OLD SERIES, XL. NEW SERIES. XIX CENTRE REPORTER KURTZ, FRED. h o il in some Republican quarters. T uld do ch worse. a min { iu been out on a strike for almost 6 months dev tor's terms. Over 600 miners were fected by the strike. > an 1 wt aiid « t. Louis. the thing by over $75,000, which compromise it ge's too hot. a ti Bellefonte, show that they were cover the ame and greed, Bi Got were made and dates altered. Registers office and see the altered pa- pers. Bah! . -" £ ta “311 wr lat tt, of Juniata county, last Judge Barre week. read and filed alengthy and elabo- an rate opinion overruling the moti : 3 } ' 1a} new trial in the case of Wm. Josiah ¢ i f the murder of his wife, Mrs. Nannie een, at Port Royal, by poison on ). last, and sentenced the prisoner th cX } ( arcii . —— there Philadelpbia. are SOL imbibe regularly eigh a day, of the LGIasgow iro { SBLOWD Was « ing The spru 3 1 vy ip anit ted families Obl ; cleaned and a hu i y ails . £ spake, in an AUVANCe Ti } vod y his is believed by position was found. 3 of y CAUSE ti epidemic, ¥ 2 © ro the Las a lhe wunced the water unit lor use, ao § i s Board of Health has taken hold © patients very ¥ the matter, There are nine whose chances of recovery are alight, fi —————— Governor Curtin, during the in Sik, introduced thirty-one } ’ ™% % which twenty were private. i10¢€ certain a ificrease to y were : pens ) C.BY qualize the e : a fal! utter! helnlagg 1 ations of ali uitern neipiess | rs, to establish agricul. soldiers and sailo tural experiment stations, to refund cer- ury, to amend section 1661 of the re- od statutes, making an annual appro- priation to provid to facilitate the settloment and to f the territory Ji LES vis ar r thie AIT e arms for the militia, i “ e- of velop the resources y Alaska, to equalize bounties in certain { of cases, for the encouragement closer relations between the 1 nited States and the Republics of Mexico and Central and South America, to make all dollars of the commercial value of one hundred cents. to authorize a perpetual loan of wold and silver coin to the United States without interest, to restrict the use and sale of opium in the District of Colum- bia andthe territories, i J. 1. Spangler has withdrawn from the race for congress in order to leave the field clear for an endorsement of Curtin, whose friends will put him in the field as the choice of the Centre county Democracy for a re-nomination. Gov. Curtin does not ask this and does not mean to be a candidate, we are as- sured. Yet should the nomination be tendered him in spite of his declination, we believe he will consider it his duty to accept. In certain contingencies we look upon Curtin's nomination as not among the imposgibilities. He will now, no doubt, be presented as the choice of Centre county as a compliment, and should there be such a thing as a hitch among the other counties, Curtin may be the dark horse. There is another contingency which may produce his nom- ination of which we will not now make mention, Some think that the ex-governor's election would be doubtful. We think this is a mistake—we believe he would receive a larger majority than be had two years ago. Mr. Spangler had the assurance of a strong support, but he did not wish to stand in the way of any movement in favor of Curtin, hence he has withdrawn from the contest, - be where The delegate elections will held It is the place the important work is done. We said what we thought it our duty to say . next Saturday. have We party ticket. have said it for the good of the ing a strong Democratic The Reporter's loyalty to the Demo- cratic party none can or dare impeach. if than any Democratic paper in the slate, 3 It has as clean, not a cleaner record Through sunshine and rain, in thirty years, the RerorTER was always found true and earnest in its labors for Demo- We have always raised the cry for good men, honest and true, in order that the party might win great- with the We do this now. cratic success, people, and We have no axe to grind, no selfish purpose the We er confidence achieve victory. in view, nothin the A Ve have £0 wd x 1 WERlL, 8, V } » Aariy ana ax 1 Be + L Y 10601 icket endar "8 SuCee "1 1e ele ns HOSA + who will be satisfactory and strong, wh have clean and honest records, N Dem r saturcay. you WW, d OCTratls, se————— i MORRISON'S SURPLUS RESOLI TION THROUGH THE SENATE. The Senate on 30 ult. passed the Mors ’ 1 § resoiutio rison "surpia a number of amen an ail hall be fi thie interest Fr 3 + gs & y y of the United States, | fhe ith 1 | © 1 + all } vided that no call si ma lirect the Seretary of i i further call for the payment ir v v suspen the € fy i uch indebtednes ated ich indebtedness ich e as shall be necessary to maintain # re I and reason ublic credit unimpal i, that sv +} tu ¥ 1 IT thes +3 such suspension and the 8 tl for, shall be reporied to Congress within Tha hin $ vy 4 + ALCO or ten days after ita nex if Congre bo us ; 11 3 es fdi iy, is i i in Session. | HUSBAND AN Wikk SLAIN, {ou { £4 i ple Dele yy a Missing Farm Hand, Janesyille, Wis, July 19,—~Mr, and Mrs. Henry Search were found dead this morning at their home, about two miles southwest of this city, and the police are in search of a farm baud pamed Moore, who is suspecled of hav- ing murdered them. The old couple had in their employ a boy who helped in the farm work. rents live in Ww Jered { i The lad, whose pa- this city, came home on atarday for the first time since he has lived with Mr. Bearch. This morning he returned to the farm, going first to the barn to attend to his usnal work, He found Mr. Search lying beside one of the cows, having apparently fallen there while in the act of milking. As the old gentleman was subject to fainting spells, the boy supposed he had fallen in one of those fits, and at once ran to the house for help. Not findiog Mrs. Bearch in the kitchen, as was usual at that hour, he entered the dining room and found her dead body lying on the floor. The terrified youth fled to a neighbor's house, and in ashort time Dr, Palmer and City Marshal Hogan arrived. Dr. Palmer made a hasty examination of the body of Mr. Bearch, and found that he had been shot in the back of the neck, showing that the assassin had fired while standing behind his victim. Mrs’ Search had algo been shot, the builet having entered under the right eye and passed through the head. Both shols are believed to have resulted in instant death, Mr. Search was quite well-to-do, and it was generally known that he kept his money in the hotse, The object of the murderer was evidently robbery. The bureau drawers were ransacked and money taken, but how much cannot be determined. The assassin failed to find $475 in gold which was digcovered this morning. Saspiclon rests spon a farm hand pamed ward W. Moore, who had been employed by farmers in the game neighborhood, aud who suddenly disappeared at midoight, going to Cbi- cago this morning. Moore was paid off Friday. He bought a revolver two weeks ago, und is known to have pur- chased a 32-caliber revolver. The bullet found in the body of Mr. Search is of that size, and there appears to be little doubt that the missing farm hand is guilty of the terrible crime, - HALL. PA.. WEDNESDAY, DEATHS FROM COLD. i { Toldol, Comstock | Hail #8 large a ege were thickly {falling for about 20 minutes, smashing window panes and kiilin id de roying grain, The storin iY | Dak., krigay WS { fi IVE is “and n hen's 1 | perhaps for. her y | FIFTEEN HUNDRED PEO] : r plou #1 BIg, ii » i in D [ grain are reported t d, The hailetones 28. | Fr, 8 bre 1 ’ : nt 1h than 0 have were pers FEES i us A St. Johns, particulars of Severna were caaght in the en fields jured by the > THE P. OF 01 vere'y In } ¢ ill, Of fishermen The demanded ford, which could not be given them, ia of i i ceived, seventy Esquimaux woo H. food from the stores at Muog-| owing to the needs of the inhabit: and the small sn made the and 8 a rusl flous sy men of the 1 i pply, hp, k nth annual inter-glale harbor storehouse, where fish settleme under the auspices of were store . y, will open mday, August ds small defend 0 their only hope a des I fight I 1 the maranding y Al 1npred edented erate Va ; ar will be Season, hands heen ered me af } Reiner substant i wvements that been 1 ih x 14 place } pig 1DGICA noer v Over three Dung greater this vear. f turers of BRT idrge numoer bave a ready Or exibition, iréed man Th pi and a wt rye k, pace aitaral mplements, { gers of fine 5 la |} oplication for 3 ry i f two handred persone, 3 } lied A 1 LRN out of thirty-tive or { {total hundre 1h I id -most! | has not t ithe inhabitan ype ed May | and 1 not t try, whic a1 1944 4 # i aon gt, 9 fi is ween was tolerably AUGUST 4, 1856, { FTIR TY & NY PAE aid A IC Was given io r two al er the child but there wern among , . wie #4 FRAY 8 snring £ | twenty-fi whole { verge (“0 where Ana ' $ ©) ' In the a wt of them 1 wh Muogford there are , ID iX, am really thICKIY j deaths he Ire estimated, fron mn ing ng greater mt 3 3 1 Jia fr $ ER 3 he 1, that the numhe In New Fouundiand const there is great de | Cape Baold to Hear awe in a dying cond {aio and ES | have i LB Lior with the ahave result. t 10x16 feet i 18 but about i it were } no one knows ho 3 no more than fifteen hundred persons must perished in New Foundland and Labrador, but the exact figures can never | be known, owing to the isolated re in which the suffering exists, sins Mp fp Min DEVASTATING STORMS IN DAKO. TO—HAIL AS LARGE AS TURK- EY EGGS, Grafton, Dak., July 25.—Dark clouds were seen (o the north of this city about 2:30 p. m. yssterday, indicating that a se- vere storm was raging in the neighbor. hood of 8t. Thomas. The clouds gather- ed directly over the village of St. Thom. as, where, after a violent thunder clap and dust and shingles carried through the air the storm broke in two, one part traveling westward and the other east ward. The last named storm destroyed everything in its path from St, Thomas across the Red River into Minpesota four to six miles in width and fully thir ty miles in leng'h, At John Schmidt farm, in Martin township, this conniy, the storm broke window saaies and far- piture. Alexander McLean loses 265 acres of wheat, oats and barley, all of which is totally destroyed. Nathan Up-~ ham, Register of Deeds in this county, loses 250 acres of wheat. | A young son of a farmer by the name | of Danbar started out on horseback just] revious to the storm, and he has not! 8t Johns N. F,, July 28, —A despatch ween seen since, The horse returned from White Bay says that a large num- home, bleeding from cuts cansed by thelper of Arctic bears, driven south by hailstones. The village of 8t. Andrews|etarvation, have crossed over from Pen was complete'y destroyed, the bailstones yyland, and are devastating that coun tearing through the shingles, breakiogitry, The bears number over one thou. windows and glass, On the floes stockisand, and have appeared near Cape farm of Nathan Upham, adjoing 8t. An | Mugford. The Indians in that locality drewe, not a pane of glass was left un~ are eating their dead companions. Those broken, A farmer by the name of Jack) who die among the white settlers are gon, in Martin township, was hayingibuaried secretly to keep the Esquimaux with his hired man as the storm broke from getting their bodies. The graves over them, Before the hired man couldigra all disguised. gain shelter he was struck by hail and . severely injured. Mr, Jackson dragged him under the hay wagon and saved his life. The hailstones were as large as hen's eggs, It ia estimated that fully one-third of the grain has been destroy- ed by hail within the past month in Waleh county alone. The damage from this last storm will reach fully $50,000 Many of the farmers will be left entircly destitute. Despatches from Warren, Mian, sla'e that Marshall conaty was visited last night with a terrific hailstorm, the sec tion devastated being nearly six miles wide. The stcrm commenced abc ut two miles west ol Argh, and stretched acrots the towns of Middle River, Alma, CUT IN TWO BY J Lima, Ohio, Jaly 20.—William Gould, employe in & saw mill at Defiance, fixing a belt, accidentally slipped and fell forward on a large circular saw, which cat his body completely in two, just below the arm pita, Death was in- stantaneous, His wife says that in the morning Gould said that last night he dreamed that he went to the mill and was cut to pieces on the saw. The be. reaved wife tried to persuade him not to ge to work, but she little thought the terrible dream would soon become real. — oinn gion an i while CURES THE CORN, BUT KILLS THE PATIENT. July 20.—An unknown perambulating chripodist, who has been extracting warts and corns upon our streeta by the use of acid, has had four ict'ms. Robert McDonald has died of lod poisoning. Charles Connor is in Betts Street Hospital, down with paraly- sis. M. G. Newbouse has been sick ninety days with his finger, which will {probably have to be amputated, and | Harry Sommers is sick, a " STARVING LABRADORIANS, Cincinnati, " - A GRAND OFFER. 1. The “New York Weekly World” and the Reronrtes, one year for $2.60 in advanoe, 2. The “Weekly World” and the Rx- poRTER One year, and the History of the United States, bound in Leatheretie Tree Calf, Gilt, and containing 22 fine Engrav- ings. This dainty book of 320 12mo pages is indispensible to every ove as a work of quick and convenient reference. It is printed on good paper, with wide margins, and a prize for a bibliophile, all for $2.75 in advance, This is the grandest offer you can get for two news. papers. 420t are taken purpose discounted at whates A will 1 iors sy} ¢ SOE en | peroaps you them. gent will Smiling face again ; he will leave y « ALG Kee] ar § i Hd OAls, &°C evidence rat ther mw} i an 13 or farmers, fw fre hen a ans FARMER, y PY AMIN a SAAMI A wired I £8 Burnside » Aberty! Eagleville Marion, Jacksonville Curtin and Howard, Howard Mpring. Bellefonte Patton, Stoay Point Hai! Moon, ®ormstown Walker, Hublemsburg Benner, Knox's School House Harris, Boa ATR Ferguson, Pine Grove... Coslege, Lemont . Centre Hall and Potter, Centre Hall Millheim and Penn, Millbheim vine Ha'ies, AmionsOUN....os Mi es, Rebersburg Gregg. Spring Mille Special, ellefonte... Examinations begin at # A, M D. M. WOLY¥, County Bu i i uti wis A HORRIBLE STORY. Savannah, Ga, July 27 —A horrible story from the lower end of Tatnall co, Las just reached this city. A negro wo. man, engaged to prepare a dinner for a colored picnic, murdered a young child which had been left in her charge, cook ed half the remaine, and served it to the people. The other half of the remains were salted down in a barrel. The ne- roes became perfectly frenzied on mak- ng the discovery and seized the woman and barned her at the stake. The report appears to be authentic, 1 Bncwshoe, 4 { # i 4 Oct pL . ‘ SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE COD LIVER OIL, WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES For Wasting Diseases of Children, Where the digestive powers are feeble and the ordinary food does not seem {0 nonrish the child, this acts both as fond and medicine, giving rtrergth snd flesh at once, and is alot us palatable us milk, Take no other. Liver Remedy, JAPANESE ( Corns and Bu UNION ROACH, RAT, MICE ind ANT EXTERMINATOR, Neve er Fails. DAIRY, POULTRY TOR BOOKS, wilh ( For gale by J. D. ] . { JRN fo CURE, iH d DOC ods Free. ay, Centre Hall, an y “BY HAIL AND LIGHI- NING. 1 is DAMAG OC} on Wiilia gtorw western § in "ig i hail visited the anty, near The hail many of the ge as bens’ egge. dameged, and corn f the storm The bam of Of 8 Jors al being 88 Buildings were bac 1 fell gre i ly were whelly destroyed. ightning and destroyed, with over three other grain. The storm did not cover a . se MM A em NoTICE~~At 8 special meeting of e Hall echool directors the follow ling teachers were selected : Prof. D. F, Mauger, Grammar school; Miss Lyde McEiroy, second grade; Miss Maggie Hannah, primary. Arrangements have been made for students desiring to pursue a select course of study or pre pars for college and can do so under Prof. Mauger by paying extra tuition. School will open Monday, September 13, J. D, Mungay, Pres't of School Board. A MA FLEEING FROM THE DROUGHT, Waco, Texas, July Sl.—Every day brings new arrivals here of people move ing from the droughtstricken counties in the west of Texas. Many of them are almost destitute and completely dis- oo i. They say they want to where it rains a fow times a year. There is also scmething of an influx of colored people from Comanche county, Since the lynching of a colored murderer at DeLeon on Monday the negroes have been ordered to leave Comunche county TEXANS
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