4 gr Vol. 14 BELLEFONTE, PA.,, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1892, NO. 47 The Centre Demoreai, CHAS. R. KURTZ, - EDITOR TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Regular Price When Paid in Advance When subseriptio yoars $2 ns are not paid 00 will be charged Editorial. Tie admission of those new western states by the republicans proved a boom- erang. in the last election. a-— - THE comet didn’t strike the last Sunday night, but there were agre many colored gentlemen‘ much afeared”’ and there was a “heap praying « that day. AL lone” > ANOTHER opportunity i But still remain and our dear their have a few days of grace may be left—better catel 0 ys drawing a close—ILeap year. ww weeks girls who have not made good use of 1 on -~ SouTH Australia, of Great Britain, re vest that is as excelient in qu is abundant in quantity. for tend material rise in prices, a larger quntity will still export, further to prey man. till clings is cherished idea of On this point he recently said “The newspapers of the United ought to know me well enough to lieve that when I advocate a system | am not going to change my views mere. ly because of a defeat in ¢ iy in n States | J be. ) ect on tem iy or two befo prevail here t be file papers mus lidates in boroug nust be nominated with the Auditors | before the election or if by nom papers 7 days before the election, election filed 0 day 37 nation Township and borough Auditors are required to have the ballots printed and to certify the cost to the county com. missioners, who provide for payment of the expenses out of the county funds. - Our Associate Judges Relative to the associate judgeship in Centre county, the Philadelphia Press makes the following comment: “Centre A. Faulk. the last election, the question of his right t take the office is raised in view of the fact that the census discloses a population of to HE N= county having chosen Mr. ( au ner associate judge at 0 261 in Centre county and the sonstitu.- tion provides that when the population of a county reaches 40.000 it shall con stitute a separate judicial district, ana the office of associate judge, not learned iH n the law, is abolished in counties form. ing separate judicial districts The } and has been carried up to the supreme court of the state wint has been raised before ir iW three ms parate cases, and the decision has been always adverse to the claim that a sep. arate judicial district on the mere show. ing that it has the without action by VY. vhich containing 40.000 in. le tself, the legislature to reste a separate judicial district out of tech a county, but until the legislature acts the old order of things remain.” county becomes a population Article constitution, the legislature tl “" L county Section 5, mys that tan shall constitute a sepa inl district, does not execute + direction to Public Patronage No paper can be published without home patronage, and every man is in. terested in keeping up a home paper. If a railroad or factory is wanted the newspaper is expected to work for it. If a public meeting Is wanted for any purpose, the newspaper is called upon for a free notice. If any of the societies have A supper or reception of any kind, the newspaper is expected to give the necessary notice. The newspaper must puff the schools and everything else to advance the interests of the business men of the place, and then give them a handsome notice when they pass away, THE ELECTORAL VOTE. The final returns from Oregon make last to Jdectorad vote It it possible a an exact { { table of the | for President. CLEVELAX Alabama ATKANSAS wocrrenmess California Connecti Delaware Florida Georgia print stands as follows: HARRISON Louisiana Maryland.... Michigan Missis Do yi N North OC ¢ | this time. one lector and the republicans the other 23. They | { tl i had the ing id by voters plac their electors name, brst party f1 } alter the stead of after the name, enoug errors were made to allow one bserved that 111 Of cra tic ele It will be « Mr. ( a major Electoral votes in the total of 4 has of {4 i, er Confederate ates he still has as Harrison and Weaver POPULAR VOTE. many votes as of } gether, ma) (00, to say that the popular verdict ag or McKinley tariff 1 (XX), the Republican 8 fully 1.000 Greenburg A Huntingd Greenburg. ch the Swim Huntingdon Fire Departme and ex.-pres it of f A ndertook to fulfl requirements of bet by the Juniata River at its widest point there, d The recent rains ha { the State } sociation, LH] he an election wading across raised the river Chief way out cons derably when only ali was carried off his feet and swept down bank lined with people on either side and brass band was waiting to receive the ventur Greenburg. tle from shore, the river. The rive: were 0 some swimmer, clothes, Chief under the Owing to his heavy was drawn and, Thomas Greenburg water several times, when he had finally given up, Long, who had gone boat shore in an unconscious condition, d to his rescue in a drew him in and brought him to He was finally recusitat » - Wants Damages for a Gun Democrat said that early in September was The Lock Haven obert Crotzer going up Susquehanna avenue with a gun over his shoulder, when two dogs, to John T. Carroll and the other owned by Patrick Marr, attacked him, when he defended himself by clubbing them with his gun. The gun was broken and recently he brought suit for damages for the weap. on. The hearlug was to have been held the other day before Alderman An. thony, but before witnesses were called the case was continued until Dec he alleges, one belonged oO . Unclaimed letters: Mary Barger, J. N. Everts, Amanda Frank, Charles C. Grover, M. V. Kolly John L. Lakin. When called for say advertised, «Have you seen those elegant crayons that are being turned out by Fink. binder, the Photographer? Cull at his gallery and get his prices, 2 o -y of the States | i i i | our county, and the state, too. | her up, boys." {on the morning of the election, A VOICE FROM KANSAS, That State Turned Republicanism Down From N. J. Stover, G9 ELPA Boxaccorp, KAN,, Nov, 21, Well Cextre DeMocnraT, and reads | ers, where is the republican party now? | I tell vou us; the last I saw of it was on a wheel | barrow, pusher and all headed up salt | river, There was almost a clean sweep in “Whoop tears It kept I saw some shed | some fellows pretty busy wiping away | tective McKinley laboring ¢ { than 25 per cent Australian ballot system | 1 hi | demo : those great drops, which fell like a brick on a splash board. To make a i move for Tariff I r We S808 We will unt the chicks hatched, The old nest has been there need products, believe we have i y we dare not o« 0D lost all her warmth or and Nov, § wow flops her for Weaver ing w and Grover be he is. | saw m frequentl) m speak to a large audience, From what | the 1 n | FOG ONICIAIS, Cleveland, ard of the « and ne hey will both make $4 letter a few days ago from on riends in Centrecounty., \ ' i It pig Was reaqy sail river. friend, go up steemed my ¢« jumns, “1 don't have mt I advise all} f » wiole atch and cork up the ie y will have L pret. it is all upset out here with | | care & blank BLANKERTY BLANK HUNTERS, i CLEVELAND'S CARVER, Three Philadelphia men went up to | As the smoke clears away and we get | Snow Shoe last week to hunt deer. They | a clearer view of the battlefield covered | stopped at Uzzle’s hotel and George | With the corpses of the slain, we begin Uzzle took them to the woods, They | to appreciate the extent of the disaster | got lost of course, very promptly, and in | on the one hand and of the tremendous | their wanderings came across and killed | victory on the other. Backecloth and buck, A preacher who was { ashes for the republicans. Purple and ing on horseback heard the shots | flue linen for the democrats. Mourn. | and eame riding up to where the three | Ing isin the house of Harrison. Jubi. around the | lance and glory in the house of Cleve. | dead deer and were celebrating their | 1and. Lucky man, that a JArge I { hunt | tender-feet were gathered same Cleve. success by emptying a quart of Uzzle's | land; lucky beyond any precedent in best. “*Blankety blank my skins’ said | fiction. In all the ages hardly a parallel one of the trio “but we are glad to see [can be found to this marvelous luck, you, you blankety blank old blankety blank blank blank. Have a | reality. drink?” “No"'said the preacher," I don’t | land city next, whose name has no weight { drink, and more than that please don’t | or consideration in national politics, swear so, | “Well” | { said the tipsy “I don't ward his name before, and nom. are. “We've | inated for governor of the state before killed the blankest bigest deer you ever | saw and we lost son of a | which seems more like a dream than a Sheriff first; mayor of an in. am a preacher. Taken up by a eonverntion that had Philadelphian hever | who you he had finished his term of mayor: then and blank yO »'ll lam blank out of you.” And the preaches drunk you and caught up by the national convention you've got t« out, and nominated for the presidency be. fore he had completed his ernor; stripped { branches term as r helped them serving of of him: his four years hang it up and then who power, the renominate wit hunters, ge Jline Hog g and nk fast against cratic state Then going into ; vention wit} ment from his o it two delegates solidly agaihist hi renominated on the first b hay were | till i L terest foes whip ' | P ped into line ws they were compel y work like wt f fy " fOr | beavers for his succe IY 26d power of the 1 nal g nt, to have achieved a victory American p ia } 11s Lt hard i om a defeated candidats victories the grealest political Never before. by a beaten cand aliowed a renominat uld bave ished, but he clung to scarcely hunting party his party that h Wis partly thal no a pack ould go again hunters shoot hounds seer 50 Jost t « © GIN + Wid Pot Kin woods wile it of hounds w before S| 3 3 Dem. Son Hu ihe recent of than a Passing ng deer and ers p n theo . —-——— How Held Feels SLETh | 8 He | 1 ong ve aroused ot sind : principies and not pol A an A kK. us do must ~ Lic N.J Careless Drug Clerk death of Huntingden county rough the carelessness of a drug } Win a k. mistake for cley gave her poisen through a remedial medicine, is a 3 ' most sorrowful nar or ¢ fact that irresponsible people are st ployed i 3 of pharmacy rug fale RAOINE giovd WOIK ducing the ignorant and krespons the board says that any persen who engages a minimuin, and law creating the 4 114 . ’ in selling drugs or compounding pre. } $id . StL 8) : u without a cer a the board that he of i have be x : “Or ptior a] liable to a fine clerk did » should at or seems almost in a fatal blunder -—_ Volitios in Prayer Moeting Al a recent in New Jersey a democrat prayer meeting ic brother praye that God would eause the democratic marty to hang together, a roeubli. sh This led the demoeratie brother tomake the following amendation Not, O Lord, can brother means whereupon can present uted, "Amen, awen.” in his payer, l ins Re our roubli. of accord and “Any corr will do, Lord, any cord will do.” intexcted the republican. The pastor immdiate. ly made a rule that hereafter plitics should be kept out of prayer meeng. hoe sen but in the spit concord,” .o-—— Ingalls at Lock Haven The Thirtyseventh Annual ession of Clinton county Teachers’ [stitute will be held in the court house s Lock Haven, December 19th to 23rd 1502, Besides such men as Deput! State Superintendant Henry Houck, x-Sen- ator John J. Ingalls of Kansaswill be be on hand and on Tuesday cening, December 20, will deliver an adress in the beautiful Normal School ekpel. to all educators and those interestd in the eause who will be present on tis occa sion, our | Leneral | som | Logar's ) elzht years Fe aid he felt stump bh corrupt he boy who had | favor of {to a0 } aul Lise § toe; he was too old democrats Am re. and it hart rh gh. 1 ountry too much to like vigilant sentinels th extremely sorry Lo see vert for the unrestmined the cry | honest : erib, for four years at Jeast frst thine in thirly years to | plundered by the ¢ rale; but per But afte: sonally 1 have little to regret.’ past, where is the Democra the shock American Never seen suc wi - not glory in his country. the world began derful and bloodless nearly seventy millions of apparently in mortal strife. ago, next March, Grover Benjamin Harrison rode down Penns) | Something Good Was = amusin es specialt melodrama, K revolution pro- ol Man opm use, of pi | rirl i : . n Cleveland and y i Nip and Tuck, © pre- | vania avenue together, and ath an gh noon land ing Cleveland handed over to h the public, and quietly rover is | They of 1 are greeted nightly ier and compelled f SUCCES8OT great ledgers of U sagt and without oste hoat | gret, resumed his station as a private | eitizen. On the fourth of March, 1803, the same two the same to repeat their eccentric act many times tation, or apparently even wit . -——— Snyder Conuty Fish Mory Middleburg | ont liver Ulric of Mills. Inst gentlemen will oc cupy week caught a German carp in Middle. creek that weighed 14 pounds, measur. ed 304 inches in length, and 11 inches in width. He skinned the fish like a beef, and was surprised to find a num. (rlobe } carciage, and will side up to i the capitol amid the shouts of applaud. | ing thousands--the outgoing president receiving as much attention as his sae. | cessor, who will return the sceptre to the man whom he received it. | Meanwhile the nation resis serene, sat. isfied that none but citizens | are on guard, and whether democrats or republicans they f mer of fine from hide whic shot imbedded in its tough 1 Soe person had shot into him, American \d - » are jealous of the {for ts prosper. ity, and hopeful for its future greatness, “Salt River The phrase “Up Salt River" nation’s honor, anxious origin in the fact that there is a small stream of that name in Kentucky, the { We may not yet have solved the prob. passage of which is made dificult and | Jem of the perfection of human govern. laborious as well by its tortuos wind. | ment but it is our belief that in all the | ings as by the abundance of shallows | 288 00 other system has ever been dis. and bars. Hence the saying is applied covered by man which so nearly ap. to defeated political parties or candi | proached the dream of our dead proph. dates, who are supposed to be sent to | et, of "A government of the people, for | oblivion. the people, and by the people.” - .— bas ils - .—-— . A factory near Paris makes annually | Tas iaw Twied twenty million quill toothpicks, and js| A few weeks ago an Illinois editor | the Inrgest establishment of the kind in tested the virtue of the Postal law mak. the world. It was started many years | ing it larceny to take a paper and not ago to make quill pens, when they went | Pay for it. He obtained judgment out of general use it was converted into | Mains each for the full amount of his a toothpick mill, Large flocks of geese | claim, About half of them came up | are raised by the farmers in the section | and made oath they had po mare prop- | where the works are located. | erty than the law allowed them as ex. | s——— empl from execution. He had this Jot | When the people find out that a man | arrested and sent to jail for larceny, is mean at home they don't eare how | He was a plucky editor and knew his good he professes to be at church. [ rights. He will be paid in the future, and against the | i ROVErn- | Lyon & Co. ARE In Earnest. wher £ legant ihe new tock is ’ Mail Order De r samples of new immense wdlers fond mothers Wwe Our bottle Jersey suits green, brown. trimm braids, ’ and embroidered 186. All 00, 4 00, 1 ycars up. you may and ire to please $ Come 1 style and price ‘ur trimmed $5, , 12 and $15.00. rt and from $3 up. braid at all prices. it colors, trimm- ps, ete, Lat g coats from " Y sses hoods in bgl in light furs—-fur lo tie 1 lon $1.50 girls refers am Chenile tabh A beautiful covers from 1.25 to $5. le scarfs by line. Tal
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers