Bellefonte, Pa., Sept Great American Traveler. Here Isa Worthy Successor of the Late Lamented Daniel Pratt. He was a great traveler. There is a man in Nashville who has traveled the length and breadth of the United States, from Maine to Mexico, from New York to San Franciseo, and did not pay a dime for his passage, and he rode half the way in a first-class pas- senger coach, the other half in box cars and as “blind baggage.” At present this distinguished traveler is registered at the work house. Everybody in Nashville knows him, especially the policemen. An American reporter’ called on the traveler yester- day and found him ina mood to recite various reminiscences, some of them of thrilling interest. “T reckon,’ said he, “I am about as well known in the big cities of the country as little Ben of grandfatber’s hat fame, and when the authorities of the place hear I am coming on a visit they receive me with open arms, al- though they don’t have a brass band to play martial music and have me ride in, a carriage. The mayor doesn’t make a speech of welcome, but the address of the police judge is impressive when he scowls at me and jerks out, ‘Thirty days on the rock pile.’ “There's a secret in getting about ibe country on your face, and even when it’s known some fellows hayen’t sense enough to work the racket. Every time I leave Nashville I rig up ina new suit and get a pass tosome town about forty miles away. I never fall in with a crowd of bums, tor it’s always bast to travel by yourself. “When I start from one town to an- other I generally strike the cannonball jrains and find out what kind of a crew they carry. men I ride between the mail car and %ender. If the trainmen are ‘tough’ on a fellow I crawl under the trucks and hang on, or sometimes I get on top of a passenger coach and lie down by the lights. Riding the trucks is dan- gerous, and if a fellow don’t know how it’s done he’sa goner. You have io cramp yourself up in a peculiar po- sition, hold your feet up and never move during the ride. Sometimes I ride the brake rods. That’s the easiest | and safest way to travel when you're ont on the beat. IL get a plank with a {had just returned to Ifit's a good set of | nail 1n each end so it. won’t slip, put it under the rod and straddle it. When 1 get in the passenger coach I put up a pitiful tale about being an unfortunate railroad man and having lost my papers and I generally get my ride. “T made $50 once, and it was the easiest money that ever came into my hands. Major Clarfee was the passen- ger agent of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe road, and I went to him, in Fort Worth, told him I was an unfortu- nate and I wanted to get out of town. He gave me a pass to some point about thirty miles up the road, and I left that night. When I went into the coach who should I see but Major Clarfee. He motioned for me to have a seat by him, and commenced asking about me, and how I managed to get about. ‘Why, Major,” I have ({raveled over your road a thousand times and never paid a cent or had a pass, nor beat my way.” At this the old man pricked up his ears, for he thought he would catch some one of his conductors at some underhand trick. “How do you do it ?”’ the major asked me. “That’s a secret,’ I said. “Cl give you $20 to put me on to it»? 3 « ‘Make it fifty,” said I. “¢Done,” and he passed over the oT onev. “ «Well, Major, I walk.’ “He saw I had him, and he didn't kick ; but he cocked his eye and looked at me a long time. ‘When get hungry {goto the biggest hotel in the city, give the clerk a pitiful song and dance, and I get a square meal. Sometimes they take me up in the dining room and sometimes they give me a hand- out. I have eaten at the Palmer house in Chicago, at the Ponce de Leon in St. Augustine, at the Fifth Avenue in New York, and in fact, the finest hotels in the country on that scheme. “The life is 8 checkered one, but I like it, and I guess I will always be a bum.” The Horse Power of Whales. Sir William Turner, the present emi- nent professor of anatomy in the Uni- versity of Edinburg, Scotland, has given much attention to the study of whales, their structure, habits, etc. He esti- mates that the great Greenland whale {average length 50 feet) attains a maxi- mam speed while swimmiuag of ten miles an hour; the “Finner” whale (maxi- mum length 85 feet) often making twelve to fourteen miles an hour. Mr. Turrer, in one of his lectures, said that he and John Henderson, of Glasgow, the well known builder of the Anchor Line steam ships, had spent much time in trying to arrive at a satisfactory con- clusidn gs ta the harse power exerted by large speciesjof the whale in making a speed of twelve miles an hour. As a base for their conclusions they took the size and dimensions of the great ‘‘Fin- ner,’ which was stranded on the shore at Longuiddry some years ago. It was 80 feet long, weighed 74 tons and had a tail which was 20 feet across at the ex- ireme end of its flanges. With these data, Messrs. Turner and Henderson cal- culated that a wlhnle of (he dimensions mentioned, in order to attain a speed of twelve miles an hour, must exercise a propelling force of 145 horse power! —————) The population of France is now 38,095,150, while that of the United Kingdom is 37,740,283. At the be- ginning of ths present century France bad twenty-seven millions to the sixteen millions of the British Isles. Every de- cade since has diminished the distance between the two nations, which are now running a neck-and-neck race, with a certainty that before the next French census is taken France will have fallen behind Great Britain. The Fighting Alstons., ataS gh A Family Once Well Known in "the South for I's Dueling. In the days of southern wealth and chivalry before the war, when every true gentleman maiatained his honor by the rules of the code, the Alston family became famous for the many bloody duels which its members fought, says the N. Y. Evening Sun, The male members of the family through five gen- erations all died with their boots on, but most of them had killed their men in a fair fight before they fell. The Alstons were all brave men, as the word was understood in that sec- tion, and the slightest insult to one of them would bring a challenge to mor- tal combat. The first of the Alstons settled in North Carolina nearly a century ago, and for many years the family was prominent in the Carolinas, Florida, and Georgia. The last of the famous family of fighting Alstons, as they were called, was Col. Bob Alston of Georgia. He was killed in an im- promptuduel with a man named Cox fought in the state treasurer’s office in the capitol at Atlanta fifteen or twenty years ago. The Alstons were all rich. They owned large and fertile plantations and thousands of slaves.. The young men were educated at Yale and Har- vard, with a finishing course of study in Paris or Berlin. The women were as brave as the men, and believed in fighting duels to keep the family repu- tation unsullied. An Alston who failed to challenge the man who insulted him or spoke disrespectfully of any member of his family would have been driven from home in disgrace. One incident, remembered by many old southerners, will illustrate the fighting qualities of the Alstons, men and women. RT A young scion of the noble famil the . beautiful family home in Florida from Paris where he had completed his studies. At a ball one night he over-heard a young man speaking in rather a disrespectful manner to a young lady, a guest of his mother. Young Alston ascertained the name of the man, and next day sent him a challenge to fight a duel. Then he told his mother what he had done. She threw her arms about his neck and ex- claimed: “My son,I am proud of you. You are a true Alston. I will give a dinner in your honor immediately after | the duel, and I am sure you will kill your opponent.” The duel was arranged to take place at sunset the following day,and Mrs. Alston issued many invitations to an elaborate dinner to be given in honor of her brave young son immediately after he had killed his man in his. first duel. The guests were all assembled at the Alston mansion, and dinner was ready to be served, when the young man was brought home dead. He had been shot through the heart at the first fire. His mother kissed the pale, cold face tenderly, and without a tear dimming her eye, she turned to her horror- stricken guests and said : “He is dead, but he was an Alston brave and true.” What Chaff is For, The chaff which surrounds all kinds of grain has very important economic uses. In its wild state this chaff saves the seed from exposure to weather, sometimes in severe seasons only one or two grains escaping damage by win- ter’s exposure. When first cultivated most kinds of grain had doubtless much more abundant chaff than new. The original wild Indian corn in which each grain has a husk of its own, is an il- lustration of this. But chaff even now serves a very important purpose. It allows the grain to dry out in stacks and mows, without heating so as to injure the seed. Grain threshed be- fore this drying out is accomplished heats much more injuriously ‘in’ the granary. : Sometimes in threshing oats that have been drawn in wet, we have seen the straw blackened by heating around the bands, while the heaps kept sepa- rate by the chaff showed each grain ‘bright an uninjured. Wheat that has astrong bearded chaff'is usually a strong grower, as its generating poweris less apt to be destroyed by heating in the mow. This fact secures the continued popularity of these sorts, despite the unpleasantness of working among bearded grain. Reaping machines that bind grain with twine as soon as cut, make the chaff even more necessa- ry. Itis not any more difficult to work among, and it does help to keep grain from being injured through imperfect drying before mowing away.—Ameri- can Cultivator. In Melbourne there .is a woman who rejoices in the somewhat inhar- monious name of Fraulein Lepper. The good fraulein has devoted herself to a forlorn hope—a crusade against tea. She, is herself a tea teetotaler, and she called recently a meeting of lady abstainers. In a speech she said that she considered that, in her opinion, next to alcohol the greatest master of human will and de- stroyer of vitality is tea, and then she went on to say that tea belonged to the same class of drink as alcohol.” She af- firmed that 1t acted like alcohol on the nervous system, though manifesting it- self outwardly in aa entirely different way. Alcohol acts as a stimulant, ac- cording to Fraulein Lepper, while tea acts as a sedative. The former prevents life by inducing excessive action. The latter prevents life by destroying it. A serios of terribleeyperiments with theine wound up the lecture, and the speaker proved, to her own satisfaction at least, that the Chinese herb is altogethér per- nicious when tuken into the human sys- tem. S————— ——Mrs. May Wright Sewell, Presi- dent of the American Federation of Women’s clubs, is at present at Paris, studying the women’s societies and or- ganizations of that city. She intends to profit by the occasion of the Chicago Ex- hibition to summon an! international congress of women for the consideration of various questions of peace, temper- ance, public morality and, above all, the development of women’s rights. nen Jerry Simpson’s Mule. | The Latest Campaign Story of the Kan- sas Statesman. One of the best stories of the year is told by Jerry Simpson, popularly known as the “Sockless Socrates of Medicine Lodge.” He had been talking about the Alliance vote, when he compared the astute politician to the Kansas mule, says the Atlanta Constitution. “Out ip Kansas,” said he, “there is a boy who had taught his mule to squat when he touched him on the flank with his heels, and one day when he was riding beside an Englishman the mule suddenly sat down on his haunches. ‘What's the matter with your mule? said the Englishman, ‘Why,’ said the boy, “he’s a setter; don’t you see that rabbit out there? The Englishman was much astonished. They rode on a while and the mule squatted again. ‘What's he doing now?’ said the Englishman. ‘He's gettin’ again,’ said the boy. ‘Don’t you see that flock of quail? By this time the Englishman was dying to own the mule. An animal he could ride that was also a setter would be price- less to such a Nimrod as he. He of fered to buy the mule, but the boy didn’t waut to seil him. Finally he consented to ‘swap the mule for the Englishman's fine bay horse and $100 to boot. The Englishman mounted the mule, the boy mounted the horse ‘and’ they rode on together. After awhile they came to a creek, and the ‘Edglishman drew up his feet to keep them from getting wet. About half way through the water got so deep that he had to draw his feet up to the mule’s flank, As soon as the bcot heels touched the mule’s flank he squatted right in. the middle of the creek. What's the matter with your blarsted y | mule now 2! said the Englishman. ‘I -told you he was a setter,’ and he’s just as-.good for suckers as for anything else.” Boxing for Boys. There is absolutely nothing in the way of recreation so beneficial in every respect to a boy as boxing. I am posi- tive—and I know whereof I write, for as boy and man I have tried them all, fencing, wrestling, rowing, swimming, riding—that no one of them has the many advantages of boxing. As an all-round developer it is unequaled; not one of the boy’s muscles remains inactive; back, stomach,legs, arm,s all are called upon for vigorous service. But what I consider its best feature in its recommendation for hoys is the very thorough drilling which the disposi- tion of the boy must undergo. If alad is quick to lose his temper, boxing will cure him ; it will teach him that no one who lets his temper get the better of him will become an expert sparrer : it will speedily convince him of the absolute necessity of keeping cool and in entire possession of his wits in order to sustain his efforts and avoid defeat. The boxer who cannot control his tem- per is practically at the mercy of a cool skillful opponent. One cannot spar successfully and become flustrated, = A boxer must ever be on the alert, his wits constantly alive, looking for an opportunity of assault, he must be able to act instantly and with cool’ delibera- tion, as distinguished from wild, undi- rected action. He need-do no running to develop the muscles of his legs or his lungs; these are all continuously in‘action.— Harper's Young People. Pigmies vs. Giants. ‘Lilliputian as they arein size (being no larger than mustard seeds), they achieve results their Brobdingnagian ‘opponents utterly fall in, We refer to the efficacy of the powerful preparation known as Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, compared with that of their gigantic competitors, the old-style pill. Try the little giants, when dyspepsia, liver com- plaint, constipation, biliousness, or any kindred ills assail you, and you'll make no mistake—they’ll disappear at once. ; : —=—A German authority says that al- most a third of all humanity— that is '400,000,000—speak the Chinese lan- guage. Then the Hindu language is spoken by more than 100,000,000. In the third place stands the English spok- en by almost 100,000,000. Fourth, the Russian, with 89,000,000, while the Ger- man language is spoken by 57,000,000 tongues and the Spanish by ebout 48,- 000,000, Of the European languages the French is fifth in place. Old Honesty Tobacco. \ FINE PIECE OF A CHEWING TOBACCO Ae is indeed a luxury. —FINZERS OLD HONESTY -- Comes as near being a perfect piece of PLUG TOBACCO as it is possible to get to it, and is known as a —=STANDARD BRAND— Among dealers these goods are on the market in only one shape, 3x12 full 16 oz. plug— the most convenient “to cut in Pocket pieces or carry Whoie. JNO. FINZER & BROS. Louisville, Ky. 36 37 1t i Saddlery. So CHOEIELDS XEW i HARNESS HOUSE. We extend a most cordial invitation tc our patrons and the puablie, 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 !arge room, formerly occupied by Harper Bros., on Spiii:g street, It has been added to ray factory and will be used execli- 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 you will buy. Our profits are not large, but by 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 intrested in now. Profits will tale care of themseives. When other houses discharged their work- men during the winter they were all put to work in my factory, nevertheless the big (?) 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. 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 HORS COLLARS from $1,50 to 85,00 each, over $100.00 worth of HARNESS OILS and AXLE GREASE, $400 worth of Fly Nete 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 keep everything to 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 honses discharged their hands, they soon found work with us. JAS. SCHOFIELD, 33 37 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa. Farmer's Supplies. sna SUPPLIES AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. | SOUTH « 25 v CHILLED BEND _¢¥ * Ly DuOvs & 54 o o> SHARES 2 4%, > reduced from 40 to Cog 30 ets.—all other repairs re- duced accordingly. CHILLED PLOWS are the best bevel landside plow on earth; prices reduced. Rolan POTATO PLANTER, The Aspenwall is the most complete potato planter ever made. Farmers who have them plant 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—7he Farmer's Friend” Horse Shoe Lueck Spring Tooth Harrow, seventeen teeth, one side of which can be used as a single cultivator. THE HENCH AND STEEL KING SPRING 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 durabilily: BUGGIES, NOBBY ROAD CARTS, . PHATONS, AND PLATFORM SPRING WAGONS. » “The Boss,” Bent Wood, Oval Churns—1} Union Churns. Our wale 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 assortment at very low prices. A large stock of < 4 ara R Flower Pots and Urns. 1 i t FERTILIZERS, } § 1 Agricuitural Salt, our Champion Twenty-five Dollar Phosphate; Lister's best make: Buffalo Honest Phosphate for nse on barley, corn, po- tatoes, and wheat, as well as Mapes Potato Fer- tilizer, all of which have the highest repunta- tion for producing an honest return for the money invested. . Gur Jarge trade justifies us in buying our supplies in large quantities, hence we huy at the lowest prices, which enables us to sell at the lowest prices; therefore, it will be to the interest of every farmer in Centra) Pen opr. nia to examine our stock before purchasing. We take great pleasure in entertaining farmers. 1t does not cost anything to examine the articles we have on exhibition, McCALMONT & CO., Hale Building, Bellefonte, Pa. NL en } Business Managers. 35 4 1y RUIT EVAPORATORS.—Fruit driers and fruit evaporators which can be used on stoves also ; larger evaporators with heater attachment for sale by MCCALMONT & CO. 36-33.3t Hale Building, Bellefonte. Pa. Ape 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. 36 14 Tm rae A ay BEFFEErEac > MONTANA, Washington, Oregon and California reached quickly and cheaply via Great Northern Railway Line. Ask your local ticket agent for round trip tickets to any point in the West or Pacific Coast via the Great Northern, Lind THE leading pleasure, fishing and . hunting resorts of the Park Re- gion of Minnesota, of Lake Superior and the Rocky Mountains reached easiest on the various lines of the Great Northern from St. Paul. FARMERS, stock raisers and busi- . bess men will find choice loca- tions in the Red River, Milk River and Sun River valleys, at Great Falls, and in Belt mining towns, the Sweet Grass Hills, and along the Pacific extension of the Great Northern in the Flathead and other valleys of Montana. THE Great Northern reaches more points in Minnesota and North Dakota than any other railway. It is the main route to Lake Minne- tonka and. Hotel Lafayette, MAPS and other publications sent free, and letters of inquiry an- «swered, by F.I. Whitney, G. P. & T. A.,G. N. Ry., St Paul, Minn. 36 32 tf Flour, Feed, &c. {3 ZAPEELT, HALE & CO., —BELLEFONTE, PA.— :- Manufacturers of -:- And Dealers in o—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o 23~The highest market price paid for sesererss WHEAT ........RYE......... CORN ..cvene Music Boxes. bY Raab GAUTCHI & SONS, 0—MANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS—o 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 Gautchi’s Patent Safety tune change can be guaranteed. Old and damaged Music boxes carefully re- paired. Send 5 cent stamp for catalogue and circular. HEADQARTERS IN AMERICA FOR MU. SIC BOXES. Music box owners please send or call for Patent Improvement Circular. 3349 1v Iuminating Oil. : {ows ACME. THE BEST BURNING OIL I'HAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM. It gives a Brilliant Light. It will not Smoke tha Chimnev. .... . _. _} It will Not Char the Wiel. It has a High Fire Test. It does Not Explode. 1t 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 Railway Guide. ENNSYLVANTA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES, : Dec. 14th, 1890. , VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD, Leave Belleionte, 5.35 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone, 6.66 a. m., at Altocna, 7.45 ga, m., at Pitts. burg, 12.45 p. m. . Leave Bellefonte, 10.25 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.559. mt Altoona, 145 p. m., af Pifts. 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 Philade]. phia, 1.25 p. m. : Leave Belletonte 10.25 a, m., arrive. at Tyrone, 11.55 a. m., at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m. at Philadelphia, 6.50 p. m. ) 3 Leave Bellefonte, 5.20 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 6..40 at Harrisburg at 10.45 p. m., at Phila- delphia, 4.25 a. 1. 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 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 LOOK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 4.30 up m.: arrive at Lock Ha- ven, 5.30. p. m.; illiamsport, 6.25 p. m., at Harrisburg, 9.45 p. m , Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Ha- ¢ at Harrisburg, 3.13 p. m., at Philadelp 6.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 8.49 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha- hein my donve Williamsport, 12.25 ., leave Harrisburg, 3.45 a. m. i Philadelphia at 6.50 om. = 2TTIve at VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte at 6.10 a. m., arrive at Lewis- burg at 9.20 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. mn, Philadelphia, 3.15 p. m. Lass De 2 m.,, arrive at Lewis urg, 5.45, at Harrisburg, 9.45 p. m.. ila- a at'4.25 a. m. 5.44300, Pulls yo 11.00, leave Williamsport, 12.20 p. m. : Ea at BALD EAGLE VALLEY. WESTWARD. EASTWARD. 2 | B 2 g |B 2 52 5 Dec. 14, BE Bul & = | > ® 1890 = Eel ® £ Bg = . 5 a = [E™ EB £7 § P.M.| A.M. | A, wm. (Arr. Lv. A. Mm. p.m |p nm 6 40| 11 55 6 55|... Tyrone 8 10[3'10| 7 15 6 33] 11 48 6 48\.E.Tyrone.. 8173 17| 7 22 6 29] 11 43| 6 #4|.....Vail...... 82013 20 7 28 6 25 11 38) 6 40 Bald Eagle| 8 253 24| 7 33 6 19/ 11 321 6 33|.....Dix...... 8 30/3 30| 7 39 6 15/ 11 29 6 30|... Fowler 8 3213 83| 7 42 6 13| 11 26| 6 28 ..Hannah...| 8 36/3 37] 7 46 6 06 11 17| 6 21 Pt. Matilda.| 8 43/3 44 7 55 559 11 09| 6 13 ..Martha....| 8 51/3 52| 8 05 550 10 59 6 05/....Julian....| 859401 8 15 5 41| 10 43{ 5 55.Unionviile., 9 10/4 10, 8 25 533| 10 38) 548..S.8. Int...| 918418] § 35 5301 10 35 5 45 .Milesburg | 9 22/4 20| 8 39 5 20) 10 25| 5 35.Bellefonte.| 9 32/4 30 8 49 5 10| 10 12 5 2 .Milesburg,| 9 47/4 40| 9 o1 6 02) 10 01| 5 18,....Curtin....| 10 01/4 47 9 11 4 55 956 b14/.Mt. Eagle. 10 06/4 55] 9 17 449] 948) 5 07|..Howard... 10 16/5 02| 9 27 440) 937) 459 .Eagleville.| 10 30/5 10| 9 40 438 934 456 Bch. Creek.! 10 35/5 13] 9 45 426) 922 446. Mill Hall...| 10 50/5 24 10 01 4230 919 443 Flemin’ton.| 10 54/5 27 10 05 420 915 440 Lek. Haven 11 00/5 30| 10 10 P.M.| A. M. [A M.| | A. M. |A.ML| P, M. TYRONE & CLEARFIELD. NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD, Fig Ea Z| Neg Dec. 14 o | & Eins ls 390. 8 F (B21 8 1890. gs | £8" F ia" P.M.| P. M. bh M. | Lv. AT.1a M.A. mm [e. M 725 315 820). Tyrone...| 650 11 45/6 17 732) 322 827LE. Tyrone. 6 43] 11 38/6 10 738] 321 831...Vail 6 37| 11 34/6 04 7 48) 3 36| 8 41/.Vanscoyoc.| 627] 11 25/5 55 755 342 845|.Gardners..| 6 25| 11 21/5 52 8 02| 350 855 Mt.Pleasant| 6 16] 11 12/5 46 8 10, 3 58 9 05..Summit...| 6 09! 11 05/5 40 8 14/ 4 03] 9 10{Sand.Ridge| 6 05] 11 00/5 34 8 16/ 4 05, 912i... Retort....| 6 03} 10 55/5 31 819 4 06| 9 15|..Powelton... 6 01) 10 52/5 30 8 25| 4 14] 9 24|..0sceola...| 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|..Stéiners...| 5 43) 10 35/5 09 842) 430 940 Philipsbu’g| 5 41| 10 32/5 07 8 46| 4 34| 9 44|..Graham...| 5 37] 1026/4 59 862 440 952 Blue Bali. 33 10 224 55 8 58 4 49| 9 59 Wallaceton.| 5 28| 10 15/4 49 9 05| 4 57] 10 07|....Bigler..... 522/10 07/4 41 9 12/ 5 02 10 14.Woodland..| 5 17] 10 004 36 9 19/ 508) 10 22|...Barrett....| 5 12| 9 52/4 30 9 23} 512/10 27. Leonard...| 509) 9 484 25 9 30, 5 18| 10 34|.Clearfield..| 5 04 9 10s 17 9 38. 5 20| 10 44. Riverview. 4 58 9 31/4 10 9 421 b 26| 10 49 Sus. Bridge 4 54) 9 26/4 00 950 535 10 65 Curwerlsv’e| 4 50, 9 20/4 06 P.M. P.M. | A. | Am Am (eo BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. ~ Time Table in effect on and after Dec. i4, 1890. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday. 6 45 a. m; . 00 p. m, Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday.....10 30 a. m, ois: 5 25 p.m. BELLEFONTE, NITTANY & LEMONT R.R ' To take effect Dee, 14, 1890. WESTWARD: EASTWARD. 111 | 103 114 112 SraTIoNs. P. M. | A. M. A Myf PW, e158] 53500... Montandon........ 920] 545 2025.6 20]...iii.s Lewisburg........ 9 10| 5 36 Fair Ground.......}.. shia addi .t 5 6 30 ..Biehl.... 9,00 62 240/ 635 Vicksburg........| 853] 5 20 2 50f 645