VOL. LXVIII. CAPITOL NEWS SOME ACTION TAKEN TO 8S THE SILVER QUESTIOI The Financial Polley of the Administration Will be Endorsed Dem, ite by the Kenlueky Mi Convention, il 1 from Kentucky that wa ing to President ( will doubtl dent's en] tion, ly mistaken, the administratio the Kentucky Dem which will It is President Carlisle have bee the financial campaign vention week. well Cleveian carried on inside tl of Kentucky for soit perfectly natural both be pleased wi tory for the side t ed. It seems, as far as can be ase that the fears which have tained by some Dem nancial split in the would be permanent perina it, i WW Democrat, i, OL LLL Representative Kend . who is at present al ashington, who is a free silver this subject: “Tl but one issue that SIAVEer qu i 1e is involved party. Beyond that principles to which the finan be the last election in very close one, 1 tion will rdi sii when the state v will have one of ties. No difference single issue holding tog: Attorney Washington home, where he will sible arrange his pris paratory Lo nis residence al capital. He expects fore the first of July here the greater pa vin Howgat embezzling money ( apt ment while acting ¢ of the Weather this week, and that if the j another verd found. Thi altogether 13 iy 8 eX pe upon the edged difficulty of con ington courts thie the Governn manner both of Howgat ducted. Republic probably in has been clear was out-classed by ployed by Howgate; ¢ tion of many important vinced me that wh against another out the same result can horse, under from a race base ball club stances, Of The extension rules to employees of Printing Oflice, and in number, which bh ally announced by Pi land, is, of course, highly most of the employees of lishment: but there are more lots who have doubts about ry working of the chan “I wish,” sai I and confidentially connected witl administration, “ti the l a closely he promi- | emocral 115 eve ry nent Democrat was working as ener getically and as unselfishly for harmo- | ny in the Democratic party of his state | as Senator Hill is doing in New York. | He knows that if the party is to win the Presidential election it gain control of the empire he is devoting his great organizing tal- | ent to getting the party in good fight- | ing condition, regardless of the man | who may head the national ticket. | When one considers the proneness of | all men to desire above all things to! “get even’' with those who had in any | W must re- state, and | Hill eannot be given too much credit for his present attitude,’ Those interested in the attempt of the Republicans to postpone or strad- dle the silver question will keep their eyes on Senator Dubois at the conven tion of the Republican national lesgue, to be held at Cleveland, Ohio, this week. Mr, Dubois, who has been in * Washington for some time has public ly given notice of his intention to spring the silver question on the con vention and to demand that some ace tion be taken upon it. Since then great pressure has been brought to bear upon him to content himself with merely stating his views in favor of silver to the convention, His attitude at the convention will show what ef- THEY ELOPED, i Mr lamsport Heiress, “The t Margaret Fisher, William 8. Fisher, one of the belles of the city, and daughter of Mrs. bride is scarcely past sixteen, and is the grand-daughter of the late Mahlon 1° isher, a millionaire lumberman, the cat-grand-daughter of James A. Hu- ter of the founder of Williamsport, Mi- hael Ross, is both beautiful qomplished. Mr. Wolf is a fine and > hie ding young fellow, has I a brokerage office in Pine street. Miss admiration ue time ast a telegraph opera- 1 Fisher several has that their cognizant of On the plea of nding the afternoon with a school iis OWI 1h Pomany Ways ends have long been 1 1 1 ’ $ itual aliection. Miss Fisher left home Thursday lastening to the railroad » was met by her sweetheart 1d nao, minutes afterward they whirled toward Elmira. i0 o'clock that night, just as Mrs. er was about to seek aid from the authorities, the following telegram was received from Elmira, N. Y..:— “We in Elmira, Mr. and Mrs ). Wolfe.” Mr. Wolfe, it derstood had asked for the hand of X Mrs. Fisher re- r consent ou the ground that was too young to wed. ife is pretty and are Fisher, but Ler has a rown right. - > Mifflin Judicial District, iul apportionment bill pass- it be signed by Gover- It provides for five ad- for West on, Green and Jef- the f Mifflin and Hunt- had tached to Centre, but the district and of Mifflin county » will hereafter preside «, one each i, Washin %, and one for rt Ki Huntingdon separate whing com posed I'he Governor for this district to which will neces- a judge this fall. - > — Milton. Suicide at der, a well known resident nmitied suicide Tuesday, alternoon, by drowning. -class carpenter, but had for some eyed upon his mind so much that he went to the canal and f employment his pt thre His hat and coat were found on the bank. In the coat was a note directed to his wife saying w himself in. it she should not worry about him hat he would like to be buried his mother. y i DEsiae He was about {2 years old, and was married and owned his own home. ies A New Way. A means of forecasting the weather rom a morning cup of coffee is given Leeds Mercy, which asserts has proven more trustworthy official Drop two lumps of sugar carefully into the mid- die of the cup; if the air bubbles re- main in the center of the cup it will oy the that it than the FUESSeS, f they gather in the centre and then go in a cluster to one side, look out for SHOWers. Bp Will Remove His Remains, of Winfield Seott Hancock are to be removed from The remains (Gieneral lington National Cemetery, At a meeting of veterans of the Second Corps, Army of the Potomac, held in Washington, a committee was appoint- ed to take charge of the removal and reinterrment. The body of Mrs, Han- cock is to be removed from its resting place in St. Louis and interred beside remains of the hero of Gettysburg, . nt in Deceat Burial for the Soldier, By a decision of the supreme court handed down recently, when a vete- ran, who is very poor, dies, his family may bury him and the county shall stand the expenses up to $50. The cus- tum has been in some counties to bury such unfortunates by contract, let to the lowest bidder, the same as in cases of ordinary paupers. The supreme court says that the law intended that old soldiers should have a decent buri- al, and that the county should pay a moderate expense. 360 pair Men's All Wool Pauts, worth 3.00 and 4.00. fect the pressure had, Our price, 1.50. Lyon & Co, WEATHER PREDICTIONS, i oe Says It Will be a Good Year for | Corn. My last bulletin gave forecasts of the { 19th to 23d, gnd the next will the Pacific coast about the 24th, the west of Rockies country by close of { 25th, the great central valleys 26th to | 28th and eastern states 29th. reach Cross {| This storm wave will be preceded by a very warm period, excessive evapo- | ration and drought, and following it | [ will come very much cooler weather, | : 2 . ‘ with a large increase of rain and good ferop growing weather in numerous the 1 This and the precy ding storin | and excessive of ited ic | Slates, | wave will be above the av parts erage in force {and high winds may be expected. The warm wave will cross the | of Rockies country about 24th, { great central valleys 26th, and eastern i states 27th. Cool wave will the Cross west of Rockies country about 27th, the great central valleys 20th and east- | ern states July 1. Indi { sufficient rains in most p { corn belt to make a fair corn cre ti fiat ALi0oNns avol th Lilt p, and the only probable drawback is He ¢X- Of aris | pected low average of mperature., § thi June will be warmer than | part, but | will average below in the great Th $ 2 { tions of temperature are e the t the | Indications are it the last altogether the temperature corn i 3 1 | producing section. condi- iC sane ted fo pe ir | July and August, averaging ver | in the Missouri, Ohio and upper | sissippi valleys | rain. | The drouth and { April and May were and an average of cool weat he COOl Mis- v , With a fair | accompanied by some land an average rai { principal corn months, | on with a reasonable degr | ty. Killing frosts will not long after Septembe the cor pre try, and farmers Id portions of n | plowing early in {ay mature were late the ¢ orn will frosted unless cut early. The above in reference | crop applies only to of the country drain sippl. A Sunday Figrace. Last Sunday, we are inf ty of young Lewistos [7 Mts. fora day of fun, and somewhere near { of the { who never thinks a thought Viel thea re th i HAD grave and sedate and shocked his sensibiliti {ration of of the | bloods had brot lune =abibath bath, h and Is sich, and a live pig. partaking ia bite and a swallow, t ig was brot the to ase] Pig; it ng out, greased and let you fellows giving chase, | the awfully scared gre | hop and jump and gr and {and what the fellows would call big i fun. But the One who Keeps the book for the final judgment, has entered it {therein as a shameful desecration of {the Lord's day. i cateh Was ab tumble, | po . Being Rap idly Reduced. | You accepted our invitation to call | upon us during our Centennial and it | was highly appreciated. We are now preparing for the coming season on a | grand scale— You shall have all the | vantage of low prices the ad- | vance takes place, stock of Clothing, Hats, ete., is being rapid- ly reduced to make more room. Belts and White Trousers a specialty. MoxtTaoMERY & Co, Merchant Tailors, Bellefonte. ad- before Our present —— A New Industry, A curious and profitable has sprung up in the large sawmill districts in the lumber regions of this state, in the utilization of the immense quantities of sawdust and compact bales and in this form finding a ready market and fuel in eastern sections, i — “Many of the citizens of Rainsville, house,” says Jacob Brown, the leading merchant of the place. This remedy has proven of so much value for colds, croup and whooping cough in chil dren that few mothers who know its worth are willing to be without it. For sale by Wm, Pealer, Spring Mills, and 8, M, Swartz, Tusseyville. AA MO MAP EAA Clay Wosterd Suits, worth 12.00 and 15.00, our price, 7.00 and 8.00. Lyon & Co. -» Owing to the fact that Lyon & Co., of Bellefonte, must make room for a large stock of spring goods, they now offer their entire winter stock at such prices never before heard of in this county. Bee their advertisement in another column on page five, f CENTRE COUNT FACTS CONCERNING LOGAN THE { MINGO CHIEF. As Inseparably Connected With the Karly History of Centre and Adjoining Countles. The ni is nse parably connects th the arly history of Centre and adjoining and counries, has been perpetuated in applying a spring in Mifllin county, toa I village in Clinton eounty, to mountain, a pt NMpruce Nittany and to Cr once had wth, i Cer, il on ol tiie celebrated who dwelt for many Kelly, Kili, now Sunbury, and the ted to Christian Vie Hves 1 also baptized, giv which he was ever n, in honor of James : Necretary of Lhe Vania. Adel Logan made his Kishacoquillas Mifflin county. fii Levy as in i for sl for “ wigwain miles above vistown, at till iii The eat ch known ‘Logan's 1 5 following § account of W act 1542, by the fi tek of the Kishacoquillas 8, to Hon. R. P. MecClay, ther of the State Senate: Cf Was given in illiam Brown, Esq., one of sl I's fil y ot time I saw that rs our guns, the ANTREL, He « iit another win to stream, and offered to guide me met fog ther fa- he There 1 first your ‘e remained in selecting and | g the a friendship which never 1 ian aid das, s af wad tl he slightest interruption. “We visited Logan at his camp ther four or five rounds himself When he went know led gv d beaten, we were about to leave him into his But and brought deerskins as he had lost out as many dollars, and handed them to Mr. MeClay, who re fused to receive them, alleging that we had been his guests, and did not come to rob him; that the shooting had only mere I JOR “Me bet tleman, and me take your dollar it me beat.!”” So he was obliged to take the him to receive even a horn of powder in re turn. “The next year,” said the old gen- tleman, “I brought my wife and camp- ed under a big walnut tree on the bank of Tea Creek, until I had built a cabin near where the mill now stands. Poor down his cheeks) soon after went into the Allegheny and I never The above was confirmed by a daugh- ter of Mr. Brown, and the following added: “Logan supported his family by kill- ing deer, dressing the skins and sell- ing them to the whites, He had sold quite a parcel to a tailor, who dealt ex- tensively in buckskin breeches, receiv- ing his pay in wheat. When this was taken to the mill it was found so worthless that the miller refused to grind it. Logan attempted in vain to obtain redress from the tailor. Fail ing in this he took the matter before his friend Brown, then a magistrate, who heard the case and awarded a de- cision in favor of the chief. A writ was given to Logan to hand to the constable, with the assurance that that would bring the money for the NO.25 i | skins, But the untutored Indian | could not comprehend by what magic { the little paper would force the tailor The | magistrate took down his own com- | mission, with the arms of the king up- {on it, and explained to him the prin- { ciples and operations of civil law. against his will to pay the debt, L.o- gan listened attentively and exclaim- ed, “Law good! Make rogues pay.” The following incidents in the life of Logan are gathered from various BOUPCES “When another daughter of Judge and Brown (afterward Gen. Potter's wife) was just beginning a younger to walk, her mother happened to ex- press her regret that she could not get a pair of shoes to give more firmness Lo hier little sta p. Logan stood by and He Brown to let the litt “nid 1 Mi withing. soon after asked 5, le girl go gO up The alarmed at {and spend the day at his cabin. Wis proposition; but she knew the del- icacy of an Indian's feelings—and she and with seCrel re KRIOCW Logan, LOO idctance, but I i t ne ¢ pli d with apparent The ' ' BIOWIY his request, 41 § } Yes xr Hours of ne day wore . 1§ ii {as ti lef was seen coming down trusty he pat bh in trotted proudly exhit a moment her with his charge; and : {tle one aris, beautiful pair of mos Casings the product of H.oual Loft Kish 1141 1 11 y § SJORRILL ICI NASLACOGULIIAS Valle . because of 1y ¥ § ! HUI oer o it, and the H ttied In . i no jonger for an city of game. © n . 14 Himsell deter subsIstance i i wig ih iE, intry where id game pl mm the Ohio el- sil 4 outh of Y AOVe ris HOW Creek, at es W Heeling, remarkable was bulit by bi » Heckewelder, the In- Br ¢ I'he massacre r i bolo prooamy | which omment He attacked n, women and chil- ounded six or eight more. | the wounded, Opan returned to find mangled | and | The if bodies of the slain and his cabins in smoking ruins. 1 | heart of the man was broken, and it | called for revenge, can the call be won- dered at? He buried his dead, cared for the wounded, und then gathering around him the men of his tribe, join- | ed the Shawnees in the war they were | the His re- | terrible. many vie-| tims were sacrificed to whites, How it | commencing on VENnge was | no earthly | record shows,” The vigor with which the war was prosecuted by the whites, under Lord | Dunmore, Virginia, | brought the Indians to terms, and they | made overtures of peace. To secure { this Lord Dunmore a Governor of ppointed a coun- | cil on the Sciota in 1774 and invited all the hostile chiefs to be present, Logan {among the number. He refused to at- | tend the council, but sent by the mes- | senger the following speech, preserved {in Jefferson's “Notes on Virginia.” “I appeal to any white man to say if ever he entered Logan's cabin hungry, {and he gave him not meat? If ever ire came cold and naked and he cloth- ed him not? During course of the last long and bloody war Logan remained idle in his cabin, an advocate of peace. Such was my love for the whites, that my countrymen pointed as they pass- ed, and said, “Logan is the friend of the white man I” 1 had even thought to have lived with you but for the in- juries of one man, the last spring who, in cold blood and unprovoked, mur dered all the relations of Logan, not even sparing my women and children. There runs not a drop of my blood in the veins of any living creature. This called on me for revenge. I have sought it. I have killed many, I have fully glutted my vengeance. For my country I rejoice at the beams of peace. But do not harbor a thought that mine is the joy of fear, He will not turn on his heel to save his life, Who is there to mourn for Logan? Not one.” “Some time after this war [the Bhaw- nees’] Logan, who had married a Shawnee woman, removed to near De- troit. A habit of intemperance—that curse of the red man--grew upon him, and he became quarrelsonie, frequent. lo giving way to ungovernable fits of passion. He realized his degradation, und to a missionary spoke feelingly of the eurse which had come upon dezlaring that he felt as if he w on [the brink of eternal fire. In of | his frenzies he struck his wife down, {in the presence of her tribe, Fearing | he had killed her, and knowing the { Indian law of retributive justice [ fled from the While {flight he met, according him A one s he camp. on his { Le y tradition, ® 3 ar ‘ . { his wife's nephew and some other In- {dians, and thinking that this relative he declaring the m te f | prepared to defend himself, | was about to avenge irder, | ! y { he would kill all who o d him, THs Pp ee | The nephew, in self-defen shot him r {1 { dead as he was dismountin | horse,” i It is recorded in Howe's he w { lections,”’ that as ure tween Detroit and hi 751. He was sitting at | time with his blanket over his head 5 OW October, 1 | before a camp fire { upon his Knees, had taken some | him and buried | He w Faestierd PRT ‘ } we WHO, though savage as [ie was i 1 iis V0 ai ns, Is described a i # { ed si Lrails of Ot some of the noble ity, and who unquestionably tdowed with natural abili t order. He was several highes over six feet high: row; lithe, athletic f . tery 1s in frame; firm, resolut His Tah-gah-ju ing in festures. is said, was “short dress. lp tl ASUMMER HOLIDAY. Delighttal Tours to the North via Pennsyl- vania KE, K, I'o provide t most attractive n Lie i § {rior « 137: t ” Jidax 04 of spending a summer holiday, enn syivania Railroad Con arranged to run to the north. The point Lhe and the itinerary iin A ill N ed abound nature ¥ 4 { Deg “a 8 it Ces is scenery and ends only with its co i are familiar to dll wonderland, ot be disap- Niagara may bx ex pecled, Watkin's I'housand Islands, Quebec, ] pointed in (len, Falls, : treal, Au Sable Chasm, plain and George, Highlands of the Hudson. gu 4 res Of SAralog fixed for the departu tours are July 16 and Augu ¢ und trip rate of } ae Ie 3 I Q 100 fr Brooklyn, Newark, Harrisburg, OTK, ‘hiladelphia, 1 will eon and Washingtor ver al ry expenses during the A beautiful descriptive nr pt it of the Penns) 1196, Broad Street phia. OCU red from Hel WOMEN lp WHO SUFFER With Form of Female Should Read What Dr. Hartman Says, any Complaint It would be impossible to present an exhaustive array of the svmptoms . - : caused by these troubles, for their name is legion: but te them are to smarting, throbbing, scalding, beating, burning, promiunen along be mentioned trembling, bloat of cold, fox lings, quivering, aching, ing, flashes of heat, tremors prickly sensations, sinking faintness, numbness, indescribable puncturing, piercing pains flying from part to part with provoking uncertain- ty, mocking the victims with momen- tary relief, to begin its tortures where. No two cases are exactly alike in number and severity of symptoms, else- some being only slightly annoyed, oth- ers being actually confined to the bed. In all these perverted functions of the female organs take a tablespoonful of Pe-ru-na before each meal and tween meals, and enough Man-a-lin at bedtime to keep the bowels contin ly in a natural condition. Vaginal in- jections of hot water should be taken three times a day. Book on female diseases sent free by The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Company, of Columbus, Ohio. For free book on cancer address Dr, Hartman, Columbus, Ohio. ——————— I have two little grand children who are teething this hot summer weather and are troubled with bowel complaint. I give them Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera and Biarrhoea Remedy and it acts like a charm. 1 earnestly recom- mend it for children with bowel troub- les. I was myself taken with a severe attack of bloody flux, with cramps and pains in my stomach, one-third of a bottle of this remedy cured me. With- in twenty-four hours I was out of bed and doing my house work. Mrs, W. L. Dunagan, Bon-aqua, Hickman Co., Tenn. Forsale by Wm. Pealer, Spring Mills, and 8. M. Swartz, Tusseyville, ual- ~~You can save § on every $10 par chase you make at our store. We have received a big stock of spring goods, and they are exceptionally cheap. Lewins, Bellefonte,
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