The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 22, 1888, Image 5

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    SIORM-SWEPT
New York, Pennsylvania, New
Jersey and New England
PRACTICALLY SHUT OUT FROM THE
WORLD FOR FOUR DAYS.
The Worst Storm Known in the
Country's History,
ALL RAILROAD TRAVEL AND TELE.
GRAPH COMMUNICATION CUT OFF.
Nemarkable Scenes In the Streets of New
York--All Business Suspended-—-The City
Threatened With Faomlone--Intense Saf.
fering Everywhere Disastors on the
Coast — Graphic Pen Flotures of the
Wiered Secene—Removing the Blockade.
New York, March 16 —Never in the city’s
history has New York passed through such
a fearful baptismal of
whirling, seething sea of snow, an unspent
the very furies loos-
the elements-—a
whi itened hurricane,
ene i to madly beat and submerge the popu-
lace of the great motr polis
For four days New York has been prac
tically cut off from the world
For four days New York has slept "neath
snow banks almost insurmountable to
human effort.
The st which began on Sunday last in
& cold, ling rain, changed to snow Sun-
day midnight, and an hour later, a hurri-
cane arose and when on Monday morning
Haylight dawned, the scene ark-
bble beyond any winter sight remembered
by the people. City Hall Park presented a
wiered scone never 10 be The
wind howled, whistled, roared and moaned
as it rushed along in maddening glee, filling
the air with sheets of snow. Bnow diifts
blocked the streets and to move horse cars
or vehicles of any kind was not within the
range of possibilities; only here and there
A wagon was to be seen, only here and
there a feebly moving man.
The Snow's Pranks,
orm
driz
Was rem
forgotten.
lescended in layers, it came in
Is, rose and fell and corkscrewed and
zigrag ged and played with every-
thing exposed to its fury
What a sto ! What
winnlineg 6 us
orippiiao i ANA &
'
Huma
ble
slantly
upc
havoe
a day! What a
was almost impossi-
ventured out were con-
hrown against each other and fell
or inthe great snow
Everywhere horse cars
and were lying
sireets,
banks,
were abandoned
upon heir sides in the
, The elevated roads were cripple
the day, and before noon all
donned.
Cabmen were demanding fancy prices for
their services. As high as 830 was paid
48r a cab from City Hall to Central
Park, and vet to start upon s
was perilous alike to the life o
hanst.
early in
were aban
ars
ich a irney
and
So ammzing, 80 unprecedented was the
situation that 3 o'clock in the aftern
the only vehicles in Printing
were two abandoned horse cars covered
with sleet stuck ho wwaeless in the snow,
The only human beings to be seen were a
seman and three boys on ti
oon
iat pol
: ;
Wale
’
Uoathina
Clothing,
18 side
is seldom
Men
enormous
like of which
in town, was brought
fn quaint caps, in
some looking like theatrical
vast coats of cloth, rubber, canvass, fur,
pilskin, sou'westers, Indian moccasins
jogs tied at the bottom with twine- every.
thing that keep out the
weather was to be found on the people in
the street.
the sean
appeared
hich .
high boots,
properties, in
out
IK
hing, any could
A Lifeless City,
The
wires were down
but hanging in
coated with sleet, the
scone
wh £.
When d
the fury
more and
stroets
at
busiest wore lifeless,
last-not subwayed,
The houses were
general tone of every
was whites, motion was
the general sound was roaring
18k came there was no abatement
of the biizzard It howled
more loudly, accentuated by the
absence of all distracting
tatters,
the general
of
darkness and
sounds
at least one day with a Western blizzard.
At [ast weather had been felt the like of
which no old inhabitant ventured to say he
had ever seen in the neighborhood. The
eity went into its gas-lighted rooms and its
heated houses, and its parlors and beds
tired, wet, helpless and full of amazement.
The mail service of the city succumbed
to the storm early in the day. The em-
ployes cams to their posts pretty promptly,
but the carriers went out almost empty-
handed, as the railway mail service was
about paralyzed. Bupt Jackson, of the
railway mail service, said that ali his
means of obtaining information was cut off.
What little mail was brought in by the col-
Jectors and from sub-stations during the
morning was dispatohed from the general
office.
But no afternoon mails were gotten out,
Of forty out-of-town mails due, four of them
came in.
Railroad travel was compietely blocked
and all telography was suspended.
, New York could not hear from the out
side world, save by way of the Atlantie
New York.
A Fatal Accident.
’ There was no business. Few houses save
porner groceries, were opened during the
day. Everybody made an effort to get to
his place of business, and many kept up
tha struggle to get down town until in the
afternoon, when, finding their ¢ forts fu
tile, turned back home.
During Monday night, East River became
blocked with ice, and Tuesday morning,
before the ioe was broken by steam tugs, a
thousand people wallkted over on it from
‘Brooklyn to New York.
Everywhere snow laid two feet deep on
the level, and in the streets it was drifted
the lower windows of the residences.
of any consequence, and that was a depilo-
rable one. A rear end collision occurred
on the Third Avenue Elevated Road, kill
ing one engineer, fatally injuring the fire.
man, and seriously injuring nearly a dozen
passengers. The struggle to get down
Town was 80 great, that the few trains that
ran early in the morning were
ducked with bool, PB J erie
train weighted down with people, stalled,
The snow was blinding. The rear plat
form was crowdad., Without a moment's
warning, a train of four cars, drawn by
two engines, came dashing into it. I
wrought fearful havoe Every person
who was on the rear platform was either
seriously bruised or sustained broken
bones. That none of them were killed out.
right was a miracle. The engineer of the
wild train, Samuel Towle, was caught be.
tween the heavy irons of his engine and
truck and crushed to death.
Rrookiyn and Jersey City.
The scenes in Brooklyn were even worse
than n New York. With only one ele
vated road, travel there was totally sus.
pended.
Cit
Jersey Central
Jersey vas practically lost. At the
Ferry house, on the Now
Tuesday morning, the notice
was posted: “All trains abandoned."
“Fifty trains are on the roads some
where, blockaded, and the Lord knows
where,” remarked a railroad man.
All night long a ball, with harmonicas
for was kept up by delayed
passengers in the Pennsylvania depot in
Jersey City,
During Monday night the snow ceased to
but the temperature grew eolder, and
Tuesday morning was but
little improved. Tho streets of the great
cities were littered with abandoned
vehicles of every discription—many of
them leaded with provisions or goods of
some kind, and left just where the poor
beasts drawing them stalled and could go
no further. Hardly a block in the city but
had upon it a load of meat, or beer, or coal,
or groceries, stuck half way up its sides in
side,
music,
these vehicles still remain and will remain
for two or three days to come.
The Shovelers at Work.
On Tuesday thousands of Italians wers
put to work shoveling snow- throwing it
from the sidewalks and from the
centre of the street on lower Broadway.
This made the streets passable to pedes-
trians,
On Wednesday most of the surface rail.
ways had armies of shovelers at work un-
covering their tracks, and by Wednesday
noon, the Fourth Avenue line had the upper
part of its track cleared and cars began
to run.
Removing the snow from the sidewalk
banked it so high that peoples standing
upon opposite sides of the streets were
not visible to each other.
With the snow removed from the oar
tracks in the middle of the stredts, two
great snow mountain ridges are left along
either side of the street, and the sight isa
novel one.
A Famine Threatened,
here has been the greatest apprshen-
the
visitation of the elements only
serves to strongly illustrate how entirely
New York lives
Almost any Western city is prepared to be
locked up at any time for a month, When
New York has been hemmed in for two
days, the cry at once goes up of umiversal
suffering, of famine; po milk, bread, meat
nor coal. People buy coal by the pail or
bushel; meat by the half pound and bread
by the loaf, or flour by the five cents’
worth. If aman asks for a dollar's worth
of flour, the grocer Slope and looks at him;
or if hie tells the ¢ nhe wants a ton
of coal, the coal man ows at ence his cus-
tomer is engaged in some large business
nd has a big bank account
The grocer turns over his stock of many
articles of food daily, and a storm that
stops his supply two days, precipitates a
famine among his customers,
ma
An Original Genius
On Wednesday an original
a fire on the big drifts before his store, and
all over the
ample was quickly followed. The sir was
full of brown smoke aml the appetizing
oder of bonfires. The method was unique
and interesting. A hole was excavated in
the drift of abou t the capacity of a oubic
yard. From the top of this to the top of
the drift a funnel was made te secure venti
lation. Then trenches were dug at the
The hole was filled with
pack
right merrily, asd the interior of the drifts
wore speedily toasted at least they looked
toasted, for the cinders and smeke dis
colored the anow to a dark brown, and
time passed the drifts gradually melted
away This artificial thaw caused no
serious discomfort to pedestrians, and it
livery of goods at the many stores where it
was employed.
Perished in the Storm.
Almost hourly reports are coming in
resulting from the storm. Itis feared that
over twenty lives have been lost in Essex
County, N. J., alone. The foliowing are
known to have perished:
Xavier Zwinge, Livingston.
John Murphy, Newark,
John Boyer, Brookdale.
Unknown man, called “Crazy Fisher
man," Newark.
Unknown man, Newark.
John Horan, Battle Row, Orange.
Unknown man Irvington.
One man and two children, Hackensack.
Alexander Bennett, Staten Island.
Staten Island.
Unknown man, Beanett's brother-in-law,
Staten Island.
Three milkmen, Orange.
The following are missing:
John Alamy, Harrison,
Theodore Schmeffer, Newark.
Bon of Nathan Grotta, Newark.
Heury Bonner, Elizabeth.
James Kelly, Elizabeth,
Two Employes, Elizabeth Oil Works.
A few trains were moved Wednesday
morning bus they were only local. Newark,
Patterson and Jamaica were reached with
much difficulty.
Starting the Malls.
On Wednesday mail pouches for the
and 240 sacks were started out over the
Pennsylvania Road in the hope that they
would eventually get through. A Bound
Brook train, the first to arrive, came over
the Central Ratlroad of New J In the
afternoon the Western Union
secured the first direct communication for
three days with rong; Pittsburg and
Cincinnati, Messages to Philadelphia and
Washington were sent to one of these
points and there repeated,
Blockaded Pamenger Trains.
Yesterday tho Erie posted the following
notice in its Jersey City depot:
Sty and
City
We expect soon to commence
picaunger tas trains between Jersey
further later in the
day. Also expect soon to start train over
Northern road of New Jersey.
Every railroad in New York and New
trains loaded with psssengers blockaded
by snow drifts between stations, and in
many instances the suffering for want of
fuel and food has been great. in many
cases there were no farm houses within a
mile or more of the unfortunate passcugors
and when such farm houses were reached,
there were few of them prepared to feed a
hundred or more people for one meal much
lesa for soveoral days.
oT THER POINTS.
Snflfering In the East, Now York, New Jer-
sey and Pennsylvania General.
been the greatostsuffering
Numerous reports come
but the extent of the
damage, or the loss to life caanot
be known for some days. The entire coast
from Maine to Lewes, Del, and even bolow
that has suffered.
New Haven, Conn, has suffered greatly
from the storm. In New Haven thers
were reported up to Thursday seven deaths
from exposure. They occurred on the out
lying streets of the city, and the victims
were all working people, Three girls ems.
ployed in the Le Candee Rubber Company
lost their lives in the large drifts on St
John strect. They left the Candee shop
during the heaviest part of the storm, and
thoir bodies were taken into house near
by. The Grand avenue precinct reported
that one of the policemen connccted with
the station had found a dead body It
proved to be that of Michasl Haggorty, of
25 James street, Fair Haven Another
man was found frozen todeath early on
Tuesday morning on Lincoln His
body has not been identified
A Hartford, special says the aver
age depth of snow there is three feet and
some drifts are fifteen feot high. Nota
whee! is movi ng on any ralir and basi
ness throughout that section is comple
prostrated,
A dispatch fom Meridan says the bl
ade is still comple At Holt's Hill “wo
passenger trains = und f or New York are
snowed in with 180 passengers, and farm.
ors are trying to feed them
A telephone message from Danbury says
that the hat girls all stayed in the shops on
Monday and Tuesday nights, The few who
attempted to go home went through a
siege. Many did not reach home, but, weak
and exhausted, were obliged to ask for
shelter along the way. Not atrain is run.
ping. Several buildings have been crushed
by the snow.
Reports from all points nn Eastern New
York bring the same news-—iravel sus.
pended and business paralyzed
At Albany,
A despatch from Albany says:
“Not a horse car ran in the city yester.
day, and sleighs succeeded In gelling
through only three or four of the wider
down town streets. All the rest
solutely impassable, except for ped
trians, and they had to wade through deep
Business was at a standstill, and
many stores did not open. The public
schools were closed. Neither branch of the
Legisiature met yesterday, as not enough
members to form a quorum succeedsd in
getting into the city. Such a state of affairs
has never before been known The
Hudson River road is so badly blockadsd
that officials hardly expect get a train
here from New York before Thursday i
trains on the Delaware and Hudson ure
abandoned. The same is true of the Boston
and Albany. All communication with Troy
and Cohoes is cut off. Last evening a Chi
CALS aX prosa, due hate on M y after.
noon, succeeded it ng the city
Bhe had lain about twe rd four hours near
Schenectady, and several trains blockaded
at the same point | and at mid.
night two more
A trap was seat Wes
be
There has
along the coast,
of vessels wrecked,
human
siroet.
Conn,
ofl,
IT
oly
ock-
were ab
£8
hare,
10
§ %
in unio
ywed her,
Buffalo expresses came no
ing the even
Jarier is
now prag tically open
In Penmaylvania
A dispatch from Heading, Pa, says:
“Trains south of here
aded since Bunday night
snow bound between here and Bridgeport,
is expocied that they re.
The Esst Pennsylvania
is entirely blocked, as is
Schuylkill and Lehigh Branch Ralilr
The bridge at Albany station, on the Lainesr
Branch, was entirely demolished by the
storm. Beveral wrecks are reported on
the Reading asd Columbia Branch. De
from Alleatown, Bethlehem,
Mauch Chunk, Easton, Shamokin, Potts.
ville, York and Lancaster report the
storm as unusually severe. The trains are
snow bound in all directions, and telegraph
wires are all down. The snow drifts are
from six to fifteen feet deep throughout
Lebanon, Dauphin, Lehigh, Bucks, Chester
and Berws counties
“The snow blockade on the Pocono Mous-
tains is so severe that no trains will be run
over the Delaware, Lackawanna and West
erp Railroad to New York before the end
of the week In some places botwean
Moscow and Cresco the tracks are covered
to a depth of twenty-five feet. No trains
can be sent over the Jefferson Branch of
the Erie road north of Carbondale for sev.
eral days, and the blockade on the Dele
ware and Hudson gravity road to Hones
dale will sot be opensd until next week
Not a single colliery in Lackawanna or Wy.
oming Valley are in operation.”
A Binghamton dispatch says: “Not a
train has arrived in this city from New
York since Monday at 3am. The Laocka-
wanna has three express trains stuck fast
on the top of Pocono Mountain, with little
hope of release before to-morrow, and the
Erie is digging out its tracks along the
Delsware and moving trains very slowly.
The trains are running on good time be.
tween Busquehanna and Buffalo, all the
trouble being east of Busquehanna.”
Trexrow, N. J., March 16 The first train
from New York since Sunday arrived at §
yesterday afternoon. The Legislature will
try to get a quorum to-day.
have boon block.
Fifteen trains are
but it will be
leased
Branch
to-day
the
ad
DISASTERS OFF LEWES, DEL,
Many Yessels Wrecked and Several Lives
Lost-Sehooners Ashore.
Pritavrrenia, March 16, - Capt. Handy
Holt of the steam Tag George G. Simpson
arrived in this city from Delaware Break.
water late Wednesday. His boat was sunk
in the storm on Bunday night, and it had
been reported that the Captain, his wife,
sud the crew had been drowned, He had
bis head bandaged, and was badly out
about the face and was suffering from
his terrible exposure,
“On Bunday night,” sald he, “the steam
tug Lizzie Crawford, the wrecking tugs
Tamesi and the George (0. Bimpson were
tied up to the steamboat pier at the Break
water. Atlabout 11 o'clock the wind began
to blow hird from the northwest and the
rain fell In torrents. Suddenly it shifted
to the southwest und blew a hurricane.
dock The nen all rushiod on deck, and the
fireman of the Crawiord fell overboard
The engineer immiviintely jutnped into the
water Lo save bim. Poth men worse thrown
on the beach by ‘he waves and saved.
The Crawford was loll without sueineer
or firecinan, and Capt Kane headed his boat
for the beach, A big wave siruck her
before she could be turned, aud she was
swamped. The Captain and the rest of the
crow were washed ashore.
“When the Crawford went through the
pier we. slipped lines and started to
back out. Our decks were filisd with tim-
bers from the pier, and we were leaking
badly Veo backed away ar and
let go one of our anchors and thirty fath.
oms of «hain, but we were tossed about,
and kept drifting toward the pler,
which was a mile away kept the
our
from the p
sione
We
BEWARDED are thos
will bot take them from thelr homes
Hes, The profits are large and sure for every in
dustrious person many have made snd are now
makivg several huodesd dollars a month, 144
easy for nuy OUo Ww mi ke 8 and upwards per d
ing
oid, ca pital not HH UL
new No special abil iy required; you
can do it ax well ss any one. Write to us
for full particulars, which we mail fre
Btinson & Co,, Portland, Main
rE PENNBYLVANIA BTATE COLLEGE
; we start you
LOCATED IN ONE OF THE
FUL AND HEALTHFUL
ALLEGHERY REGION; U
TIONAL: OPEN TO BOTH BEX EZ,
TUITION FREE BOARD AND
OTHER EXPENHES VERY
MORT
BPO
BEAU]
TH}
NDE NOMINA
pumps at work, bul the water gained on
us, Then one of the pipes burst,
and the pump would work any longer, |
The sea was running high,
though there was no hope for us
Protector was lying at
stone plor We drifted toward her
Capt. Mimford shouted tous to t
8 line. It was a
Protector, and Capt
but it was the only
lives A line was throw
made fast the starboard
Holl was the first to get off.
chan iped to the deck
tector, and was oa
Mimford and
and the deck
landed safely
higher, and
renning as
story house
ing, and that's all 1
came to nyself |
and all were ru
to force medicl:
glean
nol
and it looked as |
The tug |
anchor vear the
'
arow
dangerous thing for
Mimforl knew
chanoe we had for our
it was
Mrs. |
Watching her
of the Pro-|
in the arms of Capit. |
Mr. Robinson
3
wod her, id
nto him and
to side,
Ȣ she jun
ight
# +1 sn ear
hand ds follo
The waves kspt
when 1 mped they
] ns fn
remember
do remember
was
hands bbing me, an
ie down my thsoat
fallen to the deck, and str Emmy
one of the stanchions, and cu
Everybody except my wife 1h
dead, and they tell me 1 was
for half an When
sonsos the Bimmpson was at
the
1¢
K
he
aour
bay In six fathoms of
w hen
were lan
decks had been washed aw
storm abated on Tuesday we
al the iron pler, and walked two
lewes. We had been
tha town went wild over
found that wo were safe
“After we landed | had
what the storm had
were washed ashore and
are in the hospital with fro
schooners were
ashore alo
lying inside of the stor
of distress fiying. The steamboat
torn away, and beach is
wreckage, The tug Protect
the Captain and crew of
with sugar, and set them ashe
As nearas Capt. Holt «
the names of the
larks Zo
Flora A. New
Wall, Index
Thomas, William
Izabella, All
Mason, E
boat Turley
and the tug
son, at
the
4
dod
Hiiies
ost
when
reported
us
and
they
& chanoe
Three
twenty
10 ace
done bodies
seven men
gon limbs 1
twenty
and
5 0
a |
_—
are
ty-five are;
Lies Ww th signals
Suny, Vesna.
wer
ng the beach
pier was
the strewn with
ras
wn sche
She Tried and Knows.
A leading chemist of New York
says: “ No plasters of such merit aa
the Ath-lo-pho-ros Plasters have ever
before been prodneced.” They are
8 novelty because they are pot Mr
simply to sell cheap, they are the
best that science, skill and mone
can produce, and will do what is
claimed for them. For sprains,
aches, weakness, lameness, ete,
they are unequaled.
© Fulton Bt. Sandusky. 0. Nov. 11,1.
Athena Pacis acted ike
ih is the beet | over tried and 1
vo used many kinds Our droswiet
nid “plasters are all shout the same but
1 dont think so now I eprained my arm
sod shoulder fu July, and it has teen
painful soos, but it t Bot pain the st
all pow Mrs Wriiss Masris.
89 Bend 6 cents for the beautiful colored plo
ture, “ Moorish Maiden.”
THE ATHLOPHOROS CO. 112 Wali St. NX. T.
WALL PAPER :
WINDOW SHADES AND
FIXTURES.
Painting and Paper Hanging
A SPECIALTY AT
S. H. Williams,
46 High Street,
Bellefonte, Penna.
We have the Largest Stock
of Wall Paper ever brought
to Bellefonte, at prices lower
than ever before.
BROWN BACKS 7%e, WHITE BACKS 120,
PATENT BACKS 10c, WHITE BACKS 12¢,
BATINS and MICAS 1%, GOLD from 15 to &c.
Embossed Golds and Flocks from 45 cents to
$1.95 per piece.
COLOR BORDERE--4 band 12¢, 5 band 15 cents,
4 band 25 cents, 8 band 35 cents, 2 hand 45 cents,
1 band 75 cents.
GOLD EMBOSSED BORDERS-S band 25 conta,
4 band 35 cents, 8 band 45 cents, 2 band 75 cents,
1 band $1.00 to $2.50,
Ee
SPECIAL FTRICES FoR FU RNISHING |
APER ON THE WALL.
re w— rere TAPER Era EE att td
We have ‘good Painters and Paper
Hangers constantly in onr em.
ploy. Are to execute
work on short notice and in a
workmanlike manner,
Call and examine our stock Tele:
phone Connection,
IDES HIDES |
hest cash market
rall kinds ut tides) hides
ter,at Oentre Hall station
AS. N LEITZEL
0st AUCTIONEER =—0
Spring Mills, Pa.
years experience.
guaran.
os admins otior
LEADING DE}
1. AGRICULTURE (7
CULTURAL CHEM]
lustrations on
tory
BOTARY and
eal and practices
i
study with th
CHEMISTRY
thorough
CIVIL
practice w
HisTORY: /
nal i
LADIES
RCILENCE:
Music,
ANGE
{opt one!
qui red
thie
“Con 2 ¥
Two ye
YOUR! and 3
AG E and
} French,
One or more o0
entire course
MATHEMATICS and
and appli el
MECHANI
with # My, t
pl ev
ARTS
three years’ «
pment
add ross
GRO
Lion
MUSICAL COLLEGE,
The 33rd Session opens Monday ever
ing, April 30, for the Teaching in Vc
and Instramental Mr asic, Address,
. Moyzs, Director,
6k. Freeburegh,
Nv IS THE TIMETO BUY
—GHTTITS —
Pa
Little Bree
I am now al
competitor's price,
The Hunting Public is respe
quested t land examine
arriv
tia
} C8
is now ing.
AGENT FOR VAN CAMPEN'E COMPO!
IYNAMI
THEODORE DI
ral Gun
CARS WIiTI
nt
CiRcn,
VIA THE IRON MOUNTAIN
Leave St, Lous at 8
THE ONLY LINE
Great Cent
Louis to Los An gelea and San Fran
ROUTH
Daily.
DOES IT
ip
THAT
m.,
ALVIN F. SOLT,
Tailor
Centre
{Merchant
— 0
Hall, Pa.
I hereby announce to the public that I
opened a Merchant Tai
tablishment in
0 ISHIRK'S BUILDING{~—0
at Centre Hall, and am prepared to at-
ine of
business, Having taken a complete
course in cutting, [I feel confident that
A good
fit guaranteed 1n every case, Give me a
call and examine my work. tf.
Also, Agent for Lewandos French Dye-
ing and Cleassing establishments.
Have a fine line of Spring and Sam.
mer r Samples.
GRAIN.
REPORTED WEEKLY BY KURTZ & BON,
Prices subject to fluctuations of market,
Wheat, red $ 5 Oats.
Wheat, white . Ni Rye. w——
Corn, shelled. eB Barley, No. i.
Batley No, > mixed with oats, bought al ons
weight and price,
Wheat mixed with Rya bought st rye weigh
and price.
FLOUR AND FEED,
Fancy Pat. Flour. 1 45 Bran per ton.
Best Roller Far, $135 Bran, retail owl. 100
2d Best Rol'r Flour 1 25 Chop per on 22 00
Middlings per ton. 2 00 = retail per owt 12
COAL MARKET,
JE
« $5.00
. B50
5.9
8795
bho
jo.
WOOAIANM...cvcre.onnreceeecarsr 40
sinner sree. TD
BA discount on all above prices will be made
farSPOT Cash,
KURTZ & BON
be ssosugvavunns
LOHR.
CENTRE HAL]
{Covenant Mutnal
Galesburg, I
¢
PA., AGENT FOR
jenefit | sociation, of
pecial agent for the
Centre, Clearfield, Mifflin
tinedon, Th h., i8 sirictiy for
Hows and their wives
¢ i 1 i. C6. 0
: insur
5 A% pg oth er agent
hide]
Bell
corner
efonte, Pa.
Dizmond,
bank,
Office N, W.
| doors from first national
two
BARKING OG.,
BEIILEPONT
ow lnterost
na Bel Goverm
Buy at
FENN'A
ve Deposits and
Discount Noes agent
Tp
BEAVER J. D.
President (
BLUGERT
is
Breer
fori h
Hotels.
«| gun iosse.
{fonte, Pa. Bpec inl
er, proprietor, Bellies
attention given to
junel by
SE
oa,
RELLEVOXTE, PA.
EMANUEL BROWN, Pr pristor
find
The trave will
in
Hote] County
and
beast,
a trial
commu
equal to any in the
respect, for man and
moderate. Giveit
ing
His
harges very
Boalsburg, Pa
He has been
nd offers his ser-
tf
iy
OR
sneeessin
vices 1o
al, (FF TRE HALL HOTE L.
D.J. MEYER,
FOR BUMMER BOARDE
——
Prop'r.
VERS AND TRANSIENT
1
aithy locality, pure
surrounded by finest
in the state. Bchools
Terms very
16ang tf
Good Ta
mountain water,
natural scenery
harches ont
reasonable,
ble,
réw i wat,
Free
N
I RVIN HOUSE,
LOCK
8. WOODS CAL:
Terms reasonable,
wn first floor,
NEW GARMAN HOUSE,
a
opps wite the Conrt Honse,
BELLE} ONTE, PA.
Pr pric tor,
wood sample roms
Centre Hall
Office
tion
in
in ail
on, Ether ad-
l4apr
gireet
res de: Oo, Wi
nrapnches of his
ministered
D R.S
professio
give satisiac
orofessio
:
G GUTE
Dentist, M
nal services
prepared to perform
lental profession He is » fully
vared to extract teeth sbso ,
pain.
LLIUS. —
Offers his
blic. He is
in the
pre-
lutely withon
my 2978
. Braxoren C. P. Hews
gr ANGLER & HEWES
ATTTORNEYS AT-LAW,
BELLEFONTE. CENTRE 00... PERNA,
Special attention practice in al
the courts German and English
0 ™~ CLIOTs
Consultation
OHN KLINE,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, BELLEFONTE, PA
Office on second floor of Fursts new
building north of Court House, Can be
consulted in Eagten or German. 7m’yS4
1. HL ORY C. MM, BOWER, E. L ORVIS,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
BELLEFONTE, PA
Office opposite the Court House, on 2d
floor of Furst’s building. jan85
TNEY,
F. FORT
Attorney al law,
Office in old Conard building, Belle
fonte.
K. HOY, D.
« OCULI IST AND AURIST,
Office No. 4 South Spring Street, Belle
fonte, Pa.
Office Hours, 7to 9a. m., 1 102, and
8 p.m. 1imay4m
S. A. LIST,
LEWISBURG BOOK BINDERY,
All kinds of bloding, at reasonable rates, New,
papers, magazines, pamphlets, ste, bound and re
bound in first class style. 1083m
oan BIBLE,
~——ATTORNEY AT LAW
Bellefonte, Centre Co, Pa.
Office in Conrad building, iat
Brockerhoff House.
ou Are You whip 8