4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. MARCH 217, 1902, The Centre Democrat, CHAS. R. KURTZ, w———— = - - PROPRIETOR FRED KURTZ, SR. | gn iTORS. CHAS. R. KURTZ, ) CIRCULATION OVER 2850. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : SUBSCRIPTION - - $1.50 PER YEAR Persons who send or bring the money to the office, and pay in advance, $1. por year. expires is plain your name. unless The date your subscription ly printed on the label bearing Subscriptions will be continued, otherwise directed. We employ no solicitor, send the money to this ofce. EDITORIAL, Wo kin get the machine nomination for governor ? El-kin. Et For wHoM will the Centre county re- publicans instruct their delegates for gov- | ervor? Try Jobn Hamilton, Tug Prohibition State Convention will meet at New Castle, Pa., May 21st There will be 762 delegates in attend- ance. THEY are bound to make Roosevelt do | some rough riding to be nominated for | He don’t suit the boss gaog | president. of his party. - Sussipy Hanpa is being “‘forced”’ to beat for the republican nomination for president. He the choice of the treasury looters Pr Roosevelt 18 Tug grangers pass the right kind resolutions, when they go the where the centre shot can be made to polls. and there alone Fa - f Pe have cb four A I¥ the p pnsylvani years ago, woul Jenks for Harrisburg would not they took a Stone. If like Elk eople ( sen Leo a Governor the corruption ul have followed, but they again select in, the same political rooster, thing will follow MAN W. C. ArNOI announced Ex-CoNGRESS has formally Republican the 21st DuBois, didacy for the for Congress Woodward, from of Clearfield, is also after the L 18 DOW ( same office a nice b n band between them. - | to the Philadel ling and funny Hamilton delegates of A BELLEF phia Ledger ONTE speci bas this stant , that John announcement bad ublican for promised the reg this county to Elkins Smash the attempt to bite « oO governor leu dealers, if John does not ff a big piece. A —— _ frem the Harrisburg Tue Patriot in comment reference to the Senatorial question jn this district has t rought fore ward a general sentiment that Senator W. C. Heinle shall needed be returned, as he is Indications are that he will re ceive the nomination without any opposi tion. - jonaire Hanna and a y rich ship with might and annually instead score Immense owners to steal $5 thirty years, mi of Haonpa's maker, are workiog main L000, 000 for snamed subsidy would farmer, mi what be if the carpenter, robbery, Senator vote ner, shoe- barber, shopkeeper, hackowner, and workingmen, were {0 ask congress for a truthfal millions of Haona a subsidy, putting in 1p fe . plea of poverty, x Co.? right as against the These classes and are a mes more needy and have just as good a worthy The est attempt at rob thousand ti than the bloated shipowners sub the bald sidy game 1s bery at the ushering - in of this century Asthe P nited States Gatermining the Schley controversy and forbids clared the resident of the in ling its reopening has de. battle of Santiago simply a captain's fight, the Chicago deems it pe “Chronicle rtinent, from the records at hand, to state what the captain's got for their share, and Captains abs W.T. Sampson. acting rear a F. E. Chadwick, of the New Y¢ Captains present W. 8. Schley F.A( R. Evans O. E. ( J. W. Philip H.C. Taylor The made on the theory that the victory was wou by the absentees, this way ent and net #1 it reads gaged Imiral. 825.757 4 TK IERLA F) and engaged- (a Ri 2,190 1164.80 1.080 80 ook , AlN distribution was - CLEARFIELD POLITICS. The Republican machine of Clearfield county, controlled by Judge Gordon and Frank G. Harris, carried out the com. pact made with the Stone. Elkin. Durbam gang. Al the primaries last week everything was harmonious—s0 much so that it was painful. Less than 15 per cent, of the Republican voters participated. The machine people explain this lack of interest on the ground that the weath. er was 50 bad; they did not participate because they will not vote for Elkin if he is nominated, Judge Gordon is a candidate to suc ceed himself on the bench. At present he is playing all kinds of politics in the interest of Gordon, The entry of A. H, Woodward into the Congressional removed a dangerous rival from his path, All signs now point to Gordon getting the nomination without much effort, It is the election that is worrying him most, however. He is weaker than when be was elected nine years ago. You are expected to | out | of | but they must back them up | There's | at | 1,740.8 | 2,182.9 | WAR-POLITICS AND WAR-HEROES. The American people may not be able to pass upon the merits of the Army Re- | organization bill which Lieut.-Gen. Miles severely criticised, as he bad a perfect right to do when his opinion ‘was asked by the Senate committee. But the peor ple are quite warranted in concluding that Gen. Miles knows a good deal more about the subject than either the amateur soldier Roosevelt or the crafty lawyer Root, who was jumped from his briefs into the War Department, The people are justified, in looking with astonishment growing indignation upon the censare and humiliation of the three chief figures of our army and navy Miles, Dewey and Schley—by these young men in civil office, Temarks the N.¥Y World. furthermore, and a — a ———— General Taft, who onsoys the dls- | tinction of trying to be governor of | the Philippines, like all the other prominent men who have mixed In it, | are having a very hard time to show | just how he and God are working dill- gently for the interests | plnos Ww hom they love so well. He says | that they have no thought of establish- | ing reconcentrado camps In the usual gense of the term. Of course not. The ordinary sense of the term and the | gange of every man who knows any- thing understands that such a camp Is a place where the captured women children of the enemy are placed | be starved to death order to f« | their fs hust ds and br to give up their to the This Is ration meant in ( today actly pines, wh i work for { rene. who never did the slightest vio- vy ¥ win 114 lence to man, child, and in withers, ot invader. concent Ps a, this is what they mean uth Africa, and it is ex- they mean in the Philip- are doing missionary ise of the | lan oam in what ore we the car ywly Naza- woman and precepts uch of any of wtures. No matter what Taft he and busin or | avery oO! whose declare against | 8 treatment God's cree God pr ess is damnal | be to the fin h pose to ia ple have a the spirit of IN OPERATION JULY st g from Clearaeia of the Beech Creek arthaus, a of the ‘ork Central ¢ are four tun. im the dis on, tance of thirty mil the es, one feet long . second feet at at at Deer Creek, at 2. 500 Shawville, 1 lot 400 feel, § 600 feet Karthaus, The grading is the heaviest kn Pennsylvania ra ong ridges this piace road constr s are They All 1 tunpels are of of are Deck-Truss style the abut cuiveris and Con are durable pearance 1 be run in July next, § hitherto All Du Be Patton and Barnsboro region, train wi through a countr) unknown | the railroad worl the coal from Punxsutawney and as well the over this lin "ne, e by water grade to port A Snvugt passenger service will be in i , giving lines a through route The cost of the troduce the New and allied longer than the Pennsylvania. line will be abou. $3,000 amount §70 The pay cluded 1,50 for ties roll at times bas men, struction 10,000 different men have empl A + wea TRAMP CURE The superintendent of the Municipal Lodging House in Chicago thinks he bas solved the tramp problem, which is seri. ous throughout the West. He divides tramps into classes. Some are the resuit of industrial conditions ; some are made tramps by drink, and others are degen- erate owing to the conditions of their childhood. When a tramp applies for lodging he is bathed and fumigated, and in the morning is allowed a breakfast. Then he is examined by a doctor, who determines whether he is physically able | to work. If be desire employment there are four firms which offer it. For four days he receives lodging. If a tramp will not work he is locked up as a vagrant, No tramps or homeless per- | sons can lodge at the police stations of | Chicago, and the “barrel houses’’ also are closed to them, They must go to the Municipal lodging House, where this rule of work or prison meets them, That sounds like a practieal solution of the tramp Rulsance. r— Clinton County Statistics. Number of taxables, 10,26¢; number of acres of cleared land, 75,574; number of acres of timber land, 406,730; value of all real estate taxable, $5,957,213. The number of horses in the county is 1670 valued at $156,933: number of cows 3241 valued at $62,783. Occupations are valued at $365,069, The value of all property taxable is $6,541,993, and the aggregate amount of conpty taxes is $45,793 95. The amount of money at interest is $1,045,596, and the amount of state tax for 1902 is §4,- 183 04. " ~See our shoes. ¥. Ladies’ $2 eager & of the Fill- | to | yee | as | will go York Central | wo, of which | ooo alone has been paid out | in- | and during its con. been | VARIETY OF COUNTYN EWS. (C sontinued from page 1.) was wrecked by a barrel of beer in the Lewisburg bridge, last week, proves lo be incorrect. The Sunbury Item says a merry tele. phone war will be on in that town within the next week or so, It 1s said the Bell people will place ‘phones in private houses for less than a dollar a month. At Huntingdon, on last Thursday morning, George KE. Neff missed the early train to Alexandria, where he was to do some work, He was crossing the track when engine No. 305, struck him and killed him instantly, His head was crushed. Mr. Miller, of Salona, who was award. ed the contract ago, tearing down the old Evangelical church | building at Mackeyville this week. The Esen several weeks is lumber has been sold to George wine, of Salona, who will enlarge his 1m. | plement building. The ilifated Pennsylvania road, railroad engine of the | Lycoming creek during the flood of last December, is again having { repaired at the bodies of E ugneer in use, Sunbury traces of the Marty { and Fireman Glass have yet been discov. | ered. | Twelve year-old Jeanie Eberhart, Unio effect tained while ¢ whose bome is near Swengie, the 84] hers | county, died Thursday from of an injury which she sus school the day previous. She was dentally struck on the head by a ¥ ball bat in the hands of a boy who, several companions, were engaged game during recess. I. O. Harps Port Mati that he is a good posit located place and the w he a in ifices of Nelsot Co MN cour siesale dealers s¢ he cant do without the tor Schree Mr. and Mrs ast Sunday of kengast, W. A Cause death, Schreckengast caught husband through an disease at Pittsburg Deceased was aged mouths, She was the and Mrs. H. B Kleckner and three children survis - jes’ ~ Lad guaranteed at Yeager & Davis which plunged into | been | shops. No | RECENT DEATHS. ApoLrH MILLER :—died at his home near Coburn, on Wednesday afternoon 18, aged 72 years. The funeral was held Saturday morning. Interment in Union cemetery at Millheim, WiLLiAM Hoy :—son of Joseph Hoy passed away at his home at State Col: lege on Sunday 16. He had been af flicted with whooping cough and catarrhal fever developed. He was twenty months old. at New Miliport, Centre county, He was the first soldier in the Army of the Potomac to lose a leg, being in the battle of Drauesville, Dec- 1861. He was a member of Company K, Pirst “Backtails. ember 20, Pennsylvania yolun- teers, 4 Died Calder- Miss JANKE | the home of het nephew, at Tyrone, , CALDERWOOD ke BP. last Friday at wood, morning, of appendicitis, The deceased was aged 70 years and 3 months. Born in Centre county, she had resided at Penna Fuar- | nace for thirty vears until one year ago | when she went to Tyrone Mr. and coachmaker of CoNDO son of Condo, Cartes | | Mrs Ames | Penn Hall, died ! day morning 15, He had a severe attack of meas ch i A hie an i at his me on Satur after ness of three | weeks | les, whi tubercular th His ags dreaded disease which caused his dea YCars. i Thomas two daughter laughter Girard, Pa the | James GLENN :(—who died at his home | Pa., was a native of | life was actively engaged iu the Disci. He was a man of strong | ple ministry. mental equipment and no matter whether before the court, in the pulpit or upon the political rostrum he was a speaker of great force. - Ladies’ all solid shoes for dress $1.25 | Yeager & Davis. - Deafness Cannot be Cured By loeal applications, as they eannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to eure Deafness, and that is by con stitutions! remedies, Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube, When this tube gets inflam od you huve a running sound or imperfect bear ing. and when It is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the jaflammation can be taken oul and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases out of ten are caused by eatarrh, which 1s nothing but an inflamed condition of the mocous surfaces We will give One Hundred case of Deafness (ean not be cured by Hall clreulars, ree ¥. J Dollars for any sed by eatarrh) that can s Catarrh Cure. Bend for CHENEY & Uc ™ ’ Toledo, OO the best We are autho od Lo announce the name of WM. C. HEINLE, of Be for Ktate Senate, sul ort Democrat { nee SHERIFF FAY LOK, of Be Conference Headquarters... W— , T— No one will doubt us when we say that there is no place in town where one can get | 80 much satisfaction for nothing as in a music store. A fine assortment of instru- ments is always “a thing of # i | beauty” and in the hands of 2d a skilled performer “a joy REGISTER , ARCHEY. of Per RECORDER { ASSEMBLY COMMISSIONER fH - | forever.’ We have the in- struments, and a skilled per- former will be in our rooms throughout the Conference Session. Come and INVESTIGATE. Our stock cannot be sur- passed anywhere. Our prices are low and terms easy. Our { . time and exderience at your convenience. M. C. GEPHART Millheim and Represented by H. C. Kraps. Bellefonte. saa FEES IESE GSS ESSE E SEIS IEIS. 12042040043 ¥ Men, Whatever You Do. Do THIS How Casy if we « We h AVE Sa dn’t strange oul Penn'a. Hart Schaffner éx SSSI IEE SEEING ESSN IIIIIIIS EEE Temple GOUrt. We want you to come in and look at this Clothing. it 1s for us to s ling hi 4 4 " agvaniage Tel ni both \ styles in Clotl other clothing but ours are like. You'll g ett probably need only Nt ad’ tell you ring 5 CS inh $7.50 Trousers have corded side seams tinge of green with faint stripe of red running through it, is as stunning As an M $10.00 eighth inch ; lar ; trousers with three. Sim's’ If you cr result they ard here, : 1£ and weaig the price should command, Sack Coat with rounded corners ; ing with three rows of stitching ; broad shoulders ; COME HERE FOR YOUR CLOTHING, BECAUSE IT WILL PAY YOU TO DO SO ve Us b than tw Ame ty WW every su sty'e somel ' Clothes ney tl i 10 put n far nave worm ur ] less m ready CXAl S " an vi m, ¢ ASY rhts are re ady \ Men’s & Young Men’s Suits. MEN'S three-button Beck Coat Twenty-eight patterns, but that ENS & YOUNG MEN'S lined with Princess serge stationary front [won't sag eighth inch open welt side seam, 10 tly what you want. & YOUNG MEN'S SUITS, best for the money that ever waa : inside facing piped with Princess serge ; ing and seams all stitched qoarter inch ; high cut SUITS. finer than any other elothiers think Look at the style we put into it! inside facing has quarter-inch satin pip- seams lapped and stitched three high cut vest with or without col- ‘with or without belt straps. More It would be in Central Styl edg- Vest with notehed collar brownish Cassimere with a v 3-button WIE ITTSTI INITIO NI NIT I IIIS ST patterns than you'd care to look at=sixty three. woo uw VV nn macnn wlll cid \ $12.50 Mohair serge ; the fore-rank of fashion. Its the newest, neatest effect this sesson the cul gives an idea, MEN'S & YOUNG MEN'S SUITS. Whew ! thing quite so swell at $15.00 or even $17 the secret of our success, stationary stiff front broad, high padded shoulders ; six or seven. (won't hang limp like a rag) ; button vest with notched collar ; —— - .-— But you've never seen any. 00 in other stores. You know Ringle breasted, Sack Coat lined with the collar is hand “ir trousers right in But ‘we want to tell you about that husotifol “black.en- white” effect. SIM, THE OLOTHIER, offers. And then we bave them in the pew twe button | Its as much your interest to see them as it is ours to show them. Belleionte, Pa. §
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers