Page 4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA, OCTOBER 15, 1908. A —————— Er ——— The Centre Democrat, FRED KURTZ, SR., Kditor, CHAS. R. KURTZ, Editor and Proprietor, W. FRANCIS SPEER, Associate Editor, SWORN CIRCULATION OVER 5200 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 Per Year ik Persons who send or bring the money to the ofMice, and pay in advance, §1 per year CENTRE DEMOCRAT clubs with N. Y. thrice-n-week World Zor Pittsburg Stockman for wes 3185 «ove + 31,80 The date your subscription expires is plainly printed on the label bearing your name. All credits are given by a change of latel the first issue of each month. Watch that, after you remit. We send no receipts unless by special request. Watch date on your label, Subscribers changing postofMce address, and not notifying us, are 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. Democratic National Ticket. For President WiLriaM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska For Vice Prevident JON W. Kens, of Indiana Democratic State Ticket. of the Superior Court, WEBSTER GRIMM. of Bucks County Democratic County Ticket. For Cor W. HARRISON WALKER, of Bel F Assembl J. CALVIN MEYER, of Bellefor ress, lefonte F r Sher ” Frep F. Smite, of Rush t For G.F. WEAVER For 2 F. Pierce MUSSER, of M WEAVER .. DUNI F J. W. BECK Jonx L. ( { Penn tow: AP, of Spring t will vote for an of pose master of Be should su ¥e d two u ort Walker, instead, BurLGAr:A having torn away from Tur. key, and set up for itself and installing an Emperor, is creating a great stir among European powers and there are fears of a general war, scme of the em pires being sustain favor and © 4) ing Bulgaria Tue Gaze tte. a YY an as Our reg ular co 133 We Des he gave Crats as at Any deme rEans are Bry an Well, that a better man, s¢ croakers in former tried to make him out a very bad man. he be" peck upon his cl used to Was a man aracter, and Bryan as he now is, is without a blemish upon We without a his character lefy the con- trary SHERMAN, who was put the Taft , Is a member of a score of trusts and corporations, and some of them of the worst breed. On the other hand Taft is talking about re- vising the tariff, but does not say wheth- er up or down, ticket that is intended to deceive the people. Not so with Bryan and Kern— they tell the people out-right that the » on ticket for vice president corrupt trusts should be wiped out and | that the tariff has been a robber long | enough and should be revised to a reve- nue schedule sufficient to pay the govern. ment expeuses, and not to create mill ionaires and panics, to the impoverish- ment of the laboring masses, S50 there you have a! BARCLAY'S RECORD. Anyone who will consult the Congres sional Record for the past term will find that Congressman Barclay never once on the floor of congress raised his voice in support of any worthy measure, or aghinst apy infamous piece of legisla tion, The fact is, he could not if he de- sired, As to voting, he very frequently is noted as ‘‘not voting,” ‘‘absent” or “paired,” When he did vote he strictly in harmony with the speaker, WAS agent for the trusts and corporations at Cannon, it will be remem- bered, upon one occasion flattered Bar- clay by allowing Barclay to hold the is enacted, great gusto was paraded in the papers of this district, After that Barclay took { his cue and favored everything that old [Joe Cannon—the enemy of the com- | mon people—proposed or endorsed. { This country has suffered from the | work of Speaker Cannon. He is a mil. { lionaire, who by some mysterious pro- cess has come into great wealth, The independent republic over the country are an congressmen now pledging their people that if elected they will oppose Cannon for speaker, Where does Barclay stand? Why for Cannon of course, or he would have been independent enough to declare 1 pose this no elected. 1self to opg nan, if Bi steals; op arclay the ‘ship posed gathe how trusts sold Am heaper abroad ti portant occasion ) District, has suffered much in this manner in the past. It has become a by-word that only a rich man can successfully aspire » M1 » : tO this posi man, of sure woul overwhelmed 1 be year went Cameron, worthy young 1 receive re ogni not tie only passport public life y he election « impetus f Mr. Walker will prove an | worthy anc land, It district t apd Imspiration to every 1 deserving young man in the demonstrate that manhood of our will in this e citizenship ways be corrupted; that men cannot be pur hased at so much per head and delivered at the polls like dumb, driven cattle; above all, that there is {open to the humblest citizen of worth the opportunity, and honor, of sitting in the council's of our nation, Young man' stand by W. Harrison Walker—he is worthy of your support, HIT THEM HARD. | At Joliet, the other day, Bryan hit hard | from the shoulder. In his speech he {said: “Right will triumph in the com. ing election, and the might of the peo- | ple of the United States will be shown {to be superior to the machinations of } 3 : CAD not a | Joe Cannon, the man who acts as the | MERIT YOUR SUPPORT, There is no longer any dispute among the intelligent taxpayers of Centre coun- ty as to the efficiency of the present county commissioners, Messrs, Dunlap and Weaver, The annual statements and the Auditor's Reports all show that Altogether the funniest break made in | this campaign—not even excepting Son. |in-Law Longworth’s promise that after | eight years of Taft we shali have eight | | more of Roosevelt—was that by Victor | | Rosewater, editor of a prominent Re- | ROSEWATER IN HOT WATER, | | i {inthe past two years they have been | publican paper, the Omaha Bee, member | | unusually mindful of the taxpayer's in. | of the Republican Executive Committee. | | possible, were kept to the lowest mark, | bureau, Washington so that no hostile legislation | | every terests, Expenses, wherever it was and public property and other public interests were not neglected, These are the facts that everybody No doubt, these men have not in all cases done everything to please individual Centre must admit, in county, | There may be incidents here and there { where some duty might have been per- | gavel for a few moments—which with! formed differently. These men are only human-—not infallible. We do not mention this as an apology, either, The point we wish to make if this: The voter and taxpayer looking to his best interests must consider the complete record of Dunlap and Weaver, as a whole, t boards and judge from the results Compare it with the work of former The tabulated statement | our last issue very conclusively shows that these men, in yrovidin 1 uu addition to | for a ge debt, kept current expen lowest possible 1 } " icial duties, they have beer down to the their off Hiring obiigin teous public has rec them, INSULTING SOLDIERS lie every campaign stand by Bois Pen When the soldiers, who were inf ina rose. old soldiers, can be jenced by such a band of Philadel. phia roosters they certainly are in need of better guidance, iled ’ 1 10 The letter they is 1 the m by rackets, Club using # ritable 1 TRADUCING THE DEAD of Nev District Jere me prose it Now, while the body { our great presidents lies i the peatriolic sentim people will resent the work of petty itical liars and villifiers to besmirch pol pol and traduce the memory of ex-President Cleveland, jut then a liar will doanything 1 al he may win a point Tux present Commissioners, having pulled Centre county out of debt and reduced the expenditures, are good enough for farmers and taxpayers. Their defeat would give to Gazette $1500 more of a political pull—or $4000 in all per annum for Harter. Thatis why he op- poses Dunlap and Weaver, Owing to the tariff on wood pulp this office must now pay about $400, more | than formerly as a special bounty each | year to the Paper Trust, That is why we want a change. Some other printers in Bellefonte want a change, for the | same reason, but don't have the moral | courage Lo say so, | i 3 : Tux Sharpless Separator Company, at |the big corporations which wish Mr. | West Chester, the other day ordered its men to join the Taft parade in that | town, and further threatened them if Taft was not elected the shops would be shut down. Gee whiz! we did not know that this country was to be run to far. ther enrich the Sharpless sharpers, at the expense of the poorly remunerated farmer. But under Roosevelts's rule, who now has Taft running for his tool, ten thousend shops have been shut down within the last two years, and several millions of working men have been out of work and the bottom has been knock. ed out of each one's dinner pasl, Demo- cratic farmers should avoid Sharpless separators. The Sharpless men should be prosecuted for trying to intimidate voters and then rode on a rail for their tyrannical threat, | Taft elected, that he may ‘regulate’ them in such a manner that they can continue their oppression of the common people, | Our party has no mortgages outstanding | 1n corporation vaults, its support is com. ing from the farmer, the merchant, the | laborer “and the men who desire that | : 3 ] i Rerustican farmers, join in with the democrats to skake off the shackles that have been hung over you by the trusts, | monopolists and greedy corporations for | a score of years, Bryan is the champion, | the David, that will slay that Goliath, if { the people put -him in the presidential chair, Frou different sections come reports permanent prosperity shall be re-estab- | of office holders being removed on | | lished by again throwing wide open the | account of pernicious activity. {| P. M. of Bellefonte should take warning competitive field,” Tur rumpus among Ohio republicans is not yet stilled and will not be. For. aker is on the rampage and has a large following which will cut a wide swath into the Teddy. Taft ranks, J.C Miver Esaq., is able, is honest, is competent—that Is why he would prove a credit as our Representative to Harrisburg, The | notwithstanding his active career has) very little “inflocence.” EE ———— Gosrens, the president of the Ameri can Federation of Labor, advises la boringmen to vote for Bryan. He al ways was considered a reliable man, Mos of the laboringmen found lemons in their dinner pails this campaign, That is why they want a change, [and head of the Republican publicity | On Saturday in his paper, Mr. | Rosewater quoted, this the principal | | sentence from the tariff plank of the Republican platform adopted at Chicago { ‘In all tariff legislation the true prin- ciple is best maintained by the imposi- { tion of such duties as will equal the dif. ference between the cost of production at home and abroad, together with rea. sonable profit to American industries,” Evidently he had never read the plat. form of his own party and coming across the statement in a speech by Mr, Bryan, who had quoted for the purpose of re- t, the editor of the Bee mistook futing 1 it for an utterance of Mr, Bryan's own, and proceeded to say of it lines campaign. The patter in the coun- alisfactory, ¢ no “Nothing prettier in the catch-all has been offered in thi most hide-bound stan try can accept that as the rankest free trader in it. The nothing." All ana can d del declaration means is drawing to a close IgOlening. are br WHEN GAME MAY BE KILLED List of Animals and Birds When They May Be Killed in This State n tober 1 \ bear niimite { ober 1 Ma Jecem! om bet ’ nbes oli h Ch English nese pheas- ant, five in one day, twenty in one week and fifty in one season October 15 to Dec- cember 1 Grouse pheasant, five in one week al ’ 0 . Mort ROLAD Or called none commonly day, twent ne season, October 1 Decem! H Decem! are or 1i September 1, 1 weasel $1, mink $1 1 a day Jass, bruary 1g over 7 inches me 15 to Febru. to November uly 1 in this commonwealth possession only during and for fifteen days Game killed may be had in the open season thereafter No ruffed grouse, commonly called pheasant or quail, commonly call ed Virginia partridge killed within the commonwealth can be boughtor sold at any time. No rauffed grouse, com- monly called pheasant, killed outside the commonwealth, can be sold within the commonwealth, fae nf during the open season for like birds in the commonwealth and for thirty days there- after. No wild turkey or woodcock killed either within or without the com- monwealth can be bought or sold at any time. All other game may be bought and sold in season ! No game of any kind be legally car- ried or in any manner removed out of the state. The starling, the Pash sparrow, kingfisher, crow, raven, Cooper's hawk, | sharp-shinned hawk, duck hawk, pigeon hawk, great-horned owl, barred owl, red | or pine squirrel, coon, possum, wood chuck, or ground hog, fox, wildcat, weasel, mink and skunk are not pro- tected and may be killed at any time, deer Dx, P. §. Fisher, having made an effi. cient and popular coroner, the voters owe him the usual re-election, He im- poses no unwarranted expenses u the faithful discharge of his duties. Me is especially qualified, being a physician of long and sncoessful practice. The Doc: tor, besides, is a pleasant and sociable gentleman, Tux present postmaster of Bellefonte is Capt. Barclays’ rightsupporter around here—and he is a dandy, Turex are too many hungry men, women and children-—we need a change. We NRRD good men at Harrisburg—vote for Meyer for the Legislature, POPULAR CONTRIBUTIONS. To Aid in the Election ‘of Bryan as President, | party recel the Standard Oil Co., the great Steel | Trust, snd other trusts. The expenses | of a National campaign are unusually | large and must be borne by popular | subscription, Bryan is opposing the! trusts and, as in former campaigns, they | are supporting the Republican ticket. Every loyal Democrat id contribute to this cause, can, Your interest Democrati¢ principles invited in the success of warrant some financial assistance. Send and it will be forwarded promptly to the The following) persons have contributed to your contribution to this office Democratic National Treasurer. this fund m. C, Helnle { Rowe B. Kimport W. Rumberger James H. Corl Fortine Ww J A Leo Johnston Na oriney Naginey Chas. BR. Kurtz BIG — ~ Stoc WEDNES., OCT. 28. Fine A WM. ISHLER, Auctioneer E.T. JORDAN, COLYER. PA. AUCTIONEER y " sales Pr to | Give what you certainly pill | We Neev a competent man in the Re- corders office. o—— | Wirn bountiful crops there is no oc- As all must know, the Democratic |cagion for empty dinner pails—we need ves no aid from Wall street, |, change. Don’t Forget It AST WEEK notices were enc ed 10 all those who allowed the P year due subscription Remember portant that you give this Ler your immediste sttention gol & notice 10 become over it is very tT This Is made neces sary on sccount of the new Post Order ist, 190% wh issaed January ich publishers and subscribe must conform If yon this mat are ver your stiention now THE } y arresrs kindly give yh ir Bu im- £ mats if you ge wi vw "UBLASHER It is Very Important PUBLIC SALES clock SATURDAY k Sale! = A FEW POINTERS FOR MONEY MAKERS! Highla —-— - As - nds of State College This plot has Few f Private Sewerage, Light and Water Creat deman for are renting here now {1 best ’ ’ nv or ya eartl ns at State LOTS ON EASY TERMS Call or writ LEATHE 116 College Ave. Oo R ' BRO ‘ THERS, STATE COLLEGE, PA. 100 MEN'S & YOUNG MEN'S Suits and Overcoats SPECIAL PRICE $20.90, $16.00, : 19.00, 15.00, $0.00, $8.00, $7.50 values 00, $7.00, $6.50 values, 00, $5.50, $5.00 values, 50 $4.00 values... ...... $3.50, $3.00 values. ... $2.50, $2.00 values, 100 One Large Lot of Men's Shirts, BELLEFONTE. 18.00, $17.00 values 14.00, $11.00 values... .. $12.00, $11.00, $10.00 vriues pr. Knee Pants, were OC... + 100 pr. Knee Pants, were $1.00... Regular Sizes---for Stouts and Slims at $12.00 At $10 00 at $8.00 .e al $5.00 Mixtures, also Blues and Blacks, 50 Children’s Suits and Owvercoats . At $5.00 . «At $4.00 , At $3.00 Al $2.00 Jat $1.50 «88 280 «+ AL Soe MONTGOMERY & CO., + STATE COLLEGE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers