HENINGTOBACCO _WHY? it's the Chewers 3.1.7 igure tl e,now that heca et 0 ye Vk Bs) : ket: .J%Tinest inthe mary Gives HEAR no lasting mn Joyy Louisville, Ky Scientific American Agency for CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS DESICN PATENTS COPYRICHTS, eto. vo Handbook write to OADWAY, New Yorx, sit for see uring patents in America. | taken out by us is brought before the pubili a notice given free of charge in the Scientific American Ranpuat circulation of any selentifie paper in the Npiendidly illustrated. No intelligent man shon'd be without it. Weekly, 83, a i: BL six months, Address MUNN & CO, RAS Lie, 361 Brosdway, New York, A True Combination of MOCHA, JAVA and Mao, ‘THE BLAINE DIVORCE | The Secretary Discusses His Do- | mestic Tribulations, | HIS DEFENSE OF HIS NAMESAKE. I'he Generous Offers Made to the Yonng Married Couple, He jected by Young Mrs, Blaine—The Rebuke to and Premier's Letter of Father Duncey. | Wasninagron, Feb, 20, Secretary | Blaine has furnished to the United Press "a lengthy statement relating to the marriage of his James G., Jr, to | Marie Nevins and their divorce. Hesays {that he and his family have borne | quietly every publication inspired by the | young woman, but the last outrage of the kind, embodied in the decision of a judge at Deadwood, 8. D., assumes a character which makes it impossible to | remain longer silent, The statement opens with a letter written by the secretary to Rev, Father C. Ducey, who officiated at the wedding at the time, in which he protests against the act of the priest. The arrangements for the wedding, thesecretary says, Miss Nevins made and was responsible for, and in a minute detailed statement of facts he asserts the falsity of the asser | tion that Mrs. Blaine broke up the mar | riage relations of her son and his wife, | The latter refused the offer made by the | se retary for the maintenance of the | young couple. Mrs, Blaine at no time | in thought, word or deed, attempted to | separate them. “On the contrary,” says | the secretary in closing, *‘she did not { fail by liberality, by consideration and | by extenuation to foster in every prac- { ticable way their happiness, if happiness | to them had been possible.’ | "Since the separation of my son | his wife, three and a half Years ago, my | family has silently borne every mis representation, every slanderous attack, | every newspaper interview which | pleased the now divorced wife to in | spire. The one person aimed at een Mrs. Blaine, and we have perhaps [been at fault in allowing a horror of th | public discussion of | combined with a regar { for the future | of my permit so mut | calumny to go unanswered. The outrage of the kind, embodied in the | decision of the judge Deadwood, |S. D., assumes an official character | which makes it | longer silent. {| “A letter which I addressed to Rev, Thomas I. Ducey at the time | the marriage will distinctly stats tmportant facts bearing upon event, | The letter to Father Ducey, dated | Augusta. Me., Sept. 13, 1888, is as follows “Un Wednesday morning last, the Sth inst., my youngest son, James GG. Blaine, {Jr shwcked me by the announcement that on the preceding Monday he had | been united in marriage with Miss Marie | Nevins; that you had performed the | ceremony in your own rectory; that my | son and Miss Nevins were unaccompan | ied by friend or relative, and that two of your household servants were the sole witnesses, My son's announcement gave the first knowledge that | or any member of my family had of his mar. | riage or even his attachment to Miss Nevins, whose character, I wish to say at the outset, is not at all in question, and of whom, but for this marriage, 1 have never heard a breath of censure “ ‘My son was born Oct, 12, 1865, and | is not, therefore, 18 years old. He was | living here in his own home, in the house where he was born, surrounded by neighbors who had known him all his life, under the daily care of a tutor | who was fitting him for college, which {he hoped to enter this autumn. To | facilitate his preparation he desired to remain here apd the summer, while | the other members of the family were much of the time at Bar Harbor, As | have since learned, Miss Nevins, in company with her sister and her father came to Augusta on Monday, Aug. 16, On Friday, Sept. 3, eighteen days after | her arrival in Augusta, my son, who | had never seen her nor heard her name until she came here, left his home with. son, and It has } nas private matters, grandson, to impossible to that {ing to my son's appeal, | am prepared to say that the marriage whatever evils resulting from this de- plorable marriage my son may be the author or the victim the guilt will be on your head. James G, Bramwe.'” “When I wrote this letter 1 believed { that Miss Nevins had no other responsi- bility in the marriage than in consent- Since then I was arranged by her my son, “Within ten days after her arrival in Augusta, within one week from the day she first met my son she wa adjuring him for several successive days to write nothing until she saw him. She asked him to look into the marriage laws of Massachusetts and New York “When they reached New York after they had fled from Augusta she can- tioned my son not to ‘forget the gold box for Ducey.’ and to the pocket of your gray clothes for the ring." In short she took charge of every matter and directed all the pre weedings to the last minutae, “It was thus that a boy of 17 vears and 10 months, in some respects inex- perienced even for his age, was te mpted from his school books and his tutor, and blindly led to the altar by a young wo man of full 21 years, with entire secrecy contrived by herself, and with all the instrumentalities of her device complete and exact, “I purpose next to show the falsity of the assertion that Mrs. Blaine awoke up the marriage relations of my 3. and his wife. She did not see her daughter in-law until May, 18587, eight months after the marriage, when, being in New York the latter called on her twice dur- ing her two days’ stay. The next she saw her was a month later about to sail for was a single day in New York and saw the young woman on taking leave, “Within two or tnree days I learned the details of the dismal failure of their New York life, and after full consulta tion with Mrs approval, 1 proposed that they should come to live in Augusta and ocenpy our old home, | assured them in addition to a house, fuel, light and the { & man servant, the sum of : until my son should bx income for them My son immediately told his wife in detail what my offer was, He was that she would not stay in A far more than by When wages of VEOAT LO earn an r reply IUSLA ually enstranged f fusal to accept the family and to every vis one more than myself, that a was the least Mr. Blaine mediate canse of hi departure was secretary of st woman's husban A i documents, and he disaster to be dreaded. thal then states longer than his young wife desired, al though he was in the company of hi father, who had subsequently } He concludes Just forty-four days after this willful departure she returned to my house, a companied by her mother, Mrs, Nevins, my grandson and his nurse. Mrs, Blaine, who was ill, at dressed and went down stairs, having previ structed her maid to do | quired for their comfort. Neither lady advanced to greet her. No extended to her, but from Mrs, Nevins seconded by her daughter, came charges Once Aros, usiy in everything re against her son and herself so insulting | violent that a servant was called ir the frankly avowed purpose of act and in fi of the statements of the judge « wood, Myson was entirely restraint was attempted ire separation v's departure Far be it from me to hold my son blameless, though his youth, his nnoowm- sleted education, his separation from the | mfluences of home, the exchange of £20 ‘look into | | paper | Mexico, and representing the interests {| vor of the passage of such a law | free of {HX { | foreign manufacturers in tu { mand for time | Europe on June 8 she | | ple buy are, to a great exten Blaine, and with her free | | Pastor Koenig's Nerve 1 Pastor Koenig, of F 44 now prepared un band was | Highest of all in Leavening Power.—U. 8. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. Roa ABSOLUTELY PURE Wool Growers for Free Wool The Philad The dispose of theh ¥ ’ Stock re furmers Vi gas, wer, a OWS printed al Las New goods at Cost. NOLL J AMES( ATTORNEY On 0 Mee the eeond chang Bellefonte, P of wool growers, is in favor of {ree wool, In speaking of the Springer bill it The manufacturers ought to be in fa ass nox ought the wool uw word growers The the different to utle of disapproval. adm Varietis not grown in the Un ited which the manufacturer £5 if he Isto ng purpe i i kinds of BOOS, Wonk domestic wool I'HE ROBBER hance its price, The manufacturer, having sy to nll the wools he need be driven, as he is now, to tl + of cotton and shoddy, tH Lhe fo.calied woolen Foul of wool. shoddy and cotton. the ¢ ul K Sleeplessness Cured. Iv Br, Sevens, Keylerton P.O, Pa, I am glad to testify that I u Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonle with the bes seoces for sleeplessness, and groal relief for suller really » K, Pastor Ororows, Md. Beptember, 15K parties to whom I sold # w of wie was telling @ LO. Ie ‘ ve f day that be had suffered from great dizziness and paln through his woole After using one bootie he was entirely cured JOHN WW. CARDER My wife sufferad for a number of years from Ove of the WARNED IN TIM box y Merchant, | violent nervousness and spent hundreds of dob lars for doctors and medicine, | avadl | Koenig's Nerve Tonle ber trouble bas subsided, but all to no After taking ouly two bottles of Pastor JOHN FULLMEKR re «A Valuable Fook en Nervous 8, Diseases sont free to any address Y I poor patistts can also obtain » this medicine free of charge, " This petnedy has been prepared by the Reverend rt Warne, Ind. eines HOA and der his direction by the KOENIC MED. CO., Chicago, iil. Sold by Druggists nt 81 per Bottle. 6 for §5 Large Size, 51.75% 6 Bottles for 89. SPECIAL SALE! Al THE | | { | House, 1 Baking Powder (ABMAN HOUSE, J High Street, opposite the Court Entirely new. New furniture steam Heat, Electric Light. and all the modern improvement D.GARMAN Proprietor, (TENTRE COUNTY BANKING \v COMPANY. er of High and Receive Deposits: D JAS. SCOFIELD Manufacturer a Dealer in 75 HARNESS | have always «uy nand fine wk of Whips Lap and Buffalo Robes Blankets, Fly-nets, anda thing needed about horses Spring Street, Southof Alle BOGGS & BUHL, } Federal St RELIABLE INSURANCE. Picture Card a ration [ ipations for With every pound peck life tnull of hopes and anti and | Premature and ngenial « panionship are considered, { hold out permission, and without the knowl | edge of any member of his family cares 8alo everywhere, THE KING OF ALL COUGH CURES; DOCTOR ACKERS ENCLISH REMEDY Sold in England for 1s. 1%d., and » . in America for 25 comnts a bottle, I'TT TASTES GOOD, Dr, Acker's English Pills Cure Bickness and Headache, URE small, ploosast, a favorite with the INK Indies Ls WE BOOKER & CO NEW YORK Sears ieRERRRREIR ERY BARRERA ARRAN EE EE DHNSON 4NopYNE LINIMEN 1 KE Any Ory \U I DITERNAL sed BRTEIVAL see 0 & ENERATION AFTER GENERATION 0 FAVE USED AND BLESSED rr, (#7) OTwy NG-HEN Dropped on Bugar, Childven Love It, ~ LR Ev Fravalec should have & bottle of in his steht very Sufferer Lim "mms. vi allen a y Ker 4 rh, Brome 1 Beene or accompanied Miss Nevins and her sister to their mother in New York, On Sat | urday, the 4th, the two young persons | presented themselves to yom for mar riage Mr. Blaine then refers to the fact that Father Ducey aided his son in conceal ing the intended marriage from his parents and of the reverend gentieman’s assistance in securing a dispensation for | the marriage of young Blaine, a Protest ant, to a Catholic He proceeds | A week ago my boy was under my | protection the most helpless, the least responsible member of my family; er ratic but controllable through his strong | affections; an object of constant watch fulness to his parents, his brothers and his sisters; a source of constant anxiety bat not of despair, because he is of good | abilities; as influenced to the | right as to the wrong and because the | patience of love can never know wear ness, Today, through your agency, this | boy m years, inexperience, in jndgment | In practical capacity, leaves my home | and my care, burdened with the full re | sponsibilities of a man, with the welfare | of a woman in his keeping In defense of this conduct you al legged tomy som Walker the confidence reposedd in you as a priest by my son 1 he confidence of the confessional ia al | ways respected, but by your use of con fidence reposed in you outside the con fessional, even by those not of the Catholic communion, yom perforce be | come an accomplices before the act of any crime or any imprudence to which you may listen, It is not for me to ad vise a minister of your intelligence that your position is absolutely untenable, would be dangerons to society, and would not be respected by any court of the land. You further allege in your justification of your action that if yon ad not performed the ceremony some one else outaide your communion would have done so. This is a common defense of evil doing and is unworthy of a est and » man. You might as well ustify your murder of a man by chloro on the ground that otherwise some one else would murder him with a readily “I am powerless, | cannot question the legality of the marriage. I shall at a distance, and at every disadvantage, endeavor to guide my son. But as a father living uuder the institution of the family, as a citizen living ander the divine order of society, | protest against your sot. As a servant of God, to whose mimistry you ave ordained, I call God to witness between you and me, Of more sinned against than sinning his mother at no time in thought or deed, attempted to separate him fr his wife Jaxes G. Brass VIGOROUS Young Mra. Blaine Asks the duction of Her Love Letters New York, March 1.—Mrs, Nevins replying to the published statement of Mr. Blaine, says it is a f from beginning to end tured out of whole cloth at length the meeting with Mrs Blaine and asserts that the letter's manner was overbearing and insulting in the highest degree she and her daughter will vet prove her assertions Siovx Faris, 8S. D., March 2 divorced wife of James GG. Bla answers at length her father published statement regarding her ma riage pathy him Wu quotes from, and says “1 will give you a sufficient time in which to conform to my reasonable de mand, say ten days, If at the that time you fail to respond, | deem it my duty to give their contents and corroborate my state ment by publishing letters from your son, both prior and subsequent to our marriage. You know full well that your charges against me regarding the mar riage are unfounded. 1 give you ample opportunity to retract “This is not a proposed diplomatic en gagement on my part, for your success in dealing with powerful nations is too well known for me to meet you on any ground than as the mother of your grand son, | simply ask, now that you have arraigned me by the use of fragmentary quotations from my love letters to your son, that you be fair enough to publish the originals in full. | will then prove to the world that your son was far from a weakling, and that you, his prond father, wo) knew it long before he mar. ried me.” Whitman Has n Relapse. Camprx, N. J., March 2. Walt Whit RESPONSES Pro- manning She and details She says She says she is not asking sym but demanding justice. She a publish in full the letters shall in substance man's condition i» reported to be worse than for several days past, the 1 poet not resting as easily as he rig do- ing. He was y pleased with a Sympathetic | which he received Alfred Tennyson. The ph | does not ex press | immediate dissolution, but says it may f as lo for come at any time, tissue of lies | end of | Clearing its which we and LESS THAN Goods Must Go. All these goods must go as we must SOK k obtain bargains make room for our Spring This 18 a rare opportunity to from an old and reliable clothing house when we say we are making a Clearing Sale it means that we intend to get rid of our stock at a Prices will be cut regardless of former rates, great reduction This is a rare opportunity to save mons ey. Come and see the bargains weare offering. Money always refunded if goods are not as represented. SAM'L, LL PROPRIETOR, Allecrheny St WIN, BELLEFONTE PA. Fire and Accident TIRE: Nationa! of Hartford, Continental of New York, Fire Association of Philadelpia, and other strong and leading com anies ' HNecident: Travelers All business promptly and carefully attended to CHAS. SMITH, Agt., Bellefonte, Pa. Sept. onrad House NEAR QUEEN & CO The famous firm of Occulists and Opticians Of PHILADELPHIA Have arranged to send one of their Specialists on the ye TO BELLEFONTE, WEDEESDAY, MARCH 9th, He will be at the BROCKERHOFF HOUSE Sumi AMP, » _ Those w eyes are cansing discom Foceive Intailigwnt Ang sxOIf] atbenton, oo QUEEN & CO. ut St, Philadelphia.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers