Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, June 12, 1891, Image 6

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    Tenogratic
Bellefonte, Pa., June 12, 1891.
—
About Tomatoes.
“One gets so tired of tomatoes!” said
a lady. “After you have had them
sliced or several times they really pall.”
Shades of Savarin! Sliced and stew-
ed! Let her try them baked with ham
as an dccompaniment to her next fillet
of roast veal. The modus operandi is as
follows: Butter a pudding dish and cov-
erthe bottom with slices of ripe tomatoes.
Season with pepper, salt and half a tea-
spoonful of sugar; strew thickly with
bread crumbs and sprinkle on these two
tablespoonfuls of finely chopped pork
and ham. Repeat this order until you
have three layers, cover with an invert-
ed dish and bake thirty minutes. Re-
move cover and brown nicely. If this
is to be served with roast beef, substi-
tute a gill of gravy for the ham and
pork and use rather more crumbs to ab-
sorb it.
A delightful way of using tomatoes is
to boil them hole. Let them be large
or small, but all of one size, and cook
no more than will lie comfortable side
by side in a sauce pan of any given size.
Lay them in with the blossom end
down, cover with boiling water, add a
iarge spoonful of salt. They are done
when they can be pierced easily with a
sharp tined fork and will take from five
to fifteen minutes, according to their
size. Lift out with a colander dipper
and lay in small deep dishes like oat-
meal saucers; cut a Greek cross on top,
ay on butter the size of a walnut, sea-
son with salt, pepper and a soupcon of
sugar, and serve. Cooked thus they are
delicious at breakiast. Preceded by
ripe fruit and a cereal, and helped out
by aslice of cold meatand a hot muffin,
they make one of the best of Spring
breakfasts. Served as a first course at
dinner they replace a soup. Served on
a slice of delicate, buttered toast one of
these boiled tomatoes—a good sized one
—makes a lunch of which ladies are par-
ticularly fond.
A pretty little girl bachelor who lives
by herself says that for two entire
months last summer she ate a boiled to-
mato daily at one of her three meals.
Medium sized tomatoes are delicious
broiled whole, care being taken not to
«ecorch or burn the skin.
Deviled tomatoes are a nice accom-
paniment to roast chicken or any kind
of cold meat. Choose large, firm and
not overripe ones and cut in two or
threeslices. Make a dressing by mash-
ing very smoothly the yolk of a hard
boiled egg with one tablespoonful of
melted butter and one of vinegar; add
salt, pepper, sugar, mustard and cayenne
and heat to a boil. Remove from the
fire and pour slowly, beating the wkile,
upon a well-whipped egg. It must be
whipped to a smooth cream and the ves-
sel set within another of boiling water
while you broil your tomatoes on a
«close barred double gridiron. Lay on a
hot dish and pour the sauce over.
Tomatoes Liyonnaise are worth more
than a passing notice. Remove the
skins from and cut in pieces four or five
good solid tomatoes. Slice three me-
dium white or Bermuda onions and put
them in a frying pan over the fire, with
a tablespoonful of butter; stir to prevent
burning and when they begin to
«change color pour upon them the toma-
toes, seasoning liberally with salt and a
little pepper. Set the pan where the
contents may cook briskly for twenty
minute, stirring them frequently; then
remove the pan to one side, add a table-
tablespoonful of minced parsley and a
gill of strong beef gravy—if you have
none make some with prepared bouillon
—simmer five minutes longer.
The Crab Industry.
Crabs are eaten by all nations. The
Tobster fisheries of New England are ex-
tremely important, while shrimp and
crabs of various kinds find a market.
The great crab centre of the East is the
waters about the mouth of the James
river. Here the edible crab holds high
carnival, and at Fortress Monroe I have
seen the bottom so covered with them
that it was impossible to wade without
stepping upon one. Here hundreds of
barrels of crabs are taken each week and
shipped to Baltimore, so finding their
way over the country at large. On the
great mud flats near the town of Hamp-
ton the soft erab or ‘shedder’”” makes its
home during this period, and here the
colored fishermen hunt them. One old
man, a most successful crabber, told me
that be “trod” for them, and I found
that this was so literally. He wadded
along in the mud and felt for the shed-
ders with his feet, lifting them up with
his toes. © There,were times when Sandy
made a mistake, committed an error of
j#dgment and “trod” on a hardshell, at
which time, according to a local authori-
ty, the air was lowery and threatening.
~~San Francisco Chronicle.
A Clever Dog's Trick.
A correspondent sends from Michigan
a true story of a farmer’s dog who
has been found guilty of obtaining mon-
ey under false pretenses.
He is extremely fond of sausages, and
has been taught by his owner to go af-
ter them for himself, carrying a written
~rder in his mouth.
Day after day he appeared at the
butcher's shop, bringing his masters or-
der, and by and by the butcher became
careless about reading the document.
Finally, when settlement day came, the
darmer complained that he was charged
with mores usages than he had ordered.
The butcher was surprised, and the
next time Lion came in with a slip of
paper between his teeth he took the trou-
ble to look at it. The paper was blank,
-and further investigations showed that
whenever the dog felt a craving for sau-
sages he looked around for a piece of
paper and trotted off to the buther’s
The farmer is something out of pocket
but squares the account by boasting of
his dog's intelligence.
——“Bress de Lawd ! It’t come; it’s
ceme.’’
“What's come, mammy ?" :
“Why, de judgement day, yo’ brack
ignyramus! Didn’t yo’ heah dat Ga-
briel’s trumpet? An’ dere goes yo’
ig old fadder up at the first sound.”
he old man was kicked in the air by a
oiule.
TN ll Fa BR
A Mohammedan at Worship.
I know of no religious spectacle more
impressive than that of a barefooted
Turk standing erect on his prayer rug
with his face towards Mecca and bis
eyes looking straight into the eyes of
his God. It is not a duty with him,
nor a formality, nor the maintenance of
a time honored custom. Itis his very
life. Watch him as he enter this
wretched interior of Bania Bashie, with
its scaling and crumbling walls, and its
broken windows, through which the
doves fiy in and out. Outside at the
trickling fountain, he has washed his
feet and face and hands, bathing his
throat and smoothing. his beard with his
wet fingers. He is a rough, broad-
shouldered, poorly clad man in fez and
shirt, his waist girt with a wide sash
ragged and torn. He is perhaps a
“hammal,”” a man who carries great
weights on his back—-a human beast of
burden. His load, whatever it might
be, is outside in the court. His hourly
task is his daily.bread; but he has heard
the shrill cry from the minaret up
against the sky, and stops instantly to
obey. He enters the sacred building
with his shoes in his hands. These he
leaves at the edge of the mat. Now he
is on holy ground. Advancing slowly,
he halts half way across the floor, and
then stands erect. Before him is a
blank wall. Beyond it the tomb of the
prophet. For a moment he is perfectly
still, his eyes closed, his lips motionless.
It is as if he stood in the antechamber of
Heaven, awaiting recognition. Then
his face lights up. He has been seen.
The next instant he is on his knees, and,
stretching out his hands, prostrates him-
self, his forzhead pressed to the floor.
This solitary service continues for an
hour. The man stands erect one mo-
ment, with a movement as if he said,
“Command me; I am here.” The next
moment he is prostrate in obedience.
Then he backs slowly out, and, noise-
less, regains his shoes, bends his back to
his burden, and keeps on his way, his
face having lost all its tired, hunted
look.
The Pennsylvania Ratlroad’s New Sum-
mer Excursion Route Book.
The Pennsylvania Railroad’s Surnmer
Excursion-route Book for the season of
1891, just from the press, is undoubted-
ly one of the most elaborate reference
compendiums issued by any railroad
company in the world. The company
this year has used new illustrations,
printed on a very high grade of paper,
while a decided departure from the old
cover hitherto binding the work is seen
in the new one, which is beautifully il-
luminated, and would do credit to the
brush of a Rossi, so cleverly French is it
in every detail. The new map embraces
a territory from Canada to the Carolinas
and from the British possessions of New
Brunswick to beyond the Great Inland
Lakes. When comparison is made with
this volume of 272 pages, 100 illustra-
tions, and over 1500 routes, a book
which entersits year of manhood the
first day of June, 1891, and the tiny
pamphlet of 24 pages and 63 routes is-
sued twenty-one years ago by the Penn-
sylvania Railroad, and considered at
that time a marvelous departure in raii-
road advertising, the growth is hardly
credible.
Growing 0 1d. =
“I went home shortly after nine
o’clock the other evening,” said a well
known gentleman of long residence in
this city, to a friend yesterday, “and I
was pretty tired, too. As I entered the
hall I saw sitting in the parlor my eld-
est daughter and a young man who has
been coming to the house for some time.
As I hung up my coat my eyes discov-
ered the second daughter anl a young
man at the piano in the sitting room.
Going into my library, I found my oth-
er daughter who is'still in school, enter-
taining a young lad of nice appearance.
Going up stairs, I found my wife and
I asked her in a laughing way if we had
better not move out. 1 have thought
considerably on the matter since. It
was a sudden awakening to the fact that
1 am getting old. Andsomehow I have
thought more, if that is possible, of my
girls ever since, as I realize that but a
few years will see them leaving the old
place for homes of their own, and my
wife and I, in declining years, again
alone in the home nest. Yes, I feel a
good many years older, and I have felt
kird of biue as I think how far along
in life I am.”
He Was Too Careful .
As a pedler of rugs was passing a
house on Joy street a woman opened
the door and called to hia:
“You man, there—say.”
He halted and looked at her and saw
the grim determination in her eye.
“Ain't you the same feller that sold
me a rug last spring ?”’
He was, but something in her voice
made him forget the truth.
“No’m, this isa new route for me.
That mus’ have been Soapy Jim. He's
out of the business now.”
“I reckoned it was you,” persisted the
woman; “think a spell. It was a red
and yaller rug with a green border, and
I paid for it once a week for two months.
1 do believe you're the same young fel-
ler.”
“Never was in this part of to wn afore,
ma'am,” vowed the man.
“Is that so? Well, if you’d been the
same man I was going to buy another
rug for myself and one for my sister who
is going to Dakoty, but I wouldn't want
to deal with a stranger. Excuse me for
doubtin’ your word, but you do favar
that young man amazingly. I see now
that you ain’t him.”
She went in and shut the door, and
he knew then that he had mude the
mistake of a lifetime.
——Little Ollie heard her sister Lula
speaking of a diary, and having bad it
explained to her that a personal
diary was a brief record of one’s life, she
exclaimed: ‘Well, then, I don't see
why they don’t callit a livery.”
——DBibleton—‘ Adam spent several
month in Eden.” Snarly—“How do you
know ?”’ Bibleton-—¢He was placed in
Eden on the sixth day of the year 1,
and he remained there until the fall.
——Clothes do not always make the
man, but his wife’s clothes frequently
break him.’
a is REET
For Sale.
ALUABLE TOWN PROPER-
TY FOR SALE.
The undersigned offers for sale on
easy terms the valuable and pieasantly located
roperty now occupied by Dr. Hayes, on west
High Street, Bellefonte. Suid property con-
sista of a
LARGE TWO-STORY BRICK HOUSE,
with all modern improvements, an excellent
brick stable and other outbuildings, and one
of the best located lots in the town. Posses-
sion given April 1st, 1891. For further particu
lars address
MRS. DORA HIRSH,
129 North Duke St.
35-48-tf Lancaster, Pa.
McQuistion—C rriages.
usa 0
—In—o
BARGAINS
o CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, o
AND
SPRING WAGONS,
at the old Car ‘age stand of
McQUISTION & CO.,
NO. 10 SMITH STREET
adjoining the freight depo
oO 0
We have on hand and for sale the
best assortment of Carriages, Buggies,
and Spring Wagons we have ever had
We have Dexter, Brewster, Eliptic,
and Thomas Coil Springs, with Piano
and Whitechapel bodies, and can give
you a choice of the different patterns of
wheels. Our work is the best made in
this section, made by good workmen
and of good material. We claim to be
the only party manufacturing in town
who ever served an apprenticeship to
the business. Along with that we have
had forty years’ experience in the busi-
ness, which certainly should give us
the advantage over inexperienced par-
ties.
Inprice we defy competition, as we
have no Pedlers, Clerks or Rents to
pay. We pay cash for all our goods,
thereby securing them at the lowest
figures and discounts. We are aeter-
mined not to be undersold, either in
our own make or manufactured work
from other places; so give us a call for
Surries, Phaetons, Buggies, Spring
Wagons, Buckboards, or anything else
in our line, and we will accommodate
ou.
We are prepared to do all kinds of
0—— —REPAIRING——o0
on short notice. Painting, Trimming,
Woodwork and Smithing. We guaran-
tee all work to be just as represented,
so give us a call before purchasing
elsewhere. Don’t miss the place—
alongside of the freight depot.
3415 S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
Pure Malt Whisky.
Jorraxes
PURE BARLEY
MALT WHISKY!
DYSPEPSIA,
INDIGESTION,
ad gll wasting diseases can be
ANTIRELY CURED BY IT.
Malaria is completely eradicated from he
system by its use.
PERRINE’S
PURE BARLEY
MALT WHISKY
revives the energies of these worn with exces-
sive bodily or mental effort. It acts as a SAFE
_ GUARD against exposure in the wet and rigo-
rous weather.
Take part of a wineglassful on your arrival
home after the labors of the day and the same
quantity before your breakfast. Being chemi-
cally pure, it commends itself to the medica.
profession.
WATCH THE LABEL.
None genuine unless bearing the signature
of the firm on the label.
M. & J. S. PERRINE,
3136 1y 38 N. Third St., Philadelphia.
Williams’ Wall Papers.
My 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,
— ERE Rae
| LEATHER EFFECTS.
— Ce
| INGRAINS, BOSTON FELTS,
EMBOSSED GOLDS, |
ARNISHED BRONZES |
FLATS, WHITE,
"BLANKS & BROWN,
qui &
|
i
|
IN GREAT VARIETY AND
WITH MATCH FREEZES.
CEILING DECORATIONS for the coming
season are especially beautiful in design
and coloring
WINDOW We havea 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 corp
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 asi all who think of doing anything in
our line to drop in and examine our goods
and prices.
8S. H. WILLIAMS,
117 High Streat.
36 4 4m BELLEFONTE, PA.
ETS
Saddlery.
Investors.
SCHOFIELD 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 ot 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
Yon will buy. Our profits are not large, but
hy 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 trade is growing and
that is what we are interested in now. Profits
will take care of themseives.
When other houses discharged their work-
men during the winter they were ail put *to
work in my factory, nevertheless the big (?)
houses of this city and county would smile if
we compared ourseives to then, 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.
50 SETS OF LIGHT HARNESS, prices from
$8.00 to $15.00 and upwards, LARGE
STOCK OF HEAVY HARNESS per
set $25.00 and upwards, 500 HORSE
COLLARS from $1,50 to $5,00
each, over $100.00 worth of
HARNESS OILS and
AXLE GREASE,
8400 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 25¢ per
pound. We kasp everythingto be found in a
FIRST CLASS HARNESS STORE—no chang-
ing, over 20 years in the same room. No two
shops in 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.
3 SUPPLIES AT -
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
SOUTH oN CHILLED
BEND SP YZ) PLOWS
o> SHARES ¥% 2
> reduced from 40 to 5
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
50.00 per year from their neighbors, who will-
ingly pay $1.00 per acre for the use of an; As-
penwall Planter.
HARROWS—17The 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 SPRING
i TOOTH HARROW.
Allen’s Celebrated Cultivators, Garden
Tools and Seed Drills, which were practi-
cally exhibited at the Granger's Picnic.
CORN PLANTERS AND CORN SHELLERS,
. latest improved.
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
a fork 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 durability: |
BUGGIES,
NOBBY ROAD CARTS,
PHETONS,
AND PLATFORM SPRING WAGONS.
» “The Boss,” Bent Wood, Oval
Chur ns and Union Churns. Our tale of
churns is constantly increasing.
WHEELBARROWS.
Our steel and wood wheelbarrows are adapt
ed to all kinds of work of which we have a
Jarge assortment at very low prices.
A large stock of
D GAR
pARM A men SEEng
Flower Pots and Urns.
{11 FERTILIZERS t 1
Agricultural Salt, our Champion Twenty-five
Dollar Piiosphate; 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 Jarge trade iustifies us in buying our
supplies in large quantities, hence we buy at
the lowest 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.
Wn. Shortlid
Roni. Mr Cront, } Business Managers.
35 4 1y
Gas Fitting.
M. GALBRAITH, Plumber and
Gas and Steam Fitter, Bellefonte, Ps.
Pays purticular attention to heating buildings
by steam, copver smithing, rebronzing gas fix.
urest, &e. 20 26
oy AFE INVESTMENTS FOR CON-
SERVATIVE INVESTORS.
We desire to call the attention of all persons
that wish te invest promptly and upon safe
real estate security, to the securities offered by
the
Equitable Mortgage Company
Condensed statement, June 30, 1890,
Capital subscribed......cveeeereneserens $2,000,000 00
Capital paid In.....cccoonviinennssssrsirsses 1,000,000 00
Surplus, Undivided Profits and
Guarantee Fund.......... aaniie 439,383 02
ASSES i ccrstrrrrrriresesssrsesins sesensenene 11,168,985 04
SENET ARGUE
Philadelphia Card.
Eee W. MILLER,
WITH
WOOD, BROWN & CO.,
Dealers in
HOSIERY, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS &C.
429 Market Street:
151 PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Railway Guide,
Prva RAILROAD?
AND BRANCHES.
Dec. 14th, 1890.
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Belleionte, 5.35 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone,
* 6.50 a. m.,al A'tocna, 745 a. m., at Pitts.
burg, 12.45 p. m.
k Leave Hallefonie, 10.25 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
11.5568. m. «i A'toons, 1.45 p. m., at Pitts-
ourg, 6.50 p: m
Leave Bellefonte, 5.20 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
3.40, at Altoona at 7.50, at Pittsburg at 11.55.
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD,
veav. Bellefonte, 5.35 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
$.55, at Harrisburg. 10.30 a. m., at Philadel-
phia, 1 25 p. m.
Siz per Cent. Debentures Secured by
First Mortgage.
Denominations, $200, $300, 8560, $1000, $5000, ‘
and $10,000. Price—parand accrued interest.
SAVINGS CERTIFICATLS
Certificates issued for three months bearing :
414 per cent. interest ; for six months and
upwards 5 per cent. interest.
Municipal, Railroad, and other Investment Bouds
Full Information can be obtained from
E. M. & J. BLANCHARD,
Attorneys at Law,
36 12 3m BELLEFONTE, PA.
Tourists.
MEE D. & 0. C.
——TO MACKINAC—
SUMMER TOURS,
PALACE STEAMERS. Low RATES.
Four trips per Week Between
DETROIT, MACKINAC ISLAND
Petoskey, The Soo, Marquette, and Lake
Huron Ports.
Every Evening Between
DETROITANDCLEVELAND.
Sunday Trips during June, July, August and
September Only.
OUR ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLETS,
Rates and Excursion Tickets will be furnished
by your Ticket Agent, or address
E. B. WHITCOMB, G. P. A., Detroit, Mich.
THE DETROIT & CLEVELAND
STEAM NAV. CO.
3614 Tm *
INMuminating Oil.
a0wy ACME.
THE BEST
BURNING OIL
I'HAT CAN BE MADE
FROM PETROLEUM.
It gives a Brilliant Light.
It will not Smoke the Chimney.
It will Not Char the Wick.
It has a High Fire Test.
It does Not Explode.
It is without an equal
AS A SAFETY FAMILY OIL.
We stake our reputation as refiners that
IT IS THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD.
Ask your dealer for it. Trade supplied by
ACME OIL CO.
34 35 1y Williamsport, Pa.
For sale a retail by W. T. TWITMIRE
TT mR
Music Boxes.
I I ENRY GAUTCHI & SONS,
0—MANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS—c
oF %
SUPERIOR QUALITY.
o—M USIC BOXES.—o
ST. CROIX, SWITZERLAND.
Sale rooms and Headquarters for the Uni
ted States at
1030 CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA
No Music Boxes without Gautehi’s Patent
Safety tune change cau be guaranteed.
Old and damaged Music boxes carefully re.
paired. Send 5 cent stamp for catalogue and
circular.
BEADQARTERS IN AMERICA FOR MU.
SIC BOXES.
Music box owners please send or call for
Patent Improvement Circular.
33 49 1y
Fine Job Printing.
Leave Belletonte 10.25 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
i 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 p. m., at Phila-
delphia, 4.25 a. m..
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.30 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha
i ven, 5.30 p. m., at Renovo, 9. p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 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-
ven, 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.,
at Harrisburg, 3.13 p. m., at Ph ildoipale at
6.50 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 8.49 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 10.10 i 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 Bellefonte, 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.
g 5 ¥ 5 3
EB zg 3 Dec. 14, poixel =
Flew | # 1890. & 7 2 B
2 2 R g
P.M.| A. M. | A. M. AIT. Lv. A. M. (p.m | p. Mm.
6 40 11 55/ 6 55..Tyrone....| 81013 10! 7 16
6 33 11 48] 6 48.E.Tyrone..| 8 173 17| 7 22
6 29/11 43; 6 44|......Vail 8 20|3 20| 7 28
6 25| 11 38) 6 40 Bald Eagle 324 733
6 19| 11 32; 6 33.......Dix 33] 739
615 11 29] 6 30 . 333 T42
6 13| 11 26| 6 28|.. Hannah...| 8 36/3 87| 7 46
6 06 11 17| 6 21|Pt. Matilda.| 8 43(3 44| 7 55
559) 11 09] 6 13|...Martha....] 851352 8 05
5 50| 10 59] 6 05|...Julian....| 8 59/4 01| 8 15
5 41| 10 48) 5 55|.Unionviile.| 9 10/4 10, 8 25
533] 10 38) 5 48|..8.8. Int...| 918/418] 8 85
530| 10 35] 5 45) .Milesburg +t 9 2214 20 8 39
5 20| 10 25| 5 35|.Beilefonte.| 9 324 30| 8 49
5 10 10 12| 5 25|.Milesburg.| 9 47/4 40 9 01
502 10 01/ 5 18|....Curtin....| 10 01{4 47] 9 11
4 55 9 56| 5 14|.Mt. Eagle..| 10 06/4 55| 9 17
449, 9 48) 5 07|..Howard...| 10 16/5 02| 9 27
4 40| 9 37 4 59 .Eagleville.| 10 30/5 10| 9 40
4 38) 9 34) 4 56 Bch. Creek.| 10 35/5 13| 9 45
4 26/ 9 22| 4 46/.Mill Hall...| 10 50/5 24| 10 01
423) 919) 4 43 Flemin’ton.| 10 54/5 27| 10 05
420 915 4 40/Lek. Haven| 11 00/5 30! 10 1
P.M. A. M.A M.| A.M. A.M.| P. M.
TYRONE & CLEARFIELD.
NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD,
iE 5 §
5 53g! B | Dec.l4 5 8 |B
BE Bal 2 1890. B : Bir
? @ ? ?
P.M.| P. M. | A. M. |Lv. Aria. Mm [A.M P.M
725 315] 8 20|..Tyrone....[ 6 50| 11 45/6 17
7 32] 322| 8 27.E. Tyrone.| 6 43| 11 38/6 10
7.88) 3.211 8 3l...nr: Vail...... 6 37| 11 34/6 04
7 48 3 36| 8 41|.Vanscoyoc.| 6 27| 11'25/5 56
7 55| 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 3 58 9 05|..Summit...| 6 09} 11 055 40
8 14) 4 03] 9 10/Sand.Ridge| 6 05 11 00/5 34
8 16! 4 05] 9 12|...Retort..... 6 03] 10 55/5 31
819| 4 06] 9 15/.Powelton...| 6 01] 10 52/6 30
8 25] 414] 9 24|..Osceola...| 5 52| 10 45/5 20
8 35 4 20 9 32/.Boynton...| 5 46 10 39/5 14
8 40| 4 24| 9 37|..Steiners...| 5 43| 10 85/5 09
8 42| 4 30; 9 40 Philipshu’g| 5 41| 10 32/5 07
8 46) 4 34| 9 #4|..Graham...| 5 37| 10 26/4 59
8 52| 4 40; 9 52/.Blue Ball..| 5 33] 10 22/4 55
8 58] 4 49| 9 59 Wallaceton.| 5 28 10 15/4 49
9 05| 4 57| 10 07|....Bigler..... 5 22) 10 074 41
9 12| 5 02 10 14..Woodland 517/10 00/4 36
9 19| 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 MPM
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after
Dec. i4, 1890.
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......6 45 a. m.
LE 3 00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday.....10 30 a. m.
© 5 256 p. m.
BELLEFONTE, NITTANY & LEMONT R.R
To take effect Dec, 14, 1890.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
111 103 114 112
STATIONS.
P. :
iiss Montandon..
0 ..Lewisburg..
58588
b
5
4
4
753 422
4 00] 7 53 .eieeine. CobUrN..veiuns. 7.30 2.00
4 17) 8 10|....Rising Sprin 712) 343
4 30| 8 24|......Centre Hall. 6 58 328
4 371] 8 3%..........0regx.... 651 343
4 43) 8 37|......Linden Hall. 6 43) 316
4 48] 8 42). 638 311
452 8 46|.. 6 34 3 (7
4 57, 8 51 «| 6:29] 8(3
506 9 00 Pleasant Gap...... 6 19| 2&3
5°15] 9 10i....... Bellefonte......... 610] 245
P. M. | A. M. | A.M. | P. M.
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. EASTWARD
May 12, = 2
1890. i 3
2 8
AMP M
Scotia 9 21! 4 47|.
5 25|.Fairbrook.| 9 09| 4 27
3 37 Pa.Furnace; 8 86: 4 13
5 44... Hostler..., 8 50, 4 08|.
5 50!...Marengo..! 8 43] 4 (1
5 57/.Loveville..| 837] 3 55
6 04 FurnaceRd| 8 31| 3 49
6 08 Dungarvin.! 8 27/ 3 46},
6 18/..W.Mark.., 819| 3 18
6 28 Pennington| 8 10| 3 30
6 40\...Stover.....1 758 3 18.
6 AU i
.Tyrone....| 7 50 3 10].
ELLEFONTE, BUFFALO RUN
AND BALD EAGLE RAILROAD.
To take effect May 12, 1890.
i ies EASTWARD. WESTWARD,
0 2 | 5 FH
STATIONS. -
INE JOB PRINTING P.M. A. M { A. M. P.M
KE 6 20 9 10/Ar...Bellefonte....Lv| 6 00] 3 00
o A SPRCIALTY———o0 613 9 3 .| 607 309
AT THE 6 08) 8 611 313
i 6 03] 8 616) 319
WATC HMAN o OFFICE; 589) 8 619 323
a 551 8 622 326
553 8 6 26 3 30
There is no style of work, from the cheapest 547 8 ..Briarly.. 6 32| 3 36
Dodger” to the finest 5 43| 8 36|........Waddles.........| 6 38 3 43
5 39| 8 33..Mattern Junction .| 6 46] 3 48
0—BOOK~-WORK,—o 8 ver MALLETS. 11 eran 3 53
but you can get done in the most satisfactory : > a
manner, and at . 524 7 700] 4 59
Prices consistent with the class of work | 520 7 704 504
by calling or communicating with this office.
THor, A. SHOEMAKER, Supt,