Page 4 —— The Centre Democrat, FRED KURTZ, SR., Editor, CHAS, R. KURTZ. Editor and Proprietor, W. FRANCIS SPEER, {ssociate Kditor SWORN CIRCULATION OVER s200 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : SusscrirTION, . $1.50 Per YEAR Persons who send or bring the money to the office, and pay in advance, §1 per year CENTRE DEMO( N. Y. thrice-a-week World for... 1 Pittsburg Stockman for 1 A RAT clubs with 80 The date your subscription expires is plainly printed cn the label bearing your name. All| credits are given by a chabge of latel the first issue of each month. Watch that, after you | remit. We send no receipts unless by special | request. Watch date on vour label | Subscribers changing postoMce address, and | not notifying us, ure liable for same | Subscriptions will be continued, unless other | wise directed | We employ no collector. You are expected to | send or bring the money to this office | and to contribute funds with Democratic National Ticket. For President WILLIAM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska. For Vice President JorN W. KerxN, of Indiana Democratic State Ticket For Judge « uperior Cou WEBSTER GRIMM. of Bucks Cour Democratic County Ticket For ( ress Ww IN WALKER, of Be For A J. CALVIN MEYER, of Be HARRIS parativel 4 has made enormously 1 WHAT has the Roosevelt adm done to curb the robber the big bl 1ad DIiOowW made immistration trusts after all the law to enforce against them for the gre ' and still 4 Au year republicar gave the Centr tion has i the no | not for remunerative extortionate prices for all he needs to buy for use on the farm, inflicted by the trusts which are backed up in this wrong by a robber tarriff, and caused a depre of We challenge a successful denial of this as sertion ciation the value of farms Tue republican party deserves success because it bas brought great things to pass. So says an of the trust party, Yes, it does a “great” thing in upholding the trusts, and thereby does “great” wrong to farmers and the public in general It does a‘'great thing” by the robber | tariff, making farmers pay more for all | implements and farm machinery, It] does ‘‘great things" by not prosecuting | the robber trusts for a continued viola- tion of the law. It does ‘great things” | by winking at rebates by the railroad companies so the great monopolists can | freeze out the smaller industries, It | does ‘great things” in refusing to pros ecute the great, robbers of the public | and very ‘great small things" in occa | sionally prosecuting a small thief, It| does “great things” in building state | capitols;and steals being found has shown | ‘‘great” sympathy forthe robbers that | not one has yet been fined or imprisoned, | It has done a “great” many other “great things” that would fill volumes were it to be printed—all in the same line esteemed organ Well, lets see | bers of the Federation | by the members of the | pay speakers and for literature { about the el | ticket, ileal and destructive.’ | CONS LABOR FOR BRYAN, “Every Union is in a position to make some financial contribution, and it is hoped that the contributions may be as large as the members of the Union will afford.” In a circular letter the labor organizations throughout the coun- try Monday night Samuel Gompers, Pres addressed to ident of the American Federation of La bor, not only comes out openly and une. quivocally for Bryan, but also calls upon the representatives of the labor organi. zations to contribate to a campaign fund for the success of the Democratic ticket, Gompers has said all along that while he personally was for Bryan, the mem- were, of course, at liberty to do as they saw fit, NO CONCEALMENT NOW. But the appeal signed by Gompers and Executive Com- mittee throws all further concealment to the winds. It calls upon organized la- bor to support the Democratic ticket, I to to bring which 1 ection of the Democratic Contributions are to be sent to Frank Morrison, secretary of the federation, at No. $23 G on, D.C, their national headquarters, street, Northwest, Washingt The circular i » name of the exe name ot ople, we somett 1" all 1aoor pe appeal it DO |] been expected, bered hundreds extravagant will extort spend Increasing the } that do not yield a by sufficient sum, by That is the im vying vying le A tax on incomes sublimest height to which Republican statesmanship soars As to the two parties and prosperity this paragraph from a summing up of Candidate Taft's speech by the Spring. field newspaper that does not support Bryan, “Republican,” an independent is interesting and instructive Summing up the discussion of party differences, Mr. Taft concludes that the Republicans are ‘‘progressive and regu lative,” while the Democrats are ‘radi. This is good as campaign claptrap, but Mr, Taft has certainly failed to present a bill of par. ticulars. And respecting the restoration of business prosperity, it might be all very well to claim that Democratic suc. would retard the restoration of prosperity if prosperity had disappear ed under a Democratic administration; but when prosperity was lost under a | Republican administration, the claim is calculated to make people laugh, It is an application of the like-cures-like theory which has proved not as accep. table in politics as in medicine, the because There are | Tux labor organizations country are endorsing Bryan he stands for their interests, a lot of them, too, —_— over Tux Bryan campaign is no longer re | garded as a joke, The other fellows realize it as a serious matter, OVER THE COUNTY, | | The citizens of Milesburg are find- | ing the new state road an exceeding ly | dusty affair to their homes, A marriage license was issued in Blair county recently to Michael Morgan, of Altoona, and Cora Edminston, of State College. Mr. and Mrs. D, L. Hall, are now at Pleasantville Station, a suburb of New York city, where they are guests of a niece, Mrs, G. F. Nor- ton +The Farmers Mills Union Sunday school will hold a festival the church the evening of August 15. The re for the benifit of the school snge Cornet Band will furnish occasion, at on IoC ceeds The Chal music for abutments Woodward the at The contract to bui for the new iron br was awarded by supervisors of Haines township to L. W. Wert and John H. Haines, of Aaronsburg, whose bid was $342. Candidate George F. Weaver, Gregg Twp., nominee on the Democratic Ticket for Register, has not been able up to this time to get out over the coun- ty to make his canvass owing to illness, He is reported as improving of late, Geo. L. dog man, for bird d 1 1d £0, f ol Springer, moved his quarters ogs to the mountains north of Smithtown. This is the third year Mr Sprin is in the aining dogs and he has ess ful. 1 training busines very oer ger been next Saturday eveninj of the Baptist ptre Hall with } and the latter id Mrs. Daniel DArg« more than a dozen of Dr, W met recent The R For the first time in years the brothers H. Schuyler, ot Centre Hall to spend a few family Consists Schuyler, a prosperous hardware mer chant of Bloomsburg: Miss Elizabeth Schuyler, and Mrs, Thomas W. Simkins, of Lansdown; and Dr, W, H, Schuyler In the absence of Prof, Hall Miss Crecia Williams, daughter of Mi. and Mrs. George Williams, of Bellefonte, has been manipulating the keys of the large vipe organ in the Presbyterian church in a manner that is both pleasing to the! congregation and highly commendatory to herself. She is a natural born musi. cian and experiences no difficulty in | handling the instrument and sisters days together of four—James yy y Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, state commis. sioner of health, has been secured by Dr. Thomas F. Hunt to deliver a lecture on tuberculosis in relation to human health during Farmer's week at State College next winter, Dr. Leonard Pear. son, of the University of Pennsylvania, will lecture during the same week on bovine tuberculosis in relation to human | health, Each gentleman is a recognized authority upon the subject he treats, Mrs. E. A. Davis, who since the death of her huabs has made her home with | her son, C. H. Davis, at Philipsburg, | met with a very painful accident recent. | ly which will lay her up for a time. Mrs, | Javis was going down thn short flight | of steps leading from the front porch to the walk when her heel caught and she was thrown heavily to the walk. She struck on her right shoulder, dislocat. Higa member and breaking two bones it, | | Kerr, of Centre | | horse was found at | 2188, of Millheim, the | Miss Sophia Thompson and Miss Es- | ther Greggory, of State College, are on | a six-weeks' visit to relatives in Kansas, | Centre County Pomona Grange will meet in hall of Victor Grange, at Oak Hall, Thursday Aug. 20, at ga. m. and 1. p.m. All the 4th degree members are cordially invited; sth degree will be | conferred at 1 p. m. : The other day farmer Elmer Ishler arove to Boalsburg and tied his team to | a fence which they broke down and ran One other the vehicle Oak Hall the at Nittany mountain, The annual tral Pennsylvania district fireman's asso. ciation will be held in Philipsburg on Thursday and Friday, August Joth the Bellefonte companies will have large delegations present Mrs, Womelsdorff, mother of Hon. P E. Womelsdorff, whose home has been with her son for a number of lying at the point of death, and at her age, almost 8o, little or no hope of any favorable change can be entertained, Lot Jones, of Philipsburg, Centre ounty, is shipping crates to Missouri and Arkar lle pea Crops usual, the old Keystone State in whenever away, demolishing convention of the Cen- . and 20 and Years, 1s a 1848 tO help han the big Just as i ibbing is nibbing worth ch in those States any! 1 ¢ whila hiog while is doing : { {The ing ont Dow } f Hictokoa 1118 reservat braves o tribe res ion LX Wow near their wi The Electrelle A new invention that adds great possi* bilities to plano playing 9 : . I'he d most interesting pro duct of American genius is being in stalled in one of the fine Hallet & Dair's Rants at Gephart's music store, Aiken's lock, where special demonstration and entertainment will be given on this marvelous invention during the week by Selphia latest an Prof, Wm. Meyer, of Phila Can be adapted to any piano; needs no treading Come and be entertained MC Geruarr Stop, Look AND LISTEN! La Bellefonte" IS JUST OUT | Copies may be had by dropping a Edm. Joseph, Bellefonte, postal to | Also for sale at The Index. THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA, AUGUST 13, 1908, THE CONTRACT LET. Contracts for railroad construction aggregating $13,000,000, which will | ultimately give the Pittsburg and Lake Erie an estern outlet, have been award- | ed to the William J. Oliver Company, of Knoxville, Ky., by the Pittsburg, Binghamton and Eastern Railroad Com- pany, heading for ‘Philipsburg, of which Major H. S. Schwanecke, former well known Pittsburger, is vice president and chief engineer, Construction started immed. section from ( Orange Hill coal field The contr 11s for a | 1 ony LK will be iately on the eastern ton, Pa., to miles. miles an- act calls 310 gene Tal iroad contrac warded in t} 0 and tion load nhalfllarge are now n ine property VP per Reports made s« ief engineer of the Pittst hamton and Eq show that me time ago by € Bing Nng inthe Powell ro ite, tension from distance of tweniy- has been completed and half miles of track laid fromfClearfield will pass through Lock iamsport, Canton, Towanda, Say and Oswe Lyre, Extensions will go built from Powell miles and {fron field, 148.6 Lox K Haver npleted ] i. A Talent For Balancing. The pleasant coffee room of the d Garter at Ri »d in ized by England's states and writers was lown on ~ Only One Alternative. FJ : The Tressler Reunion re ‘ f 4 Ve b : LIGHTNING ==R0DS== HONESTLY AND PROPERLY APPLIED WILL PROTECT YOUR BUILIINGS, Those forsiched by BUM & LEATHERMAN, Pittsborg, Pa., are acknowledged the best. PUY OF YOUR 1&8 Al AUTHORIZED AGENT C. A. THOMAS & BROTHER, BELLEFONTE FW Sole Agents for Centre C PA. punty. "Ha VENISON WHOLESALE. Can Deer be Raised Same as Beef Cattle, The department of agriculture at Washington believes that deer can be raised the same as beef cattle and its experts have set themselves to the task of popularizing venison A bulletin on deer farming wil! soon be issued, “1 | stockmen and raised ther nell The idea is to have raise deer just the me as cattle easily while experts lare are and require but li care Meat commands Dre expres been ra 1g before t} good f would i are the Way. In ti Shoe . { De done feeding 3 Woman Run Over by Binder Fl r A Michael Dute, of Avis, wa THE BAZAAR THIS WEEK For Bargains THE BAZAAR J. S. GILLIAN, Prop Crider’s Exchange BELLEFONTE. NINN I i a = IN NN NTN ER aa ht ff ff Es Ee A RRR ass. FREE! FREE! $250.00 Worth of Presents will be GIVEN AWAY FREE! to our customers in the next two months ending Oct. 15 $100 With each pur. chase of 50 CENTS you will receive a numbered ticket and at the end of Oct. 15 you will stand a chance to receive any of the tollowing articles FREE ! - 4 4 b + $85 Ant Harmony Deluxe Talking and Singing Machine [ot of Records worth $10, $2¢ Sewing Machine, $15 Morris Chair, $15 20x40 Plate Glass Mirror, $12 42-piece China Dinner Set, $10 Couch, #10 Single Barrel Shot Gun, $10 Washing Machine, Square, $5 Rug, $6 Parlor Lamps, 8&4 Pair Irish Point Lace Curtains, $6 Chocolate Set This is the most liberal offer ever given the people of Centre county. but you have aided me so much 10 Increase my business over the year of 1907 that | feel like giving somethin DISPLAY AT MY § the graphophone Yours very in return for your kindness JRE, and you can see them at any time THE PRIZES ARE ON Qome and hear wraly, YEAGER'S SHOE STORE, BELLEFONTE, PA.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers