BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1889. The Centre Democrat, CHAS. R. KURTZ, - - - EDITOR. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, Regular Price $1.50 per year. When Paid in Advance $1.00 When subscriptions are not paid inside of three years $2.00 will be charged, Demeeratic County Committee, 1880 - “ “ wens’. M. Bowar «Patriek Garrety Joseph W. Gross Bellefonte, N. W... " SW “" r Centre Hall Boroug Howard Borough Milesbur ROSIER unre Millheim Borough owe... Philipsburg, 1st W “ Md Ww “ Unignville Borou Benner... i M. I. Gardner ’ '. W. Hartman seed. 1), Ritter «wal. H. Riley Jackson Gorton seesnsle. of. Bing John M echtley «Phillip Confer +7 H. F. Adams L. Barnhart weDaniel Grove wwsdohn T. MeCormick «Samuel Harpster Jr wane C00. B. Crawford wenmans of, UV. Rossman J. A. Bowersox wasn A. Weaver weesanenees WI, Hipple Wm. Batley wasn £3 Franklin Dietz John ©. Miles D. W. Herring A. Henderson J. Gramley gh... Huston. Liberty Marion. Miles .... Patton. PBR cs sussnt assesses sossns on ‘ POREBE, KK. Pou ciiammsnssrmmeiinmn on S.P « Goodheart MeCann Wilcox J. Haynes Jr J. N. Brooks Wm. T. Hoover werene ARTON Fahr J. BH. MeCanley Levi Reese WM. C. HEINLE Chairman Democratic County Ticket. ASSOCIATE JUDGE THOMAS F. RILEY, of Harris twp. FROTHONOTARY A. SCHAEFFER of Bellefonte DISTRICT ATTORNEY CALVIN MEYER. of Bellefonte J, COUNTY SURVEYOR GEORGE D. JOHNSON, of Howard FOR CORONER Dr. J. W NEFF, of Snow Shoe Editorial. A GOOD OFFICIL Pro Lew 1 The Democratic candidate for thonotary in Centre county is Mr Schaeffer, of Bellefonte a son ex-Sher Schaeffer of Walker township, and he a brother-indaw of Mrs, Frank Black. ford of this city. Mr. Schaeffler incumbent of the office and is askirg for a re-election, which will undoubted. ly be accorded him. He is one of the best prothonotaries in the State, is a member of the bar and thoroughly fa. miliar with all the forms and strictly temperate and industrious and always at his post. Such a man carnot fail to make a valuable officer thie court and the people and as sueh his merits have been fully recognized, The above article is taken {rom Lock Haven Democrat and estimate of our present Since Mr. Schaeffer has been office he has performed his duties with faithfulness that commended. | It too oftens happens that mw en are elect. ed to fill positions of considerable trust and importance who are not capable attend to the business and often do not sustain the best of a reputation. Co tre county has hal a good tase of such officers who were elected through | isan influence, when good round judge ment was not exercised, It is a mat. ter of grave imporiance to the pablie and the tas payers, especially, to have able, honest aud efficient men elected, When the Democrats of Centre county placed the name of 1. A. Schaeffer%on the ticket they right man ‘or Prothonoturs oly! ing and qualiled for the position, We want good men elected this fall ; no more boobies and timaservers, § the pry WORSE LM : N the Hs Aa trae Prothonotafy. in a is to be to he mrt. v thie got W as he is aqreenb’'e, - Freres thousand changes in the postofiices in five months is the record of which Chief Executioner Clarkson boasts. And this under the sanction of A president who sald in his letter of ne. cetaption that “*onty the interest of the public service should suggest removals from office,” and that “iu appointnents to every grade and depariment ftuesn and not purty service should be the es. sential and discriminating test, and fidelity and efiiency the only sure tea. ure to office.” In some cases he has sought “fidelity and eflicency” in pris. ons, or among the criminal class, But Quay's and Dudley's debt had to be wd. W. MeCormick | Willis Weaver | | that everything is done in that office in a { fair and decent manner { ment, for a letting of the job, is inserted { in a number of the county papers, when i cover up the underhanded jobbery and Meyer | are completed it wi that ag TAXNER ON PENSIONS, 1 HMISSIONERS. i Laney He Will Knock Out the Surplus Next Year Commissioner Tanner's Chautauqua Speech. We hear a great deal about the pen- sion roll. We have one that costs the government $565.,000.000. There will be more next year. (Uproarous ap- plause). You must remember that these are all within the clearly defined law. ‘vhe Commissioner will sit up nights, as he has done for months, not to bestow charity to do justice. - Where does the money go ? It keeps. It sup- | “THOSE (0 ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF PHETENDED HONESTY, | Large Contracts Given to Politienl Favorites, Heelers und Henchmen—The Abuse of Of. flee Nothing Better wus Expeoted, About six months ago the wall around the Court House tumbled down and is me condition, After the { usual delay and meditation, so char acteristic of our present Commissioners, {and for which the county pay $5.00 each Con missioners have de. | still in the s: in the veins of the heart does in the body. One little thing comes to my mind. Billy Moore's pension under the late administration had been stopped and his name stricken from the roll. 1 put it back and I dated it back to the day when it stopped. Theres so much more of that surplus gone. For twenty years I have stood before the people trying to have justice done to the soldier. In the later days some little power has come, and I thank God that I can, with out scientific knowledge, transmute some of the coin of the Republic into God's golden sun- shine and to per day, thar cided that the wall should be repaired. | This would require very little work and | expense but to make the public believe an advertise the cost for said advertisements would, This piece of te trick to Ww itself, repair the wall, pretended honesty is 4 en political fuvoritism employed by Hen. derson and Decker in giving Gallager the } wh of e Milesburg bridge. an CL ¢ abutments at the Why did they not 5 to bid in the reciin send it streaming Now Nox Rind homes of the suffering. HUOW Our Home mechani 8 ——- ACCIDENTAL SHOOT SG. same way on the work and in that way get itdone for the least possible amount ? Had this there The Result of Handling Fire Arms Care. lesaly of money been done reason to find fault, a the would have been no ; \ tn ast Sundav evening when mmissioners give ARE n yening, Vanatta, Lock Haven, was about to go to bed and bad picked up a self that While looking at it one of his fingers in Way and expensive wook into cocking $5 of harneter an i WHUTIOUS © ‘ bulldog revolve: without a publi g log revolves was § SOIReLLINE IS Molle ob bn Ame hie me entangled trigeer and it went off. the through the window and Kitchen window of the Rat | just after that uaf had entered the door water, wiich he had ben out drawing, {In his hand. The ball struck Mr. Rath | to r | . in tiv ’ 14 lit : tit 3 | ‘ Lit 108 RA | ue & ] e | 1 | ball going the house + : 5 stone abutments at the Mileshurg bridge entering View ug § an No for i cost the cot “eg enormous and extravagant price, . : ortunate individual of of a letting was made tit armngements ’ advertisemen ) with a bucket CHSIYVE WOK exj spoiled the fig Gall ral the the 11 Ma geber in breast h DeAr i . but 14] ind was a fact Making a args way it struck arib or bons welled a that oe gi and for and bounded out again doubtedly saved Ratl dist Yen an is nn Ser } 5 ance between the two houses is very considerable Mi: although there being no icant | grout deal of | { : ] lope, wasted money often, | : Rathgeber suffered a good deal, bullet I {the wo ind is not likely to prove sm | ’ his sort of | . . ; ; | He savs he feels sore al moet | effect. | : ver from A @ county = When Henderson was 1 ’ -— particu) | Johnstown flood have been officer wehad |, | related, fear of ord iis past honor « rex Numberless sad f r in writ! it : n but is only now ti CA the "x - . to a good A | saloon. keeper ! ] colored | bartender, had taken refuge on the roof " the ludicrous Incidents are oy nigl t be expected re mistaken, ue Here ia who, the surface Ww with a boul : IONE Ie IR doing the circumstances in his in. availeth little 8 lacking. Where ted'out to "Johnny" be. ins nefarious schemes of his building, was so impressed the awfulness of the situntion that he | appealed to his bartender to pray for both, as he (the know how to pray prayed, ** Oh Lord, if you ever ence 1 S1Yea ns of bad man. Al They were saved. - incompetency and Republican have more Lise t GoverNonr Beaver's explanation his relation to Hssioners the state of affairs at ’ ] i ed { exchange good as | Johnstown shows that much general knowledge in regard to these affairs as he has in regard to the prospects of Home Rule ju Ireland means well enough, and he not wittingly doing anything to annoy the flood sufferers, but he is not the man to take the bull by the horns and make the noble eharity of the people as sudden in hed and bsotted demagogue who | relief as it was in tender. — Record Licious communications in | last week, The pectable people of Centre Mr offer 1 will him ut the polls Ie . - 1 } 1] nother lot of ‘em ¥ he has about .—— fio note the effort made voters of Centre county Schaeffer, the Democratie Mr. ubliec officer can is i% Prothonotary. + character Silty ying -—— wrote ¢ the col of his paper : nt | the table are frequently not as tooth. | some as they should be, is because they are not Killed immediately after being captured, asthey should be. The prop. er way to deal with newly captured fish | is to bleed them at once, which is done by entting in at the neck without sever. ing the head. That uot only insures { long keeping and better] table qualities ta {bat it is homane, It is not a pleasant wotld | Night to a right minded person to see a © wilh his own selection as the | flue fish die a lingering, gasping death. moe ratic for Gov. | Kill your fish as soon as captu red, He is for Bigler this year: and 4 not conedtning blself with what may or may not be done by the Dem. ocrats some other year, .o-— ; Mr. Gladstone's library at Hawar. don 8 one of the fuest privates libraries | fa England, thas more than 29,000 volumes, Mr, Gladswone loans his books oat to any ore in the veighborhoal who | sve , tittle fun and. give the bays wants to read them Jormerly people down there a few polntars In tossing con'd keep them wa they liked, but a he sphere. Somehow it happened they few years ago the rule was nade that | got their eye tooth badly cut when they book could bo kept for one month | tackled the Milesburg amateurs, Such (only. It 1s the regular free library of jus running and batting made the the district. | Fleming 'sdizzy and came home fueling nc MO like stewed monkeys ITis repoited on the streets that | were beaten by a score of 18 v5 & and Judge Furst lost the Kepler case on aw til hard 4 work xing to w= 5 i and know Hnanimon cere county Nt nu i¥ endorse next November, .——— Ex-Sexaron WALLACE makes very short work of the silly newspaper story thut he is opposed to the nomination of his fellowtownsman, Mr. Bigler, ns the State Treas. - Democratic candidate for @ turer beenuse suchas nomination inte 1 | candidate : : ¥ exi ie ernog | ation is off on a jaunt to Atlantic City | this week; Olie Meek and niece Mbs | Nellie, of the Watchman, left on Tues. day moming to join the exenrsion, ~The Fleming base ball team got a { good thumping on last Saturday after. noon. They went down to Milesburg ~The Juniata Valley Editorial associ. ae plies in the body politic what the blood | the | Neleon | loaded, | heart, | ire s life, The i : m, | | OuUs. | with | saloon.keeper) did not , The bartender | Aj a shun ve us now.’ | nigger and a Dutclunan, save us now | perpetuation of an) | they are of | | and he wi He | : One reason why fish when served at | FRUITS OF PROTECTION, AN UNFORTUNATE FELLOW. | | The Chicago Herald [case in short meter: “Wherever in | America protection has established an | Infant industry, there has followed the { truck System, the slave system, the company government and the de- | Americanization of that region. The | Americans have fled and foreigners | have been seen in the blasted districts | It has been on the call of the Governor (for militia to effect a lower scale of | Wages. As at Johnstown, Pencoy- ed, Brazil, Hocking —everywhere—the | friend of man has looked on the scene {and has wished that manufacturers and | mining bad not come into tho world, to But he Ssceeedeod in Gotti & Money Enough From them to Live Comfortably the Ke. mainder of his Life, The hero of a checkered career in which a remarkable train of misfort unes have brought to him a snug little fort. turned from the West. Jacob lives at 18 Hendee street, Somerville, Mass, He 18 on the shady side of fifty and his story a8 he personally related it readslike k romance. make the d y «ful, While the baci Sadat “Twenty years ago,” said Mr, Hennis | | metamorphosed from Americans to Irish | | "48 no different from other men. | : ‘ y 4 Thad a good constitution, was called | [to English, to Germans, to Italians to igh prloommin ' ted : Magyars, to Huns, to Seyi a green, anc rents were poor great Amerie ili ” Vii ans-ths had to get out in the cold world and | Dwar ag an milliosative has Paseod yyy tor 4 living, ‘A friend oy Ne {away and the billionaire eorporation has York Rot mea chan : “ " ny | taker 0 3 " . # in a street gang. en his plate. At last men, contem. I lived in Jersy City and used to wo back I i By aor: of protection, clue and forth on the ferry, One night gois | thelr and 4 Ye going » W »ouths and grow afmid. Now home from work the gate tender opened el them give, in order to save these the gate 100 3000 and I fell be as | worthy miners from death, for at last . ell between the boat and the slip and h: ¢ leg crust the labor problem has got to that stage | 1 so that it } . ' ’ : Jui'vuy 4 RE ' f ] ! 1 ake f where the strike and the militia can no ures that ¥ or ahem. of f + cour gave We res {hack longer be used to confuse the prompt. but I re ” a, oy a Event set-back i MOVers got i ’ v l¢ ings of charity or to certain | 1 hs a] Le good Wourder, | kvoesial ; toilinas » and had such a clear case that there iypocrisies of our civilization. | | no difficulty in getting 85.000 dam | | from the ferry « OMPAnY “A Of H conceal Z Was le .— WOOL. RUN OVER BY AX EXGING president | yA! | { mined to get another job, 1 sem ; “My leg wo n y 11 that Stall wonder is it that the My leg worked Weil tha { of the national association of wool man. i Taan H “for extraordingary meeting of the | & place ina round-house on | railroad. ARSOC IA. | u i i : {Up his engine and J got 3 : ut tion in Boston on September 17. to J 4 A Wi my right arm was cut | almost off, Well. the « OMmpany g 1) - ; . { $2,500 and paid my doctor bills. Ww numer. | Re aay | had quite a Httle sum laid by and thought ufacturers has issued a ca an One night the firemar CO in ne sider the present unhappy om adit affairs as demonstrated by the | ous recent failures.’ navel i The call mentions | I would get tnt : / ona get Into some business here | for consideration three features | gel } 80m CSS Wher {my crippled condition wouldn't bother { me much. by | Knee al { =tha necessity for unity of acti ¥ in among are affected I bought a small « in Syracuse and did . . IKAI X for #8 yon those whose interests arst rate two lnck or 11 OIOWw od. | the wool tanff, the equitable adjust ment " : y ’ : ii 4 | Years, but wy k. shall | "oe il f Pr tea 4 *" RE { OF ths schedule, and a basis which : : Piease st { adapt itself to the present industrial “One morining I was going the st situation i Wwe if | Ss . when withou off in street and when they nee the first of January there have any warning. a | blast went TH lot 1 tl i : Rs OL DRAr Lhe Pp cked? FETS | been 6ifty wool failures in this country pil ACK ¢ in view of which f wool manufact. was minus an teeth. That tractor who did the blasting just # an { and I inv ested 85 of it { tic and new chewers | kept on at the cigar " ¥ d almost all urers have indeed cause for alarm. ee and almost al ‘ 1ittle clrets ' " ff has caused the distress | Hille circus cost Lhe ry mds of dae hogh ta ta tl - Wo Wool IM ) Just asit has 3% i H protec teed in ero kery O- Arpresscad NAH { business, and before a vear was over 11 be hanged if I didn't fall into a manhole side walk one evening and break .—— inclined to ove their EYeTYWwWimre, A seating knows which mean t de becotne YLtisd ness » known 1 Lhe my ot 4 | take it ff ton stuck them fi her #0 badly that they had to ek and | r 85.000 and S00n le {erally deal BA Siu : ! } ora i Le Who aims at rood | again ont it Hs © | Ale h irzitimate, o t howe he | rime wad fig a] hoetuc riist BAD LUCK THIS are worth ‘1 concluded that | fou while, | Syracuse and 1 sold out and can Hy compre the | skedd, 1 } nel wagh of hers |T had enough cash salied to keep me ™ AY Servs] n . soon becom known to 0 his Fe and dealers of | comfortably and didn't worry much in pros | about making truthful rep. i Ie Nw leclines a living. One day tao years azo last march, ! sant over to the profits tend to the | city to get a litle job dons ina machine business in which : GeAling. resentation ai } shop "Twas a little plese of turning Tuarmnion wm of the term, isan | to go out | stumbled and and fell against means to alp or around like a pin whee) practic A business man, | and waited while thes did it o {In the Lrue a h nest m : i v the shafting WAS revoly i 0 business ismy s In two secon for values, money » . ng | ’ | commodities a fair basis of profit, | I sued ‘em but the misesable reoundries endeavors to do it unfairly | allowed me only 8115 and I hed to pay and falsely to the injury of the person | away #25 of it for this wig.” | with whom be deals is not business | tanding on 1 a in -——— {man a disguise, eh sharper Drexel pruposes establish. i) "hi shia, and will ex ng 1.500 000 in erect. {| Mr. J. A thway of trade who, : thway of trad RATE | ing an Industrial institute in The J old aphorism applies here, “honesty ) - tel. | when known is always avoided, is a " ing the same. One thousand girls will the best policy i - of - one thousand boys at night. This school Joined to the great Industrial Institute the wealth of the late Mr. Williamson | will Philadelphia far been | ahead in matters pertaining to popula built, he gal 1850 | and practical education. It is gratify. about miles. Al present the | ing to see rich men like Mr. Drexel South is bMding mere railway mileage | start their enterprises and public ben then any other part of the country. | efactions while they live. The prone. What is more to the point, the Southern | pags to decry wealth and consider riches rail “oads pay ey constantly show in an evil should be modified fn a very | trafie and net en The South is large measure when we readily see that built has no ‘peculative the grand monuments we have to art There culture, justice, science, literature and education come from those who had the genious to make money, At States the « had against 2.00 in IS88 the Southern miles of mallroad, as IK 1880, Since last Janu establish, ary about 1, 000 miles more have making 1 since 18.500 Ha fs is not yet ove rouds~roads built to Is 80 much room that | territory aie still Add to this that the roads conservatively maneged and are not eagaged In © wags" and other like ruluovs proceedings. The Soaibern railroads are in good con. dition and have a big future. The min. eral, agrievliom! and manafacturing development of that section will be tae + wonder of the next generation, as the Dakotas and Kansas sre of this. . - Tux manner in which the common wenlth cass were disposed of by Distriet | " Autoroey J, C, Meyer aut the nresest term i Be! S.C put nt Yet resent ven | Bad Mash hws sup, tothe volo s of the county for his yee | 150 bushels of “Big Yield” an excel elocidon, Eve y case was cniefily pro. lent quality of red seed = Sweat for sale. | pared nod disposed of with d'spateh, | Address or oall upon Anciber example of the benedts of bay-| ~~ WALLAGE C. Cuapyax, ing eficiont men elected. Grove arg eotions of good nnd, | Tax floods of this Summer have shown how great a protection against the inroads of water a row of willow trees may be. The engineer in charge of the Potomac river improvements mays that where willows were planted the land was protected from washing, and practically no damage was done, while in the improved land not so pro. tected there was great Joss. a i Ni | | states the | A MAN WHO MET WITH MANY SERL | OUS ACCIDENTS, | electives an endowment of £22 | arships for deserving students | Principal with its own corps une is Jacob Hannis, who has just re. | { Buperior advantages | be accommodated in whe davitme and (GEO. G. GROFF, M. wees) LEWISBURG PA, (oe Bue Rev, Jous Hannes PH.D, Presiovrse, f 5 with hol ono bend YORIS In iy TE The College has four courses « fr & ut a oservatary ; elective course of two | chemistry Members of the Colley Faculty confine themselves wholly to College work The Academy, William FE. Mortin, 4. ™ i of Instructors, fits young men thor Pr ness or for teaching The Institute for ladies Mrs. B. B/Sarison A.M, with separate buildings and campus, sid with x own corps of Instructors, offers = thorough course in Literature and seiepoe, snd in Musie ad Art No institution in Pennsvivs s doing Tet ter work than B ty. ste dents registered last year atieth year Le glans Sep. 12, 1886 For eatalogue or information addr Prof. G.G. Groff. M. » l L. 1 Pa and Its own buildings ughly for college, for bu an Lewisburg, MDWARD K. RHOADS, | cn DEA LE Anthracite Coal, Bituminous Coal, Hed — —— - — - — gS aud AT ( BROWNS OLD COAL YARD, Near the Paves r Depot -1- BUCKNELL : UNIVERSITY =- LEWISBURG, X X i which ail ymmunity sre An Institutios members of the ¢ proud Registered last imber expected 101 Studer Year this ycra yroken in a 'w Gymupasiom ul Laboratory. Ground = be t few days fora» and fora Che: your boys and ication. It may inslance you cam Parents giv 14 . girls a good ed be the only leave them, This College is pry pared to do as good ther College in the State, niages hers, thorough instreo- Bd location, beautiful scenery Spacious buildings, large ground ample appliances 4. A large library open all day. 5 A large museum used for study. Exeellent Expenses below the average. A more] Christian community. in all the terary societies, Practical instroctions SCHNCEs 10. An WHICH 8 US il. K wanen. 12 needy, 13 4 Astronomical Observatory «l by the students advantages to men and the ) “ jual Free scholarship to aid A large body of loval Alumni. A strong denomination to furnish financial support, 145. A Facaity ambitious to keep their institution at the head, 14, Students who come to work. 17. The Institution is as thorough as at aay College in the a i. There is no longer any need of — i their hisdren to distant achaols. The total value of the University erty now approaches half a million lars (R500. All students not prepared for Cole lore classes may enter Bucknell Acade- my. or Bucknell Insitute, in which in tractione we g'sen in all the branches nsunlly taught In Academise, Seminar jou and Novral schools. Students im these schools have the use of the College Museum, aud Library, Special atten tion to those preparing to teach. Prac. 1) . thal instractions tn Phynography, Tek ography, Typewriting amd is offered to all the students. For catalogue and intormatian, sdes D, L LD,
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