LJ ITHE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1806. BARTRATS DOWNFALL Recall of the Italian Commander in Abyssinia. HE I8 TO BE OOURT MARTIALED, Buoeceded by General Badissera The De- feat of the Italian Forces Has Caused the | Wildest Excitement and Bitterest Com ment Throughout Italy, Roume, March 4.—It is impossible to ex- te tho consternation which the news | ef the Italian defeat in Abyssinia has eaused in all circles In this city. The newspapers do not even seek to minimize the disaster in the slightest degree. Kvery Bour marks the appearance of fresh edi- sions, giving additional details of the mews, and more particularly of the manner fn which it has been recelved and the opinions of the editorial writers upon the disaster and the campaign. All this serves to increase the publio ex- eitement, which is constantly growing. The whole of the garrison of the city is | eonfined within disorder. Even the semi-official news papers dwell without disguise upon the serious feature of the situation Owing to the general clamor the war department officials determined to recall GENERAL BARATIERL and court n eral Badi eoImina sinia 1 ral Baratierl. Gen 1, and assumed troops in Abys y the effect mmanded the disas g, and nanded the by students ITE Fe the prov 0 was also ut was nstrati interview inst night the barracks for fear of | | | | Humbert | present ask for may deman relief of mot to! Ing t! to add: the « Th gover: mi pons; Mrs WAsH s 1 Harlan States, annound in the cu : Ka Ste Stan ord waa a oourts ir aver §! Wins the Suit, Mr f th tanford f Mar Justice in the supreme « eo United ed the d n wes 8 senator This tates ver something | roportion as a stoek h v f the ntral Pacifle Rall road co nN h Hoged liability of the he Un d States for bonds | ernment late ntrix the United co RO Chairman Harrity's Views, I'he World pub vith William F. Har national Democratic he declared that he Mr. Cleveland as ssible candidates for presi deni, (hat the Democratic party must de elare against free and unlimited silver eoln, Yto 1, and that Democrats are mol ne led now than they were six months 1x the Tilden campaign. of the oom ith in which me longer « among ‘he | n msiders fore The Millions for Pensions, Wasmxaron, Fab, 20. ~The conferrees of the two houses on the pension appro priation Lill reached an agreement yester day. The only change made in the bill as i passed the senate was that involved in the striking out of the senate addition of $0,000 to tho fees for examining surgeons. With this reduction the bill carries a total appropriation of §141,528,680, Six Mundred Arabs Drowned, ComsTANTINOPLE, March 8. Torrential ae a consequence the river Tigris has over Sewed, vast tracts of land being flooded. she Arma district a nomad tribe of six f the court | Jane | A WEEK'S NEWS OONDENSED | Thursday, Feb, 27, Arsene Houssaye, the noted French 1it- teratour and art eritio, died in Paris last night, aged 81, It is sald In New York that ex-Congress man Bourke Cockran, since the death of | his wife, has determined to become a Catholle monk, The president yesterday nominated E. Prentiss Bailey to be postmaster at Utlea, N. Y,, and also Mary Kate Cleveland at Waterville, N. Y. Foster Crawford and Younger Lowls, who killed Cashier Dorsey while robbing | {| & bank at Wichita Falls, Tex., were taken | from jail at that place by a mob and hanged. Friday, Feb, 28, About 20,000 clothing workers in Baltl- more are idle as the result of a strike for recognition of the union. Near Blue Earth City, Minn, Moritz Firkly, a wealthy farmer, killed his wife and himself after a quarrel, Indiana Prohibitionists nominated a full state ticket, with Rev. E. C. Schous, of Terre Haute, for governor, Henry Dowden, a negro, killed Engineer Dodd at Weldon, N. C, last Saturday. Yesterday hewas sentenced to dls March 17. The revolution against the government of President Zelaya, of Nicaragua, is now in fall blast, with chances favoring Zelaya At a meeting of the New York Yacht club Lord Dunraven was expelled from honorary membership in the club, there being but one dissenting volee Saturday, Feb, 20. The Iowa senate defeated Senator Funk's resolution to give women the right to vote at all elections There is a severe snowstorm in the north west. In North Dakota and Montana the thermometer is below zero, Prince and Princess Troubetzskoy (nee Mrs. Amelie Rives Chanloer) left New York for Europe today on the steamer Werra The ship J. B. Walker, which has been on the rocks at Liberty Island, in New York harbor, since Feb was floated yesterday The Jee ted 180 [4 of government s Alsace Lorraine re bill to to build a shooting box Multzig for Emperor William reichsland the 3 KE) marks spend 4 al Monday, March 2 A crowd of maske from and Windsor it is thought they lynched him officers on a train at An unknown man threw vitri Burns, a factory girl at Bridg but she escaped with } Hunter, | | at Kate wurned cl tepn Jooth announce igi wvement 1 to antagonize the ol rel n rican ok } New York h Atias line steamer French liner Bur passe the hea irday ar on Sal ilsa was sun ilsa's Kers were res ring Tuesday, March 3, Wednesday, March 4, ¢ G 5TOCK AND PRODUCE MARKET Closing Quotations of the New York and Philadelphia Exchanges, York, March | Ar I. y WAR Com} ' vy d General Markets, March 2 PRILADELPHIA steady: winter super, § $7 Pennsylvania rol clear, 8.400 8.05; do. do. straight, $5.0005.75; western win ter, clear, $9.50603 65 Wheat quiet, Me. lower, with 3c. bid and T4o. asked for March Corn dull, unchanged, with 8c. bid and 35ige asked for March Oats dull, steady, with ho. bid and ec. asked for March. Hay firtn for choloe grades; cholee timothy, $164 16.50. Beef and pork steady Lard firm: western steam, $5,853.70, Butter firmer; west ern creamery, 121340. factory, 31%. ; El gins, 2144« imitation creamery, lB i6e.; New York dairy, 118%. Pennsylvania and western oreamery prints, extra, %o.; deo choles, 230. ; do. fair to good, 188210. prints Jobbing at 24@%e. Cheese quiet; New York large, 8310Mc.; small fancy, S@I100e.: part skims, 34@8e.; full skims, 205. Eggs firmer; Flour quiet, but WAL. do. extras, New York and Pennsylvania, 1ig@i1%.; foe | house, $1.75@2.75; westorn fresh, 11M@11Mo.; | southern, 10W@lle. Ldve Stock Markets, New Yon, March 3. Beeves firm. FLOOD DAMAGE BAST. | Havoo of the Rising Waters in New | Hampshire and Maine, | PROPERTY LOSS REACHES MILLIONS | At Brunswick, Me, Three Workman Were Drowned While Trying to Stem the Tide | of Destruction Rallroand Trafho Serl | ously Impeded and Mill Work Suspended | Dover, N. H., March 8.-—More than | $200,000 damage has been done by the flood | | in this city, Three bridges have been | washed away In this city and a large seo tion of the big Bracewell blook has been completely wrecked, The Merrimac river is rising at the rate of three inches an hour. The Nashua river is eight Inches | above any stage it has reached at Nashua in the last twelve years, and Jackson's mill, which employ 1,000 hands, and the electric light works have been obliged to shut down. Three bridges at Somersworth, N. H., have been carried away, and traffic ox the Northern division of the Boston and Maine rallway is suspended in consequence Many other bridges on the Plscataqun have also been destroyed. At Bow Juno tion, two miles south of Concord, N. H,, 1,000 feet of the roadbed of the Concord and Montreal railway has caved in, and it must be several days before the damage can be repaired Reports from North Weare and Now Boston indicate that several bridges in that section have been wrecked, and It will be several days before railroad traffic can be resumed. All the mills at Man chester, N. H., are idle The tracks of the Boston and Maine tween Manchester and Lowell are several feet of water in places. It will re quire two days at least to repair the tracks to Concord. The Merrimao in its bank Mass all the be under river over Lowell, and mills are idl am river at Kennel her than it has been at any time rk in {i fl years and w THE FLOODS IN MAINE Millions Worth of Property Destroyed. PORTLAND, Me., March 3 —The the Presumpscot river has subsl siderably, Three Lives Lost and A LER IEEE one bridge out of six in the Dam Harsts in Conne hE i LHR New York State Floods Sabaiding. ALBANY : ad » has ¢ BS Man } march er about vd sidence of the flood \ populated business and res of the « } tu day from on iy Iw i wide a half mile Was su oto twelve Seven Thousand Made Idle by Flood Maxcn ren, N. H., March Merrimac ear water in th r 1 av private bridges and the steam p Amoskeag mills shutting down the miils Ih throws { 7.200 hands out employn and may last several wooks no yosterday Sudden Death of a New Jersey Judge, Trestox, March 4 Judge Clifford Stanley Sims, of the Now Jersey court of errors, died here yesterday of paralysis He waa stricken while walting for a train at the Pennsylvania railroad depot, from which he was taken to a hotel There he died a few hours later. The body of Judge Sime was embalmed last evening and sent to his home at Mount Holly 1896 Fr. Sa. 1 6|7 13|14 21 28 ——— MOON'S PHASES, Cd, 6 2% | De 22 TR Ol 14 2% | Olan 20 2% Lar gg ger wed - ITEMS OF STATE NEWS, IRWIN, Pa, March 8.-Miss Pauline Clarke and Miss Mary Greeves, both of Westmoreland City, and Richard Gar. land, of Bhafton, were run downt by a freight train near hero and were instantly killed. The party wero returning from an entertainment, TUNKHANNOCK, Pa., March 8. ~The Wy- oming county commissioners have been | summoned to appear at Seranton to an- | #wor for cor tempt of court (a refusing to pay into the hands of the prothonotary of Sullivan county the amount apportioned to Wyoming county as costs in the Judicial contest in the Forty-fourth district. WEST CHESTER, Pa, March 2.-Nine | Femonstrances, containing in all 1,000 gig. natures, have been flied in the ofMlce of the clerks of courts against the granting of a liquor license at Berwyn, in Kesttown township, to James F. Kromer Ab the present time there Is not a licensed house in the place, and the remonstrants claim that none is necessary. WiLkesparne, Pa, March 2. — Mary Lombroski, of Hazleton, has brought suis by her attorney against Joseph Zmujdin for $10,000 damages for alleged breach of promise of marriage. The plaintiff says that the defendant on Jan. 23 18006, prom ised to marry her, but he married another girl and jited her, for damages which sho wants JOXESTOWN, broke into the Wagner, near th aged 12 years in the he opened { tied wound: capped distar Pa, March residence 4 f Burglary Mra Her ad m J hn noted ace ipted the spl heard and son moving about Hao obtaining 8 revolver He emp volver and but they es the intruders » upon | thy every hamber of re f the burglar al x i one i vb MATES Wore from the hous B } LIAR & part VOS a wi ti mem nary njun mn sot Winter and in restraining them i s of ul Moe i La fice ids of the restrained from ae | as ISiness An interesting barre Coal ¢ was arrested Saturday 1 Anth Killed by a boller exple t Monday The exact slosion was not made clear ed the bell AT "a n of that If t alias old Mary P boe WTA tie man with } He was } in $I the arrival of police from and Mrs. T the gang, es K wa 0 for wearing obberts, two other members of aped the detectives, bu capture is assured SCRANTON A smallpox character Pa., March 4 ! one of a unde rmine oreated excitement It Priceburg, a mining village of about 2,00 inhabitants, four miles north of here. The public schools have been closed and th case reported to the state health officer The man {ll with the disease is Joseph Filarski, a Polander, 25 years of age, and married. The housp is in a thickly popu lated settlement of Polanders. The sus pected case is that of a Polander wh worked with Filarski. Business is pr tically at a standstill MirrLintowx, Pa, March 8 ..C Ramsey, a farmer near East Waterford Juniata county, beat his wife's brains ou Sunday ulght with a club and an iron bar | They had been reading a socialistic bool | oalled “Millenial Dawn,’ and become d¢ | mented over it, but were not considere dangerous. They were alone at the time Mrs. Ramsey was found in the kitchen, Caso and have | traced for some | h } n goods “2 | THE walting Mr | | ders for a Chsloe | POTATOES ! { will cost you nothing to give it a trial | | ‘Wanted Salesmen INTERIOR DECORATING is a fineart, whenitis properly done, and the modern styles of wall paper, designed by some of the best artists of the day, go far toward making it comparatively inexpensive. Some of the very latest beauties we are of. fering for the Spring trade at aston. ishing low prices, at S. H. WILLIAMS corator and dealer in S.H. WILLIAMS, * ‘WORLD WIDE ENDEAVOR Young People's Society CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR i Gillespie, Metzgar & Kel Ae . i amps at hada w Wy o. UNION SQUARE the publisher YORK addre ENTURY NEw 8 We want one or two GOOD MEN In each County to take or Hine of NURSERY STOCK or SEED stock and seed guaranteed. We ive you Steady Employment wilh Good Pay. It State when writing which you prefer to sell. Address THE HAWKS NURSERY CO, 1.14066m ROCHESTER, N.Y. INVEST - YOUR - MONEY IN FIRET MORTGAGES on city or country real estate worth at least double the amount of loan. Interest at six per cent. payable quarterly or semi-annually. Bor rowers pay all expenses and attor- neys' fees. Can secure plenty of first-class investments at all times for any one who has money to lend. For further information and par- ticulars, address E. H. FAULKENDER, Attorney-at-Law 8.8.1y Hollidaysburg, Pa. —— RBAILROAD SCHEDULILS NIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES In effect on and after May 2), 1865 PP ENNBYLVA VIA. TYRONE~WEBTWAKD - leave Bellefonte 5 2am, arrive at Tyrone 6 40mm, at Altoona, 7 40a m; at Pittsburg’ IZ10Wpm Leave Bellefonte 10 8a m arrive at Tyrone Z5amiat Altoona l 40 p nat Pittsburg ym seliefonte 5 15 pm; arrive at bial Altoona at 7 40; at Pittsburg at 11 Tyrone w leave 6% Via TY BONE~EASTWARD Leave Bellefonte 5 26 am, arrive at Tyrone 6 40: at Harrisburg 9 3 am; at Philadel phila i217 pm Leave Bellefonte 1004 am, arrive H2Z5am;at Harrisburg 240 pm delphiab47 pm Leave Beliefonte 515 pm 642; st Harrisburg at delphia 42a m at at Tyrone Phila at Dm: at Arrive 0 20 VIA LOCK HAVEN Leave Bellefonte Haven 103 am Leave Bellefonte i, arrl Haven 4pm: at Henovo¥ pm t dlp m, arrive 3 RORKTHWARD 450 p m, arrive leave Bellefonte at #4 Haven Leave Be Haven LOCK HAVER—~EARTWAKD =" Hefonte, 9.2» a. m. arrive at Lock muport, 12.55 p.m, al Philadel W ve at Lock Ha oy Har kin “wr A at eat Lo Leave Be BALD EAGLE VA ttached to Phil rain passing West bound { on Day Philadelphia GEPHART General Supt | Wilamspt east bound at at 65%. m i ma t trains between Williamsport and JW BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD To take effect May 20, 18% fect PASTWARD 124: 88: 29% WESTWARD LR IRE i STATIONS j MAM AT 88 198 80 inns a 8 Bellefonte Coleville.. Morris. Whitmer Hunters Fillmore Brialy er. Waddle Reotia Crossing, Tw wine KTUmMIine vse NETruble hx iL Aaa A Ee » ro =F FEY TET EE Ed a | PHB IDOEND BERET ENA with Tran § "rains State Ccid connect with Penna. R. KR. trains at Bellefonte, Dail t Sunday f yay JH. TRoMAS, Supt, COUNTY BANKING ————————
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers