Bea sate #3 . ver & Gephartvl P! emocra VOL. 16. BELLEFONTE. PA. THURSDAY, § t NO. 37 The Centre Demorat, CHAS, R. KURTZ, ED. & PUB. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $1.5 £1.00 Regular Price per year if pald In ADVANCE " CLUB RATES: Tug CEXTRE DEMOCRAT one year i §, h) ”5 ind N.Y. Weekly World one year § s0I 1.75 for $1.45 rag CENTRE DEMOCRAT one year} and Phila. Weekly Times one year STATE DEM@CRATIC TICKET THAT NEW ERA. ASSURED. The Calamity Howler out of a Job-Repub Hoan Testimony in Contrast with Hast Ings’ time Misleading Speech-—-A good Coming The speech delivered by Gen. ngs before the republican clubs, con- vened at Harrisburg recently, was a carefully prepared utterance, and was fiast- i For Governor, WILLIAM M. SINGERLY For Lieutenant Governor JOHN 8. RILLING For Auditor General, DAVID F. MAGEE For Secretary of Internal Affairs WALTER W. GREENLAND For Congressman-at-Large THOMAS COLLINS HENRY MEYER intended to be the summing up of the issues of the present campaign. As it was the product of mature deliberation we can afford to pay some attention to it. The one great object this year is to delude the by prolonging the calamity howl, and even if possible stifie the renewed vigor of the country simply for the purpose of creating campaign tinder. Take for example the follow- ing illusive paragraph from THASSeS (reneral Democratic County Ticket AARON WILLIAMS e~MATT SAVAGE Judge—C. M. BOWER ys JAMES SCHOFIELD, t ROBERT M. FOSTER, JOSEPH J. HOY lge—~THOMAS F. RILEY. the o Editori Wl Love candidate independent? intimated that he will be a November has in Regular or —————————— Tue republican calamit out of a job. ce business has vived under the new democratic they can’t sing that song - HASTINGS’ calamity | number, Those “silent mil banks," like the bloody by. We e are living ina ———— in % | I wl K wl is a bac 1s and broken are gone New era. shirt, I are idly | ice for his op- Tue demoerats in Ohio denouncing Senator Br position to the Wilson tariff bill. They gondemn Fis course uncertain ‘tones. He was one of the traitors and | rou: ’ in no i py energy than those of the county seat. Last week they had an enthusiastic meeting and organized a Singerly Clut Bellefonte should follow suit, and then send a strong delegation to Altoona, t attend the state convention of Dem. ocratie Clubs, on October 12th. time for us to hustle ourselves or else the enemy will get away with us ; - For years Wm. M. Singerly befriend- ed the poor of Philadelphia by furnish. ing them with coal at cost, He is philanthropist and benefactor. Gen. Hastings suddenly grew immensely wealthy asa coal operator, while the minerssuffered from poor wages. erly labored to help the poor. Hastings 8 looking out for Hastings. That | he difference I 1 { Is | 18 a Sing- 3 BE —— is Tue South has again redeemed | The defeat of W.C. P. Breckenrid for re-nomination to congress was great victory for morality and men in public positions. Would God the reformation go farther and embrace other evils. When honorable reprobates aspire to public positions, public sentiment should crush them. Too many known de- aulters, pilferers of public funds and uch like, who can be found without | doing all the way to Old Kentucky, should be turned down the anner as Breckenridge received dues—no matter, what party they repre- sent. Licentious wretches and dishon. | est officials, who plunder public funds | ~in office~are a menace 0 a govern- ment. if H Rie age ge lag cle 0 coul dis. | in same } 18 i -- -> For years Gen. Hastings devoted his attention to politics—~furthering the interests of the republican party and at | the same time keeping himself in the | tide. His speeches were always filled | with rank misrepresentations of the present democratic administration and its principles. He has opposed tariff reform for years and always urged pro- tective tariffs that would enrich the | wealthy operator and compel the farm. er, laboringman and general consumer to pay more for his necessaries. Fe has devoted the greater portion of his life to assalling the democratic party and its candidates and yet he imagines that Centre county democrats will give him enough complimentary votes to cap- ture this old rock.ribbed fortress of democracy. Democrats will you per- mit it? Singerly is the ideal demo- crat. He is a pioneer in the great bat. tle for tariff reform. Stand by him. Tt | Hastings’ { he lays | power’ How that co | 15 ho i i! h 4 y howlers are | er | 14: } hie tariff | | governor | reason n truth v i Cc th ity took its f1 never to retur | considered leaders as a est national and State political b onors ! said to the speech, which the author, any pretentions to should retract, for they are if | integrity, not true, | Here it is: “The well intentioned citizen decided how to vote at the « well consider ground imself, how he li) Ke who has not a oming election I hs the nis ndition t¢ the republican party has has { Has he had steady id reg of 1 empl ager oyment? Is he Does he find the | » 8 y . it an tle 1 the Ww iving cheaper, an t t rosperous? 1e future | fl st better? usiness As contented and confident As before When he has answe y himsel bility for ¢ r the future in n the box The nan above who utterances came is very anxious to Pennsylvania and fo most likely to and demagegueism— particular whether tellin that he ms of he avr ail is litical tifices ot very 18) or not, h yw (ren \ just so oters to his cause, To she 10TH Hastings’ need only refer consistent to the Wg) we nt. recognized as the | ished 8 to paper, nost reliable paper publ whose only aim H the truth £ y different in that! publish its read. 11 to teil. and * te 'y news and 8. has quite story h Hn thor ug resting and inst deliberate! iinely of 5 2 Vat he and commer- jal activity, for the reason that, with e repeal of the McKinley act, prosper- ight from the United States n again. Mr. Chauncey M. Depew, a 5 and radical Republican, who such high esteem by his party as by its most dish inguist fit candidate for th 4 Ww is hel Hamburg correspondent of the New York Herald, on the Sth inst, “The settlement of the tariff question is the beginning of a new era of perity, * * * Confidence is restored— that means everything to The indu energy of the 70,000,000 IT ple country, not yet fully pros. us. trial i in the stability are assured. “The consuming and purchasing | the better, and that the settlement of | 15th of October. Mr. Woodward 1s | | powers of this homogeneous population | make prosperity for every business, regardless of foreign demands. BUSINESS PROSPERITY NOW pe he will | it been with him individually? | paid | | whi {the nn In | for the correspondi | terances of prominent and fmpartial | of 84, 825 cases in 1892 and 80 a | en Ne ranks are better without him. | repub licans SH045- Dike speking 6. | 2 Ix spURG democrats have more |. Childs’ | affected by the | trade developed , is resistiess when eredit and | Maine to New Mexico. They croak the wish that is father to their croaking; he speaks impartially, in wise judgment, and from prolonged, informing ex. perience, What Mr. Depew not only by reason, by the character, energy and the intelligence American people, but by the business conditions of the paseing For instance, the new and, of ugar, beet root variety, must cease, been the continuous croak of tisan croakers; the answer to it found in the fact that | which State the beet cultivated, certain within the last few company, with a capit for the construction of This is but says is confirmed by common sense, the enterprise, the of the actual day. tariff repeals the bounty on sugar, in say the prophets production of consequence, “calamity,” the of the That has the par- is to be in Oregon, root capitalists have days organized a tal o } valle especialy in i8 { $1,000,000, " wel root sugar | refineries. one of It is safl that the Freshman class largely | ADDITIONAL LOCALS, ~-W. after a looking ke Reeder, Esq., is about again | bepell of sickness. [He vhat paler, is —J uc rst is resting easy and smiling yhileé Love and his friends are holding pselr “Ghost Dance” at Tyrone. '& Lenker, of Lemont, have § M. M. Musser’s store at Aaronshirg and will continue the bus iness. | Neagy all the candidates in Centre county wil attend the Grange picnic this week It will be a great shaking me. -The (attendance at Penna. State College is larger than ever this year, a hand. numbers bhyer one hundred. ~Miss L'lllie Lyon left for New York on Mondgy. While there she will be on the alert 0 find some choice goods for the many lady customers at Lyon & many t country of | 1 fact controvertirg inveracious croak- ing. Since the tariff question has been | settled, and it has been practically | settled, for at least three years, and by | its settlement fixed conditions establish. ed and confidence regained, the unfailing test of the iness, has been giving the assuring indications of reviving prosperi. | ty; the great transportation companies, of trad a | instances throughout the | stock | market | i of bus status | most a *h are the porters , carrying | d the mills, hops to | the raw material to the works products of factories, ark nereased an induet re adits ASA Y furnaces, fi ts from ITROS wind tl branches F reported that many all fave rable. I i “In jobbers state that thy m y dry 15 far during i wet the present m ceeded those the demand of it mth trax f was the ns have ox two vie ars the ), when iargest histor xls 13 Prices, t adyancing make similarly Shipments from Boston } of 80 G50 cases y g are and shoe a | 7 k were 48 agains JAXX! cases ng weel last year, new tariff, shown renewed activity. Why the if should ro 2 «a 1 > vs ™ industries have a Known turers er wh manufac kn Up mn the condition Amer yurage ate n enters will per energy . Of A } In adily adapt selves to if there is t ness oot f Ver factory indics ty, of wh ich boom. But may be are not likely to silence tisan croakers, whose serve party experier what sacrifice of the em The people, howe truth, as it iscertain to! nde manif by the activity and profitabl trade, and they will be ther alarmed by them than traveler by the croaking of the frogs at nightfall in the roadside marshes,’ facts however conclusive they the Par- ) Policy it t at TM 5 ) no matter ry's welfare learn tl tn v "1 ol the - PR occupation of the howler is The rapid ment in all classes of business pelling them to face about and is reviving. The New Tribune, although reluctantly, Tue calamity improve 15 C gone. he | admit York admits | | evenings ¢f this week, | past a resident of Altoona, ty papers Judge D. | tuted a suit in the common Pp leas eoust weather has been against them. iB : few weeks igo it Was Loo ¢ now to wet to plant, {ahd “tin indistrios Which a are most Monday morning. He expects to spend there is | 5 short time in this section visiting | Septet ber | LEN daughter page pers and keeps Ul ! cornice has Co's, ston. WILL HE RESIGN? JUDGE FURST’'S RESICNA- TION EXPECTED. His Statement to the Huntingdon County Grand Jury-Getting Even with Pattison Would Appoint, the Love People. Judge Furst’s defeat for renomina- tion seems to have affected him very much. The overwhelming vote against him was more than he expected, The campaign was an unusually bitter one and the things said and done against him, by the opposition, will not soon be forgotten so that under these circum. stances it is no wonder that His Honor HASTINGS TOUR On Monday morning left Bellefonte for his seven weeks the state, make several will enable county Gen, Emporium of During that 16t ings begin mpaigning will vhich Every Lock Lyon. vernor, ts tour Ci Lins he speeches each; d him to reach tow: At y Walte: y ost and Haven he the candi James W tary of wick, city itor and George MeCain, the Phi iphia Pre was RECON Dati ind from I Mr. Henry Hall, of the Pitts Why Gen, Hast 5 shot important } was joined b date for | inter lieutenant candidats affairs; ( of ge fi atta nal ' SECIS. War. ' C 80] ie lade (;eneral 4 by ie r 1 mex, 1 Hef wi i ] r ror ing 1 te such feels like retiring from the bench, At our last session of co upon its adjournment, as left the court house, he friend that he had made to a jury in Centre county, Last week Judge urt, it said | [1 Judge Furst | Yemarfiod is last charge | ‘ ‘ oa Furst presided in | ~The dies of the Evangelical con- gregation will hold an ice cream and | | oyster festival at their church, on Wil. | delphia Record, among other { lowbank street, on Friday and Saturday | { | ” | -Mrs.bhn Royer,of Zion, who is now sixty years of : took her first | car ride os Monday by going from Belle. fonte to her home over the ( Central | Some \ge, lail. { road of Penna. —Mr. David Baoey, for several years is spendis few i: with his parents at Zi g a ore hand. Last inger amputated ga nurs Sati wy afl 8076, | {4 | rdon coun- | | ~According to the Hun gd . Kre ” "has of Hi untinglon count Fodor 1 & Sons, for ds AmAg nation in the sum of 8360 -Very few farmers heir seeding as the « B. a ig 15. (WN) have finished ned contin wel It will tt 1ake their crop later than usua ry t 1 = Willis R.. ly, editor and publish. svoll lOve OYE Un riends. He is a native of Miles twp. t analysis made is that it It practicall iti matler ates The nte's wales water. 8 leleterious James Nola: i ried on Monday to Miss Blanch 1 Mr. £) At rg Ornes Was mal | @ Stratt ar Siratiu Nolan James Mr. smducted a f of rearhartville. 4 AO, Cf ie 1) “ unceme Hy ms, LSS 4) paper, linoleu and wall pa- e largest | the state, carpets, rugs, ine to and Ast large quantities he buys al be fi in this part of ¢ handles | and sells at an advantage over others. -On next Sunday morning and eve. | ing Ira Micthell, will the pulpit in the Reformed chur this place. Rev. Noll will appointment at Miflinburg that ~Everybody admires the appearonce | of Brockerh off's new building since the | been finished. It an imposing structure, Hon. John A. Woodward, Howard, Pa. devoting some and attention to the coming meeting of | the State of Agriculture, al] i y ] occupy at an h | day. 15 ft is time Joard | Hun {to the | Pattison course renomination, with encouraging Lovell’s candidacy in | Huntingdon county in order to, in some a | farmer, ] Huntingdon county. Huntingdon, of the A dispatch from 15th, to the Phila. things, | {contained the ant NEWS: “At the conclusion of court to-day | President Judge A. O. Furst, of the ting: lon ( entre district, announced retiring Grand Jury that he | would never again direct the delibera- | tions of a similar body.’ That appears to conf] county rumor. next regular will be held the last week « several weeks after the | wi the district judge. If Judge Furstsh would become the du to appoint a side at the November probability his the judge elect Why His Honor ould take this a matter with himself, in | which he entirely consults his personal feelings. While Judge Fu be following signifi the Centre | i | : | ‘he of court | if November, session : ] reg 1 en W iii elect a4 new Id resign it |} (rOovernor Ly re. 3 u of $ In wv | bi § 1 cessor and in all vould be 18 election. | courts appointment at the previo « i is > i was defeated for ited | is generally cred $ FL The Scheme Did The Philipsburg L J but Aw paper Irvin and al. nade between ~~) av. Grom und H. J. She O00 for His Peaches a Juniata cx raised 7,000 crates of peaches i hard, wd over n { . RT Henberger, unt) his thirty-acr fro which } of Year, { i { i reali 85.000, wheat all or don’t know but to point out the if farmers want to make these days, they will have to devote less | attention to and more of it to | truck raising, fruit culture and the like, | The Juniata county farmers, according t made a few days azo, realize £100,000 on their h is equivalent to woman and beats oll average ed farming, we » admil a very bral: that raising L fact money Y one wheat to a statemen will this peach crop alone, whic over 8&5 for every man, yeat “that the business tide has turned for | Penna. State College, on the 17th and | child in the county. | the tarifl question is the cause of re. | newed business confidence.” This ad. | mission is very significant coming from | He says Centre county will | en titled to three Farmers’ member of the board and a credit to it. likely be | Institutes “There is no end of idle money which | 46h a source, and the settlement of the | | this year. | will now seek active employment. In | Jess than two years the panic of 1803.94 | will be forgotten. Mines, furnaces, | mills and factories will be in full opera- tion; railroads will be conveying profit able traffic, and the movement of internal commerce and the free circu. lation of currency of the equivalent in business and wages will certainly crease the demand for eyerything pro. duced upon the farm or elsewhere," Mr. Depew is the President of one of the most comprehensive, profitable and most ably managed railroad systems in the United States. He is a business man in the broadest, most practical meaning of the term, and as such, his opinion regarding the business of the country is worth more than all the croakings of all the reckless, unthink- ing, unscrupulous and prejudiced parti is your duty. san organs, leaders and agitators from tariff by the democratic administration | is assigned as the real cause, The re. publican tariff was in operation when business was prostrated, the democratic tariff brings about a change. This is the logic of the Tribune's admis gions. Take courage democrats. The calamity howler has become the herald of coming prosperity. . "Contrary to Law An exchange remarks that some peo- ple think that a raffle is not in violation of the lottery law. Frank Eberle, of Westfield, was of that opinion. He wanted to dispose of his bicycle, and he had a lot of raffle tickets printed, which he sold at u stipulated price. Some of the tickets were sent through the mails, Now Frank is under bail in the sum of £1,000 for his appearance before the Uni. —Louls Fabian recently made a hand. some black walnut cabinet which he presented to the Undine fire company. The cabinet was made by hand and isa fine piece of furniture, embelished with elaborate scroll work. The cabinet will be chanced off and can be seen any time in Josephs® carpet store window. As the proceeds are for the benefit of the fire company every person, who can, should take a chance. ~On Monday night nineteen large chickens were killed for Mr, James Kel. lerman, on east Bishop street, this place, by a dog. The chickens lay scattered about, either bitten in the neck or back. Several months ago Joel Johnson, living next to Kellerman , lost twenty-three in one night the same way. Several per sons saw the dog but could not get ted States district court, close to him. | ruined the country —— ——— For Calamity Howlers | The following items are clipped for | the benefit of political demagogues who still assert that the democratic parly The freight car builders in the rail road shops, at Renovo, were ordered on thirteen hours per day last week on ac. count of the great demand for cars for | the road. i The Eagle valley tannery, at Ridg-4 way, is working full force and crowding | hard, | .——— Nominated for Congress Dr. D. Gi. Smith, of Freeburg, nomi. nated for congress in the Union, Sny- der, Huntingdon and MiMin district, by the democrats, is a native of Penn Hall, and is a firm democrat. Dr. Smith is a people. «An unusual heavy rain passed over this section on Sunday evening. The continued wet weather is making it difficult for farmers to finish their fall sowing. i his address a | BEBO yYery | polit ernment : | nucl Har election | too much itl | mest people. mission and functions of a od rad nt Work ap : nd i fe rent weekly by Bauer | Apples. dried, perpo Tal Hams su Breakfast Bacon Lard, per Eggs per Potatoes per bushel Dried Sweet Corn per pound... 07 With The young man but he stands well with the | an active can When he feel ) Posi- Sees a Ww V a8 { | whelming 1 idential r much Decotne u larity people pres ly alarmed at h the laboringmen at NSingerly’ "Weide ia Philadelphia. .—— Hiv, of { L SENATOR New few day lation in New sible remarks tical evil of our for agotoal Jersey, made 1) ald enterprises basis of a vicious paternalisi y tr We must econ $n 1 1 Lo Tox ie count OR Te: { fairs, { dividual in | n brains 1Iees, w The never uttered the sent must support the ; - he government must That idea recogn well.ordain. i egulated government. Ji But thats a every ome that £ be or do not the make men 1 Or virtua t evervt! dha laws I Poor, nis lepends lene { ny Bellefonte Grain Market. ted weekly Jackson &0o: uck whe at perd shel plaster. pert na NS, GROCERIES &C. (as corrected &( PROY 181 ’ herr Jeans p 1 fons, per titer, per pound low, per pound ‘ountry Shoulders Rides Hams gar cured § jesdried per pound ere 1 seeded m yushel Su pount QOTeN ovine ve new OLD NEW o and complete line of Shoes, 1 and them vd at very low PRICES Small, we propose to close once al out at Wi Shim on F can fit the Large, at Foot, as well as the Thin, Flat POCKET-BOOK
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