Pack 4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. JUNE 22, 1904, Bhe Contre Democrat, FRED KURTZ SR, {gpiTORS. CHAS. R. KURTZ, CIRCULATION OVER 3800 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: SUBSCRIPTION - - $1.50 PER YEAR Persons who send or bring the money to the office, and payin advance, $l per year. CENTRE DEMOCRAT clubs with N.Y. 3t-w World for... cuesnsers sossrsnse Pittsburg Stockman for . Tribune Farmer "os The date your subscription expires is plain. ty printed on the label bearing your name, All eredits are given by a change of label the first issue of each month. Wateh that after you re mit. We send no receipts unless by special request, Watch date on your label, Subscribers changing postoffice address, and aot notifying us, are liable for same Subscriptions will be continued stherwise directed We employ no collector. You are expect send the money to this office inless ed to EDITORIAL. Frou the doings of last week's repub- lican county couvention it goes to show that they have no love for a soldier and even less for a Bible. - THE chilly atmosphere that surrounds the Republican National Convention at Chicago indicates that after November our republican #riends will have to be put in cold storage. - that Jorn A. Daley has informed us we misquoted his last He from politics~ speech in ssue. with this insists that he bas not rawn fact from will be in it more than ever. - in Ir is that the Pennsy! will announced make an additional If al five 5000 men, have families fect thousand sad thing for twenty them WaeNn Womelsd fore the public ¢ plund ed backward lemow There in sight among is all over the counts t empty are the THE other day came John A. Daley, looking as pieasant as though he had been nominated for assembly. In his hip-pocket there seemed to be a large upon orders will hear. scare and the deaf will WE waged between the are shocked a bat when have t would Just Chin.-ti chikaio, K tienlit fight are patkin, ’ litch, Kamimura, and others just g rible. fonte is ten thousand miles away . —————— - LAST campaign the chairmen of parties in this county, crat, and Reeder themselves against the poses both Brungart, d lemo- republican, pledged the use of money in ing pur » We believe the resolve was strict! up of citizens in and out campaign for e.eclioneer lived to; it met the approbati f the county. we obserye a commendable spirit among republicans to disapprove of nominations made at the the republican county convention week when the dictation of bosses without voters having a say, as was done at pleasure of three or four home PREPARING FOR HARD TIMES. The locomotive firemen of the New York,New Haven & Hartford RR. recent ly invited the officers of the road to din. ner. Percy R. Todd. one of the vice- presidents of the road, is reported to have said during the course of his re. marks : “1 want to say that there are many in- dications now that for the next few years hard times are ahead. Business is fall. ing off everywhere, It would be well for your committee to remember that and to reckon with it in asking consideration of | much of the character of | sale. fire-cracker—look out, when it goes off | the little bosses who make nominations ! A 1 " | claims from the company, | { If, as Mr, Todd says, the indications point to hard times, what is going to be: | come of the prosperity argument which the republican party has been employ If ing so diligently ? business is falling {off everywhere, how are they going to It hard timeswill 12? whoop it up for the full dinner pail will be noticed that the last a few months (during the campaign), but he predicts hard times for next few years. The dispatches report a large number of men discharged during the last few months, and we are told that clerks are being discharged in New York because What people is dull. all this Did an business can mean not the buy pros perity at enormous price? Did they jot elect a republican administration for the express purpose of getting prosper. 4 ity reject tariff ref Did they not turn down free silver, low imperialism private monopolies just for When a man sells his birth- t for a mess of pottage he ought to the pottage does not get I any pot remarkably generous be honorable to neither the ipient nor to ich gives the degree partakes altogether too a bargain and ' been D. M. D., somuch too much throw- D.. LL. D., Ph. that these degrees Yes, there bas Ing are D. and u't tnean und dubs of anything--exist only on pa of the action of a ev Sugarva y road which is t in an (Mearf 1 n and Clearfield Feet A wd . ’ , " structed and tha com menced this year, For eral months engineers have been busy surveying the between Clearfield constructed it route for road this apd Franklin, and will conpect the Lake Shore railroad with road It wil a shorter route from Chicago to Ph the Beech Creek rai make phia, New York and the east and its con. struction means much to the section country through which it will traverse — » Houserville. iast | the siate was made at the | bosses. | ' The democrats are opposed to bossism | as much as to the corrupt use of money and it becomes republicans to join in for the purity of elections. THE PROPER COURSE. Why did not the Bellefonte ring go to Jobn A. Daley weeks ago, when the ticket was slated, and te!l bim not to spend time and money for a will.o.the-wisp campaign, when they did not intend to allow him to be nominated ? True, the old soldier, the flag and col- ored voter are emblems of freedom in the minds of republicans as long as they agree to do the bidding of the republi. cans who are running the machine, but how soon they are laid on the shelf when their desire runs contrary to the man. dates of bigger fish in the political pond. Ah! lor these there is a Love with a very clear and distinct background farther down the Dale in which Lambs play and feed to be slaughtered for the Love feast (?) which may be indefinitely postponed, From the Phila Record : The Democrats of Centre county have made posible the defeat of Judge Love, one of the most notorious of the political Judges of Pennsylvania, by putting up against him Ellis Lewis Orvis, a man of gb character and one of the ablest and ty popular attorneys of the Bellefonte r. arence Kaymond Sur | ents at Linden Hall Corn working | with hay making close at hand Ihe supervisors are busily engaged crushing stone and making road Miss Olive Tressler western tour. James Raymond and wife transacted busi ness at State College on Monday C.Y. Wagner and family spent Bunday with friends in this section, Yarnell. Mac Freneh wife and children, of Munson, with Mrs. R. 8, Confer and daughter Ella of Milesburg, spent a part of last week at Jerome Confer's, Mrs. Kate Bayers, of Nanty Glo, Is visiting at her parents John Crofts, Miss Eimeda Pownell is visiting her friend, Miss Lona Brower, Mrs, Allee Stover and daughter Lou, of N, C., who have been visiting At the home of Henry Heaton, Sundayed at M. V. thomas’, Miles Heaton is now on the sick list, Mrs, Erma Witherite, of Ranville, has been the guest of her sister, Mra. Wm, Watson the past two weeks, Mrs. Charley Klingler, and daughters Jessie and Francis Confer, are visiting friends and relatives at Boalsburg and Oak Hall, Hello! JRunville, where are you, Have you been eating too many green apples! iayed with his par Is In order ith the farmers has returned from her Clintun county Sunday school workers should make it a point to attend the dounty convention to be held in Lock Haven on Thursday, joth. | Frank . | ladel- | of INSPIRATIONS TO PATRIOTISM. As the anniversary of American inde- pendence will soon be celebrated the fol- lowing texts and toasts may be suggest ed to the Sons and Danghters of the Re. volution, whose special care it is to keep | sacred the memories of the “times that tried men’s souls.” These are all authen. | tic citations, from the books of Theodore Roosevelt, whom a great political party is about to nominate for President ; | belloving that it is calculated to do much good, | we highly recommend it to the citizens of the Thomas Jefferson, the author of the | Declaration of Independence and of the Virginia resolutions establishing religious toleration, and the maker of the Louis. jana (Parchase : He was “‘vascillating,”’ “timid,” a “shifty doctrinaire,’” "incom - petent,”’ “ungrateful,” " “intriguing “‘constitutional ly unable to put the proper value on truth- fulness,’ and ‘the most incapable Execu- that filled the chair,” against Washington, tive ever Presidential James Madison, the Father of the Con - stitution and the President who brought the war of 1812 to He was timid," an honorable close: *‘incapable,’” *'a ridicu. lousiy incompetent leader for a war with Great Britain,’’ a man “of imbecile capa- city” who brought "shame and disgrece to America.” James Monroe, the courageous, wise and moderate President who hurled the great “Doctrine’’ in behalf of political freedom in this hemisphere in the face of the Holy Alliance, and whose eight years term is known in American history as the Era of Good Feeling: “He was his adminis. f War under Madi. ) ‘figurehead,’ and tration as Secretary son was a “trinmph wecility to the tm Congress, George M. Dim Z, Clear ger, W. 1. d; Prothonotary, Register feild, Assembly, George M. Bi Betts, Clearhe lewis BE Boyer, Dubois, and Recorder, K. Smith, Clearfield; County Surveyor, Harry Byers, Clearfield; John C. Barclay was re-elected county chair. man, and the Congressional conferees are John F. Short, B. #. McCracken and T. N. Crick. i ’ i Sugarvalley. Daniel Kmert, an aged citizen of Nosrerans, died at the home of H. MH. Herman Monday night of ailments Incident to old age. Heo was Tayenrsold, His funeral took place this morn. Ing and burial was made at Mt, Pleasant, wend . Sunday School Convention. All the pastors and Sunday school super- intendents in the district of Haines, Penn and Miles townships are members of the conyention and are expected 16 be Each Bunday school is requested OUR HISTORICAL REVIEW | Continued from page 1. present | | at least three delegates, “ Resolved, That the Teachers’ Institute form. | 130 A A Bad Stomach ed In this place meets our approbation; and Appoint jie) to proceedings of the institute ; Devotions Lessens the usefulness and mars the hap- piness of life, It's a weak stomach, a stomach that can not properly perform its functions, Among distress after | eating meals, heartburn, 2 and nervous | | District nas county as worthy of thelr attention and en Edwin K couragement.” i The Howard (District) Instilute was | the first auxiliary institute formed under | this resolution. It was organized at Howard, Jan. 18, 1851: Orrin T. Noble, president; Ezekiel Pletcher, secretary. Its symptoms are nauses between belching headache, ood’sSarsaparilla a bad ston vomiting, The third annual session was called to meet at Millheim, October 4th, which on account of election excitement was per- haps not held; but the meeting called for ris i Accept no substitute, Dec 1852, at Mechanicsville, by W. - G. Waring and J. D. Wingate, secretar- Cu pepel # permanent, res ach, indigestion and dys a, and the ire 17 <7, ACR LALA AA ARAL RE ARR AA AA iARARRARARIAGEE Eo 2 td otadiits ds, Bo ] REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS les, was held, and was a great success, The generosity of the people of that place (now Mountain Eagle) un- bounded, and the directors resolved to add one dollar per month to the wages was of teachers attending institutes, The fourth annual session of the Coun- T. four days, ty Institote, Orin Noble, president, held at Pine Grove Mills, commencing Dec. 26, 1853. Abner Dale, A.B, D. Wingate, secretary; delegates elected to the continuing was Gerberich Bros. Opp. Big Spring. Messrs. EF. Blakely, vice-presidents; J State Teachers’ \CRibikibbiibiiiittiitbbitbadbidititbibititibistiostiatattisans hb Abb bbb bbb bk bbb bb bbb db bth bb A EL Ah Association, Orin T. Noble, gate, and John H 854: Wm Nancy M. vice-presidents; Abner Orvis. Waring, Campbell E. T. ROAN, THE NEW GROCERY ed for G i » retary; George Livingston, « as made to order ing secretary; Miss A. Armor, tre rer; before the advent of modern method DD Wingate, Misses M unter, and Dr. G and no anch of indust: has rece was ’ “a RO, | manager + of the reso ine Grove is one | ¢ pe to se provement 0 Ut in Three PRIZES 1 [| y ais yw ’ lars . Vafang For first largest umber $2 50 1.50 1.00 pEninsuia, are tarning out For second largest number ' reBOT f Pe varies : as the reports of the varior For third largest number come They are now pl conservative official estimate at 4000 A Viadiyostok dispatch says: A large large Japanese schooner, laden with pro i week i in visions, bas been brought into port, Ras. sian torpedo boats bave destroyed a num- ber of other Japanese sailing craft, load- ed with food, along the coast of Japan. Tag Philipsburg crowd fixed John A. Daley. The Bellefonte crew pulled with | ¢ them. Of course Judge Love had noth. | ing to do with the case 00000000 000000000000 0P0000000000R0RRP000CR0ROOO00RRO0RPROe y fees 0000000000000 C000000RPR00PRROPRORReROPRP0ROR0OOReRe FI SIM'S SUITS-HAND-TAILOR! = =D dl SINCLE-BREASTED, STRAICHT-FRONT VARSITY TO BE FOUND ONLY AT SIM'S, the perfect ready-to-wear, cool, faultless looking clothes for men, who want to be correctly dressed FOR BUSINESS OR OUTING yet comfortable, made right, yet cost no more than made wrong or carelessly. We match them against the best custom-tailoring for style, lit and shape-retaining ability, and yet, moderately priced. [THTR VETERE FIRMA HEE HEE Prices are Moderate as they Are No nced to reduce them in the midst of the season There ig time enough for that in the we give reductions that You. A iong—that are actual savings for IZ ust-—w her g hen are true reduct We dispose of our stock in methods have and shall govern this must have it, as all other merchants. yusiness-like methods, Reliable We expect a profit—more, we fair, | store No need to try and induce people into this store by marking goods far above their actual value, and then making big reductions. Sound principles of bosiness—the kind you appreciate—is what you can always expect here. " No short sighted plane—to sell you the once } )y 4 scheme— ger scheme to sell you the second time. and a big This store is here to hold and merit your trade by reliability—by sell. ing the best at moderate prices. Our rule is sell as good clothing as we can—fresh, well-tailored, sani. tary clothing—made for our exclusive trade, and if yon compare the Suits with those at reduced prices elsewhere, you will find ours better at regular prices. SIM, THE CLOTHIER, CLOTHES OF THE BETTER SORT. ——
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers