The entree Bewoerai, THURSDAY, NOV. 2, 18988. CHAS. R. KURTZ EDITOR WE HAVE THEM. An immense line of Ladies and Misses Coats and Wraps, Just received a new stock of the latest designs and natterns, You are invited to come and see them. At the same time line of all kinds of dress goods. low prices are the greatest induce. ments, dan of we keep a complete Our LYON & 0 LOCAL DEPARTMENT. ~Wm J. Singer, Esq.,is attending the closing of the World's Fair this week. ~-The residence of Hon, J. H. Orvis, is being imyroved be the addition of a handsome porch. —On Sunday afternoon we had the first snow squall of the The weather has been quite cold and chilly SEASON. since then. -A political meeting was held in the court house on Sunday afternoon. A number of prohibitionists were disgusted with the affair. —Henry Kreider of Wolfs student at Franklin & Marshall ¢ is lying ill atLa Pa., of typhord fever. ~—C. M. Dale, Esq., has purchas residenc dangerously John Cooke a6 on and will few repairs can be made, street occupy it ¢ —(vide Musin, the famous violinis will be at the opera house on Thursday ¢ evening. This company is composed of artists and will be worth seeing. -Mr. A. W. St, Clements chu Goodwin. a ganist of phia, will preside over the new or the Episcopal church ual run durin inting the official and = leb i in Centre county at the con -—That brick crossing on the diamond causes a great deal of comment. The curbing in a number of places has sunk | n On and so have the brick heavy hauling. —A span of the bridge across Spring Creek, at the electric light station, was torn away this week to make way for the new railroad. Work is progressing rapidiy at that point. —Mrs. West, mother of Mrs. W. T. Achenbach, of this place, died at her home in Philadelphia on Saturday Oct, 21st. The deceased frequently visited her daughter at this place. terior of the Reformed church, place. It is a fine piece of work and pro- duces a very pleasing effect. ~A game of football will at State College, on Saturday afternoun between the Western Pennsylvania team and the State College | boys. It will be an interesting contest. be played University of ~We hear some complaint on account | of the heavy blasting being done on the | hillside in the vicinity of the electric | light station, whare the ground is being | cleared away for the new railroad sta- | tion. ~-Judge Riley came in from Spruce Run, to attend court on Monday. They | i : failed during last week to shoot a deer. | He left on Monday afternoon for the hunting ground where the party expect to remain until the end of this week, ~On Wednesday of last week, Mr, Walter Lembky, and Miss Grace Hurd, | were married at the home of the bride's | parents in Altoona. Walter was for. merly a Bellefonte boy, but now isa practicing attorney at Washington D. C. ~The Christian Endeavor Society, of the Christian church, at Howard, | will give an oyster supper, festival and | fair on the 23d and 25th of December, in the former post office building. Will have fancy work of all kinds; all are invited. -After being internally remodeled, the Reformed church will again be open on Sunday next Nov. 5th, Service in the morning at 10:30, in the afternoon at 2:80 Sunday School; service also in the evening at 7 o'clock. The public are cordially invited to attend anyor all of those services, Let there be a fall at- fandence at the Sunday school, ~Kellar, the magician, drew a very large crowd to the opera house on Sat- urday evening. Every seat in the build- ing was occupied and standing room was in demand. About two hundred came by special train from State Col. lege. The entertainment had a number of new and interesting features, ~The Punxsutawney Spirit says: A pretty good story is being told on Jake Dick, the genial passenger conductor of the Pennsylvania and north western rail. road. He and John Sweirs, another conductor on the same road, were at the Word's Fair. They became sepe. rated in some manner, and Mr. Dick was very anxious to find Mr. Swiers 80 he went vp to a policeman and said: “Do you know John Swiers?” “No, sir; L do not,” answered the policemen, curtly. ‘What, don’t know Swiers, why he has been here all week.” { Of allots to be used | RB Mr. J. ( | government, it —On Wednesday W. F. Wise & Co. | of Tyrone, completed frescoing the in. i at this | HIRD | self i them and | He evidently is not manly enough to { concede to his democratic neighbor | short—he means democrats { not wish to have his name brought into { print, informed the | Harter was in the habit of making such | insulting | cratic party. | campaigns it would be a common thing be | ignorant, | for him to assert that ‘‘nearly all the | preachers and educated people of the INSULT T0 DEMOCRATS, WHAT CANDIDATE HARTER THINKS OF DEMOCRATS, His Challenge Accepted and the Proot Far nished What other Men have heard Him Say-~Democrats, Resent the Insult In our last issue Dr. John F. Harter, the republican nominee for sheriff, was charged with saying: “The inte lige nee of this country 18 in the ri publican Pay iy.” As Mr, Harter is making a special ef- fort to iuduce democrats to give him a complimentary vote, and pretends to be when after an office, it is well that the public should know that he is, at heart, a most bitter partisan and bigoted re. publican. Mr. Harter was given an op- portunity to deny the above statement, but he did not dare to 1 it, simply authorized the Gaze the following challenge fute tle to make nee for sheriff, authorizes the Gazette to request the CENTRE DEMOCRAT to pro duce the man or men to marked that “*all the intell country the Now is the time proof.” gence of th ] party." forth the is In DEMOCRAT lly in polit. The CENTRI made it a point, and espec ical discussions, never to make an asser- tion but that it Mr. Harter's inviting fore gives us an opportunity to uphol could fully substantiate. challenge there. charge, general thing | the same 1s in my hearing, al . Smith is i at Millh ssary for { vit Lo the same, ware merchant him to make an aflid Mr. Har i . | deny that he made suc! knew better. We think that convince any one of what kind of ma. | terial this man is made. He may be good, law-abiding citizen, of genial dis- should be enough to other com- ties when he position and may mendable traits, but in pol intimates that his neigh! + IR 3 possess r 1 » $ Mz A IRDOTrant because he differs with him in an honest opinion, votes the democratic ticket and { believes in the democratic principles of it is an uit that every Bex ause | Harter | | true democrat sh some people don’ thinks, and don’ t! see thing I Lhe same } as he does, : $ 3 ' ht y RNG he has the nuda confidence to sit in judgment upon brand tl them as “ignorant” ¥ the their convictions or the intel In honesty of ligence even tothink for themse! ves ars crats becanse they are too now any better, The statement, published in the last issue of the CENTRE DEMOCRAT, caused considerable comment. Another prom'= nent citizen from Millheim, who does writer that Mr. abont the demo. During previous political remarks to see Mr. Harter standing ci the streets of Millheim and calling the democrats It would be a common thing country belonged to the party.” People in Bellefonte inform us that republican when Mr. Harter was recorder, it was customary for him to break out in a | tirade and abuse of the democratic par. ty. A prominent attorney of this place, | once said: “AU the low Dutch, ignorant Irish and offscouring of the foreign countries be. | “most all of the preachers and edwoated people are republicans.’’ Now what does all this amount to? It simply shows that Mr. Harter is not the broad, liberal-minded man he ought to be; instead isprejudiced, vindice tive—even abusive of those who differ with him. The democratic party is not brought into question by these charges of igno- rance. If Mr. Harter sincerely believes what he has said, he is deserving of sympathy for his narrowness and prejudices, If “¢ knows better, and we hope he does, ho can only pose before the public as a political black- guard, Is such a man deserving a complimen- tary vote ? ~It is reliably reported that James A. Feidlor, post master, has tendered his resignation, The department can name hissuccessor at any time. Mr, Feidler's term, of four years, would have expired February, 1804, Demo TWO PRISONER! ESCAT'E Another jail delivery occurred on Sat. urday evening by which two prisoners took leave from the county jail, without permission of Sheriff Ishler, A hittle more than a week ngo two men, John Freeman and Charlie Jolimson gained their liberty by digging through i cell wall on the The opening was repaired on last Thursday by James McCafferty, mason, who res piaced the stone as well as he could. On Saturday afternoon Mrs, Ishler directed second floor, one of the prisoners to clean out the cell and wash up the floor and it was done JETS Ary | lowed the freedom of the a sort-or-a-demoerat-himseir-yon-know | | | | | | | | i He ! i dog in the vard barked an “Dr.J. F.Harter, the republican nomi- | dog in the rd barked an) whom he re- |i). {| Sam R and well equipped I worl eratic applicants are hustling. During the day the pris mierior ot . wp 3 PR 1 i. fucks PLADVRR 630M 08 00 aru sania ded wedvia about 8 p. m, about four o'ecloc his cell wine cleaned at K in the afternoon, and like other cells | locked At about 7 p. m., while Mrs, and ex-sheriff Woodring wer: in the sit ting room, they heard the kilchen door open and someone wal zed though. | great deal of fu A few moment 3 later it was another} had been dag jail wall at the same place where it I two more Robt, Wa nket was torn an been repaired Meese and A bl to a bed stead by which Ley escaped, selves down int here 1 t kitchen and they pa We took them but ¢ wagh the wa at he SLONES Grogery Mill Barned On last Friday mon y clock the large Frank & Hock: was destroyed by fire pl steam power. It stood near Musser’ flouring mill Coburn. he flouring mill canght fire ; along the street leading to several times but it was saved bv hero Che plaining mill was (lled with a lot of finished work, such as window te. There was ne insur m the property and the sashes, doors. ¢ (41% | % : Ance « MOEN Wil stnount to several thousand dollar She Wants & Divoree A suit for absolute divorce has been begun against John M. Ward, captain of the New York base ball team, and well known in Bellefonte, by his wife, Actress Helen Dauvray in New York. So far as known, Ward will not file an Miss Dauvray declines to give the name of the co.respondent. pair have lived apart since 1806, when on April they signed articles of separation. Answer, he 30, Death near Beech Crock Mrs. Delinda Mason, widow of Irs Mason, of Beech Creek, died at home in Liberty township, Centre county, on Friday, October 27, at the advanced age of 82 years, and was bur. riad from the residence of Ira N. Me. Closkey Sunday. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. Harvey Lamkin, of the M. E. church. Interment made in her | the cemetery at Beech Creek Well Stocked George Getty, of Selingsgrove. aged states that Mr. Harter in his presence (97 years, became the father of a son | . { who for some time past has been the recently. He is now the father of children. - This beats Centre county's record, which has a father of 24 chil. | long to the democratic party.” also that | dren on the other side the mountain, and one with 18 children on this side the mountain. Horse Found On Monday evening, of last week, & young horse belonging to Titus Gram. ley, at Spring Mills, was stolen from the stable. On animal was found loose ina fleld on Joseph McClellan's farm near Tussey. ville, where he evidently had boen tum. ed in by the theif. Captured at Snow Shoe Joseph Lesko, the Hungarian who committed a flondish assault upon a 5. year-old child at Panxsutawney on the Sth inst., and then fled, was captured at Spow Shoe, Centre county, Saturday Zist. He is now in jail at Brookville, Mark an (X) in the circle, at the top of the second column, on the official ballot, and it will be a straight vote for the entire democratic ticket, Harter boasts that he never sup ported Cooke, «1 mon ht ie) the | " * | oy Ware so. if vole fer un the building was not | YYW i¥l Wednesday morning the | — A DUTCH LETTER, THE CENNSVALLEY VOTERS “ANT BE FOOLED. They Have Krigwy Jo doh Conde for Many . Hl wie Give Him then I nited Support Ag Ow Years They thnely Remarks. MicLugny, py Mister Drueken ich wed + Oct. 30, Ich heb gamarel “Nn brief se hiriva, SwgA was ich denk 3, dier amoh) und wed dicr amohl fun dere campaign, | ‘ mehne d a Lett Dis republics i ] hire party Shady” Harter. un Ara dravaled fw, | ty un fuhled al di denked dos I RRRE we MI Wik { grawda’ dos ¢ nna dos sie net mie ong sehlede] vinomt litterlichsehtufl Seller ken tsite mehner gude dos ur schioft, un vader ebber ware froli won ehr alfart schlofa ie A * : $ AWYTYE ae Inn (dos is¢ dubna, des ‘14 obs ford Un USSR seh for wockia mit so lomberei Vie letscht woeh hut so 1 er fon Gregg township tsu der g'schriva, un hut ed nawma g'sign i“ n Gregg Township Demograwd.” Won ehr g'signed het os en defeate re. pudlican condidawt, exschulmashter bootermilich-ereamer, ware ¢hr nacher kumma, Die liet county sin aw net so ferdult dumm, sie ons tsiel in Centie wissa tsimlich nacht all dos net fiel om ma grawda hoka henka bleibt, Now Mister Drucker, won mier uns of de fees schtella, kenna mier schloga dos sie uns seilebdawg nimmy bodera. Mier wissa case sie aw | beshta republicans vota fer unser con. | didawta sel is gude, Mier ben usht g’hart dos 's Sherman Bill repealed is; sel is besser, un der oldt Grover widder hawna im korb. sel Good bye. MIKE SCHINTZELMANX. is ’s besht. Married Last Week, On Wednesday Oct. 25th a very pretty wedding ceremony occurred at the resi- dence of Mr. and Mrs, Hezekiah Hoy, near Bellefonte. The contracting par- ties were their daughter, Miss Kather. ine I Hoy, and Rev. Wm. J. Wagner, supply pastor for the Centre Hall Lu. heran charge, Death of an OM Lady. | Mus. Sallie Long, widow of Solomon Long, deceased, diad at the residence of her daughter, Mrs, J. B. Royer, at Centre Hill, Tuesday nighth, the 24th, {atthe age of 85 years. The remains weie taken to Millheim for interment. ] Died at Pleasant Gap, | Mrs. Wm. Harrison died at ber home | Pleasant Gap, Pa., on Saturday night from childbirth, The infant died also. The interment oceurred at that place on Tuesday. She was 26 years of age and leaves a husband and one child. Her maiden name was Jennie Ecken- roth. ~ Headquarters for ready made cloth. ing for men boys and children, Cloth. ing made to order. Dunlap, Youman and Sherman's latest styles of derby hats. Fall line of Men's Furnishing goods. A naw salesroom has been ad. dad under the first floor. Moxraomenry & Co, wel Every democrat should put his (X) in the circle, . { 1050 pounds kad a bluff or spavin mark ug | ON the left hind leg, and was light with nous | " "we 3 | foal. This horse is an excellent pacer dos foon de | | learned of the thief or who it might have now is | ] | put an (X) in the circle at the top of TRIAL LINT, Second Weck November Term Commens Ing Monday, Dee, 41h, 1802 | Joseph Ross va, Jeremiah FEekenroth i tev Tuaace Kreider vs Benjamin Corl’s | i Rona vars, Isabella Lohr vs Philipsburg boro, Mary A Blake vs IL. W Glover. Jumes and Lot Kimport vs Brown, Lot W Kimport vs M G Brown, Mary M Fravel v8 Sara Crissman | exr’s, John C Motz vs Harvey Bishop. The Fry of Win M Gl i ! | 1 shechie Co vr Est ary Wilson vs Harry MeCauley, i Begargei, ei t al. Munson (ran 3 Co * r » -w rd A BiVE EM uyeii, | MeCaline oieob Garbric k vs David Harter. James Higgine vs Meck & Nagle. ME Church v8 Bat of W R Miller. non v8 I R Thomas f FAME MBANe VE 3 A Best or a Dont seems to be a great ort " SOM el at, There a siuggers beat { Persons is also “ BO er orbett beat Sgllivan and Sullivan beat a number of others. red There is a cow beet, a sugar beet. a i beet, and other the yellow Various beets that ever mllenge anybody to beet that was raised in the of Robert Tate, in Nittany The said beet was a regular red in length 64% in, | in circumference, the long way. | I'll be beat if anybody can beat that t, except a dead Leat, AN EYE WITNESS, the beet, measuring 324 in. rex Horse Stolen. On Monday stole from the miles east of IMOMIng A roan mare was stable of Geo. 8. Gray, 14 Storinstown, this county, the animal was 14 years, old weight about and at one time was on the track. The horse was recovered near Tyrone, on Monday evening, but nothing was been, I¥ you want your vote to count right, the second column. That will count for the entire democratic ticket. “The intelligence of this country is in John F. Harter, republican candidate for sheriff, GARMANS. the republican party.’ MONDAY, Nov. 6, an agent with Sam- ples of Fur to make your selection from. Cost you nothing to look. Garman’s Store, one day only. Remember the date. GARMANS. W EH NOT ONE BUT A Good all wool. strong, serviceable, dressy suits, esther for dress or busi- at the down price of TEN DOLLARS. NESS wear, way These are not the usual Ten Dollar suit you see advertised, bui goods thai will certainly surprise you to know their actual worth, You must see them AUBLE'S STORES BELLEFONTE, ‘Have Got Them §
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers