4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA.. THURSLA , OCTOBER 8. 1806, The Centre Demorrat, CHAS. R. KURTZ ED. & PROP CIRCULATION, OVER 1700. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 per year. $1.00 Regular Price If paid in ADVANUR CLUB RATES: Trg CENTRE DEMOCRAT One year | and Phila. Weekly Times one year \ for $1.45 NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, WM. J.BRYAN, of Nebraska ICE PRESIDENT of Maine FOR ARTHUR SEWALI STATE TICKET FOR CONGRESS J. LSPANGLER CONGRESS AT-LARGI DEWITT CC. DEWIT] JEROME T. AILMAN Democratic County Ticket, : L$ JAS. SCHOFIELD For Assembly— | RORERT M. FOSTER For Sherlff—W. M. CRONISTER For Treasurer-C. A. WEAVER For Recorder—J. C. HARPER. For Register—GEO. W, RUMBERGER. sP. H MEYER For Commissioners—;i n'a NTEL { FRANK HESS “¢{ B.F.KISTER Auditors For County Surveyor-J. H. WETZEL For Coroner IRVIN EDITORIAL BRIGHT OUTLOOK The free sil son to fegliencout The extent ( to the other upon the issue. ing, seriously thinking That want. what the free silv is They are confident of their cause, believe it is just and ultimately must win | when the great mass get to understand the issue. this will be a memorable event in the financial history of our country. It notes the uprising of the masses against the who control and manipulate the weal It is the struggle between the laborers, mechanics, farmers, at . ® the . 4 tisans, et speculators me pict. and those mou upon manipe 3 late the That has tendency d been the al past decade. Note the condition of the farmer, also the distress of our laboring men. On the other hand the wealth of the country is gradually being assimil- lated in the hands of comparatively few. This produces two extremes in our civil ization—the dependent toilers and the In millionaire independent rich. 1860 there was probably but one in this country—to-day there are thousands All portious of our country are afflicted with unemployed, destitute families and distress. Mortgages have covered the farms of the people. Our civilization is gradually drifting to the condition of foreign countries owned by the aristocracy, an obligarchy, reduced to mere while the people are serfs. ‘That is the system that creates the degraded specimens of Hungarians, | Italians, Austrians pow drifting to our shores. The intelligence of our peopie is our only safeguard. The farmers over this great land, and they are its sinew and backbone, are thinking, With them we find the great labor organizations of the | { and knows from experience what their . ; | best interests are, financial problem and readily see that a | land. They are beginning to study the change is necessary. They have no con- fidence in McKinley, Mark Hanna the labor crusher, with all his boodle to buy up a presidential election, During the past week it has been evi. | dent that there bas been a great change in the outlook. The South and West are conceded sure for Bryan. Illinois will roll up an astounding vote in the same direction. to free silver. jngmen, even in Ohio, have honey comb. ed McKinley's own state and free silver is liable to win a signal victory there, The cause is winning thousands of new recruits daily. The tidal wave is gath. ering new force and by November prom. {ses to sweep the country, The people Michigan is about going over HECKMAN. | er péople We are making history. Yes, | The land is finally | The farmers and labor. | still rule, and the time has come to drive ’ the “money changers’ out of power, The greed of the bondholders, bankers, money lenders, shylocks, which 1n the past twenty years has filled the land with distress and misery, must go down before the just cause of a great and free people. — - WE hope that no democrat in Centre county will stoop to rowdyism by inter. held Such conduct always re-acts. fering in any republican meeting this year There should be no check to free speech in this campaigu. Let {ceive respectful atiention and an oppor- | tunity every orator re- to argue his cause. Don't | rupt any republican meetings. . - THE REAL ISSUE the the week's issue of Gazette attempling divert attention of voters, in Centre county, from the money | | can question to dirty, personal abuse of local candidates, It makes an befouling itself, because the legislative records of Messrs Womelsdor( Curtin were published. If that fair, timely, and injures the prospects of those gentlemen, fault, Their conduct is fit matter for discussion, and the public should know exactly what | they did and what they neglected to do apology and is it is not our 1 | at Harrisburg, and we will continue to The threat of the put its “Krupp Guns’ ) | speak more of it. Cazetle WO to smutt broadcast will not work hurling intimidate us or deter us fromm doing what is proper and just, Neither will it { deviate our efforts from the main issue— {the great and all-absorbing »r, more money, higher pric lucers ncipation of the proc CALVIN A. WEAVER i5 a who is deserving young man He comes from an old democratic family, is the son of a | veteran who served in the late war | line , he is | honest, upright and efficient. Such a man deserves public confidence. He would make a desirable county treasurer ———— ————————— a —— AN INVITATION Furst, from the last issue of the ne Gazette, don't know when like of ideas on ou accept another joint discussion ? If you are con- fident of your cause, you certainly have the ability to defend it. Farther, if you consent to such an agreement, state the You can depend upon it that you would find one of the largest audiences to hear the debate you ever will head again pleasure. - - M. CRONISTER ¢ seeker propositions you desire to discuss. saw in that building. meet Mr. White. We await your yasent to in debate ? you ¢ Ww offic is not a chronic He 15 a business man and a farmer. He is for Sheriff " -> OUR COUNTY TICKET During this campaign very little at. tention has been paid to our county ticket, The national issue, free silver, seems to absorb the entire attention. issue around which the waged this year. While every democrat will be interested in this struggle for a return to a safer and broader monetary priaciple, the men un our county ticket should not be forgotten. They are lead. ing in the fight. They are bending every nerve and exerting every influence for democracy 's success. Our entire ticket It is a great battle will be | is composed of representative men and | they deserve your support, - Mur. HECKMAX is a life-long farmer Give him your sup. pot. dd - No democrat should think of desert. ing the county ticket this year. These | men are eagerly striving for the free sil. ver canse this year, Stand by them. | W.M. CroxmTR, Gur candidate for | Sheriff, is an active energetic man who { would make a good official. He is not a | ¢hironic office seeker and a sort of a pub. lic charge. He deserves every loyal | democrat’s vote. Stand by him, - GRORGE WASHINGTON RUMBRRGER, has a big name, and it indicates the size of his majority this fall, Mr. Rumberger, the candidate for Register, has made a good official and deserves the customary privilege of a reelection. There is no doubt about that: He will be duly re. waided. ~Subscribe for the Cenire Democrat. Voter, where do you stand ou this issue? | : : : ; ’ = SNE be working ruin with violence that noth- | tinue { gold standard for | not | of wealth | | sinew of our race; the artisan | manufacturers; what he | to have | the money | Hou. E. vitalion for | " | ou September WORKING RUIN WITH VIOLENCE, What Hon, J. D. Cameron Says of the Poverty Making Condition of the Single Gold Standard United States Senator J. D. Cameron in a letter to the national Republican league, June 11, 1894, expressed himself ou the money question as follows The single gold standard seems to us to If its future at the rate of its ac- ing can stand. for the influence is to con- { ion during the twenty years since the took possession of the world, some generation, not very remote, will see in the broad continent of Amer. ica only hall a dozen overgrown citie | keep miter. | : ; | lending it out lo a population of dependent | laborers on the morlgage of their oy ing guard over a mass of capital and NL | ing crops and unfinished handiwork sights have been common enough i world's history, but against rebel, Rich and poor alike; 5, Populists; labor an ways, churches and coll and all insolid good faith, shrinking from | such a future as that y » » #® - w » » " A vast majority of all parties agree that the single gold standard has been, is and will be a national disaster of the worst kind almost the whole world sympathizes with Nine denths™of mankind hostile to the single gold standard, 70,000,000 people are unanimous against it. and their governments dislike it us. are oar Most of the great European nations South America rejects it. The whole of Asia knows only silver, and India which con- tains five-sixths of all the subjects of the as hostile to it as our Crows, 18 \'et the bankers of London have of, and we ve ngland holds us to the single What is still more strange, | HANNA AND THE LABOR VOTE, | Democratic Leaders Say He Has Given it Up. : Cause Is Hopeless According to the official bulletin from Democratic headquarters Mark Hanna has admitted that McKinley's cause is hopeless. “In a private conversation held at the Lexington Hotel, Chicago, a day or two before golug to New York," the bulletin says, “Mark Hanna made the remarks: | v M | McKinley's chances are It : | have lost the labor vote. exceedingly { doubtful, is no use denying that we Debs and bis | following have led the labor vote to Bry. au, while the farmers are all crazy on free silver. I am afraid McKinley will not win “These statements were made by Mark Hanva in the presence of two or three gentlemen whose names are known at National Democratic headquarters, and one of them gave out the information and his reputation veracity cannot be im- peached.’ The Democratic managers also declare that the most conservative Democratic | estimates give the free silver forces a | large working majority in the next House of Representatives, while the pres. the United States Senate will be increased. {ent free silver majority in The above appeared in the first edi- | tion of Wednesday's Philadelphia Rec- ford, but was omitted in subsequent { editions. It evidently appeared by mis- {take and was immediately taken out.) - HARRY CumrTIN believes in He legislature. Every in the tiny tin peusion . ing judges. voted that way in the who believes farmer same jg for 3 107 vole Lur. olicy should - EVIDENCETO THE POINT “World a file standard by the force of her capital alone | more despotically to her empire in 1776. The mere threat of her displeasure paralyzes mankind » - - » » ~ - The whole class or classes of small propr whole agricultural class, the ie- tors, the farmers terests are bound up in the success of our all these yf their roim hands with left old enemies, the stocracy of Europe, / protest against a revolution made for the benefil f money lenders alone MCKINLEY BOASTS Willian Per reins, "T™% ct _ : A Bus wrote S sr 2, 4 HH “I have always beem in favor free and unlimited coinage of the silver product of the United Stales,and have so voted on at least two occasions during the time I have been in public life. * * * *= * My purpose was fo secure im. mediate legislation that would credil and dignify our silver coin. 1 believe the law which we enacted this session will accomplish that result, It utilizes every dollar's worth of the silver product of the United States and even more. The value of that legislation has already been | apparent in the enhanced valuegiven to | silver. You may remember, as indicaling my position upon this subject that [voted to | pass the silver bill in the Fourly fifth or | Forly-sixth congress over the velo of President Hayes." - ———— — —— “I am glad that if Il am elected there is not a trust or'%yndicate that can come to me and say: We put you there; now pay back." "William Bryan. us Jennicgs - Tur assault made upon Foster and Schofield, last week by the Gazette, will not clear away Curtin and Womelsdor('s record, as printed in the Legislative Re- cord. - For years the farmers have been clamoring for more money and higher prices, That is what Wm. J. Bryan's election will mean. Farmer, look to your interest. The banker and money lenders want McKinley. i" ——— mia— HARRY ALVIN HALL is a millionaire, and heretofore has been a democrat, but this trip he is in company with Mark Hanna's millionaires and he says he will vote for McKinley. All millionaires are leaving the democratic party this year, Itdon’t suit them, Farmer, where should you be? Does the millionaire protect you? He never did. You must work mighty hard for all you get. . RE Anuse won't clear up Cuttin and Womelsdori’s record at Harrisburg, They may have some personal short. comings like all men, but their public career in the legislature is what deserves consideration. They voted for salary grabs, extravagant appropriations, Standard Oil bills, pensioning of judges, and such like Such a course deserves rebuke, «Bicycle repairs of all kinds at Shef. fern store, in Criders rooms, that make the bulk and | whose in- | f Lhe | than she could hold us | * United States were to adopt a silver | basis to-morrow British trade would be ruined before the year was out, for Amer. H un iodustry would be protected not ince ouly at bome but very other market.’ It fearsthe free and unlimited coinage of shows conclusively Eugland | silver of the United States means the ¢ | of Great Britian’s commercial supremacy and the return “1 of prosperity in ates — BRYAN IS ELECTED — i Mouday panies the promise, how. states that in case of n's election an increase of {10 per cent in the wages of every em. pioye in this union foundry will be given { A remarkable feature in connection with | the case is that the company's president, C. W. Cunningham, has been a life-long | Repubiican, while the heaviest stock. { bolder, W. N. Aulton, is an enthusiastic | silverite thoughi he is a leading banker, Nearly all the employes are Republi. cans, but all are Bryan supporters | President Cunningham said that the reason the promise of better wages was | made 1s that the company feels confident free coinage will so stimulate business that an increase will be justified. He be. lieves under free coinage will justify even further wage advances Robbers at Centre Hall On Wednesday night a gang of burglars were at work in Centre Hall. The fol. lowing residences were entered : Mrs, Ossman, Mrs. Anna VanPelt, Mrs. Ross, David Boozer, Dr. Alexander and Jas. Alexander. In none of the above places was anything of any value secured. The places were ransacked, and no one de. tected them at their daring work. Men's all wool suits will reveal The exact same goods that others are ask. ing $10.00 for, is a saving of $5.00 of | interest to you, Faubles. — — Got Married, Bauer slipped off to Philadelphia last Miss Bertha MM. Derr, of Beliefonte. They returned home on Thursday and on Bishop street, On Thursday evening They have our best wishes, Shoe Factory. ory at that place; considerable money ject, ~Teachers’ Institute will be held here on week of Christmas, HOOD'S PILLS « A pleasant Headache, AD Drugglsts. : i A glance at our great assortment of | Just as we predicted, merchant John | week and got married. The bride is | have rooms in the Brockerhoff building they were serenaded by the Undine band. | A move is being made by the citizens | of Tyrone, Pa., to establish a shoe fact. | has already been subscribed to the pro. GRORGE W. DELEMATER, once a candi | date for Governor of Pennsylvania, has | removed from Tacoma, Wash., to Chica He is a member of the firm of : IAW Clark, 54 20. Thompson, Delemater & Dearborn street -~ Is it not surprising that nearly every household in the country should be ac. virtues, and Hires been the ard drink of those who enjoy a delicious quainted with the merits the healthful properties of Root- beer ? For years it has stand. temperance beverage. It tones up the and 35 just what system, helps nature, all need in hot wcather, A package makes five gallons. Sold everywhere, Refreshing to tired paraders in the cam- NIGHT'S DISEASE Mrs. N. E. Wh ridge, N. Bridg paign. B cured tney,of Hillsboro , was to d by her physicians | that she was in the last stagesof Bright's disease. ) benefit from them | DAVID KENNEDY'S DR, FAVORITE REMEDY: was then used and she gained daily, and Receiving 1 soon after doing her household work. She declares Favorite Remedy her to health and strength, urinary restored All kidoey, troubles, rheumatism and dys- | pepsia, are cured by Favorite Remedy. | | Pittsburg, | child Willie, aged about two years { day | ed to Pittsburg Sa Ba SA BE BS SA Se Sa Loa sa Sa ws St Bl Bt Bt Bb Bd Buti Death From Burns On Tuesday Mr. Wm, a Lyon | a telegram from Mr, George A. Kirk stating that their your severely burned Monday and dic Mr. Mrs Bellefonte an morning, and formerly resided in but a short time ago Bb. of light "Su ght Soap prev PTT TT IT FR TR AR TY NTT YTV TITY TR TY YY YY YT a t's a Lk it does alx little attic 1 > itself i Besi ides, it prevents woolens p shrink f Lover Bros., 14d, Hodson & Harrison Ste, X.Y, il ASA SA BA Sa SECHLE Bacon ‘and are very fine. Our Oat-meal and flakes are always fresh and sound, vou ean dex nd on ther BUSH HOUSE BLOCK, A... Ont THE LEADING GROCERS R & CO Finest Goods 15. per Can. Tubs, Pails Brooms, Brush Fine Table Orleans Molasses. Syrup, in one Pp, I : £1 00 each ’ Wash Ru and Dask: BELLEFONTE, PA. adda ddadtadiatiotdeiiasd ww 3 PRICES 3 Al in our and worsted goods. stormers, Boy and childrens ceived by us, date. a a RE El a Ta a a a a a a a a a a a a a aT a al aT a aT aN a a a al a aS aT aT aS aT a aT aT AT AT AT AT ATA ATATN OOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOCC CCC other departments. AAA AAANAANA IIIT Fd ods LOE 0 0 SE OE 0 0 EE LE * PR LC) the bright, new NEW STOCK just received Clothing ready to wear in the newest designs and makes, comprising black and blue worst. ed and cheviots, fancy plaids in Scotch Over coats in profesion both dress and and servicable, prettiest effects, ever re. Merchants Tailoring department up to We can show things and guarantee oil me make up. HATS in all the leading makes—Guyer, Duu- lap, Knox, Miller, Hoang. best known shapes, both der Everything new in underware and all NP SP NC JL I J i TR ._» NG CI PA DOOOOO0ODOODOOOD0O0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMOO0 right things are + suits are very stylish you all the latest and all the by and soft. PATIL ITE TETRA SAAR SAG bh rbd A A A a SA a SAIC ACI I RK ELAR FE A on a 0 I OOOO OOOO ICICI III ICICI ICI INN) MONTGOMERY & Co Bellefonte. sgeeeeeecssscesseseed +
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers