Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 08, 1891, Image 6

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Bellefonte, Pa., May 8, 1891.
Pp—— . —
A BOY'S PROMISE.
The school was out, and down the street
A noisy throng came thronging ;
The hue of health, a gladness sweet,
To every face belonging.
Among them strode a little lad,
Wholistened to another -
And mildly said, half grave, half sad :
“I can’t—I promised mother.”
A shout went up, a ringing shout,
Of boistercus derision ;
But not one moment left in doubt
That manly, brave decision.
“Go whete you Jloase, do what you will,”
He camly told the other;
“But I shall keep my word, still ;
I can’t—I promised mother.”
Ah! who can doubt the future course
Of one who thus had spoken 0
Through manhood’s struggle, gain and Joss,
Could faith like this be brcken ?
God's blessing on that steadfast will,
Unyielding to another, y
That bears all jeers and laughter still,
Because he promised mother !
“In A Minute.”
Just Stop and Consider What May
Happen in Sixty Seconds.
“Don’t fret. T’ll be there in a min-
ute.” But my friend, a minute means
a good deal, notwithstanding you affect
to hold it of no cansequence. Did you
ever stop to think what may happen in
a minute ? No. Well while you are
murdering a minute for yourself and
one for me, before we get ready for the
business we have in hand, I will amuse
you by telling you some things that will
happen meantime.
In a minute we shall be whirled
around on the outside of the earth by
its diurnal motion a distance of thirteen
miles. At the same time we shall have
gone along with the earth on its grand
journey around the sun 1080 miles. Pret-
ty quick traveling,you say ? Why that is
slow work compared with the rate of
travel of that ray of light which just
now reflected from the mirror. "A min-
ute ago that ray was 11,160,000 miles
away.
In a minute, over all the world, about
eighty new born infants have each rais-
ed a wail of protest, as if against thrust-
ing existence upon them; while as
many more human beings, weary with
the struggle of life, have opened their
Lips to utter their last sigh.
In a minute the lowest sound your
ear can catch has been made by 690 vi-
brations, while the highest tone reached
you after making 2,228,000 vibrations.
In aminute an express train goes a
mileand a street car thirty-two rods,
the fastest trotting horse 150 rods, and
an average pedestrian has got over six-
teen rods.
Each minute, night and day, by the
official reports, the United States col-
lects $639 and spends $461, The inter-
est on the public debt was $96 a min-
ute last year, or just exactly equal to the
amount of silver mined in that time.
The telephone is used 186 times,
Of tobacco 925 pounds are raised
and part of it has been used in making
6,673 cigars, and some more of it has
gone up in the smoke of 2,292 cig-
arettes.
But I am afraid that you will forget
that we are talking about a minute, six-
ty seconds of time. No? Well, then
every minute 600 pounds of wool grow
in this country, and we have to dig
sixty-one tons of anthracite coal and
200 tons af bituminaus coal, while of
pig-iron we turn out twelve tons, and of
steel rails three tons. In this minute
you have kept me waiting fifteen kegs
of nails have been made, twelve bales of
cotton have been taken from the fields,
and thirty-six bushels of grain haye
one into 149 gallons of spirits, while
$06 of gold have been dug from the
earth. In the same time the United
States mints turned out coin to the value
of $121, and forty-two acres of the pub-
lic domain have been sold or given
away.— Cleveland Press.
ET —
»
Bible Criticism.
“‘Spedking of preaching, misquoting
and misinterpretation of Scripture,’
remarked a story telling Maine Yankee
the other evening “ministers aren’t the
only class of persons using Bible lan-
guage that construe or explain it to the
confusion of their hearers. :
“I remember Uncle John S——- a
pious, good hearted man of forty years
ago, in Cumberland county, Me., who,
while uttering an exortation in a prayer
meeting, alluded feelingy to the per-
secution and contemptuous treatment
suffered by Jesus atthe hands of the
Jews and illustrated his thoughts by the
instance of, Christ’s entry into Jerusalem
“attended by a large concourse of friend.
ly disciples.
“Said he : ‘My friends, what outrajis
things them old Jews use’t ter dew to
the gentle Saviour, when he was a-
duin all he could to cure ’em off her
:sickness 'n’ bring ‘em ter life, 'n’ a-feed-
dn’ the pore, starvin’ souls with the
‘merackerlus bread, 'n’ how patient he
was when they mistreated him so? Jest
think of his ridin’ inter J’rus’lum, 'n’
bein’ follered arter by a mob, a-hootin’
’n’ a-hollerin’ 'n’ abusin’ of him all the
“way | Theyeven tore the limbs off’n
* the trees and throwed ‘em inter the road
: ahead on "im. It was jest like them on-
feelin’ Jews; for they done it, I allus
‘thought, jest a-purpose to scare the
coli!”
—————N
The Word “Jew.”
id §
“We are Jews,” said the rabbi, to a
New York Sun man, ‘and it is right to
call us Jews, but some of us do not like
the word, because it has been used in
Europe for ages as a term of contempt
or derision. People often seem to be
thissing when they say of a man, ‘he is
a Jew.’ In English books, as well as
in German books, the word is often used
=cornfully, Tn most Kuropean cities
ithe Jews were compelled to live by
«themselves in the meanest quarters, and
this also caused them to be spoken of
sneeringly. We are called Jews be-
cause our ancient country was Judea,
but we are of the Hebrew race,and some
of us would rather be called Hebrews
than Jews. But we will yet make the
word Jew shine in the United States.”
Boy Against Jaguar.
“Milksop Dan” Proves Himself To
Be a Courageous Lad.
Night had fallen over the great
mountain wall of the Andes, and the
1"Wrnlls between it and the coast were
wrapped in a gloom which the rising
moon was still too fueble to penetrate.
Any one would have needed good eyes
to make out that the shadowy mass on
the brink of a small stream, which runs
down one of the higher valleys, was a
huge iron cage with a man inside of it,
Was he a prisoner ? Hardly, for he
was unbound and armed with a rifle;
but, on the other hand, if he was a free
agent it was odd that he should be ling-
jering ata spot which every one else
carefully avoided after dark as the chos-
en haunt of all the wild beasts in the
neighborhood. And, stranger still, this
strange watcher was a mere lad, barely
twenty years old, whose local reputation
was that of a “milksop”’—a fellow with
no spirit whatever.
Daniel Martin was the junior of the
staff of a mine that Had just been started
at the head of the valley, With the
other employes he was very unpopuiar,
partly because he was the only *¢Amer-
icano” among them (for all the rest
were natives,) and partly because, in-
stead of spending his evenings like
them, he was always poring over scien-
tific books or studying the construction
and working of the mining machinery,
No one ventured actually to molest
him, for, quiet ashe was, there was a
look about him that warned the most
reckless not to go too far. But they all
looked down upon him as a milksop,
and whenever he passed they whispered
spiteful jokes to each other, which he
was luckily not so silly as to mind.
WAITING THE ATTACK.
Now, in this wild and thinly peopled
district, the beasts of prey were so trou-
blesome that the owner of the mine, a
rich citizen of Lima, had offered a pret-
ty high reward for every jaguar
(panther) killed, but to kill them was
no easyjmatter. The wary beasts seem-
ed to avoid by instinct all traps and pit-
falls, and would not touch poisoned
meat. If a band of hunters went forth
against them they were no where to
be seen, while any man who ventured
through the bush alone was apt to see
more of them than he liked.
This was the perious mission that had
brought the brave American lad to the
dangerous spot by night. He had set a
trap for the jaguars and baited it with
himself, and naw he was watching to
see what would come of it.
He had not long to wait. The savage
brutes had already scented him, and ere
long a rustling and crackling was heard
among the bushes, and the brightening
moon showed him three long, gaunt
bodies creeping steadily toward the cage
in which he stood ready, rifle in hand.
There was a complete jaguar father
mother and son—the younger beast be-
ing almost full grown, and armed with
teeth and claws well nigh as rormidable
as those of his terrible sire and dam.
With their huge flat heads lowered,
their great white fangs gleaming in the
moonlight, and their striped, sinewy
bodies gliding noiselesly over the ground
with a fierce, elastic life in every move-
ment, they were indeed a grim band,
the sight of which might well have
made even an old hunter look grave.
IN THE CAGE.
But Dan Martin had faced in his time
the “painter” and grizzly bea r of the
far west, and he was not the lad to be
scared by any “wild beast upon earth
Coolly = waiting till the fearful.
fearful group came near enough to
make his aim sure, he leveled his piece
at the foremost beast, which happened
to be the cub, and let fly.
His aim was true, and down fell the
cub stone dead, but the fall was follow-
ed by a frightful yell as the female ja-
guar, maddened by the loss of her
young, flew raging at one side of Dan’s
sheltering cage, while the male, either
by accident or design, dashed at the
other.
The attack on both sides at once,
whether intended or not, brought the
gallant lad within a hair's breadth of
destruction, for the bars were wide
enough apart to let his grim foes thrust
their paws between so far as almost to
touch him on either side, while he was
standing as erect as he could betwixt the
clutching talons (for he knew that one
inch to right or lett would cost him his
life,) reloaded with all possible speed.
But all at once the she jaguar, mad
with rage at being unable to reach the
slayer of her young, rushed around to
the other side of the cage and leaped up
on the bars just as the male beast made
a dash at them likewise.
BOY AND BEAST TOGETHER.
Dan fired again and wounded her
mortally, but it was too late. The
weight of the two huge bodies, suddenly
thrown both at once upon the same spot
overbalanced the cage. It tottered on
the edge of the tank, turned over and
fell with a loud splash right down into
the stream, carrying Martin along
with it.
Happily for our hero (who would
otherwise have beer drowned in this
novel sentry box) the shock of the fall
snapped the worn and rusty “catch” of
the bolt, and Dan, bruised and dizzy as
he was, was able to push back the door
of the cage and scramble out into the
shallow water, which was a little more
than waist deep. :
But just as he wa: about to clamber
up op the bank a furious splashing in
the stream drew his attention to the
third jaguar, which, badly hurt by a
blow from the corner of the cage as it
fell, was struggling in the water close
beside him. Come what might it must
not escape. Like i Dan whipped
out his long hunting knife and buried i¢
in the moaster’s throat—a blow that
needed no repetition.
Just at that moment the other officers
of the mine, startled by the firing, came
rushing up to the spot in a body to see
what was the matter, and stood in blank
amazement at the sight of the dead
monsters and the ‘‘young milksop” by
whom they had been slain.
Senor Don Daniel,” at lergth said
the chief of the mining staff, who had
always been hardest of all upon the
Joung hero, “you are a brave man, and
for one will never say another word
against you. — New York Dispatch.
—— Subscribe for the Warcuman.
Bulb Culture.
The centre of bulb culture in Hol-
land, says Gurtenflora, is still at Haar-
lem, as it has been during two centuries
and a half. Hyacinths are especially
in favor just now, and ground suitable
for their cultivation bassold for as much
as $13,500 an acre, as against about
$1,000 given for ‘land of other kinds.
The expense of cultivation is placed at
about $300 an acre for hyacinths and
$160 for tulips ; and it is noted that ar-
tificial manures are never used. Nar-
cissus is also grown in vast quantities
near Haarlem, chiefly for exportation to
England. Formerly the export trade in
cut flowers was enormous, one Haarlem
firm having exported in a single season
10,000 cases; but an agreement was
last year entered into by a majority of
the Dutch flurists to abandon the sale of
cut flowers as competing with the inter-
ests of purchasers of bulbs. Attempts
have been made to extract the perfume
of the hyacinth, but only with moderate
success, especially from the commercial
point of view.
TE TEE
Vegetables as Food.
Vegetarians are frequently told that
their diet is insufficient to maintain a
proper amount of strength for hard la-
bor, but let us ask where the ox gets his
strength ? He is a strict vegetarian. By
examining a table of focd values it will
be found that meat is not really the most
nourishing food, All the grain prepa-
rations are three times as nourishing as
meat, and the same is true of peas and
beans. A pound of beans contains more
of the albuminous elements than a pound
of beefsteak. Besides that it has addi-
tionally fifty per cent. of the carbonace-
ous elements for the production of heat
and strength, whereas meat is almost en-
tirely deficient in carbonaceous elements.
From a careful computation of the flesh
foods and the vegetable foods, respec-
tively, as given in a standard table of
values, it is found that flesh foods are
only two-thirds as nourishing as vege-
table foods, while they require one-third
longer for digestion. So, really then,
vegetable foods are not only the most
nourishing but the most easily digested
and therefore of the greatest values.- - Dr.
J. H. Kellogg.
New Advertisements.
Te SOAP
THAT
CLEANS
MOST
IS LENOX.
35171ynr
Williams’ Wall Papers.
Wi PAPER
WINDOW SHADES,
ROOM MOULDING.
HOUSE PAINTING.
PAPER HANGING & DECORATING.
By S. H. Williams,
117 HIGH ST., BELI EFONTE.
We have the Largest Stock and Fine: t Line of
Wall Paper ever brought to this town.
PRESSED FIGURES, BORDERS,
LEATHER EFFECTS,
* INGRAINS, BOSTON FELTS, |
EMBOSSED GOLDS,
LIQUID & VARNISHED BRONZES
FLATS, WHITE,
BLANKS & BROWN, |
IN GREAT VARIETY AND
WITH MATCH FREEZES.
CEILING DECORATIONS for the coming
season are especially beautiful in" design
and coloring.
WINDOW We have a large stock of Wind
SHADES ow Shades and Fixtures, also a
FIXTURES full line of Room Moulding of
various widths and qualities,
With the above goods all in stock, a cor
of good workmen and 25 years experience in
the business, we think we are prepared fora
good Spring Trade at
FAIR PRICES AND SHORT NOTICE
We asic all Who think of doing anything in
our line to drop in and examine our goods
and prices.
S. H. WILLIAMS,
117 High Street.
36 44m BELLEFONTE, PA.
Book Bindery.
Xi teas BOOK BINDERY.
[Established 1852.]
Raving the latest improved machinery I am
prepared to
BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES
of all descriptions, or to rebind old books,
Special attention given to the raling of paper
and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS.
Orders will be received at this office, or ad-
dre UTTER
88 F. L. y
Book Binder, Third and Market Streets,
25 18 Harrisburg, Pa.
ME
Saddlery.
CHOMIELDS NEW
HARNESS HOUSE.
We extend a most cordial invitation tc our
patrons and the public, in general, to witness
one of the
GRANDEST DISPLAYS OF
Light and Heavy Harness
ever put on the Bellefonte market, which will
be made in the large room, formerly occupied
by Harper Bros., on Spring street. It has been
added to my factory and will be used exclu-
sively for the sale of harness, being the first
exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as
heretofore the custom has been to sell goods
in the room in which they were made. This
elegant room has been refitted and furnished
with glass cases in which the harness can be
nicely displayed and still kept away from
heat and dust, the enemies of long wear in
leather. Our factory now occupies a room
16x74 feet and the store 20x60 added makes it
the largest establishment of its kind outside
of Philadelphia and Pittsburg.
We are prepared to offer better bargains in
the future than we have done in the past and
we want everyone to see our goods and get
prices for when you do this, out of self defense
ou will buy. Our profits are not aes, but
> selling lots of goods we can afford to live in
Bellefonte. We are not indulging in idle
philanthropy. It is purely business. We are
not making much, but trad. is growing and
that is what we are intsrested in now. Profits
will take care of themselves.
When other houses discharged their work-
men during the winter they were all put to
work in my factory, nevertheless the ‘bi ®)
houses of this city’and county would smile if
we compared ourselves to them, but we do not
mean to be so odious, except to venture the as-
section that none of them can say, as we can
say “NO ONE OWES US A CENT THAT WE
CAN'T GET.” This is the whole story.
The following are kept constantly on hand.
e
50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from |
$8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE
STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS ad
set$25.00 and upwards, 500 HORS
COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00
each, over $100.00 worth of
HARNESS OILS and
AXLE GREASE,
$400 worth of Fly Nets sold cheap
8150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Combs
Sponges, Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDESADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 2c per
pound. We keep everything to be found in a
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang-
ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two
shopsin the same town to catch trade—NO
SELLING OUT for the want of trade or prices.
Four harness-makers at steady work this win-
ter, This is our idea of protection to labor,
when other houses discharged their hands,
they soon found work with us.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
33 37 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
Farmer's Supplies.
ARMERS’' SUPPLIES AT
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
SOUTH SO 20 CHILLED
BEND _¢V Y 2)» PLOWS
S "HARES Lp
5 reduced from 40 to Op,
30 cts.—all other repairs re-
duced accordingly.
¢ CHILLED PLOWS are the best
Roland bevel landside plow on earth ;
prices reduced.
POTATO PLANTER,
The Aspenwall is the most complete potato
planter ever made. Farmers who have them
lant their own crops and realize from $25.00 to
£30.00 per year from their neighbors, who will
ingly pay $1.00 per acre for the use of an, As-
penwall Planter,
HARROWS—73, Farmer's Friend "Horse
Shoe Luck Spring Tooth Harrow, seventeen
teeth, one side of which can be used as a
single cultivator.
THE HENCH AND STEEL KING EPRING
TOOTH HARROW.
Allen’s Celebrated Cultivators, Garden
Tools and Seed Drills, whieh were practi-
cally exhibited at the Granger's Picnic.
CORN PLANTERS AND CORN SHELLERS,
latest improved.
rt nn
HAY RAKES AND HAY TEDDERS
at cut prices. Farmers who harvest fifteen or
more tons ot hay cannot afford to do without
one of our Hay Tedders, which are built with
afork outside of each wheel, the same tedder
can be operated by one or two horses.
CONKLIN WAGONS,
CHAMPION Wagons, are superior in |
neat build, fine finish and durabitily:
BUGGIES,
NOBBY ROAD CARTS,
PH/ETONS,
AND PLATFORM SPRING WAGONS.
+ “The Boss,” Bent Wood, Oval
Chur 138d Union Churns. Our sale of
churns is constantly increasing.
WHEELBARROWS.
Our steel and wood wheelbarrows are adapt
ed to all kinds of work of which we have a
large assortinent at very low prices.
A large stocl of
Flower Pots and Urns.
i
ti: FERTILIZERS, ft
Agricultural Salt, our Champion Twenty-five
Dollar Piosphate; Lister's best make ; Buffalo
Honest Phosphate for use on barley, corn, po-
tatoes, and wheat, as well as Mapes Potato Fer-
tilizer, all of which have the highest reputa-
tion for producing an honest return for the
money invested.
Our large trade iustifies us in buying our
Pre NTR
ge quantities, hence we buy at
+t prices, which enables us to sell at
the lowest prices; therefore, it will be to the
interest of every farmer in Central Pennsylva.
nia to examine our stock before purchasing.
We take great pleasure in entertaining
farmers. It does not cost anything toexamine
the articles we have on exhibition.
McCALMONT & CO.,
Hale Building, Bellefonte, Pa.
Wm. Shortlidge, ;
Robt, Me Calnions, | Business Memagrs:
35 4 1y
rs
Gas Fitting.
M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and
Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Pa,
Pays perticular attention to heating buildings
by steam, copper smithing, rebronzing gas fix-
urest, &c. 20 28
HE PENNSYLVANIA
STATE COLLEGE,
Located in one of the most Beautiful and
Healthful Spots in the Alleghany
Region; Undenominational ; Op-
en to Both Sexes; Tuition Free;
Board and other Expenses
very low. New Buildings
and Equipment.
LEeapiNe DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY.
1. AGRICULTURE (Two Courses), and AG-
RICULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant
illustrations on the Farm and in the Labora-
tory.
2 BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE; the-
oretical and practical. Students taught origi-
nal study with the microscope.
3. CHEMISTRY; with an unusually full
and thorough course in the Laboratory.
4. CIVIL ENGINEERING ; ELECTRICAL
ENGINEERING; MECHANICAL ENG I-
NEERING. These courses are accompanied
with very extensive practical exercises in the
Field, the Shonand the Laboratory.
5. HISTORY; Ancient and Modern, with
original investigation,
6. INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN.
7. LADIES’ COURSE IN LITERATURE
AND SCIENCE; Two years. Ample facilities
for music, vocal and instrumental.
8. LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE; Lat-
in (optional), French, German and English
(required), one or more continued through the
entire course,
9. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY ;
pure and applied.
10. MECHANIC ARTS; combining shop
work with study, three years’ course; new
building and eau ment,
11. ENTAL, MORAL AND POLITICAL
SCIENCE; Constitutional Law and History,
Political Economy, &e.
12. MILITARY SCIENCE; instruction
theoretical and practical, including each arm
of the service.
13. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two
years carefully graded and thorough.
Winter term opens January 7th, 1891; Spring
term, April 8th, 1891; Commencement week,
June 28th to July 2nd. For Catalogue or
other information, address
GEO. W. ATHERTON, LL.D.,
President,
Be
27 25 State College, Centre county,
Coal and Wood.
Ji wasn K. RHOADS,
Shipping and Commission Merchant,
i~-DEALER IN-:
ANTHRACITE,
BITUMINOUS &
WOODLAND
}—COAL.—1}
GRAIN, CORN EARS,
SHELLED CORN, OATS,
STRAW and BALED HAY,
KINDLING WOOD,
by the bunch or cord as may suit’purchasers,
Respectfully solicits the patronage of his
friends and the public, at
—HIS COAL YARD—
near the Passenger Station.
36 18
Telephone 712,
*
Hardware.
JX AEPWaRE AND STOVES
AT
o——JAS. HARRIS & CO.’ 8—0
—AT—
LOWER PRICES THAN EVER.
—
NOTICE—Thanking our friends for
their liberal patronage, we desire to ex-
press our determination to merit a con-
tinuance of the same, by a low scale of
xessuaerery PRICES IN HARDWARE ____ ...
We buy largely for cash, and doing our
own work, can afford to ell cheaper
and give our friends tae benefit, which
we will always make it a point to do.
—
—A FIRST-CLASS TIN SHOP—
CONNECTED WITH OUR STORE.
ALL OTHER THINGS
DESIRABLE IN HARDWARE
FOR THE WANTS AND USE
. OF THE PEOPLE, WITH
PRICES MARKED 80 THAT
ALL CAN SEE,
0——AT LOWEST PRICES——o
For Everybody.
0—JAS. HARRIS & CO.,—o
2.2
BELLEFONTE, Pa.
Machinery.
of Luis & LINGLE,
[Sueeessors to'W. P. Duncan & Co,]
BELLEFONTE, PA.,
IRON FOUNDERS
and
MACHINISTS.
Manufacturers of the
VULCAN CUSHIONED POWER HAMMER
BELLEFONTE TURBINE
WATER WHEEL,
STEAM ENGINES, SAW MILLS,
FLOURING MILLS,
0 o ROLLING MILLS, &C., &C. o
Works near P. R. R. Depot.
11 50 1y
Philadelphia Card.
DWARD W. MILLER,
WITH
WOOD, BROWN & CO.,
Dealers in
HOSIERY, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS &C.
429 Market Street:
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Railway Guide.
Ye —
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
AND BRANCHES.
Dec. 14th, 1890.
151
Ee ———
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Belleionte, 5.35 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone,
6.55 a. m., at Altorna, 7.45 a, m., at Pitts.
burg, 12.45 p. m.
Leave Rellefonte, 10.25 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
11.558. m «t Altoona, 1.45 P. m., at Pitts-
ourg, 6.50 p: m
Leave Bellefonte, 5.20 ‘P. m., arrive at Tyrone,
5.40, at Altoona at 7.50, at Pittsburg at 11.55,
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD.
weave Bellefonte, 5.35 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
5.55, at Harrisburg, 10.30 a. m., at Philadel’
phia, 1.25 p, m.
Leave Belletoate 10.25 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
11.55 a. -m., at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m., at
Philadelphia, 6.50 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.20 p.m, arrive at Tyrone,
6..40 at Harrisburg at 10.45 Pp. m., at Phila-
delphia, 4.25 a. n..
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.30 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha
ven, 5.30 p. m., at Renovo, 9. p. m.
Leave Belle onte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock
Haven, 11.00 a. m.
Leave Bellefonte at 8.49 p. m, arrive at Lock
Haven at 10.10 p. m.
VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.30 p. m.: arrive at Lock Ha-
yen, 5.30. p. m,; Williamsport, 6.25 p. m,, at
Harrisburg, 9.45 p. m
Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 11.00, leave Williamsport, 12.20 p. m.
” Harrisburg, 3.13 p.m. at Philadelphia at
.50 p. m, .
Leave Bellefonte, 8.49 P. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, bry m., leave Williamsport, 12.25
m., leave Harrisburg, 3.45 a. m., arrive at
Philadelphia at 6.50 a. m.
VIA LEWISBURG.
Leave Bellefonte at 6.10 a. m., arrive at Lewis-
burg at 9.20 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. m.,
Philadelphia, 3.15 p. m.
Leave Belle onte, 2.45 p. m., arrive at Lewis-
burg, 5.45, at Harrisburg, 9.45 p. m., Phila-
delphia at 4.25 a. m.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY.
WESTWARD, EASTWARD,
E 5 H = 5
oy 5 Dec. 14, > ng
E Z E 7 1890. g E . B
P.M.| A, M. [a M. |Arr., Lv. a. M. |p.u | p,m.
6 40| 11 55] 6 55... Tyrone... 8103 10! 7 15
6 33/ 1148 6 48/.E.Tyrone.. 8 17 317 722
629 11 43 6 44 a Vail......| 8 20/3 20 7 28
6 25 11 38) 6 40/Bald Eagle| 8 25/3 24 7 33
6 19] 11 32] .6 33}...... Dix... 8 30(3 30] 7 39
6 15/ 11 29| 6 30|... Fowler...| 8 32 383 742
6 13 11 26| 6 28... Hannah...| 8 36 3 87] 746
6 06 11 17| 6 21/Pt. Matilda.| 8 431344 7585
559 11 09] 6 ans, 8 51/3 52| 8 05
5 50| 10 59 6 05|....Julian.... 8594 01| 815
5 41) 10 48) 5 55\.Unionvilie.| 9 10 410| 825
6 33| 10 38) 5 48/...8.S. Int... 9 18/4 18) 8 35
5301035] 5 15 Mulesburg | 9 22/4 20| 8 39
520/10 25| 5 35|.Bellefonte. 9 32/14 30, 849
510/10 12) 5 25. Milesburg.| 9 47/4 40| 9 01
5 02] 10 01| 5 18|....Curtin.... 10 01/4 47] 9 11
455] 9.56] 5 14|.Mt. Eagle..| 10 06/4 55 9 17
449) 948 507 «.Howard...| 10 16/5 02( 927
440 937 4 59|.Bagleville,| 10 30/3 10| o 2
438 9234/4 56/Beh. Creek.| 10 35/5 13 9 45
426 9 22, 4 46/..Mill Hall...| 10 50/5 24 10 01
423 919 443 Flemin'ton.| 10 54/5 27| 10 05
420| 915 4 40|Lek. Haven 11 00/5 30| 10 10
P.M. A. M.A M A.M. |A.M.| P.M,
TYRONE & CLEARFIELD.
NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD,
£3 5 |B
Elf 8 vw | Ed
g Z = I 2 B El
P.M.| P, M. | A. M. (Lv. Ar. a. mam pow
725 315 8 20|..Tyrone....| 6 50 11 45/6 17
732 322 821.E Tyrone. 6 43 11 38/6 10
88) S21 831... Vail...... 6 37| 11 34/6 04
748 3 36| 8 41.Vanscoyoe.| 6 27, 11 25 5 55
755, 3 42| 8 45|.Gardners 6 25| 11 21/5 52
8 02/ 3 50| 8 55/Mt.Pleasant| 6 16 11 12}5 46
810{ 358 9 05|..Summit..| 6 09| 11 05/6 40
814, 403 910 Sand. Ridge| 6 05] 11 00(5 34
8 16/ 4 05 9 12|...Retort..... 6 03] 10 55/5 81
819 4 06, 9 15.Powelton...| 6 01 10 52/5 30
825 414| 9 24/..0sceola..| 5 52) 10 45(5 20
8 35| 4 20 9 32|..Boynton...| 5 48 10 39/5 14
8 40/ 4 24| 9 37|..Steiners...| 5 43| 10 35/5 09
842) 430, 940 Philipshu’g| 5 41| 10 32/5 o7
8 46| 4 34| 9 44|..Grzham...| 5 37 10 26/4 59
852] 4 40 9 52/..Blue Ball. 5 33| 10 22/4 65
8 58/ 449) 9 59(Wallaceton.| 5 28( 10 15/4 49
9 05/ 4 57| 10 07/....Bigler.....| 5 22| 10 07/4 41
9 12) 5 02] 10 14{.Woodland.. 517 10 00/4 36
919) 5 08) 10 22|...Barrett....| 5 12| 9 52(4 30
9 23| 5 12] 10 27|..Leonard...| 5 09 9 48/4 25
9 30 5 18| 10 34/[.Clearfield..| 5 04 9 40/4 17
9 38) 5 20( 10 44|.Riverview.| 4 58 9 31 4 10
9 42) b 26/ 10 49/Sus. Bridge| 4 54] 9 26/4 00
9 50] 5 35 10 55/Curwensv’e| 4 50| 9 20/4 06
P.M.|P. M. | A, M. A.M. | A, M. P.M
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after
Dec. i4, 189)
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......6 45 a. m.
EEL a EL 3 00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday....10 30 a. m.
Leiin 525 p.m.
BELLEFONTE, NITTANY & LEMONT R.R
To take effect Dec, 14, 1890.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
111 | 103 114 112
Stations.
P.M. [A.M A.M. IPM
2 15 5 50... 920] 545
225 620 9 10| 535
235 6 00f 5 26
240/ 6 8563 520
2500 6 843 510
305 7 8 27 455
314 7 817] 4 46
338 7 753 422
4 00] 7 53|...........Coburn. 730, 400
4 17} - 8 10/....Rising Spri 712] 843
4.30] 824|....... Centre Hall. 6 58) 3 28
437] 832 wen Togh 6 561] 3 23
443 837... Linden Hall. 6 43) 3 16
448 8 42 ..Oak Hall... 638 311
4 52 8 46|. ...Lemont.... 6 34! 3 (7
4 57) 8 51|......Dale Summit 629] 33
506) 9 00l......Pleasant Gap......| 6 19} 2 £3
515] 9 104...... .Bellefonte.........| 610] 2 45
P.M. | AM AM | Pom,
Trains No. 111 and 103 connect at Montandon
with Erie Mail West; 112 and 114 with Sea
Shore Express East.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAIROAD
WESTWARD. Upper End. EAS? WARD
Bt El myn [ B| B
3 5 1890. i Bs
2 2 & 2
AaMie. wm A.M. | PM.
reine 9 51) 5 (&l....Scotia 921 447
erase 10 211 5 25|..Fairbrook.| 9 09] 4 27
{IRE 10 28| 5 37/Pa. Furnace! 8 56 4 15
sires 10 34] 5 44|..Hostler...| 8 50, 4 08
Lede 10 46] 5 50 Marengo. 843] 4 (1
10 52| 5 57|.Loveville..| 837 3 55
10 58| 6 04 FurnaceRd| 8 31 3 49
11 02| 6 08/Dungarvin.| 8 27 3
11 10, 6 18{..W.Mark..| 819 3
11 20/ 6 28/Pennington| 8 10| 3
11 32| 6 40|....Stover..... 758 3
11 40] 6 50|...Tyrone 750 3
J FLLEFONTE, BUFFALO RUN
AND BALD EAGLE RAILROAD.
To take effect May 12, 1890.
EASTWARD. WESTWARD.
6 2 x b
- STATIONS, ——
P. M. | A M. A.M PM
6 20) 9 10(Ar....Bellefonte...Lv| 6 00] 3 00
6 13| 9 03]........8cales.......... | 6 07] 3 09
6 08) 8 59]. Morris 611 318
6 03] 8 54|. Whitmer 616) 319
5 B05 85) Iveiiiaseren: Linns, 619 828
5 57) 8 48]... Hunters 622 326
553 8 44]... Fillmore 6 26] 3 30
547 8 40|..........Briarly 6 32] 3 86
543, 8 36....000es Waddles.........| 6 38] 3 48
539 8 33(..Mattern Junction.| 6 46] 8 45
8 25|.........Matterns......... 3 53
8 19/......8tormstown....... 3 59
8(9|. Red Bank......... 4 09
5241 7 25|.......Krumrine......... 700 459
5 20] 7 20|Lv.State College.Ar| 7 04] 5 04
Thos. A. SHoEMAKER, Supt,
A 24