~The Cen CHAS. R. KURTZ, Proprietor. HISTORICAL REVIEW Logan, the Famous Indian Chief, Murdered in Ohio. A FRIEND OF THE SETTLERS Remarkable Speech by the Old Chief in which he Laments the Loss of the the most of his Kindred bution from F. P. Green (Chief Logan, mentioned in the follow ing narrative, is the same who had a | wigwam in this section and fora time went back and forth over comprising Nittany, Bala Eagle, Penn Kishaquoquillas vallies. were named Logans Gap, Logans Spring, Logavos Branch, &c. In a future chapter we will furnish other interesting inci. dents concerning the great Logan.) In the immediate vicinity of Reedsville, is Logan's Spring, named after the sec. | ond son of Shicalamy, a distinguished Indian chief, who died at Shamokin in 1749. Logan resided here for some time, whose family was afterwards cruelly murdered, at Baker's, near the mouth of Yellow creek, on the Ohio river, above Wheeling, as appears from the follow- ing :— **About the latter end of April or be. ginning of Mav, 1774, I lived on the waters of Cross creek, about 16 miles from Joshua Baker, who lived on the Ohio, opposite the mouth of Yellow creek. A number of persons collected at my honse, and proceeded to said Baker's and murdered several! Indians, amoung whom was a woman said to be the sister of the Indian chief, Logan. The principal leader of the party was Danie! Greathouse. To the best of my recollection, the cause which gave rise to the murder was, a general idea that the Indians were meditating an attack on the froatiers. Captain Michael Cres- sap was not of the party ; but I recollect that some time before the perpetration of the above act, it was currently report. ed that Captain Cressap had murdered some Indians on the Ohio, one or two, some distance below Wheeling. Certified by me, an inhabitant of Shel. by county and State of Kentucky, this 15th day of Nov. 1 799 CHARLES PoLKR. On the 15th day of dentally the Baker, the person referred Nov 1799, I acci- met upon road, Joshua to ia the cer. tiicate signed by Polke, who informed me that the the 1774, opposite mouth creek, was perpetrated at his house by thirty-two led by Daniel Great. house ; that twelve were killed and six or eight wounded a sister and other relations of the Indian chief, Logan. Baker, says, Captain Mich. ael Cressap was not of the party; that some days preceeding the murder at his bouse, two Indians left him and were on their way home ; that they fell in with Capt. Cressap and a party of land 1m. provers on the Ohio, and were murdered, if not by Cressap himself, with his appro- bation ; by being the leader of the party, and that he had this information from Cressap murder of Indians in the of Yellow men, among the slain was HARRY INNns. The following extract from John Sap- pingtou’s statement, proves conclusively that Logan's family was not killed below Wheeling, as Dav, in his Historical Col- lections of Pa. states (p. 468.) “Logan's family (if it was his family,) was not killed by Cressap, nor with his knowledge, nor by his consent, but by the Greathouses and their associates. They were killed 30 miles above Wheel. ing, near the mouth of Yellow creek.” Jefferson's of Virginia, Appendix p 30-'46 Nore. —Logan’s people were killed at the mouth of Yellow creek, on the 24th of May, 1774 —CoMPILER. In the autumn of the same year, Log an was urged by the Indians, who were anxious to be relieved from Lord Dun. more’'s army, who had waged war against them, he sent his speech, in a belt of wampum, to be delivered to Dun. more, by a faithful interpreter, Under an oak, still standing in a field of one Wolf, seven miles from Circleville, Ohio, fo a southern direction, the following speech was delivered by the person who carried the wampum, It is a pure, native specimen of heartstiridng and soul-moving eloquence : “I appeal,” says Logan, ‘to any white man, to say, if he ever entered Logan's cabin hungry, and he gave him not meat ; If he came naked and cold, and 1 clothed him not. During the last, long and bloody war, Logan remained idle, in his cabin, an advocate of peace. Such was my love for the whites, that wy countrymen, as they passed, said ‘Logan Is the friend of the whites.’ I had thought of living 1::cng you, but for the mjuries of one mau, Captain Cressap, last spring, in cold blood, and unprovoked, -Contri- | the country | After this chief | i | murdered allthe relations of Logan, aot | sparing even my women and children, | | There runs not one drop of my blood in | | 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 in the beams of peace. Bul, do not har. | | bor the thought, that mine is the joy of | fear, | not turn on his heel to save his life. He will Who | is there to mourn for Logan? Not one!” Logan pever felt fear, (Logan had been misinformed, in part, as to the leader of those who murdered { bis family ; it was not Capt, Cressap, but Daniel Greathouse and his associates.) John a distinguished Moravian Missionary, says, ‘About the year 17 Heckewelder, 72, logan was introduced to me by an Indian friend, as son to the late reputable chief, Shikelemus, and as a triend to the white people. In the course of conversation, I thought him a man of superior talents, than Indians generally were. The subject turning on vice and | immorality, he confessed his too great share of this, especially his fondness for liquor. He exclaimed against the white people, for imposing liquors upon the Indians; he otherwise admired their in- genuity ; spoke Yi gentlemen, but ob- served the Indians unfortunately had but few of these neighbors, &c. He spoke of his friendship to the white people, wished always to be a neighbor | to them, tended to settle on the Ohio, below Big Beaver; was (to the best of my recollection) then encamped at the mouth of this river, (Beaver) urged me to pay him a visit. I was then living at the Moravian town on this river, in the neighborhood of Cuskuskee. In April, 773. while on passage the Obio for Muskingum, I called at Logan's my down settlement, where [ received every civility I could expect from such of the family as were at home, “Indian logan, after the death of his family, ran to this: reports concerning that he exerted himself during the Shaw. aunese war (then so called) take all the revenge he could, declaring he had lost all confidence in the white people to At the time of negotiation, he declared his reluctance to lay down the hate het, not haviog (in his opiuion) yet taken ample satisfaction ; vet, the nation he would do it. sions, from time to time, denoted a deep Life, said he, had become he | what pleasure was; he better if he had Report further states, that he became in measure delirious, d for the sake of His expres. melancholy a torment to him knew no thought it never more had been existed some eclared he would kill himself; went to Detroit. and on his way between that place and In October, 13 Miama was murdered St while as prisoner on my way to Detroit, I was shown the spot where this should have happened.’ FROM THE AUTO BIOGRAPHY OF COL. SAMUEL MILES Hox. Freo KurTz, DEAR Sik: [am very much interested in the Historical Review you are giving each week in the Democrat. It is not only teresting but instructive. Everyone having reliable information should send it in to vou for examination; in that spirit I quote you from my great grandfather's (Col. Samuel Miles) auto. biography (the original masuscript of which is in my possession.) He originally enlisted at the age of 17in a onmpany raised by Isaac Wayne, father of Gen. Anthony Wayne, was discharged in 1746 | and shortly after reenlisted as sergeant im Capt. Thos. Lloyd's company, Gov. | Robt. Morris appointed him ensign. He says, “As soon as the troops were col- | lected and equipped we marched for Shamokin, an Indian towa, the inhabit. | ants of which had been very troublesome to the frontier settlements, We crossed | the Sasquebavna and marched on the | west side thereof until we came opposite | to where the town of Sunbury mow | stands, where we crossed over in bateaux | and I had the hovor of being the first suan that put his foot on the shore at | landing. In building the fort at Shamo- kin, Capt. Levi Trump and myself had | charge of the workmen and after it was finished our battalion remained there mn garrison until the year 1758. In the | summer of 1757 | was nearly taken pris. | oner by the Indians, At about half a | mile distance from the fort stood a large |tree that bore excellent plums in an | oven piece of ground near what is now | called the bloody spring. Lieut. 8. Attler | and myself one day took a walk to thus tree to gather plums; while we were | there a party of Indians lay a short dis | tance from us concealed in the thicket | and bad nearly got between us and the fort, when a soldier belonging to a | Millok guard not far from us came to | the spring to drink, the ludians were in danger of being discovered and in | consequence thereof fired at and killed the soldier, by which means we got off and returned to the fort in much less time than we were coming out,” F.P. Gunn, Gellefonte, Pa. CAMPS FOR | CONSUMPTIVES Free Homes to be Placed at Dis- | posal of the Afflicted. FIRST TRIAL IN CLINTON CO. Tents Will Be Erected—The Common- wealth Will Be at No Expense. | Outdoor Life to Be Encouraged for the Afflicted. The Dauphin County Medical society has invited Forestry Commissioner Roth. rock to talk before it on his proposed scheme for the care of congumptives, and he has accepted, Dr. Rothrock says the scheme contem- plates tke establishment of camps on the reservations of this state | may be the | purpose where persons suffering fiqm various forest which suitably located for consumption and who have not the means to go to California and other places for their health, can spend several months | in the summer, It is probable that the first camp will | be opened on the reservation in Clin. ton county, which has an elevation of 2000 feet above the level of the sea and | is free from consumption because of the purity of the air. This reservation has | an area of 45,000 acres and is adjoined | by two other large reservations. It is,intended to erect big A" tents with permanent foundations and anchor. ages, so that they will not be blown down by the heaviest storms. These tents will have heavy wooden floors and will be placed 15 feet apart. A wooden platform, raised fromthe ground and covered, will extend that the rainy days aloug the front of these tents, so invalids can take exercise on The intention is to allow the people who care to avail themselves of this opportunity to live gut-of-door lives. Dr. Rothrock said that the state will not be asked to contribute one penny to he already has the The patients will be furnish- the enterprise, but that enough money subscribed to cover expenses ed with shelter free of charge, but they will have to make their own cooking arrangements. They will be required to rigidly adhere to the fish and game laws for the preservation of the forests in. cluding precautions in the use ot fi There phin county, this si Te is a forest reservat in Dan ion le of the Lykens val ley which bas an elevation of about 1400 feet, where a camp will be estab! ished if the plan succeeds The ultimate result of the idea is the establishment's of consumptive camps on of be districted for the every healthy forest reservation the state, which would purpose = Kicked By a Horse. Ellis G. Eyer, at his home in Warriors. mark valley, met with a severe accident, last week. He was taking the borses to water, riding one of them, when another of the animals kicked at the one he was Eyer on the left leg the Dyer once before on and struck Mr breaking the large bone between knee and ankle, Mr, had the same leg broken near the same place, - Water Election. At the coming local election, Feb. 19 the citizens of Millheim will vote for or against bonding the for water works to amount of $10,000. This will town | be the fourth time the question of water | | works was submitted. That live town certainly needs something of the kind, | either by the boro or private corporation. - —————— - Altoona Preparing a Welcome. The residents of Altoona are prepar- ng to royally welcome 63 boys who have been fighting in the Philippines for nearly two years with the Forty. third regiment. Mayor Gliva appointed sev. eral committees to prepare for the re- ception. They are expected 10 return in July. - i Appointed by the Governor. Tames Starford, of Philipsburg, has | through it, been appointed by Governor Stone a member of the board to examine appli- cants for mine inspectors of the bitumin. BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY | and trapping game, | culturist i with his | rewarded for their investigations 14, 1901, WANT GAME LAWS CHANGED. | | The many subordinate granges throughout Pennsylvania will petitiun the | governor and the state legislature to give the land owner fuller control over his | own premises with reference to killing It is contended that the land owner should have first right, ! The game seasons being short, the agri- engaged the At parades ofttimes busily 1s work, and consequently “sportsman’’ captures all the game. the same time this “sportsman’’ over the cultivated grounds of the agri. culturist at his own will, and frequently does considerable damage. The memorial asks that hunting on cultivated grounds be made permissable only when written consent 1s given by the owner, Killed a Wildcat. At “Pond Bank,” out in the Barrens, Hunter James Holmes, Jr., and his two dogs ran across some tracks Instantly the dogs followed the trail like a flash to a nearby brush pile and, dashing into { it, began a terrific fight with a wild cat at bay. Mr. Holmes meantime ran to | the other side of the pile to capture the animal if it should flee froma the dogs. Losing in the encounter with the dogs, the cat turned to escape and, with a spring, jumped for Mr. Holmes. The bunter caught it, and with one hand preventing it from scratc hing with its hind claws, with the other he slowly choked the animal to death. He have the pelt mounted Col Times. full ot Voting Machines for $6 Fifteen of machines which the Mevers patent voting are in use in several cities and towns in New York were sold by the city of New York at Port for $6 chines were purchased by the Rich 1 mond the other dav These ma- the old own boards in Westfield, during the wave of ballot towns of Northfield and Richmond county, in 18¢s, reform which the followed charges of fraud at the elections in and chines cost #4 The inventor of this voting machine, 1593 18g4 The ma. 0 each was Hile Meyers mee a live business man of Bellefonte, whom many of the Democrat's readers will remember - Local lostitute The teachers comprising the district of burg and South Phi ipsburg 1 Burn- boroughs, Rush, Suow Shoe and Philipps side townsh hoid and Saturday of this week at Phi Ps, known as distri wi their institute ore hu ro psburyg They have a complete program prepared for the has eminent instructors in attendance occasion and wi ec some while the best local talent will also contribute to the success of the various sessions The Hon Houck, Deputy Superintendent of lustruction, Henry State iS among the list of instructors and will speak on Friday evening on the subject "A Glance Backward.’ Trials without a Jury In the House on Tuesday a bill was introduced authorizing Judges to bear and determine without a jury cases of as- sault, assault and battery, CArrying con. cealed deadly weapons, selling liquor without a license, to minors or on Sun day, keeping a gambling house or place for gambling, malicious cheating a hotel keeper, mischief and or boarding bouse saving to defendents in such cases their constitutional right of trial of jary by means of an election in the nature of an appeal. Senator Heinle, in democratic caucus, spoke against the unfair apportionment bill. etc., . - . Successful Prospectors Lock Haven Democrat : The men who have been prospecting on the Kreamer lands on Scootac creek have been greatly They have already gone through a vein of coal | twenty. seven inches thick. Over a foot | below this vein they struck another vein of coal. They have already gone to a depth of three feet and are still digging The prospectors are of the | opinion that the vein is nearly five feet thick. The coal appears to be of good | quality. After the men get through this EXPANSION IS EXPENSIVE Congress will Appropriate an Im- mense Sum. TAXATION GROWS ALARMING The Consumers are the Taxpayers and Must Bear Burdens Reaping the Reward of Imperial- ism-——$20 per capita. Grievous of the Fifty capi- Probable appropriation sixth Congress, $1 f20 Money States January 1, 500,000,000, pel la circulation in the 1901, $2,173, in per capita, $28.19 This simple statement gives a better the Treasury by the present Congress than idea of the wholesale raiding of a page of figures. It is not exaggerated; indeed, the amount of the appropriations is more likely underestimated, Not since the civil has the war per capita of expenditures been so high, and not since the year 15868, when the effects of the great sectional struggle had not yet been felt at the Treasury, had it been half so high. This is remarkable, but it is the fact that only in three of the four years is also true. More startling still that that great war lasted did the per capita of expenditures exceed the pres. cot amount, and then, with the excep- tion of 1864, only by a few dollars The following shows the per capita of or expenditures different years from 1 to igor; the figures for the last named year being conservately estimated “on 1901 ( Pst The appropriati CTIRTI IR | 2 ms for the fiscal year made by the present Congress at its first $0,562. The regular an. 1902 amount §£7413.474.804 ning these figares the tota for would be Hi of appro- fty-sixth f 25 Hh yriations the Fi Congress ¥ AL" 453 There is a serious side to this startling There lirectly rex announcement is a hidden truth in this that few wi wWniz but the blighting effects w and every hour of immense sum of money must he dd as sure as the sun rises ana is the way it figures who cam ne We has . to pay fis ), 000, $ blind or ignorant and understand, viz 000 population 000 appropriations, or $20 per individua Each male voter in the country, or work ng family of five, that. If be has three, the from the man, represents on the average a reliable statistics prove child, for amounts to $60, taken f labor for ment pu If he four children, the average, total is just 100 per year a wife and lax mcome govern with alarmmog poses is blessed He pays this indirectly in the increased of clothing, drugs, tobaccos, whisky, beer, building He dont it directiy but the government gets it all cost everything he consumes, on groceries, shoes, hardware, materials and such wee the same, and he wonders why he must work so long and hard and have so little left for his labor, This will be felt more in the coming yesr, The cause of all this is first, the foolish and unrighteous war we are waging against the Philippines to seize their coantry. The expensive operations in Cuba and Porto Rico add much to it. The general extravagance at Washing: ton is another growing evil, The policy of expansion, ‘benevolent assimilation’ is the greatest evil of all and these taxes are the direct result. | The people ‘voted for these things last fall and are entitled to have them. Yes, expansion is costly, How do you like it. | —— — The Difference. A boy can sit on a sled six inches ous coal regiocs, to serve for a term of | vein of coal, they expect to find clay a | Mquare, tied to asleigh moving eigh miles four years from March 1, 1901, ———- Not a Big Run. A gentleman who bas come from the up river districts estimates that only about 125 rafts will come down the Sus. quehanna in the spring. Some of the timber that will come down the river will be of the best, Scarcity of Hogs. There is a great scarcity of hogs in | Nittany and Sugar valleys. County butchers are compelled to ship their hogs from the west, This 1s the first time that Clinton county farmers could not supply the demand for bogs. The fellow who lives in an attic sel. dom complains of 100 high living, short distance below, Lock Haven Trolley Deal. The Susquehanna traction railway, | | an hour, but couldn't sit on a sofa for a | dollar, says an exchange. A man will sit on an inch board and talk politics for three hours; put him in a church pew VOL. 23, NO. 7. | FACT, FUN AND FANCY. | Bright Sparkling Paragraphs— Selected and Original, The Man With a Big Mouth. I love the man who knows From Hast to West i ail from North to South, Who ku WH A hing both great and small And t 5 over it--the tele. phone The | s often a man with a his tory Liquor aan her too oftea go logether T »J account The rosy future No, Maude, tune is not When a the cold weather, he shakes one of his many frien society bad to a the feminine of for. misfortune, dear ; this best man OHxes furnace, friends. Tell man meanest know a about the 1 be your friend you know, an will meaner one The billco ting off till On dunned to lector doesn't believe in put. tomorrow what can be day. An Accident. AN ler *, who atten Edward a years of age school, at Romola, the noon hour, u aboul a quarter o ting off, while the s a his head, atling a long in the skull above the temple, while the other calks nearly pierced his ear His escape was certainly remarkable, for had the horse's foot come squarely down on his head at | ’ the high rate of speed at which they were Euing yal have crushed it, - t could not | a Year Railroad company its with the Phila. road yupany for betyeen Keating listan MM forty six 2 the Philade of $60 PADS phia 000 a was el to the proms. tion he make this seg 1 one it line tracke agreed to send its trains over the ’ between these two points - Killed Near Laurelton A ed Wilson B ngaman, son of H Binga- man, of the Laurelton and Pine Creek railroad last Thursday evening 7. Coming from the mountains one of the trucks jumped the Laurelton, Laurelton, was ki on track about a mile above He was thrown under the wheels and He died in a short time from loss of blood. His father was engineer on the train by which he was killed The young man was only 19 vears of age. had a leg crushed —— Williamsport's Oldest Man: William Harris, Williamsport's oldest man, celebrated bis g24 birthday anniver. sary last Sunday and is still hale and bearty. He was born in London in 1818. He rode from Boston to Philadelphia on the first railroad that wasever built, He quit smoking over thirty years ago and pever drank any wiskey., Mr, Harris is able to read now, as he always has done without the aid of glasses, Ancient and Modern Proverbs. "He who knows not, and knows not | that he knows not, is a fool ; teach him, | "He who knows not, and knows that | he knows sot, 1s simple ; teach him, “He that knows and knows not that he | knows, is asleep ; wake him. “But he who knows and knows that he knows, is a wise man; follow him." Arabian Proverbs, State Buys Mountain Land. The State Commission recently pur {chased a tract of land of about 4.000 | | running between Lock Haven and Mill forty minutes and he gets nervous, twists | acres from Dr, P. P. Hyatt. The tract Hall, has again changed hands. Here. | A0d goes (0 sleep. A man will 611 bis | is situated (a Hartley township, Usion after it will be managed by Jacob Scott cheek with filthy tobacco juice until It | county, Armag township, Mifflin county, and C. A. Mayer, of Lock Haven; J, | Tens down his chin and feels good; but a | gud Haines township, Centre eounty. Henry Cochran, of Williamsport, and | W. Bb Given, of Columbia. The line has | been in operation six vears, and hereto | fore was controlled exclusively by out. side capital, » Methodist Conference. The Central Pennsylvania conference | of the Methodist Episcopal church will | be held at Chambersburg, commencing | on March 27th. The conference has over 68,000 members hair in the butter will kill him. Big Fire At Watsontown. The large nail mill plant at Watson. town owned by Godcharles Brothers, was burned to the ground Tuesday eve. ning. The fire is supposed to have been of incendiary origin. Loss about $10,000 partially insured, . ———h An old bachelor says a woman's heart is like a honeycomb-fall of sells, | The land is denuded timber land i - EE as Powder by the Car Load. | It isstated that the tunnels of the new railroad between Clearfield and Karthans | will require 600 car loads of cement and | at least that much powder, ToCuren Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets, All druggists refund the money if it falls to cure. 1K. W. Grove's signature is on each box. asc.