set di { neces iy IS HOS has adopted wo a State school | our own a. - The New York World sibility for a “eondition”’ says : Response sreatod by and a surplus revenue of $100.000.000 a year will soon be transferred to the Re- | publican party. The leaders of the Democratic party therefore, do well to turn thelr atte tion to the theory of taxation has produced this surplus. which ink Democracy is opposed to the theory t a tariff for bounties to millionaires is a Yegitimate exercise of the Constitu. tional) power of taxation. Trad Democracy is at war with the theory Qhat the handicapping of wana” facturerd by a tax on their raw materia is for the ‘protection of American ine Real Dethocracy repudiates the theory that a tarifMof 47 per cent. is necessary : Infant indastries’’ which 1, Every tradition and principle of genu. i constant | | widow whose hashand + | company, of Harrisburg, with a = 1 of $200,000, OUR WASHINGTON LETTER, | ENTERPRISING AND WIDE-AWAR TUTARY OFTHE NAVY, ESSEC, The ssnean DI hacks Down Bleulty Setded and Gerizany The Amwevienn Shipp! g Lea preaker Carlisle wae eels Glad to Step own. Presudeut Clevelan | and Secretary ht to be proud ATOR Bayurd have every rig over th Ir action in the They have nude the the down on hs marrow bones and the ter in the future, this mains wo be x greatest bully of uindeenth century—Bistinrk—get ackunowl- nd promise What squab edge Linseed! in i to do het | come wrong, iu is to le but up to the latest ont of Nimoan ie. el, data American rights and honor intact, and likely to remain 0 Representative Springer is a happy man. After working fog many months against a determined opoosition | he has the satisfaction of seeing the wore Weury Oklaboma bill passed by the House with ood healthy majority, The bill now | goes to the Senate where the fight will | begin again, owing to the shortness of the session it will have to be { sharp and quick by the friends of the John Bushy. a ag | measure or it willbe lost. | head, ex-Governorof the Cherokee President has promised { him to veto the bill should it get through he Senate, A strong appeal to the public } { of American ship | tion, says the in favor pping was made by the American Shipping League which held its annual session here last week. Fri { day evening a public meeting was held i at which a number of prominent Demo. {erats and Repulicans made { commending the work undertaken by i the League. A notable feature of the | speeches was the complimentary manner in which the Republican speakers al | luded to Secretary Whitney. | tative Boutelle, of Maine, him the “enterpr] sing and wide-awake Sec- | retary of the Navy When one at all familiar with the Department under the previons ition looks at what Mr. Whitney Hished, ’ it h it and how little : ¥ speeches Represen. C allexd ' ete s Navy wiministr: has accom comparative- the ennnot al mmending hardworking Secretary for rip 4d has done, aml re 1 8 Aan » pumber of nd now . i wale read M shone, it wot le would be Wah the interestin ward « it BE The advan of Re publican br has arrived ine. nts an ofii of them wa months some of them who ing for big 1 CONDIromise on v fookie th WAaLCHIIED In Mr. other veto, Cleveland has had to He could not see died in typhoid fever could be entitled ceive a pension. Whatever the v1 nd q Treasury the Democrats will ontinne to fight the theory of | for a surplus and a tariff for bounties, A charter was granted at the state de. Bist. to the Sterling coal capital The directors are: J. L. Spangler, Wilbur F. Reeder, D. H, Hast | ings, Charles ¥, Hewes, of Dellefonte; Henry Keller, of Harrisburg: Edward { McHugh, of Easton, and Robert B. Baker, of Philadelphia, The object of the corporation is for the mining and producing of coal coak and other materi ald, and the transportation and sale thereot, | partment Anthony Sherry, son of John Sherry, of Barr township, Cambria county, on the 25th ult,, was thrown upon a elreu- lar saw and serionsly injured, Thelower part of the chest, on the right side, waa cut through the integument and Jha, #0 a8 to allow port the lung The flex i ning the | Pennsylvania. un nutter, | exposed abuse of a sacred public trust, | and, made | RL tepublieans may do to { relieve the menacing conditi | plethoric “| surplus of #150,000000 in the Treasury | we toni pxation | { port from the pres j last | We note that General Greely, : N | I not eOnsidn : A | ps ATRIOTISM OR PECULATION-WHICH T | Ex-Senators Wright and Greer are the head men of a syndicate that is now run- Soldiers’ Orphans’ Schools of This syndi complished two well-known ments, or peculative results from the money expended for the soldiers’ orphans, and | achieve. it has brought reproach and shame upon | the Commonwealth by the only lately » instances, the brutal abuse children committed to in som of the soldiers’ the schools, This syndicate has been enough in its political efforts to have { the period for ending the schools extend. ain : and every legisla- an extension has left ed time and ag tive act granting ' the flavor of the jobber in a greater or less degree. Now they come again and their personal presence at Harrisburg is | plainly told by the bills introduced in the name of patriotism as a thin guise to peculation. Already bills have presented appropriating the sum 4590.000 to continue the been of syndicate schools which are now only by courtesy | called Soldiers’ Orphans’ Schools, First, aspecial Superintendent is wanted at a salary of : next 827 for the forthe current year and £225 000 for next year, then comes for the current year to provide the Schools of wives and mothers of perma. nently disabled soldiers. All theseare to be g thered in by the greedy syndicate that has profited the schools and that has clouded this noble 83.000 To 000 schools £40 (NN) for the Orphans’ and admission in Soldiers’ immensely by charity with consuming shamé, It is a disgrace to our law-making au. thority that the whole tem was not torn up by the few when the brutality and greed speculative sys- rota a Years ago, i of the Soldiers’ Orphans’ 8 hools syndi- hideous their greed shrewdly ¥ = $ + cate was exposed in all nakedness: but upon patriotism ; ber come to aid the syndicate State fely P of the job ators and the he tactics Ch i! thie these yet rilles lative power Had formed manded it {f the Compt tran LS palling abu ‘ nid =m shonia LAO. ™ he mi womns to Tha lar. ines i Lhe Winle call upon ts for eXpianation, doctrine of the equalization of heat « ing certain periods receives strong sup, ent condition, as unusually warm, while of opinion that in certain periods there will be a lke average of heat and cold, that wage SULIT Was such ave will of- ten be found nso short a term as ond year. Weare not advised, however, by | science, as to the extent of such periods nor whether they exist in regular eveles, Nor age we toll wherefore the seasons of each year should not ave a common average of heat; nor even why each win ter or each summer should not have the | same avernge of heat amd cold, as one would think they natuaslly would have, If the esrth in its revolation about the sun does not get into Hke condition as to temperature all the time, wherefore doos t not, we wonld like to know, a Jolin Port, foreman of division No. 44, ate has ac | It has gained large speculative | powerful | Since | does | IN OTHER COUNTIES. a Mr. George Diem, of Philipsburg, had | { his right leg broken, recently, and re. from a buggy. | Mrs R. B. Valentine, township, Perry county, has a | tree that has been in full bloom for the | past two weeks. i Mordecai Isenberg, of Turbett town { ship, Juniata county, on the 10th ult, ceived other injuries by being thrown | of Wheatfield | peach | i Sion of the Prohibition Amend i until t | killed a copperhead snake that was over | ! three feet in length, The other Sandy Ridge, day William Keller, of | had his face cut from the | | corner of his grouth almost to the ear | by a kick from a horse. A man named William Piper, 1 at Peen Station, tried to shuffle off this motal coil on Wednesday by means of landanum. He didn't succeed, however. We learn from the Latrobe Advance that as a result of very Interesting special | services held in the Presbyterian church at Latrobe fifty persons have been added to the church, Charles A. Mead, of Dubois, aged 5 Mrs. Patrick Shields Mrs. John Helsel, of Houtzdale: Mrs. D. R. P, Sherry, of Wallacetown, and Franklin A. Plerce, of Rradford township, ent deaths in Clearfield county, and aged —y ATC Ie residing | ¢, prohibit the manufacture and sale of { this subject may be of rauch value, If it { should be agreed that a majority in a { liberty, | question of the wisdom and expediency {of the prohibitory policy would still re ly The power to frame a code | ave liquors shipped here from the a4 i | question from the propriety of exercisi Recently some scoundrels entered the | stable of Henry W Indiana and knife ripped open the belly horse. When found the intestines were protruding and the short time, ingard, in Marchand, with of county, a sharp a valuable animal died in a Mrs Mary Smith. of Pean township, ged ; 72 ;: Simon Long. of Potter's Mills, ; Daniel Ludwig, of George's Valley, oh soup rearge Reiber, of Tussevville, + Mrs. Samuel Shaffer, of Miles town. ship Th Dale, of nt deaths, old man named Will Te! ] fl | a Ri ard ¢ Tee _ NAS Ale Fed “ted He mean tine ‘ 1 in fo hand out our Wii vith his aceustomed regalir- Mis Ella ) school next 3 { Mersinger will teach select aimaner before harvest and srrie Searist alter harvest. Prof. academy KUYHY samuel Ditrell wi at Tusseyville next sutnmer, il he does he may expect a large | school for he is a very popular young Hume teach ar wan. i —— «lf il take notice you will see that the thrifty farmer when to town will always take pains to blank. ot his horse before he leaves him, The worthless and shiftiess man { Into to town head his team for some | saloon, tie it with onegof the Lines and igo infor a whiskey sling, leaving his horses wel with sweat, (o stand out in the cold and shiver, Eminent horse. won say it matters little how hard a horse Is deiven if care is taken to rub him down and blanket him when through with him. Thousands of horses are annwally killed by over driving and improper care during the winter days, when they are foreed to stand out inthe YOu Ww | advocates as nearly perfect. Lemont, i he comes | will drive | | easily enforeed in the large cities and | {towns of Pennsylvania than in lowa ¥ Are the people of this State wore law. | {| THA open, FREE SREECH COLUMN. A FEW LESSONS IN PROJIBITION IN A. A Number of Articles ¥ cstoin-The Amendme Is Prohibition un Saccess. [This column will remain ope All articles m by writer and Hmited to 1000 words, he election, AN IOWA LESSON IN PROBE As the people of Pennsylvania about to decide the question wheth some future Legislature shall enacy Ia liquors, the experience of other States on State have aright to impose their =i | upon the minority in matters of personal | taste and custom, the practical | of sumptusry Jaws is a very different | such power. For several years the State has been subject to a rigid system Prohibition. Legislatures have sharpened the penal and the prehibitory code of Iowa is regarded by its authors and statutes against the manufacture sale of liquors, until portions of the State, ficulty. | trouble than formerly to obtain supplies of liquor, but they get all they “original packages” from neigh- | want in borin the smal In f Sie of £ States, 1 towns of Towa the open liquors in saloons and taverns has effectually suppressed. The drug ', however, stands open to give the nor stranger any sort of tipple upon that ved. 8 “not in Yicating lleunors.” v, the sneaking and he ness it for Se ‘and tha into t he using are Ling the law stead of Or Te ad not treated as a | Prosper containing When Pro- i plion the by Tage LAS So - od ing to the Bee « exactly 172 saloons wide open day and night, and Sunday nsed by the of enue There are in tha orrespondent S00." These saloonsare lie ml governmont in the Prohibit and vield #17..200 to the city, The it Davenport which opposed the enactment of a law violating FELEREE 8 m. a yearly rev. of isl ivi § public sent net in { the personal liberties and social customs | of the inhabitants will not permit it to | be enforeed, In view of the degree of success which | Prohibition has achieved in Iowa. #x. perience may well assume » prophetic strain in regard to the adoption of "3 a policy in Pennsylvanian. Is it likely that a prohibitory law could be more abiding or would they and submissive under a sumpluary code | that would be wantonly violative of personal rights ¥ The people of Daven. port refer with justifiable pride to the official records, which show that theoe is loss crime in that city thas in any other | of its population in the United States ; but, while law is olserved in all other ¥ prove more patient | sale of Nquor. ng innumerable diminish Inthe rural | it must be said’ | : the law is enforced with Kttle or no dif- | CPSES ATE A Vogue, The farmers have a little more | their | | be be ‘a powerful facto i hundreds of face | same | veoh | | whisky and a reasonable High Lieens law. Experience has shown tit the worst abuses of the lguor teufiie wi suppressed by High License, and tha Prohibitigh 1 never has been and neve can be /foreed upon a free pope. Mahomet could not enforce bis Tanti] prohibifory code even upon the servi inhabifants of the sunbaked reg the Edst— Record, read — ee PROMIBITION ET NTINGDON Co. Two wooden. Bea uled Associate ee n Huntingdon county have establispy Prohibition by refusing license to 3) applicants. The result of the expe ment is described by # Huntingdon ox respondent of the Pittsburg Post. ays ; For two years not a license bras i granted in this county, yet it is ad asserted by the conservative elena. society that there is infinitely sow drankenness, especially among bugs as ye ung men, to be when there were Ji It Man qf 3 v seen bere pow feu nsed places for 1 s found quite essy u | Joining counties, and as a CONSE private drinking el whs tes ¥n organised, which are CORP of Towa | chiefly of minors a:d boys of very Sead of | - Forseveral yearssucoessive | two years ago a stro years. Since the refosal of all lievwe sentiment agin total prohibition has sprung up in the city because of its positive failor drunkenuess. It has des carefully, estimated that over $a » { weekly sent from this county te Hues dealers in adjoining counties whos A few interim. zens show Lhe fede stated. joy ee) with promifient citi to be about as above .—— BETTER THAN PFROMIBSITION. The opinion that ter than Pro! gaining strength o | there is little doul high license wedi Iilon seems 10 du ong the poopie, wm! that it will Deo: in the approaching election It is mgued tes whilst Prohibition will not prohibit, & will destroy property valued at sag thousands of dollars, Iasl rupl many persons, and demoralise hus on the other hand, high leew curtail the liquor business. uw woth state and cow no revenoe - it wy Viewed in this Bie King ground agai question r brought befon A, because of A i ts involved with any prospect of a corresponding svlw and it beh ry man to give nsiderataon, ct Fraxcis Mon v, the great bana ta od 0 a repoater Pittsburg on Saturday concerning prohibitory amendment. Ss ally opposed to it, becnus cause Men could md Mr. Me ¢ Brooks law. He thinks a great deal of good by reduc the number of saloons in the state half. High license and moss are his remedies for intesnw special ness | will vied a revenue lo The fi SHpLy destroy mer yield [re are ia man ¥ px l ndment. The he Ail OVE IVES VY and candid « ance apostle, it womid do the temperance Hay harm t good, a compelled t stands by tl has done 0 keep sober, vps TR than one suasion ance, oo Grange Meeting. 1 be aseries of private mes Patrons of Husband unty at the following tae and places, here wil ings of 4 1 ¥ is Centre « Victor Grange, Feb, Tih, at § odin a. m.: Logan Grange, 2 p.m. Zion Gronge, Feb, 7th 9, a. m.; Walk «Pom. Washington Grange, Feb. 11th, at 2s Pp. I. er, Centre Grange, Feb, 12th, § a. wm Leonard, 2 p.m. Half Moon Grang, Feb. 15th, 9a m.; Benper 2 po m. fald Eagle Grange, Feb, 14th, at 9 a. m,; Undon Grange, 2p. m. The Master of State Grange, the Mas. ter, Deputy and Lecturer of the County Grange, and the Presidentfand Seore- tary of the Fire Iusorance Company [will be present. The different subondi nate Granges are requested to be fall represented as business of great impor {tance will be transacted. 1. 8 Fras, Master, J. C GILLAXD, Secretary. Ln WO pA Williamsport Sun and Banner : In . package of money received by the West
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