Page 4 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. OCTOBER 22, 1908. he Centre Demon, FRED KURTZ, SR., Editor, CHAS. R. KURTZ. Editor and Proprietor, W. FRANCIS SPEER, Associate Editor, SWORN CIRCULATION OVER s200 ~ a a NPS TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION ; SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 Per YEAR Persons who send or bring the money to the office, and pay ip advance, $1 per year CENTRE DEMOCRAT clubs with N. Y. thrice-a-week World for Pittsburg Stockman for, The date your subscription expires is plainly | printed on the label bearing your name, All eredits are given by achapge of lat el the first issue of each month, Watch ‘hat, after you remit, request. Watch date on your label Subscribers changing postoMice address, and | not notifying us, ure liable for same Subscriptions will be continued, unless other | wise directed We employ no collector send or bring the money to this « Mee Democratic National Ticket For President WirriaxM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska For Vice President Joux W. Kery, of Indiana Democratic State Ticket. =. For Judge of the Superior Court, WERSTER GRIMM, of Bucks County (Democratic County Ticket. F W. HARRISON WALKER, of Bellefonte For Assembly, J. CALVIN MEYER, of Belle F SaiTH, of Rush t For Register, WEAVER, of Gregg town r Congress, fonte r Sherif, Frep F G F. PIerCE MUSSER, of F y Tre 18" IY J.D. MILLER, of Walker r ( nly Commi WEAVER, of Penn DUNLAP, P. 8 Fisush, of Zlon there were Bellefonte- paper on we need a « For years the ture has been fill ters—we need a change. THis year Bert Taylor claims to bea republican--at least was smooth enough to force himself on the ticket. Wir furnaces idle, lime stone opera- tions on half time, machine shops doing little—don't we need a change IT is not fair to all Snyder ce in Centre c« Blair farmer : county for s Whew th G. F. We comes ar printed in the ( always stood with the porations, himself being millionaire, he with the m Walker by any means, and depends upon his good name alone and not upon dollars, for from the people. which? a llionaires voted. Harrison 1s not a millionaire, support Barclay, or Walker, — Bert Tavior never bad any political convictions, never stood upon any party platform, never was recognized as either a stalwart Republican or a cen- time—neither a mouse or a long tailed rat. Do you admiie such a man? Is such a man fit to represent Centre coun. ty in the Legislature? Hardly-we need a change. IT is a notorious fact that all the trust magnates, made multimillionaires by the robber tariff, are eager to have their daughters married to royal snobs in Eu- rope, and think an ' American husband is | not good enough for them. In years these royal connections, now found in the diffierent monarchies of Europe, will be just as eager, in return, to join hands | for turning this republic into a monar- chy and with foreign princes, dukes, counts, and such, to be in control, Such things have happened before, and the fact that millionaires now occupy about all the seats in the United States senate, and are fast planting themselves in the lower house of congress, speaker Cannon in the chair Czaring it over that body and declaring no law shall be passed by the majority unless he wills it, is warn. ing enough whither we are drifting, It is enough to make the old revolutionary patriots turn in their graves, Let us Temark, Barclay is a millionaire."y $1.05 | $1.80 We send no receipts unless by special | You are expected to sistent Democrat—was anything any | COLORED MEN FIRM. One of the uncertain factors in this campaign is the colored vote. The re- publicans find that it will not be cast solid for Taft. From all sections come reports of disaffection, This year they will not take orders, but will act accord. ing to theirown ideas when it comes to voting The following are only a sample of {the news that can be found in almost | ’ 3 . | {any paper, These were clipped from { various papers COLORED MEN OPPOSE TAFT, Colored voters of Camden, N. J., who crowded Scott A, M. E, church, No. 715 Kaighn avenue, last night, to hear the issues of the campaign presented by leaders of their own race, adopted lengthy resolutions pledging their op position to Judge Taft. The resolu- tions were presented by William F. Powell, Minister to Hayti under Presi- dent McKinley, They arraigned the Republican nominee for saying it was a mistake to give the colored race the right to vote, charged that he did not represent the true sentiment of the Republican party as expressed by Lincoln, Grant and ‘McKinley, and criticised him for failing to promise, if elected, to restore to the army the color- ed soldiers discharged for the Browns- ville affair. Bishop Alexander Walters, of New York, made the principal address, praising William J. Bryan for his fair- ness to white man and black alike, and charging that the Republican party has drifted far from its position in the days of the civil war and the years immediately following it. Rev. J. Milton Waldron, of Washington, D. C., president of the National Protective League of Colored Republicans, also Spoke. ACK 16—A Bryan ) SLIODE, Was organ. t week by the negro voters iers who formerly served at The negroes they . Re "nn 8 Say ican ticket FOR CENTRE COUNTY. Fred Smith makes a living b 1 h work and has paid taxes’all are! ife 1] 1} . % y hard life 1 nd his © 8 nly an 5 Centre con 1 his j fe li Should 1 attempt to ge trough, with all fours, before those who have a prior claim are served. Voter don hink it is best to take 't you t care of Centre cot Do think would a aty first? you Blair people for moment entertain the thought of extending their best office to any of our people? Not if it was at county | the expense of neglecting one of their | 1 | own citizens. {| Hurley is practically a stranger—take care of your home people first, A TARIFF TRUTH, | Some years ago a Kansas gentleman | was making a series of speeches in In- (diana, and when, as he was addressing | a meeting of farmers, he said: | “1 wan't to ask you farmers a ques- tion, and I want you to take time to think it over, write me your answer, addressing me at Geneva, Neb, Here 1s the question “What is there that you farmers sell { that you get more for and what is it you buy that you get for less on account of | the protective tariff?” A few weeks later Judge Ong received a letter from an Indiana farmer, who | wrote “I've been thinking your question over, and 1 have arrived at the answer to it, The answer is: There ain't a | Qeseed] thing." Senator Penrose is sending personal letters to Republicans in Centre county appealing to them to support Bert Tay- lor for Legislature, Taylor must have forwarded his list of ce cn nn cn who were put in that famous book, Bear Taylor's platform—everything for Taylor. tit showed that ig two years the present | ANIMPORTANT POINT. When a careful, industrious man takes the savings of a lifetime and invests it in a little home or a farm, he invariably is concerned about the title. The re. cord of all such transactions including | the original survey are carefully pre served in the County Recorder's office, at the court house. The original sur- | vey, with all its technicalities and pecu- liar legal phraseology, must be accurate- | ly recorded, and changes noted. This is the office where clerical ability and scholarship are essential to the best in- | terests of the public, Even more, there | must be exacting system and pains tak ing method-—the lack of any of | which will mean confusion, annoyance, one and in time possible expensive litigation | over imperfect records and faulty land | titles, { Itis no boy's play;it is no soft snap [it is not “all velvet’ | for persistent it is no easy berth It demands That is Pierce He ex politicians, { education, ability, accuracy. the Musser for this important position, why we present claims of {has a good education; he possesses cellent clerical ability; he is a good pen- man; he has had years of trai of judgment; he could take ning along this line as justice the peace; he isa good t man of g charge, immediately after the election, of the office, without an assistance, if f office, * Of Vv elected he will take char t) ie lf, and not dey a more com etent man, We have nothi Brown, the not a word We be trious—a clever youn he is vr gmmer } plummer, tions for There sl for Recorde! DON'T FORGET IT age of WHE? dealing Yer! { will ords, WHEN the last statement was issued board had reduced th and Messrs Dun at debt to £4,000; y and Weaver declare laws, There are no hard times and empty dinner pails among the members of the steel trust-—they have made hundreds of millions off of the people, and are rolling in luxury. There are no hard times and empty dinner pails among the state capitol thieves—they have stolen six millions from the state in the capitol job. There are ro hard times and empty dinner pails among the owners of the infamous beef trust-—they too have made | their millions off of the consumers of { beef who now find themselves out of |work to earn the wherewithall to | buy meat and bread for wives and little | ones. Thus we could go on and name a hun- | dred other trusts, fattened into millions, | by protection under the robber tariff and | none of these have hard times or empty dinner pails, but feast like princes and | laugh at the calamity they have brought upon the toiling millions of the land, and promise you better times if you only vote for Taft to keep in power that party { that has brought all these curses upon | the land. { Tux present Board of County Com. missioners now have Centre county out. of debt, By the end of this year they will have a handsome surplus to show, Wien Hurley comes to town Bert Taylor and his push are not far away. What makes that thirsty crowd hover about Hurley's headquarters? Rerunticans as well as Democrats should take a hand in eliminating Bert Taylor from polities, a —————— Bear Taylor and Billy. Hurly were traveling together the past week. ] i THE FIRST VOTER. Young man, great responsibility at- taches to your first vote, As you begin, 80 you are likely to continue, [mentum that carries you into a party at | the beginning of your political il oonvulsion shakes you out of it, Start | right, and in order that you may start right, examine the principles of the par. ties and the policies which they Sond | cate. tions in the United States, one fifty years old. The Republican party has been in power almost uninterruptedly for more than half a century and ny M8 its reign abuses have grown up which threaten | the perpetuity of the government and en- | danger our civilization, So great are these abuses that Republican reformers are now pointing out that something must be done—and what can be done? I'he first thing is to undo the things that have been done, and the party to undo these abuses is not the party which has done them, but the party which has pro- tested against these abuses and pointed out remedies, The Republican party has turned taxing power over to private individus it has allowed monopolies to grow and assume 2ontrol of the 1 in lustries the country by granting privileges law and by giving immunity to the large violators of the Republican party has permitted the tortunes of the predatory rich to become so large that | government is corrupted, politics de- bauched and business polluted. The Democratic party withdraw the taxing power LT dw | ¢ proposes to from private hands, to so legislate as to make a vate monopoly force the law with proposes t otect legit wealth p! inl {Jn If you are with the ple sence, be it great or small, will hasten their victory. If you mre! aguinst the people your influence may retard VIC y. But while in the peo- POPIT & yas tor that a Nal may wiation « several for the time Levi imin ot Al istration in every industrial centre, price of farm produce naturally and materially depreciated, furnish an object lesson which ought to produce a meas- ure of sober.mindedness on the part of the American people.” houses 000000000000 000000000000 Willard’s STORE NEWS. Adda Visit my store on High street it you are looking for the following goods, and I can and will save you money and give you quality Men's Shirts, Overalls, Suspenders, Socks, Gloves, Neckties, Collars, Comba, Collar Buttons, Cuff Buttons, Underwear, Suit Cases, Towels, Toweling, Men's and Boys’ Caps, Handkerchiefs & Notions, Special for Saturday Men's 5¢ Handker- chiefs, only 2c. I can take your order for a Suit Overcoat, separate Pants or Vest, and save you money and give you style. Call and see the samples, The Satisfactory Store D. IL WILLARD, Next Door to Sourbeok’s Store. | | The mo-| e 1s apt | |to keep you in that party unless some | There are two great party organiza. | Tr —— — ITORS. ystem of banking in this country every transaction is If the government, or state deposits money in these institutions PROTECT DEPOS Under the present s | "guaranteed," a special guarantee for its security must always be given, No man can secure a loan from a bank unless there is a double or treble guar- | antee attached, Everything be ng guaranteed on the bankers’ side, Every bank in the countr must y y would go out of business if it were not for its and depositors, It is from thi depos- money, accepted generally without interest, that the banks make their The bone, in fact the very 1€ very fir i rofits. 1 ! humble depositor back f life not only of the banks, but of our finand stitt tions and industrial deposits of the people furni tal that keeps ti he whole operation, Did you ever he depositor usually gets ioney antee from the banker forty tion only | recover his (LTUARANTEE, Bryan and the protection, an abso. ‘8 | i A Large Barn Destroyed. A large barn together with all the out. buildings on the farm of the late Fred- erick Bower just east of Mt, Eagle, Cen- tre county, was destroyed by fire about midnight last Wednesday 14th, The farm 1s occupied by Ammon Gramley and his loss will be quite heavy as all the season's crops were burned and most of the farming implements. A valu. able bull was burned to death, the other livestock being rescued with difficulty, The origin of the fire is unknown, The I nartly covered by insur- Bower had $600 insurance, IeRvY. Mr loss is an.e Gazette ls THE sENsLES ed a sneer at Fred Smith, al of iS 4 sneer as sheriff, o} ae because, as it was a farmer This t for every farmer, acres.” democrat repu ' 1 less acres nineteen o wv wonder his y atlorne | Centre cou ood sO FOR SHERIFF MINES Wm. E. Hurley BIG——— Stock Sale! WEDNES., OC 22 . LO A FEW POINTERS MONEY MAKERS! Highlands of State College Private Sewerage, Light and Water LOTS ON EASY TERMS te LEATHERS BROTHERS, 116 College Ave. r STATE COLLEGE, PA. free HNN NEEEEENENEEE NEESER EEEEEES New York Style IN BELLEFONTE Yon should see the at. tractive assortment of new Fall Regals we have in stock. | Every style that's worn by the best dressed New Yorkers this season is here —your style among them, First grade materials and expert modelling are the two reasons why Regals keep their true shape to the end. custom A Regal fitting is the smoothest and most com: fortable you can get any- where — quarter sizes at: tend to that, i A. C. MINGLE'S.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers