engine. Now it our business men would only take hold and THE TORCH APPLIED. bates ws would MARRIAGE LICENSES For First Week April Term ~Commenclog The Gentve Democrat, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1893, fonued thie Week Docket ablishment here Vellefonte would soon Daring Past Tule A SAD DEATH. DUETOA SHOCK OF LIGHT. | « cnr MeMulle Nagle, | NING pide A, Ens ; Monday April “4 | Walter A, Wood vs J. H. Rishel, THIAL LISY | | : | James Higgins vs Meck and ave i veritable hoom. Is pure water, VALENTINES FURNACE BLAST AGAIN. IN superior iron, near-by igent labor healthy climate, fuel, ed | onable and rey CHAS. R. KURTZ THE RACKET lo Say “My tim2 EDITOR What the People Say and Think, ht on the fly brother was 1 short ago and said s that Rack 1b hou the MDZ & Cit in Spring Creek, near rks. They have some elaborate | building, corner of Jishop streets, 18 being repairs 1st by t a fine line vl will be occupied after April ¢ Graham sisters who will keep 1s. The of millinery goo lo- cation is good. —Jacob Gross has opened up his new tailoring establishment, in the room re. cently vacated by the Snyder sisters, on Bishop street. Hav.oag taken a thorough course in the Cleveland cutting school he guarantees the latest and most stylish garments and a sure fit every time. ~On Wednesday Mr. Brandon began the shipment of hotel furniture from the Brockerhoff House to Spangler, Pa. | lepairs are also being made in the hotel for the new proprietor and new | carpets and new furniture are being re. ceived, ~Miss Myra Holliday and Miss Annie Sechler students, of Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa., are spending their Easter vacation at their homes, this place, Mrs. Holliday is also entertain- ing Miss Virginia Sudler, of Philadel- phia and Miss Clare Stuckey, Dayton, | Ohio, both of whom are students of the same college, — Last Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Reeder very pleasantly entertain. ed the members of the Bellefonte Bar Association and court officials at their residence, on Allegheny street. Judge Sadler, of Carlisle; Senator Peal, of Lock Haven; Hon. Thos. Murray, of Clearfield; J. M, Hale, of Philipsburg, were among those present. ~The Zion Normal and Classical Institute will open on Monday April 17th, The trustees are fortunate in securing the services of Prof. Thomas H. Leinbach, of Lancaster, 1’a., who will conduct the school. Hels a gradu. ate of Franklin & Marshall college and comes highly reccommended, by the faculty, as a teacher of large experience Our friends down at Zion have an eye Lo business and believe in higher educa. tion and we feel assured of the future success of the school. The Spring session will be largely attended. all make it a natural centre re is Let us first make sure of a competing railroad, Fires started on Taesday, by Mary M. Gep kind of manufacture ALL | req i8 plu k and push on the part of business men and capitalists, hart The Faroseos Fine Showing Under the Present Munagement On Tuesday afternoon last, at about | the Valentine relighted for its second blast under the | 2 o'clock, furnace Was | we ean soon hear her hum and boein., Lunatic present management, On such 2cca A man nem | Tylersville, i nigh 1 dered essentinl among furnacemen that the torch lady At the beginning Emily Valentine, Valentine, the the and on Th (any is consi hould beap nis The deceased was O28 LO Insure a success. day of the lirst ! plied by a . ful rox | and had been key onlined tl ran. | blast Miss of Robert treasurer daughter XLy veal me ago we p unfortuna When weretary nd company, oflk Miss Mary I ted theth Ler ol | 3 | Grophart | th Loveland Axe Works Haven Ez +) han 36 he (8 #8 Nn | IT Were xl of 620 days for ¢ D the furnace made 55,7583 of ores wliae Pe gl day repairs or accidents, wring th A or ‘ gross consiaer- ' vons hose destroved by fire tons for 62.476 net of all 1060 000 tons iron. 3 T and will be ich more convenient that bot SRPCPE ¢ cent, the used —more k of axe making than be were from the company’s These and own mines, near Bellefonte. : Thought! Girls mines are excellent condition dd vet : 3 ’ y turning out } » and better ore today . 4 R A { SIGETAM and their } mock while than at istory, | Pt cal ‘ y free from nt of Mj One the head of mining department. This [snugly seated in a si spirited horse, the barmness broke, and any prior time 3 evenmg recently buest : igh drawn by a under the excellent managems Harry ( company’s fact is evinced by the company’ the mun and his Valentine ‘ house, which is better filled today, | being pretty far from home and nothing to fix it the young lady produced one of | after the hardest years, than when the company on its first blast. who Another gratifying feature js the re. |} { port being sent out by the company to | its trade, that not a ton of iron is now on hand; that the 62.476 have been shipped and sold; that most of their best brands are sold ahead for 4 or tite nt | from Renovo shops. The engine was weeks; that they are likely to be crowded | 3 y sent to the shops a few months ago to ahead for months to come, and that the | ’ : be rebuilt and was turned out with all | reputation of their iron is such that | : nts : the latest improvements The engine | they not only demand but receive the | : ¢ is to be used on the road leading to highest price the market commands, J ‘ " R I Valentine's Iron Works near this place. winter experienced for started immediately repaired the broken mrness and they happily proceeded on. ward, As Good as New, whole tons Nittany Valley railroad engine, No. Friday afternoon }, passed eastward Its | widely scallered points as Baltimore, Pittsburg, Phila delphia, Reading and Easton in Penn. | spivania; Elmira, Auburn, Troy and | Albany, N.Y. and New England as of the excellent satisfaction given. {trade covers such Death of David Zeigler | | : . On all sides the company is assured David Zeigler died on Friday morn. {ing at Lock Haven and was buried Sunday afternoon. He was 64 years, 11 month and 23days old; leaves a wife, four | far north as the north-eastern corner of | 008 and Wo daughters, he decensed y . | was born and mised in BrushValley, Massachusetts. : , fasachu ‘ | where many of his relatives still reside. Much of the success attained by the | recent management of this plant is | {justly due toJ. W. Gephart, Esq., the | If you expect to change your place of | President of the corporation. His i residence this spring be sure to inform practical business methods and constant this office by card; being sure to give oversight has clearly demonstrated that | your former address as well as the new iron can be manufactured at Bellefonte, | one. Attend to this and your of a superior quality, and that will com- | will reach you regularly. pete with any other product in the | markets, Want Waterworks, This should be, and is, a matter of Afterdrinking wellwater for over a local pride. Many of the concerns to | century, the citizens of Millheim, Pa., Notice to Sabseribers : : to 500 men in each of their establish. | ter works for their town, ments to work it up into anything from | council has the matter under advise | a chair castor up 10 a 1000 horse power ment, for the best E. E vi Oscar Duck, estate, Harry Vanpool va I). W. Holt. Dr. J. G. Hartswick vs L. T. Munson, Adm'r. J. R, Bible, vs Elmira J. Decker. and then all pu hh and pull together and her garters and handed it to her escort ! paper | whom this iron is sold employ from 100 | are thinking of building a system of wa- | The boro | J. G. Fehl vs W. T. M¢ yer. James Higgins vs Meek and Nagle, J. QO. M'Cormick vs W., K. Ales H. P. Bitner v Lock Haven Vorg Hams art, principal of the 4 institute. Butler nglon mmstitut The ceremony bride’s father, assis Rev. W. F. Butler county, their futur bride is well acquainted there, having formerly been a teacher in the tion of which her husband is principal, Midnight Fire. all its contents, The family at home and nothing was saved, had been fire in a stove during the day but the stove and pipe were taken down | and sparks from the chimney flue may have the conflagration. The building was owned by 8S. M., Buck, on | which there and #00 on the contents, caused was 8500 insurance, Married Sunday Evening A quiet wedding was solemnized at the East Main street M. E. parsonage Lock Haven, Sunday night, the con- tracting parties being Mr. Warren Em- ery, of Dunnstown, and Miss Rebecca | | Irvin, of Julian, Centre county. The ceremony was performed by Rev, N. H. Schenck Get Ready for Arbor Day The Governor has given due force and effect to the tree-planting law for the current year by designating April 15 [ and 20 as arbor days the two dates being | necessary to make the proclamation pra. tically applicable to the northern and southern sections of the State, : i Death of Mrs, Passmore Mrs. Alice, wife of James Passmore, proprietor of the Passmore House, Phil. ipsburg, died there on Monday morning. She had been ill for some time past. The funeral occurred on Wednesday. ' Her age was 57 years, ander, | institu- | were not | There | Causes Menial Derangement of Hi m, Grove of Mileshurg A Vall from a Win dow Causes Death On Sunday evenl number of Bellefon or gan digging garden on | Tuesday, along the hills. Rathe wra house April : : of admisssion will | charged. ~The Orpheus orchestra will give a | public dance, Bush's Monday evening, April | will be a large attendance. The of light dress goods Henrietts, Goods, Tricots, Ginghams, Suras, ete. Lyox & Co. Arcade, ard in on The house occupied by Frank Garret | snd family, near Bush's Addition, was | destoyed by fire last Friday night with | greatest line spring Serges, This Thursday afternoon the Easter f the Bellefonte High | School will take place in the brick | building. The exercises will be con. | ducted « hiefly by members of the grad. rhetoricals « | uating class If Bellefonte should pick up a | genuine “boom” this comming sum. mer, don’t be surprised. There are | movements on foot that are of consider. able importance to ou ty. town’s prosperi. The Bellefonte band meets regularly {on Thursday night of each week in | Bushs Arcade. At present there are twenty five instruments in the organiza. | tion nearly all of whom are experienced players. woaeer the direction of Prof. | Spangenberg they are progressing rapid. | ly und will soon make a public Appear. | ance. ~During the past week two bum pud dlers, pretending to be from Scranton and on their way to Hastings, Pa. have been beating our people by a pitiful story for begging money. They collect. ed considerable and then blew it in for rum. Don’t waste any charity on them; they are beats, ~Silkaline Curtain Lace, ete. Lyox & Co, There | i White | { Wm. Ha { Emma BR. ; D. Craft ! Lizzie Luca § Edward 8 ! Hattie § { Charles Homer, tardo 5 sLOovier / i Bellefonte Grain Market. Corre Wi Red Kye Cost Lorn, | Oats—new per bushe | Barley, per bushe { Buckwheat | Cloverseed per bushel Ground plaster, perton ted weekly by Geo. W. Jackson &( te wheat wheat, per bushe bushel per bushe per CATS § per bushe shelle a per Jer bushe PROVISIONS, GROCERIES &C. | weekly by Bower & Co Apples dried. perpound | Cherriesdried per pound. seeded Beans per quart Onions, per bushel Butter, per pound .... Tallow, per pound Country Shoulders Nides {as corrected Hams Hams sugar cured | Breakfast Bacon Lard, per pound Eggs per Sor. n Potatoes per bushel DriedSweet Corn per pound... GARMANS. Body Brussells A xminsters quetts, Tapestrys The finest town. assortment of carpets in Dress goods, all the late fabrics— gimps and braids, linens and sheeting. Golden gloss, Haynes wood gloss, fine writing papers, The handsomest carpets in town GARMANS.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers