— BREACH IN THE WALL FREE WOOL OPENS THE WAY 10 COMMERCIAL FREEDOM. Protectionists Their Barriers Farmer Fighting Wool * Eyes Jective Ioint Are Opened Manufacturers’ Turn Comes Next There is good with which the Re the wool sched act, lt is ex \ ne tr wo hoy We are hensi milli bles, numl more can ter has dimins 80,000, pictures are of the misern vimpendine Vimpen er'’ the 55,000, 001 pauper she some 200 imports fell moval of 1893 were 148,000, 04 ters, not j theref eXCt llen nent the Then w aavan Prices today two or tha The omi assanit made : kept up. This, wool breaks the center of the It stril is fiercely We repeat, tective since 1887 had re than this, the en opens a brea which the ho will press breach that efforts, fore zeal tact. A « off when quinine was placed on the free t and another when hides went there, they were not serious breaches. The | Profecticonists Das Dee » bamboozle the farm into believing that s chow tl in their ability tc ers also were the tariff has 1 If wool rem not fall t tion, if, from th was m1 wool meets, ties, a pri petit from his w tion. He will j demanding wools Hero is wher danger to him present arrangemen from 40 to from competition, but the farmers the } over with him. When w free as wool, the manufacturers, will join the growing | cial freedom to get their nec life and manufacture untaxed. And thus the movement will spread from class to class. It is this that our oppone and it is to prevent this that they are now centering 3 in ana : on free wool. If they fail, they know that their whole fabric will bling down about their ears Globe n, w 50 per | Lai) turn against partnership is dis nts pee, their efforts in an atta me ta —St. Paul Crumbs From Our Table. Ex-Secretary Weeks of the Iron Man ufacturers’ association, recently back from Europe, reports that the European mills are beginning to catch the overflow of our iron trade, our manufacturers having all the orders they can fill. In this halcyon time even McKinloyism would scarcely grudge the crumbs that drop from our table to the ‘‘pauper labor’ of Europe. —Philadelphia Rec ord. No Need to Be Despondent, A sapient Republican contemporary ventures the observation that Senator Gorman must be afraid because ho talks 80 bravely about the Democrats carry ing Maryland. How should the senator talk? We have no doubt Republican Journals would be glad to see him in a despondent attitude and predicting Re publican victory. «Cincinnati Enquirer Comfort For Tom Reed, T. B. Reed will be pleased to learn | that there is an intimation that the Ohio delegation in the national convention will not stick to McKinley through thick and thin. --8t. Louis Post-Dis patch. Mr. Ingalls Will Feel It, If Mr. Foraker comes to the senate, the absence of John J. Ingalls will not be so seriously felt, Washington Pest. | shipped from this co been assiduously culti- | WANT GENUINE CALAMITY. The Country Is Too Prosperous to Sulit the Republicans, Republicans can be enndid on ocea sion. They are prepm to make the tarif¥ question the ''oy wing is gne'' of the next but with presi ul eampaign, thor sat nld doubtless they are not altoge tho another fod y ontlook and we select issue’ if there were an * if their political exig | thi their other in sight n of Withh Free trol M We Could Con- and Prices. nnd Coal arkets Ore During the first half of the present year 831,0 00 worth of iron has been to Enlgand. Yet there has ’ | protection of one form or another LEER COMM fair manufacta 1 mal for a ti na few the ON 1£ mex on n ndense more fals wl words, but bela ho of ng calamity howls of last year. But some of the organs are | keeping up the howls from mere force ! of habit, me dogs when it is not visil Philadelphia Rex 5 siderably nism —fill 6% the dy ne Tariff “Tinkered™ to Good Purpose, According to the Cotton and Wool Reporter there were in « peration on June 1 last in the woolen mills of the United States 8,458 sets of cards for | woolens and worsteds, 77,100 looms worsteds and In May, sets of cards, working in woolens and 64,200 knitting machines 1802, there were 71,000 woolen and looms and 43,001 knitting machines These fig ures aro referred to Mr McKinley as evidence of the demoralizing effect of tinkering his tariff. <Now York World 7.784 worsted Advices For John Sherman. As John Bherman, with the offeial pat nage of Ohio at mnmand for 256 years, has not been able to obtain a presidential nomination, he might very woll come ont as a champion of civil service reform.—-8St. Louis Post-Dis patch his ¢ What MeKinley Neoods, The electric train, with a speed of 150 miles an hour, would enable Governor McKinley to cover considerable ground before the Republican convention meets ~Wishington Post A Frediction From Missonrl, More eastern Democrats than David B. Hill may favor a western for president before the new year comos, «= St. Louis Post-Dispatch, man i Cape Elizabeth hg BLL 3 x oon —————— YIELDED 10 ENGLAND 3 n the Damands of the VIOEROY DISMISSED FROM OFFICE Lin, Whose Neglect Made Missionary Mur. ders Possible, Cun Never Agnin Hold Ofites Our Governmont'sa Investigation mgt AfTalr Proowedlag. Denby 1 Pek Work Their Venezuelan € ¢ 2 ¢ possibly be aught with serion Three letters, it is reported, have boon s to Mr. Bay structing hing to notily government that unl estion is submitted yc NATOR M 4d An Attack of Paralysis Which It Is Peared May Prove Fatal, WASHINGTON, Oct. |. Kx Senator Ma bone, of Virginia, suffered a stroke of pa ralysis at his room at Chamberlain's hotel, His physicians, Drs. Wales and Baker, think his chances of recovery very doubtful. The re latives of the ex senator have been summoned by tel The en ght side of ON STRICKEN Mahone WANS Dr : Wa t soon afterwards with ! and Dr Cas WASHINGTON hone's condit Educational! and Property Qualifleations Proposed Carolins A New Polat of Law, DR. MORITZ SALM. VILL BE AT THE BROCKERHOFF HOUSE ' ALLEYE &Z EAR OPERATIONS SUCCESSFULLY PE Be 4c AFLF 310000 7h a Cw 1 to quash the indictments In th SN. Landis, H ng stat penalty for and there for su decree « Was Two Women Killed hy a Train JAMES Bucks Kate Killed by sylvania r Asleep for Half a Year CLEVELAND, Oct, 3. Peter years oll, a former mall messenger York, has of a few hours, for months Crawford ® f New been asleep exception the last seven or eight Nearly every doctor in the city and not a few from ‘ viewed what bids markable case of eatalepsy ever known, A lHttle over a year ago Mr. Crawford was thrown from a mall wagon in New York sustaining injuries to his spine. Every do vice to awaken the man bas proved futile with the other cities } have he most re to be the fair Lisuntennant Peary st Mis Moms, PORTLAND, Mr, Oct. 2. —Licutenant and Mrs. Peary arrived In the eity yesterday from Halifax and went to thelr house near | The explorer's mother had gone to he city to meet him, so he camo back to town { her. The and found moeting was nn affe ting on 1895 OCTOBER. 1895 Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th, Te Tu 6/789 10 13 14/16 16 17 20/21 22 23 24 27 2829 30 81 MOON'S PHASES, bia? ® ow 18 1:10 Am, Dm oon 0:84 First Oy Ponrter 26 $04 am Fr. Sa. 4 5 11/12 18 19 25 26 Third 1 Quarter | urday evening, aged 72 | hae decided to hold a state funeral Manchester, SHH Raging In Japan nd J pan N he P out from Yokohama port ¢ holera was r AZADI that the disoase will thewinter. Inn been little chang cane About the same nl of occur dally, and there a plague abating into quarantine rt hort the di deaths the ’ nth of igns of Massnohusetts’ Damoeratie Tioket Woncesten, Mass. Oct 2 Ne Demo sratic state eomvention opened here at 11 o'clock this forenoon. The work of organ izing was quickly perfected, and while awaiting the report of the committees on resolutions the following ticket was placed in nomination: For governor, George Fred Williams; leutenant governor. Charles H, Spellman; seoretary of state, Edward J. Flynn, auditor, Alfred C. Whitney; treasurer, James 8. Grinnell; attorney general, Henry I. Hurlburt Desth of Ex Senator Crozier, LERAVERWORTH, Kan Hon. Rob ert Crozier, ex United States senator from Kansas, and for sixteen years past judge of the state court of Leavenworth county died last night of paralysis. Decoasod was the father of Captain Crozier, of the ord nance department of the United States army, and of the wife of Congressman Reyburn, of Pennsylvania Oct. 2 Professor Pasteur's Death, Panis, Sept. 30. Professor Louls Pas tour, the distinguished chemist and dis voverer of the cure for hydrophobia, died at Garches, In the environs of Pacis, Sat The government Fatal Faplosion ln a Neitish Mine, LoxpoX, Oot. 2. «An explosion ocourred in a mine at the village of Tyldesley, near Jatterdny, by which five pes sons were kil MOST NEWS THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, Four Papers for - - $1.75. adann STOP AND THIN IAN Some an VY Davin - $31.45. | mes, Two Papers for - Tur Cextee DeMoonrat will be sent to any address Nore:—This giv § Wo papers h k for less money you may be th in S MONTHS FOR 15 CTS, Tur Cexree Democrat wil 3 months for 15 eonts (ret it: Re price. N. B N ot these prices less than other papers published Road to Wealth. | W ud it: stubseriber regret the ind one-half ont Economy is the Om third (ro at once and subseribe or send vour order to CENTRE DEMOCRAT, Brrreroxte, Pa. Office in Garman Block, opposite Conrt Hous I EA NT M( )
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers