RS ¢ . to. - ins Pe ni) AE. — FIVER a> CURE Bex Toadachio and relieve all the troubles nofs dent to a billous state of the system, such ag Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress afteg eating, Pain in the Bide, &o. While thelr mos pamarkable success has boen shown in curing 4 SICK Headache, yot Carter's Little Liver Pills sre equally valuable in Constipation, curing and pre venting thisannoy ing complaint, while they alsa eorvect all disorders of thostomach stimulate the Huard and regulate the bowels, Even if they only HEAD h they would bo almost priceless to those wha from this distressing complaint; but fortus mately their goodness does notend here,and those who once try thom will ind these little pills valu. able in po many ways that they will not be wil. Bog todo without them. But after allaick hesd ACHE 35 the bane of so many lHves that here is where wo make our great boast, Qur pills cure it while others do not Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and wery easy to take. One or two pills makes dose, They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purr, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vialsat 25 cents; five for $1. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sent by mall CARTER MEDICINE CO,, New York. "WALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE 0 Cures rye Colds, Coug Throat, Croup. Iafiuen. a, Whoopin gh er hin and yo ory A sertain cure for Cy asumption oo stages, and gure relief in advanced se al ence, ou will see the excellent & et after taking tue first dose. Fold b dealers everywhere, j As bottles 50 cents and §1.09, A True Combination of MOCHA, JAVA and RIO. Picture Card Given With every pound package. For Sale everywhere, Weekes Spice Co, Toledo 0 VE NEXT “MORNING ft FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. » doctor says it acta gently on the stomach, liver kidneys, and is a poensant jarative. This drink is made fron berbe, and ia prepared for Use as easily as Sen. Its oniied LANES MEDIGINE All or 11: ct S0e. and $100 a package. | ya .” send your sddress for free sample ane's Family i pa Jue ra Ah the Dawes pac I Guy. Secon . WOO ARD, NOT, N. X. DOCTOR J. B. HOBENSACK'S 4 lerporsf biome | yoiry CURE al I MEDICAL OFFIC] 206 NN. SECOND ST, Tndiadatp bo) 2 Lhe olde In Amazios for th tr Special Diseases & Youthful E: Blood Polson, Nervous Del te 17 plogs, Discharges, Strictures, | wi skin Diseases, Vari coos Hyd e, permanently cured by improv out detention from business. 7 due to his life] ng oxy wy; to the pure vegetable rem wotigh examination a 1 iven patie nia dur ectablishment is our guarants Feentment by Mall a Speciale ’ urs, Aw, dl Sr B : day till O P.M, Bundays | ree Sinammp for Book. - ng On Earth Will v ‘ west Is LIxm SLorilan’s Condition Powder! KLEPS YOUR CHICKENS Strong snl (lealthy ; Prevents all Diesase, Goud for Moulting Hens, te atv <dnte ly Jars. Highly ooneentrated. Pn wy cons Sant 8 veil A dag, Na Aner one tor 9, send ix 1 prevent If ron mh Na mali un ‘ wh Teh oo ith Boston, Mam , nents to | and about $4 for protection. ! and that is plenty. {| the w when money is scarce and he has clothes | | that if the | woolen u | ciously, becan it to ask for bh | hold DEMOCRATIC WOOL DUTIES, Speaker Crisp on the Effect of the Springer | Free Wool BIL We passed a bill known as the Springer wool bill. We put raw wool on the free list—made it absolutely free. We did not intend to hurt the farmer when wo did it, because, in a proper sense, the Australian and other foreign wool brought into this country is not in com petition with American wool, It is an auxiliary-—an aid-—necessary to mix and mingle with it to make the various kinds of goods that we want, Aud then, again, the Democrats gener ally are in favor of free raw materials to enable our manufacturing establish obtain their materials more cheaply. We put wool on the free list, but we did not stop there. We reduced the tariff on woolen goods from an ov erage specific and ad valorem rate equiv alent to 09 per cent, McKinley law puts it, to an average of less than 85 per cent, That is the reduc- tion proposed in the bill which passed the house. Now last year there were brought into this country $35,000,000 worth of woolen goods, and upon thos there was paid into the federal treasury a tax of $32,000,000, That is a great deal more than this average of 50 per cent, that 1 told you about. The tariff on some articles is much higher and on some articles it is lower. The woolen schedule is among the highest, Last year $35,000,000 worth of woolen goods came here from abroad to be sold in competition with the Ameri an woolen products, and those goods paid $32,000,000 tax. The American consum ers of those foreign goods paid $67 000 for $35,000,000 worth of goods. They got $35,000,000 worth of goods and £32,000,000 worth of tariff when they bought them. Now, if the American people consume five times as many goods of domestic manufacture as they do « ¥ snported goods, then the American peo ple paid five times $32,000,000 in the way of increased price on goods of Americar manufacture, and therefore they paid £150,000,000 in round numbers for goods, and at the same time they paid £145,000,000 in round numbers for pro tection on woolen goods. Now the Democrats be the same amount of money you ought to be able to buy more goods and less protection. Soil the Springer wool bill mes a law, ad of that $e 15,000 000 worth of imported goods paying $12 000,000 tax, it would have paid 3 $11,000 000 tax, and you would have saved $21,000,000 on that and five times §21 000,000 on the home made article, which would have been $100,000,000 more, We are not in favor of free trade. We favor free trade in the raw materials but not free trade in the goods int which skilled American labor enters There is plenty of protection left t more than compensate for any real supposed differences in the price of Ia bor, and at the same time there are more cheap goods for the American workingmen, BX wis O00 about lieve that for bec insts or Now let the American workingma | take it to himself when he goes to the | store and buys a suit of woolen clothes thes for $10. for the cl Now, if He pays about §6 you cut down that protection, have proposed in the Springer bill, when the workingman buys $10 worth of | clothes he will get about $8.50 worth of clothes and $1.50 worth of protectior That is as muc rkingman needs in cold weather, to buy Now what else did that same bill 4 It reduced the ta wr cent. to 25 per cent., and the same and woolen bill had ome a law the nderwear for which pay $5 you could buy for $5.25. The Democratic idea is to benefit the work ingman in this way-—by imposing a cus towns duty for revenue purposes and dis tributing the incidental protection judi- 1 on i FR Te DiALIKeLs be reducing to the o price fw somewhere, n by hat he has to ch in Detr workingman th Fighting Labor, im} ng has ever been seer in this lar han the troops of manufact flocking to Washingt tariff under want to help labor by wages high ich sincerity y from a list of 1 ed in a recent tion journal, TV rk. This list con establishments { h refuse to rec Association organization of the try. These 1451 men, Confidential d mills, employing 10, ther establishments The Iron Age est of men in all the 1 protects duties that they plea making nun nine Af Pa AD report, t union mills at 100,000, It is mill sy ly sia, ti 145 published list 95 are in Penn 0 great pr of modern Republicanism The object of the Amalgamated as sociation is to get high wages and keep them high. The manufacturers interesting to note that of the 8 in the oly tection pro | fonsed the same objects before McKin ley’ committee, and then they go home to fight organized labor and keep wages as low as possible, Such is protection! MeKinley Prices for Umbrellas One of the largest firms of umbrella dealers in this country, which does busi ners on Broadway, New York, has re cently sont the following circular to its customers: Dean Bin-Owing to the condition of the slik market wo aro obilged to advance the price of our “Paria” umbrella to $3, Minch, and $8.00, S.inch. Of course all orders now In the house will be filled at the original pries We propose selling all our lines as near ts ment prices as the slik market will allow, ng to be favored with your orders for fall hollday seasons, we remain, yours, very truly, The old prices were $2.50 and $3, ro pective'y, , which is where the | | must sell for ten or {| roundabout as we | h as | bushel of whent In x on wool hats from 52 | underwear, so | you now | has got to perate | is in this ! of Irom | was abr ad, | upon the articles which he might | POWDERLY ON THE TARIFF TAX He Shows the Evils of the Protective Bys- tem The Consumer Pays the Tax. There are hundreds of persons in this | country laboriously engaged in a vain endeavor to convince the American peo- | ple that the tariff is not a tax, and the most plausible argument they can bring to their aid is that the tariff, not coming direct from the pockets not so noticeable ox though it were paid in cents, dimes and dollars directly from them. That paid on an article over and above the cost of production and legitimate €x change is a tax. Some call it profit But it stands as a consumer is taxed to yield a profit to the produ er, or, more accurate ly Bp ak ing, the manufacturer, A manufactured article, passing through a port of entry, paying a duty of ten or twenty cents as a protection to the industries of the country it twenty cents than if that tariff had not levied. It matters not that the foreign maker must pay the extra ten or twenty cents to secure admittance for his wares, consumer must pay that, or greater sum, in addition to the price the article buys. It but little difference whether it is called a duty, a tariff or a protection fee, consumer is taxed to pay it, or we do not know what a tax is It is not with the tariff or the of protection that we now take is with the principle of deception practiced on the people w rie n they told th: , tariff or protection fee, being indirectly pid is not felt to be a hardship or 80 oner came direct from their own p plain Anglo-Saxon it an be taxed out being told that they s they will not know it, it they will not mind it, the 80 Insignificant, The advocac y um enters, more been l also w of which he makes princij issue; that it this duty neans that if 1 people « indirect! or if they d« poses ignorance part of the peop where the danger | pay taxes dire are paid for, ti follow the mat what use the m payer in the n certain to wherefore of every in Heo knows he | sires to know business to know reas taxed He 3 1 what is done with makes it oney. It is not so with the tariff indirect taxation, that the and cauti not exercised by public officials in caring for the people's money No more fruit or dishonesty which lies plausible and innocent looking scheme of taxing the people in an indirect manner, Indirect taxatior its forms give way to the and the consequence Same viguance ful source of co rrupt found beneath ' can be than that concealed the vers and in all auld sh : . % | practical, businesslike and honest meth | od of co lecting taxes directly from the Then they will be more apt « take a deeper interest in the question of taxation; they will know what they pay for, and will pay for what they get and no more.—T. V. Powderly in Labor Day Issue of Journal of United Labor people. HOW PROTECTION PROTECTS By Reduacing Both Exports and Prices of American Products, McKinley) bill tarred of por This measure (the open a market for a single es UG. Blaine TWO FEPFTEMRENS CONPARED " decreases Total | 18.620, 9%4 bushe Average centa per THAT 18 EFFECT New York World MoeKinley's True Opinion of the Tariff Tax. When KcKinley was ¢ x] defending in the house, in the tariff bill which lainis May, 1 bears his name and { had recently been re ported by his ways | and | reference to the means committee, he said, with paragraph of the repealing ‘the provision in the law pe mitting the United Sta Verne to import for its use any articles free of duty tes (B “This provision of law has been eli inated in posed revision, wed by the house and government, its offi ntractors the pre and if Appr senate and the cers, president, the agents and after have to pay the same duties which , ¥ ita citizens generally are required to will pay.” In the ence to n in the old law } mitting travelers re turning from abroa to import articles as “personal effects free of duty The practical effect of this provision that the wealthy classes who wer to visit distant countries secured same speech he said, with refer able | ‘ | exemption from the payment of duties while the average citizen, unable to go was compelled to pay a duty want to use.’ In those days McKinley, fresh fr prolonged study of the tariff, believed and said that the tariff duties were paid by “citizens generally” or “the averag: citizen" that they were, as Senator Sherman seid, “taxes npon the people.’ ~Now York Times. Ha" About Differences in Wages. Joseph D, Weeks, a well known pro tectionist writer and statistician, says in his paper, The American Manufac- turer, “The lowest wages we know of paid puddlers in the United States to day is $3.25, and the highest $5.50, the price paid at Pittsburg and in the entire west." Hero is a difference of $2.25 a ton in dif ferent parts of the United States. Does not this Spice the Republican claim that if we no tariff on foreign com- modities wages here would sink to the European level? of the people, 15 #0 burdensome as | fixed fact that the | must g the | EDWARD K. RHOADS, Shipping Commission Merchant Rather Be Without [iread. XI Bisuor's Resivencs, Marque te, Mich, 1 Nov. 7, 18%, | The Bev. J. Eossbiel, of sbove | I bave suffered a gront pow fool u nervon A Pastor | 3 Nerve Ta | Hoved I think & gre Yond | rather be without bread than place, writes : and whenever } fog I take a dose le and feel re. of it and would without the Tonle, lon! allack ¢ Anthracite, Bituminous and Woodland COAI Grain Better Than the ir I doen it more K8 or ten Best Doctor. ANON wber, 1500, my ¥, I'a., Doo Ly 10 sny that | was treated yoars by bewt ors in Veansyl aul, but never gov any relief until I took Pas. tor Koonig's Nerve Tonle, Imm cured of wy nervous troubles ; have nover had the slightest since I eowumnenced pie want no and Carnegies, and the mont t i Tu Pots { (ay. Ev ¥ { one spells baking We Dred bottl ML 2113 ry t BALRAH McGUIRE Valuable Bi P nmnon i i poor patients snedielne Hoox en Nervons free to suy sddre can siso oltalr free of charge. prepared Ly Us Wa Ind . ir 4 tin MIC TAED. CO., Chicago, (iL s nt $1 per Bottle. ar Ob ! 6 Bottles for 89. 2 a LA LILEFONTE. B. & B. STOR SERGES 50C TO $2.50 A YARD. Mrs. Amanda Paisley Trinity al Ne J always says “Thank Yeu" lo sapariiia. She suffered for rs fr 4 and Secrofula sores ot 50 INCH FRENCH SERGES, at Hood’ 5 Sarsaparilla Flas effe | an ever Fo or full P art) SOC BA WE CARE $01 { to I. Hoop & Ox Lowell now hear ulars of he Noy A.D Ix t ‘ 1 al colors Mass HOOUD'S PILLS are band made, and are § CEN T =. fect in condition, proportion and appearance { y ¢ Rerges are remark t vy be » CLOSING OUT [ime a Fl R N | T UR E More than 1.000 styles of ‘New Fall Dress Woolens to select from. [lust A PMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE wen D J we VALUABLE LAN ted Catalogue AT COST of Wm f i A " . Centre county ed 2a ‘ wid § ] i . = | ¢ = Parlor, Dining & Bed Room us| BOGGS & BUHL, : Federal St. ALLEGHENY WwW. Hawort) Kimler Ate Emeline Mil na Harshberger oeased of Bellefonte bora hat Pp : OOF {DN Lieb suardian of hase mond : fn cot onte, I's. Al {legs Ne nptly | d : nar child of Col Theodore f sale: oneahird ot he ehded gh hgh . urg bore, deceased {DM Leh guardian of vor child of Col. Thendare arg boro, deceased tof HB ({ Quig of Wm. Coan, ’ ks sun dred at d fifty feet. TERME OF net 1 of pure firmation o balance in two years-with nile . \ANDER ATTORNEY Fras ¥» i on i shisha ; 3 he first and final scent Bowen & Orvis “ ’ ren] estate n s deengeed torneys A , he W Dasham, a n Ritnery ste of Potter cured by bond and mortgage on t Onvis { Davia Krape and John f Mary Royer, lat 1 # wardian of C. dAreegued Adam Hoy, admin N. W- COR. PENNAVENUE AND SIXTH ST. ZPITTSBURG, Runkle, administrator of ete, of Michael Run Address, 3. The account of W. C. Patterson, adminis b, i it ee \ Acomunt of. Mo ERAntiah of Man- ALE XANDER YOUNG | CONPANY ] A f autores of ete '} | of Gregg township Aereared " ’ 14 | of ote d Wm. Montgomery, late of Howard £ 1 y / | township deceassd / § A £4 at of Win. MeRates, administrator l ! of ote. of Wan. Rates. ate of Rush township, 17. The final account of trator of John T. Hoover, deed, as fled hy vaeeutors of sald Adam Hoy, deceased TWENTY THRER THOUSAND GRADUATYS 8. The second and final account of Jacod 1, The largest and most progressive Business College in the United States. | © 8 rat in hal mont of D. ©. el Send for new illustrated cata) . N for, guardian of James A. Noll, minor ehidd of logue giving full particulars, mailedifree, AL] , 7. CC SMITINS 8027 trator of ste. of James 1. Fulton, late of College Aes SRN, Uh . Es m M rn NT y| ©OLDESI aD. BEST, oF Pltonts hoo. dy ’ a Aqeonmt of David M Joh sunt un vides A te, late of eliefonte AD heAtlY phe pod In fain Fan 0 tC, satis An On FUATAn 4 li ey Eis Arney, RR Passyunk Ave, Ph bh
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