The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 16, 1890, Image 4

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THE CENTRE REPORTER
FRED KURTZ, Eprror and Pror'’n
“TERMS; One year, $1.50, when paid in ad
nce, Those in arrears subject to previous
rms. §2 per year,
Advertisoments 20 cents per line for 8 inser
ns.and 5 cents for each subsequent insertion
Crnreg Hosur, Pa, Taurs, O«
EASTWARD BOUND.
The President Returns from the
West
er ———————————
16.
LEAVING A TRAIL OF ELOQUENCE.
In Mansfield He Lands
Sherman and in Canton Commends
Maj. McKinley — At Alliance He
Confesses That He of
Speech Making — Termination of
the Tour.
Senator
Is Tired
WasminaToN, Oct. 14.—The president
and party arrived here at about 9 o'clock
this morning.
Prrrseura, Oct. 14.~-The time of ar-
rival of the president's party was not
generally understood by the citizens of
Pittsburg, and there were but few peo-
ple upon the depot platform when the
speciul train arrived last night.
The representatives of the city papers
were accorded a brief interview. The
president looked somewhat wearied and
remarked concerning the remarkable
October weather. He bad made thir-
teen speeches during the day and upon
reaching Washington will have traveled
over 3,000 miles. With one exception
the president has slept on his car every
night since leaving Washington. The
wesident made special inquiry for the
atest bulletin Justice Mil
ler’s condition.
The president's train |
mgton via the Pennsyvivan
8:45 o'clock. Th
ing or demonstration of
the train was in this city.
concerning
eft
In the course of the
at Mansfield, O., he
tribute to Senator Sher
resident's Speed n
the [ollowing
I an glad to be perm fed
bome of your distinguishes
friend. sure, however
from Lim political opir
of Ohio are
a
has att
Yew i GEN
anton. L.,
Att
lam g
personal relat
has won my 1
snerous and fail
s opponents, I am s
your res
itizen
failed to
mas ac .
Getting Tired of Speaking.
Alliance was the next
crowd here, too, was very large
The president
mn. Daniel Fording.
itizens: There is
station
and en
Was
Hi
thnsiastic,
duced by He
these hearty gre ings and to say sou
ciative word in return. do very x th
and I do very de
asm with w
you, feel the cordial en-
thns hich you have received me
At Indianapolis,
Ispiaxaroris, Oct. 13, — President
Harrison reached this city at 6 o'clock
run from St. Louis,
The president attended divine service
at the First Presbyterian church and
then took Iuncheon with Secretary
Tracy at the Denison house, where he
remained for three hours and received
calls from many people who came
pay their respects. In the afternoon
the president and secretary took a drive
residence of his son-in-law, the presi.
dential party returned to their special
car, departing for the east at 6 o'clock
this morning
A Quarrel Over the Count,
MostrREAL, Oct, 14.-A of
French citizens was held in the mavor's
office for the Iran:
ception and banquet to
Paris on his ammival. The |
were there in force, but th
protested against the city
official notice of the vial
and threatened to get up a
publican demonstration if it
ally a committee, comprising the mayor,
alderman, chief justi judges
ep TTT
ineasnng
purpose of
©,
and tender him a banquet and receplion,
The Republicans moved an smendiment
that was lost,
A Veteran Journalist Honored,
New Yorx, Oct. 14. Mrs
wife of the Hon. Beajamin Wood, edi-
tor of The New York Daily News, gave
a dinner last evening at the Fifth Ave.
nue hotel in honor of her husband's 70th
birthday. Notwithstanding his ad-
vanced years the veteran journalist is
active a8 a man of 50; 18 1n excellent
health; a hard worker, and takes the
game interest in public affairs that he
did forty vears ago. Among the guests
were Mr, and Mra Grover Cleveland,
Mr. and Mra. W. L. Brown, Mr. and
Mrs. John Cockerill, Mr, and Mrs, John
R. Feliows, Mr. and Mm, John L.
Grace, Mayor Grant and Hon. Smith
Ely. aoc —-
Asleep on the Track,
Des Moises, In, Oct. 14. <Peter and
Minnie Berg. the former 3 years old and
the latter 20 months, children of Peter
Berg, a miner, were ron over and in-
stantly killed by a train on the Rock
road. The trainmeén sey that thie
children were asleep on the track and
owing to a curve they could pot, be been
in time to stop the train,
Ten Business Houses Burned.
Osage City, Kan, Oct. 14, «Ten ba
Jac oats 0, he Suter of the, city
was roy yesterday . #
; partially insured, y
r Ld
¥
IRON AND STEEL MEN.
The Distinguished Foreign Visitors
each Chicago
Cricaao, Oet. 18. <The delegates to
the Iron and Steel institute spent Satar-
day in visiting various points if interest
in and around Pittsburg, one portion in.
specting the coke regions of Connells
and those that remained in Pitts.
plate glass factories, steel
works, ete... along the line of the
Pennsylvania and Alleghen,
roads.
An elaborate programme his bao
ranged for the entertainment of the
members of the Iron and Steel institute
and the Verein Deutcher Ingenne who
arrived at the Union depot
o'clock respectively this morning
were met at the station by
of some of the reception and trans
tion committees, who escorted them
the various hotels, where quarters w
already bespoken, At 10:20 |
Mayor Cregier formally the
visitors, the ceremony tak place in
Parlor W of the Palmer hwmuse. After
the reception the visitors were drive
throngh Michigan avenue, Grand and
Drexel boulevards, Jackson and Wi
ington parks to the Washington Park
club house, where Inncheon was ved,
Om their return to the city an ex!
of police patrol and fire dey
will be given on the lake fr
close the day the guests will be
a reception at the Auditor
evening from 8 to 10 o'
will tn
Wolk
at »
deputations
worta
10
"re
0¢ HM
Ae l Os
: 4 :
nu Ho
Oi'K
rht
ted to 81 seen
devi
THE DUPONT DISASTER
Views a Baskeifuil of
Ilemains,
WiLsinaTox, Del, Oct
oner's jury in the Dapot
explosion dis
yesterday alt
mains of
Tol Harm
The Coroner
Tah
John
separals
today at St. .
representing
nd Mart
par
John Harri
SAILeT
nem hers
the Fring
i LURTTa
A Pitched Battle,
Tenn., Oct
srtedd
At Mine L
Ww ils
1
is 3
from Smiths
Mn
te
211
rine
whom may
aot the worst of the battle
Frank Norman Disappears,
Fe
£3
» 500 with which
milding and loan
| of paving the dues
the trial of
been living with her.
Since
Das
Drank Ammonia for Whiskey.
WitMinGy
handed Robert Burns a bottle of am
monia and as & joke him whether
he wanted a drink of wi Burns
replied in ths H ve and 1 re he
t
' i
could be stopped he hi
i... Let i4
and stomach
he is reported
condition.
are
as
An Embezzier Sentenced.
Grasp R Mich., Oct. 14.
Matthew S. Pinckney. who gave him-
wolf up at Alton two weeks ago and was
brought here tO answer 10 the ¢ harge of
RAPIDS,
Michigan while
Jackson jail
and tWo years
to
ago,
for three vears
The Ship Magellan Lost,
NEw Your, Oct. 14.-<A
confirms the report of the
last with a cargo of oil for Valparaiso,
The Magellan was commanded by Capt.
Marshall and it is believed that every
A Bad Gang.
Jarrimore, Oct. 14. — Five yonths
were arrested at Ellicott City and
brought to this city. They are charged
with numerons assanits and thefts,
which have been recently committed.
Scarcely a night has passed but some of
the gang have committed some desper-
All Tor Love,
Ozark, Ala, Oct. 14. — A farmer
named Clayton Lloyd wished to wed a
young woman in Texas, and to accom-
slish this end he poisoned his wife and
onr children with rat poison. They all
died yesterday. Lloyd was captured
Inst night and threats are made that he
will be lynched.
Bird Shooting Match,
Aspury Park, N. J., Oct. 14.—The
5,000 live Pigeon shoot between James
A. Robert Elliott, of Kansas City, and
Edgar Gibbs Murphy, of New York, at
Hollywood, Long Branch, attracted a
big crowd. Elliott won by killing 93
to Murphy's #8, ont of [00 birds each.
Wyoming's Election.
Curvexsg, Oct. 13.-The state vote
has been canvassed in the twelve couns
ties. - Sixteen thousand and fifty-one
votes were polled. Governor Warren's
Ar Le
Claric'd, 2.507. ie legislature stands
41 Republicans and 8 Democrats.
{The Connt's Charity.
Moxy, Va, Oct, 14, Count
of Paria loft ery yostorda for the but
tie fields of the wilder yor :
attended mass at St. wl
and presented
$100 for the poor,
JUDGE MILLER DEAD
Loot Hours of the Distinguished
Jurist,
(CHARACTERISTIC TRAITS
SOME
His Untiring Industry and Sterling
Integrity — A Self Made Man,
Twenty-right Years on the Bench,
Gen, Belknap's Sudden Death,
WasnisaToN, Oct. 14.— Associate Jus-
tice Miller, of the United States su-
preme court, who was stricken with
paralysis several days ago, and whose
death was looked for hourly since the
time of his prostration by the fatal
stroke, died last night a few minutes
before 11 o'clock.
Justice Miller was stricken with par-
alysis last Friday afternoon, while
walking from a Massachusetts street
car to his house on Thomas circle. He
fell dow: on his face, and when picked
up and carried into his house wis un-
conscions He soon regained intelli-
gence and appeared quite cheerful, but
al no time was much hope of hig recov.
ery entertained,
Samuel Freeman Miller was born in
Richrrond, Ky., April 5, 1516, He
graduated at the medical department of
the Transvivania university in Ken-
tucky in 1838, and practiced medicine
for a few vears, but afterwards became
a lawyer
In 1850
Iowa, where he
removed to
became prominent
among Republicans in that state. In
1862 President Lincoln appointed him
associate justice of the supreme court of
the United States. He was at the time
of his death the oldest justice in con-
tinuous service on the court bench
A Hard Worker.
The paralytic stroke of Justice Miller
was a surprise to every one in Washing-
ton. His constitution has, apparently,
been one of iron, and he has for years
worked more than twelve hours out of
the twenty-four. It was his habit to go
into his office. at his home on Massachu
setts avenue, as soon as he had finished
his breakfast in morning, and to
work there upon his cases until the su
preme court met at noon. During his
whole career as a supreme court justice
he missed scarcely a day in attendance
upon the supreme court when it was sit-
ting, and he worked far into the night
writing his opinions and passing upon
after his return from the Capitol.
There has been no judge on the bench
for years who has done more work than
Justice Miller, and he was one of the
best equipped men of the corps of jus-
tices, He was n self hein man, and
he never had the advantage of college
training.
Miller
Judge
the
Cases
Self Educated.
started life as a drug clerk and
three yvaars in making up prescrip-
en went to a medical school
and practiced medicine
had gotten his diploma, for
vears. When he began to study
took up the study of Latin and
a thorougs knowledge of the
Miller been a
his first
began to
ardent fol-
always
He made
when he
Was an
has
career of twenty-
the bench, there
been a whisper of
cerning him, He has
upon his information
justice of the supreme
gh he has received more
from Uncle
8 no rked the machine at
nd made a fortane out of it,
BELENAP DEAD
Aries
GEN
The Remarkable Record of Presi
dent Grant's Secretary of War.
Wassinaros, Oct. 14.—The autopsy
has disclosed that the death of Gen. W,
W. Belknap, who was found dead in bed
yesterday, was due to inflammation of
the inner lining of the heart.
Mra, Belknap, who has been at New-
and other eastern seaside resorts
during the summer months, bat in New
York city during the last few weeks,
was summoned by telegraph, and also
the general's son Hugh, from his home
in Chicago, where he 1s emploved in the
office of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail-
road company.
William Worth Belknap was born in New.
burg. N. Y.. on Sept. (7, 189. He graduated
al Princeton in 1848. He then studied law,
was admitted to the bar and began practice
in Keokuk, Ia. When the war broke out he
joined the army as major of the Pifteenth
lows volunteers. He was engaged at Shiloh,
Corinth and Vicksburg, where he did good
self Lis services in Sherman's Atlanta
In July, 1864, he was promoted to
be brigadier general, andl in March, 1565, he
received a brevet as major general and was
put in command of a division.
At the conclusion of the war he was ap
pointed collector of internal revenue in Iowa,
a position which he held until October, 1869,
when he entered Gen. Grant's cabinet ay sed.
retary of war, This office he held during
Grant's second administration until March
7. 166, when he resigned in consequence of
the charges of corruption which made his
name notorious. He was impeached and
tried before the senate, the specific accusa.
tion being that he promised to appoint Caleb
P. Marsh to maintain a trading establmh-
ment at Fort Sill, a military post of the
United States, on consideration of a certain
sum of money to be paid quarterly.
The testimony was of the most conclusive
description, and the accused could only avoid
conviction Ly pleading that his resignation
before impeachment had left the senate with.
out jurisdiction. On this technical plea he
escaped, the vite being @ to 25 against him
and a two-thirds vole being necessary to ab-
solute conviction,
The later years of his life were passed in
Washington, where he had a good law prac.
tice and lived very quietly, retaining & num.
ber of fuithfal friends to the end,
by
An international Case,
New Your, Oct. 14.—The arrest of
Mrs. Field and Mrs, Miller, the wives of
the absconding American bankers of
London —who did business under the
name of Field & Co.~promise to be-
the
come one of international im
in which congress, and probably
president of the United States, may be
called npon to act, hey werd released
from custody by dpe yoster-
day, afid a2 Mrs, Miller passed outside
the corridor she was arrested Députy
United States Marshal Bern
taken before Commissioner . He
adjonrned the hearing till Oct. 27.
known
P. HE
having
Braden for
Centre Hall
Malls.
All grades of Roller Flour con-
stantly on hand, at whole-
sale to dealers and at retail
All grades of Chop.
Granulated Corn Meal
finest grades.
of the
Bran, fine and coarse.
COAL, always on hand, Hard,
Soft and Woodland, all
sizes,
TERMS, for Flour, Feed and
Coal, Strictly Cash
cash paid for same.
A A EA 0 S350
HUMPHREYS’
Di, Hosrinsys' Sppcirics are scientifically and
carefully prepared prescriptions ; used for any
Jat in private Pract toew ih sucbem.and fon aver
irty years ised by the people, Every single ge
cific ls aw cure for the disease named, pe
These Specifies care without drogging, purg-
ing or redicing the system, sad are in fact and
deed the sovereign remedies of the World,
LINT OF PRIBCIPAL NOE, CURER, PRICES,
SVETH, Congestion, inflammations
arms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic ’,
iy ng Colle, or Teething of Infants
arrhen, of Children or Adults, |
Japuterdt Griping, Billous Colic
‘holern arbuas, Vomiting.
{oughs, Cold, Bronchitis, :
Neur fu, Toothache Vacenrhe
endarches, Siok Headache, Vertigo
yupepsin, Bllious Blomach, ‘
pPprossed or Painful Periods. .
Lon, too Profuse Periods ’ .
ough, Dimicult Breathing .
pas
“haan
4
r
i eum, Ersyipeles, Pruptions.
REienmutinm, heamatic Pains
PI
te
wn
ver atc gue, Chills, Nalaria. . ..
les, Blind or Bleeding pe
phthalmy or Bore, or Wesk Eyes .&
‘ninrrh, Influenza, Cold in the Head 4
hooping Ceungh, Violent Coughs, .2
sthma, Oppressed Breathing
Ear Discharges, Impaired Hearing 2
General ¥
ropsy, and Scanty SBecretions -
Men Sickness, Sickness from IUAIng «7
idoney Disense.. .. *
Nervous Debility Seminal Weak
ness, or Involuntary Dischargos, 1.9
Sore Mouth, Canker .
‘rin Weakness, Wetting Bed, 2
ainful Periods, with Spasn -
, sacs of the Heart, Palptitation fy
s ee Bpasm, Si. Vitus' Dance. §.
ontiaerin, Ulcersted Bore Throat. 8
[853 Chronic Congestions & Fruptions ‘2
fold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt
of price. Dn fir MPHEEYS MANUAL, (184 Dages)
richly bound in ecioth and gold, mailed free,
Humphreys’ MedicineCo 08 Fulton BLN Y,
UMPHREYS VETERINARY BPRCIFICS
Used by nll ownersof Horse nnd Cate
tle. A Complimentary copy of Dr. Humpt ;
Veterinary Manual O00 on treats
eare of Domestic Animails—~Horses, Cattle,
Hoge and Poultry we Bent roe JUN
Mutacing Co., 39 Fulton BL, X.Y.
One of the
BENT Tel
escopes in
the world, Our fad
segue and to ints
about the SMleth past © ¢ its balk. 11 de a pres
SOOpE, BE ETE ke Je sReY to carry. We will aie
oan wake trom BB 1 B10 a doy #! lan !
out 43 perience Better write at Guo Wepars
address, HALLETT 800, Bex 880, Fe
NEW
°F YORE
THE ORGAN OF
w All the sensations of U1
FOREMOST ARTISTS
Life in New York ¢
$400 FOI
them without t
Every woman :
the men 40 bject to paying for then
GEORGE M. POTTER
Agent for Centre Cou
Contains
ope hundred under
bered Besntital
eed JVOD BUILDIRGE, GOOD WATER,
(rite bi
excellent fruit of all kinds, 20 minntes ir
Hall elation .
Yor terms address F. M. Baker,
or D. 8. Keller, Beliefoute, Pa
it sep 19
Daupl
Baooxtrx, Conn, May Ss, "#0.
, Kespars i.
amines {cured o Curb upon my horse
®t
bast Job I ever saw done. I haves dosen
ha wl
ing LEE Co AE EE
Bon AR fe BBR
mJ
One 0
hor Reg
Oro LL. Horrmax,
Cmrrrexaxao, K, ¥., May 18, 90,
Oy
mt re. aed bottles of your
OUNTAIN HOUSE,
F BELLEFONTE
EMABUEL BROWN, Proprivior
The traveling ~ovimunity ill fing
this hotel equal to any in the county In
avery respect, for man and beasi, and
charges very moderate Giveit atrial
Bune i!
Pa
N EW BROCKERHOFF
L
BROCKERHOFF HOUEE
ALLGEHERY 87, BELLEFONRTS
Good Bampie Rooms on First Fle
pe Free Bass to and from all trains,
Hpecial rates to witnesses and jurors,
G. B BRANDON 1 n.
VA
wir
TEW GARMA HOI
4
opposite thie
QBFTaE COW
Beoeive Denon
wisi
wn OO
Terms reasor
atalogue aud otber iufor
GEO. W. ATHERTON
sate (
snes SI TRE, wees
or -
Adjustable DESK RACK,
(Purzeres Joiy WH, 1888.)
wee FOR
PAPERS, BOOKS, STATIONERY, Ete.
Aftustable }The Partitions enn be moved in
nily to make the divisions spy required size,
simple l-Nothing to get out of order—Easy of
Strong Will hold upright any sive of book
Attachment! We make an attach
sxhell
Bizes!—The following sizes always In stock.
Wypwwen oF
Famvir
¥ Partitions.
iw
5
te !
$e i on
i
i
Wells Manufacturing Co.,
MANUFACTURERS, *
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
AVORITE SINGER.
High
gel
i