. 1884, “THU BDAY, Nn NE 27 Mio every Thursday by the CERFREOEMOORAT PUL. Co." CHAS. R. Kurz EDITOR LOCAL DEPARTMENT. -= No paper next week, ~Ruchings of every description at Meyer's Cash Bazaar. —Fans from le up to $3.00 at the Cash Bazaar, No, § Spring St. Bellefonte. ~The finest line of ruchings in Belle fonte will be found at the Cash Hazaar. —Beezer's dancing pavillion is a fa. vorite resort for many of our youg peo- ple. —Miss Nellie Thomas, phia, is visiting at the home of Mr. R. Chambers, on Linn street, of Philadel E. Cash Bazaar and take a New bar. -Stop at the look at the bargain counter, gains placed on almost daily. —Mr. Bates Bell engaged in the in. surance business at DuBois took a short trip to Bellefonte to visit friends. State College took place this week. The number of students is larger then ever. ~Hoover, Hughes & Co., of Philips. burg have been awarded the contract for the erection of the State hospital at that place. —Mr. Lew McQuistion started for Omaha last week where he expects to secure a situation. His sister accom. panied him. —A man with a wagon load of goods damaged by the water at Lock Haven, did a the di last Friday. —(, M. Bower, Esq., we hear, is on the sick 1ist from forming in the much distress, lively business on amond an abscess bowels and causes him —~Since the railroad communications t 0 i Johnstown have been repaired the num. | are sorry to | { od your school. I | the facts will ‘be —~Commencement exercises at Penna, | | in a while, { thermore, { on the character of ! | re.inst ber of sightseers visiting that place have | become enormous, ~The Gazette force put faces together last Friday graph gallery for a picture: can easily be imagined. Nosed Mike,” their in the -* Red Flannagan at Wilkesbarre, stretched the hemp on Tuesday last, —A man by the name of Bryant was arrested up near Scotia for to shoot a man. He was lodged Bellefonte jail on Monday threatening —{'ol, Geo. A. Bayard has ved the contract for paving all the around the Pennsylvania State College rece walks with his patent concrete pavement. silks, , ephers, auything in the fancy line § Meyer's Cash Bazaar, —Judge White of Pittsburg, speech at Braddock, election, said that such gheney county has would be confiscated in Germany. * —For wash embroidery si rope silk S|AxXonys, yams. Bellefonte. in a beer as Alle. ~Mrs. Snyder, wife of Rev. W. IH. Snyder, dec’d., and daughter took their departure from Bellefonte on Tuesday. They expect to make their future home | expedite an amicabl at Lancaster, 1'a. ~The Milesburg Baptist Church will 2 hold a festival, at the church, on the “afternoon and evering of July Fourth. Proceeds for the benefit of the church, All are cordially invited. ~Messrs John 1. Furst, Chas, Hughes and Lee B. Woodcock three of Bellefonte’s promising young men ex- pect to lenter the Freshman class at Princeton next year, ~Mr. William Walker, of Rebersburg was in towh on Monday on business, His farm near Rebersburg was badly cut up by the flood and crops were somewhat damaged. N. ~The new directory that has just made its appearance shows Williame. port. proper to have a population of 22,170, an increase over last year of 1,827, This is an encouraging gah. ~Over twenty thousand people are fed daily from the commissary depart. ment at Johnstown, Major J. L. Span. gler can now boast of running the larg. est supply depot in the country. ~At Philipsburg the Methodist bell was tolled every five minutes the day of election to remind the people that every five minutes a drunkard went to his grave, This is a new scheme, ~The “*busy-bee’ orginazation com. posed of the children of the Episcopal congregation held a festival last week for the benefit of the Johnstown suffer. ers. Let others follow the same plan. «Kurtz & Son'snew mill building, at Centre Hall, is completed and the workmen commenced placing the ma- chineiy on Tuesday. They expectto turn on the steam about the first of ugly attack upon the faculty a photo. | the result | Italiane| city, who murdered paymasters McClure and | . ot dpa i that the members of a Colle | know | . { bler and ought { doctor in the chimerica it = ik, 1 : by ow and | to W < | addition to the money. go to m. Sd i never made an | agree with on the eve of the | | else. ‘THAT COLLEGE RACKET. OUR CORRESPONDENT EX- PLAINS THE SITUATION, He Does Not Agree With President Ather tone He Did Not Make a Malicious At. tnok” Upon the Institution, «A Sum in Ad. dition, W. Atherton, LL. D.: Dean Sin ;=~Pardon me while I make a somewhat lengthy apology to the peo- ple of this county for you for having the bad taste to take advantage of a passing news item in order to obtain free adver. tisement of the institution of which you are the nominal head. Not only have vou taken great care to make a specific number of elaborate refutations of im. aginary charges against the College, but you have also smirched your official dig- nity as president of the State College and stooped to the very lowest degree of (fen, detestable blackguardism by your allu- | sion to the writer of the alleged charges as a student who was suspended for misconduct, Is it possible that the learned president of a college who has been shamefully vilified and libeled must resort to such a niggardly artifice in order to give weight to his statement in his own defence ? Does he for a mo. ment think that those acquainted with deceived by so trans- Surely, doctor, you must have hard up for material for refutation or had an adequate idea of your task when you compromised your dignity so shameful Iv. You injure when vou say you believe that parent a trick? been else you me, fatally too perhaps, never went to your school, admit that I and hot-headed and make mistakes once but I allow no man that I ever took or had a advan ed COHnrse doctor. 1 desire to take an in deviltry. i considered 18 not a stigmsi be for up there ollowed by an immed anyone ww S18. pended from the State er heard of that was One « not 1 and lund. This speaks well the faculty shows how lenien | free from bl ers they are. Evidently, mistook of facts and conditions for a of Pennsylvan. Now, doctor. I don't hope that yon entertain the bel Sir, You a report in State College, mere Vseribbler’’ would have the the temerity to attack = of Why ich a gal- knows faculty more than a serib- axy erudites! anyone ao as much if not to be able to repel all at. fy | "| feed] repel alto. 1 + tacks w absoinle our recent a tack rether succeseful in that direction a . ' I do not y flatter you, it T Ie with a littl more practice you will be able to regind n appropriation as un attack and there- out of it in agement, doctor, | cred —_ geld semen Bb upon seriously, I tick you or the college and all fair minded people will 1 that: I had no inten I was actuated by me tion of doing so kindest impul and the college when I wrote the item which exasperated you so much, and which | believe did more toward a ter mination of the difficulty than anything My mission was to the cause of the trouble, my motive was to settlement of it, | believe I succeeded in both, I want to be frank with and will unburden myself. When I saw the desperate situation at the college it grieved me exceedingly and I made ex. traordinary efforts to ascertain whether the faculty or the students were to blame. From every source of informa. tion I could elicit nothing but state ments condemning the action of the faculty; that made an impression on me which finally took the form of a cone viction. I was convinced that the facul- ty had blundered again, so was every: body else, so were the members of the faculty themselves as their final action proved. I hope that with this brief ex. planation you will be able to distinguish a timely and beneficial criticism from a “malicious attack.” A BUM IN ADDITION, the ws toward the faculty Spex dy discover doctor. While the opportunities in your state- ment to the publie for contradiction are numerous I shall content myself, in or der to show that I am not hostile to the State College or its faculty, with the consideration of one~a sum in addition. It is not a difficult sum. Most anyone of your overworked professors by taking a sheet of paper and several hours se- clusion ought to be able to arrive at the correct result. Please be calm while 1 give out the sum. You say that the number of students at the college has more than doubled in the last six years, The catalogue for 'S1 gives 140, the number attending school at present is 180, Now then more than double 140 and name the result. You ean hardly fail tosee that in your correction of misstatements you have unintentionally of course made one yourself. Nowl wouldnt for the world have you think that I doubted your ability to add cor much as 1 do. [ | considering a I attend. | am rash | to say | I bus ne Fur | ate ! vement whe Was desired, | malicious | will ef thata | auda- | A “PASBING INCIDENT! CANVASBSED, | You say that the “wanton and malic. fous attack” was oceasioned by what | you are pleased to call a “passing inci | dent.” I never knew that you were in- | clined to be facetious, doctor. But your allusion to a disturbance like that asa “passing incident” is certainly intended | to amuse people. 1 take it to be an ex- ample of that latent faculty which you possess of vanquishing your adversaries by dodging the real issue and straddling | a hobby. Let me again review that “passing incident,” for no doubt you have forgotten it by this time, a matter you know. tion of learning, a place where the most pleasant and intimate between teachers and pupils in order that mutual benefit may be derived. so small That's a very pleasant hallucination, | a bx { ty of quinine isn’t it, doctor ? Now then go with me Over in the field there you will observe a large camp filled with students. That is the Freshman it has left college and won't go These Freshmen enjoying selves, no lessons to study; tions; lots of time for sport. building. Those groups of students you see are committees going down to in- struct the faculty how to proceed with reference to that camp over in the field. No one seems to care whether school keeps or not, In that big room there with the blinds down and the door locked is the faculty, Its members have canceled their respec. to State College class back. them- recita. are no | Whale in Philadelphiin the | | dead, Imagine an institu. | only too true, relations exist | ‘ g H (Go into the are merely incident.” The tive class hours to-day and through the | i “passing boys whom you see rushing halls and making all that been excused from class and noise have noth offairs have ing todo. They relish thestate of immensely, Thisis a it quite Now. ment of the | | | “0 pleas § doctor, I leave | | misstaten no i whether you im, prefacing your remarks attempt to stigmatize the w you have no reason led your school, to have been ever atime : ding over for vou your ac would better n had vou sent in the | for it at the regu I an 3 3 ONE Ia r papers form of a stereots Pade lar rates, yours to command ERESPONSIBLENCRIBIY The New Hallroad of xchang ur « the fol road whi The Company Bellefo i Was Chal ago to run from Be town. but of b ago the road ( chante: iilding the Wilkesbarre OIMpany Sex They now propos the road. and in a few days engineet | he opie will be sent out to locale it. of Bellefonte have been very soll 4 for the Wilkesbarre and Western Com. pany to construct the road and advanta- geous financial arrangements have been proposes. The Bald Eagle branch of the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad the only road that runs to Bellefonte, = and it requires a roundabout shipment | Bellefonte | York road which The will run through Sugar Valley, is noted for coal mines and lnmber districts. The run to Watsontown, connect with the new ex- Wilkesbarre and West. to rea~h New and Eastern new road will where it will tension of the ern. A Blow to Missouri Saloons. Governor Francis dealt the saloons of the most severe they have ever received when he signed the Newberry bill last week. The bill prohibits music, dance, billiard tables pool tables, bowling alleys and box. ing gloves in saloons and will go into effect July 1. St. Louis and Kansas City saloons will be most seriously af. fected, and about 3.000 of them will have to ¢ hange their style of operation. Missouri blow Shaving not n Werk of Neorasity The supreme Court decided the case of the appeal by Barber Knox, Ind, arrested and fined for kesping open on Sunday. The court holds that shaving and hair cutting are not works of ne. cessity within the meaning of the stat. ute, and the judgement of fine in the lower court is aftirmed, The Colby Homestead, The flood in Fishing Creek played havoe with the Colby homestead st Cherry Run, the scene of the murders for which Luther Shaffer was executed. The house, barn and other outbuildings were swept away and the place so chang. ed by the force of the current that a per son would hardly recogni he locality. “Joseph Dukes and his “son, while working in Laurel Run mine near Phil. ipsburg this county on Tuesday, were covered over by a fall of coal. Mr. Dukes wash fled natal nd she son hut his | embarking in | ness of drift catching its | DEATH'S CRUEL HAND. | DEATH OF EDITH.DAUGHTER | } OF MR, AND MRS. C. DALE. lowed a Nombey After They strychnine, of Pills Contained nid EMies Quinine On last Saturday Dale. Ex, morning , received the and sad 164 A We danghiter Edith Dale left immediately d found that the Wis Mr. that place an Mis. Dale and daughter had been Little Edith who is about three of age x of pl Yeu ils containing a large quanti- and innocently eat covered, Medical ald was once but the deadly fatally he died alx after, strychnine she a number before is and sit an hour there. The funeral services were held at this place on Wednesday afternoon. Death of Catharine Love, On last Tuesday morning Mrs, Cath. erine Love, of Warriorsmark Hunting. don, Co., mother of John G. Love, Esq, She had time of this place passed away attack of paralysis for wis the cause of her an NOITIe and death, Wis ON Years, Mrs, Love was born county at Halfmoon this and was a dau rhter of Mr. J« The surviving Love, Esq., of | who resides at Tyrone, Annie, three hn t Gray. children are dellefonte, W, Harry Emma and Two brothers and ohn (r, State College, J bh . { and Lydia J., . all at hom at Beaver Mrs Wa Pale STNArs f Harrisburg Sadden Death Little Girl Swal. | “an und | Clement | start. | ling intelligence by wire from Philadel- i {01 | NEWS Was | vise | iting relatives in Philadelphia for some | | time, in some manner got hold of of which summoned at | drugs terminated | Her age | BELLEFONTE, EW STORE, ()= PENNA. TOMY FRIENDS and CUSTOMERS: Having opened an exclusive Clothing for Men, Boys and Children, I am now fully pre- and Furnishing Goods Store pared to show you the most complete line of Clothing, comprising the latest styles and novelties at such low prices that will astonish you; also, the latest styles of Hats and Neckwear, a full line of Shirts, Cuffe, Collars, ( Underwear, ele. A cordial invitation is elexnded {lo all my old friends and customers and others to visit my new store and examine Goods and Prices. With many thanks for past favors and soliciting a continuance of the same, / remain Yours Respectfully, SIMON LOEB, Be lls fondle . April, '89. BROCKERHOFF ROW. IN ROOM FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY MONTGOMERY & CO. lM macs i 5 1 AVE BIINOS spend he more profitable busi The east shore Marylanders take a different view of | the flood from their Pennsylvania neigh. bors north of them, Johnstown n's Dead, The physicians of Johnstown after discussing the calamity, join in the con. clusion than 10,000 On a of the the physicians the looked upon as reliable. that not a soul less the count of the general knowledge people, possessed by estimate people were lost in food. 14 Tribute of Respect of all on Tuesday June 11. Our fait) ful secretary and loving classmate, Miss Ann Fye. Therefore we deem it our duty as a Sab bath-achool to express our sorrow thy to the parents, brothers and sisters « deceased and advise them to seek It was the will wise Providence to eal from our midst and sympa of the consolation in Him who doeth all things well her gain. Miss Annie always ready to perform herduty., She was an active, interest ing worker in our Runday-school The fami) iar form, the volee so pleasant, the greeting so cordial are all things of the past, but not all things have passed away from earth. Recollee thonn of her virtues, her noble example, her faithiuliness in her home and in our Sabbath school remain as long as memory itself shat! ast. In the bloom of youll she has left scarcely sixteen years old, So Kind, so useful, we will miss her. Our Heavenly Father is re minding us of the nnoertainly of life and the certainty of death: may we all profit by His teachings, Let us strive to meet her In Heaven In the spring time we will strew with the first flowers of spring, one so falthfal and so good. We ask that a copy of these resolutions be furnished the county papers for publication and be placed on the minutes of our Sunday school Respeotfully yours, Muss Cora MoCommick 1 | Mins Benya 4 pe Keon | Miss Eva LL, Ossax | Classmates, Miss Jnsnig ROYER Approved by Pine Hall Sabbath Schoo! June 16th, 1a80, M. D Sxypen, Sup't. MARRIED, «SHIRK ~AL " aby y: in aigburg Pa, oi, 12, 18%, a de WE Rite? Z. Bhirk both tre county. Our joss is Was us her grave in memory of We Reliable Goods Only. Custom INGLES SHOE STORE-+" Our New Spring Stock of Ladie kK Handle Spring aod Summer wear is being unpacked and comprises many new and attractive Styles that will be Snarialty . A pecially. worn. Can show you some big Bargains. Prices lower than ever. YOU CAN SAVE FULLY BY VISITING THE ROCHESTER CLOTHING HOUSE,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers