Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, October 30, 1891, Image 6

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Bellefonte,
= The Soldiers Nobility
Ochiltree Faced Twenty Thousand
Strong Alone, But His Horse Died.
The world-famous raconteur, Thomas
P, Ochiltree, is never ata loss to adorn
an otherwise commonplace conversation
with a story of thrillius adventure, nar-
row escape or humerous incident. Re-
cently a number of men were telling of
narrow escapes, when the colonel told
of a close place he got into as follows:
“Gentlemen, I was with General Dick
“Taylor when he operated against Gen-
eral Banks in the trans-Mississippi de-
partment. It was shortly after the bat-
tle of Pleasant Hill, and Banks was re-
treating to Grand core. One day we
got near General Banks’ army and Gen-
eral Taylor asked me to head a squad-
ron of cavalry and charge. I was
mounted ona coal black horse, and
when I rode out to iake command of
the squadron I never thought to come
back from the charge alive. We had to
charge across an open field, a distance of
one and one half miles. I drew my
sword, put spurs in my horses sides
and dashed forward, ordering the caval-
ry to follow. Some twenty thousand of
Banks’ infantry were drawn up in line
just on the edge of the field awaiting an
attack. Of course when I started I did
not know that 20,000 men were waiting
to give a warm welcome to a handful of
cavalry When within 800 yards of
the federals I raised in my stirrups and
yelled to the squadron to follow me. I
expected to hear each ~avalryman yell,
but to my dismay all was silent. I
turned to look, when, horror upon hor-
ror! the squadron was over a mile from
me in a swift retreat! I had been riding
across the field alone, thinking they were
right behind me. They had evidently
seen the thousands waiting to pour a
storm of shot into us and had retreated,
‘but Idid not see them as I am near
sighted. Of course I saw them when I
yelled. A gleam of bayonets extended
for miles in front of me. My horse
trembled. I held my breath expecting
to be mowed down in a second. Turn-
ing my horse I rode leisurely back and
not a shot was fired at me. My horse
died with nervous prostration half an
hour after I got back. Why didn’t the
federal army fire on me? I learned
afterward that they were to fire, but no
soldier was pusillanimous enough to
shoot one man who had the courage to
«charge 20,000 men. Gentlemen, I be-
lieve in human natare and the nobility
of the volunteer soldier since that
event.”
The Story of Dresden China.
"The first hard porcelain made in Eu-
rope—for majolica, Pulissy ware, and
others of the sort are pottery, and not
porcelain—was the lovely Dresden ware;
and in that line nothing has ever been
made to exceed its beauty. Its flowers,
its ribbons, and ornaments, are perfec-
tion in design and color; there is a
rumor that real lace is’ put into the clay
before firing for the parts representing
lace, but how that vay be we do not
know. It owesits existence to an acci-
dent. The chemist, who had been im-
prisoned by the Elector in order to find
the secret of making gold and of the
elixir of life, having come across some
substance resembling porcelain in the
bottom of a crucible, was unable to get
it of a pure tint, till a rider one day
found a peculiar white clay on his horse’s
hoofs, which he had dried and sifted
and sold for hair powder, and the un-
fortununte chemist, using it and observ-
ing its weight, experimented with it,
and straightway the Dresden ware—or
Meissen, as it 1s more correctly called—
became a success, the first sculptors and
<olorists of the day lending their art to
~ its perfection. Cruelty, or rather ty-
ranny, has often attended on Dresden
china; for Frederick the Great, having
sent great quantities of this white earth
to Berlin, took captive the best workers
in the Meissen and sent them after it,
never allowing them to see home again ;
and presently he obliged the Jews in
his dominion to buy the china, he thus
manufactured by refusing them marriage
licenses till they had procured u service,
thus gaining an immense annual rev-
* enue.-—Haryers Bazar.
Why Wild Horses are Tough.
“Rest and fat are the greatest enimies
of the horse,” is a saying of the Arabs,
and if every borse owner would embody
its truth in his practice, there would be
little need to write anything further on
the subject. Its observance would be
potent to improve the horse in health,
strength, virility, endurance and longe-
vity, and by ‘holding up the glass of
nature,” correct theirrational treatment
and abnormal conditions under which
te is often reared Not that the condi-
tions surrounding the horse in a state of
nature should be wholly imitated, for
they do not all tend to his improvement
in the qualities adapted to man’s use.
But it is worthy of note that the wild
horse is tough, sound and healthy, and
making due allowance for the influence
-of natural selection or the survival of
‘the fittest when it is observed that'he is
seldom in a state of rest, that he lives
«unconfined in the open air, upon natur-
-al food, it may reasonably connect these
as cause and effect, and safely consider
exercise, pure air and simple (diet the
fundamental conditions upon which to
build up, by skill in breeding and
training, the highest and most perfect
<equine type.
] Bashful Men. v
Are there any bashful men now 'ex-
tant among us? Not among the rising
generation of “Young American,” most
surely. Perhapssome may exist in the
form of some antiquarian or library
man, who, when dragged from his lair,
may be covered with confusion, trying
to make a bow or frame a compliment
after the latest approved mode, But let
the etiquette lover meet one of these re-
“eluses op his own “hunting grounds”
and it would be he who would be the
bashful man. We are inclined to the
opinion, which will no doubt be com-
forting to the diflident and blushing of
both sexes, that bashfulness and brains
are generally found in company. Your
self-confident person is generally the
one who has the least ballast, Hil
Interesting Odds and Ends.
Scraps Picked Up Here and There
Which Contain Worlds of Infor-
mation for All.
New York has 86,5)3 dogs.
California has 246 banks.
Berlin's debt is $56,000,000.
India contains 286,000,000 peopie.
Cholera is raging in parts of Japan.
Uncle Sam has 4000 failures yearly.
Chicago is to have a $1,200,000 theatre.
An average locomotive costs $10,000.
The Alps stand in six different States.
The United States have 325 electric
roads.
London has another hydrophobia
scare.
London: employs 500,000 factory
hands.
The United States contain 30,000
millionaires.
The fruit yield has been a good one in
Rhode Island.
Iron has been rolled to the thinness of
1. 1800th of an inch. :
A $15,000,000 railroad tunnel is to be
bored through the Alps.
Japan wants reciprocity orsome closer
trade relations with China.
A new method to utihze coal culm
has been successfully tried
About 32,000,000 of peasants in Rus-
sia are destitute and must be provided
for.
Governor Knapp estimates the pro-
duction of gold and silver in Alaska at
$1,000,000.
Fitty horses a day is the average
death rate among the equine population
of Chicago.
Antimony is found extensively in
Portugal, the largest beds being situated |
near Braganza.
The reports from tke phosphate dig”
gings in Florida show the industry to
be unprofitable,
It is probable that the new track laid
in the United States this year will fall
below 5000 miles.
The Dominion Government appoin-
ted Thursday, November 12, asthe day
of public thanksgiving.
Arrangements are being made to lay
a cable from Nassau to Jupiter Inlet,
on the coast of Florida.
The French make paper umbrellas,
rendered wholly waterproof by gelatin-
ed bichromate of potassium.
An electric flying machine was re-
cently made to rise to height of seventy
feet and fly about 400 yards.
American maize flour is to be tried in
Germany as a substitute for the cheap
breadstuff now in use there. :
The German Government ‘has placed
an order in the hands of American |
agents for eighty-five tons of aluminum.
A French electrician has gotten up a
device by which he can send 150 type-
written words per minute over a single
wire.
By the use of the camera, with pow-
ful telescopes a new and very large cra-
ter has been shown upon the moon’s
surface.
Professor Hazen, of the National
Weather Bureu, declares that the rain-
making experiments in Texas have
been total failures.
The sturgeon is toothless and draws in
its food by suction, but the shark has
hundreds of teeth set in rows that some-
times number ten.
A seamless steel boat made from one
piece of metal by hydraulic pressure
promises to be very desirable. It will
last a great while and cannot leak. -
The Kentucky Court of Appeals has
affirmed a judgment of $800 and costs
against the Louisville and Nashville
Railroad Compuny for repairing its tracks
on a Sunday.
The largest locomotive yet built in
Europe was recently sent out of the
Hirschau works in Munich, Bavaria.
It is forty-six feet over all and weighs
eighty-four tons.
Telescopic steel masts or rods are to be
used in lighting the public squares in
Brussels, Belgium. The object of this
system is to preserve the beauties of the
parks in the daytime,
The effective range of the modern
magazine rifle is not less than a mile,
and the maximum range not less than
two miles. There is danger from richo-
chet up to a distance of a mile.
As heat resistants we may mention as-
bestos, plaster-of-paris, uncalcined gy p-
sum, sand, clay, ashes, charcoal, soap-
stone, pumice stone, chalk, infusorial
earth, mineral wool, rock, wool.
Electricity is playing an important |
part in the working of heavy guns, am-
munition hoists, and winches in the
French Navy. New ships are being
fitted with electric appliances in lieu of
hydraulic gear.
The practice of placing the green
boughs of the eucalyptus tree in sick
rooms is growing in Australia. They
not only act as disinfectants, but the
volatile scent has also a beneficial indu-
ence on consumptive patients.
The Spanish Board of Admiralty pro-
poses to build a caravel, a vessel similiar
to those in which Coiumbus made his
voyage of discovery. It is intended
that the vessels be exhibited firstat
Buelva and afterwards at the Chicago
fair.
By means of a powerful jet of com-
pressed air a German engineer drives
dry cement down into the sand or mud
at the bottom of the stream, so that the
water immediately fixes the cement and
it becomes like soiid rock, suitable for
foundations.
An American machine which will suc-
cessfully work out the fibre of sisal from
the plant has produced a boom in that
industry never realized with the Eng-
lish machines heretofore used. The
new machine does not cut the fibre, and
the product leaves the machine ready
for the market.
——He—80 you just positively will
not give me one kiss? And I had a
$10 bet with Tom Bickle that you
would.”
She~—¢1 am sorry for you, but I have
a bet with him ofa box of gloves that
I would not.”
Telling Time.
How it May be Done Without the Use
of Sun-Dial or Chronometer,
There is a great difference in individ-
uals as to the sense of time—that is, as
to the power of carrying time along with
one. ome persons carry it so well
that they can tell you at almost an
instant what the time of day is, to with-
in a few minutes. Others have so little
sense of time that they may be said to
be living in eternity. Time pieces are a
concession to the inability of most of us
to carry our time. And no doubt it is
true that man’s ability to be his own
timepiece has lessened directly with the
increase in the number and variety of
mechanical devices for telling time.
Perhaps the learned people know just
what go to make up the sense of time
in the mind.
One may beall wrong when he says
it seems to him that the power to carry
the time in one’s head is the result of
the power of noting the changes in na-
ture and the association throvgh long
experience of these with certain times of
day. They form a serious of very min-
ute and subtle perceptions and recogni-
tiond--the difference in the quality of
daylight at certain times of the day, the
length of shadows, the recognitions of
certain sounds as characteristic of one
time of day more than another, a whole
chain of observations and deductions
that your mind is carrying on without
your knowing it while you think you
are entirely busy with other things.
Through all this you carry along with
you the sense of what the time must be.
You don’t know you know it, but you
do, and you learn to trust you sense of
time.
That is, if you have trained it. If
you haven't, if you have always been in
the habit of consulting a timepiece when
you want to know the time, you’ll have
to. The ability to interpret the time of
day from the looks of things about you
is one that hasto be trained. Lay aside
your watch forsix months snd you’ll
find at the end of that time you will
have precious little need for it. The
few primitive people that have been
missed by the enterprising missionary in
his circling witness to the truth of this.
They can tell time as accurately as any
timepiece could tell them. There is no
I doubt if it was any gain to the Saxons
when King Alfred began to put his can-
dles into lanthorns as mechanical aids to
measuring time. Doubtless their brains
were their time pieces.
Blood Will Tell.
Of course 1t will—that 1s if it is good
healthy blood. It will grow in the
i cheek, and tell the story of perfect
physical health. If it does not, if the
complexion is devoid of color, the mus-
‘cles weak and flaccid, something is
wrong, and something ought to be
done about it at once, for in such cases
| delays are dangerous. For torpid liv-
er, ‘“biliousness,”” and the thousand
| and one ills to which these conditions
| of the system lead, there is no remedy
| in the world equal to Dr. Prierce’s
| Golden Medical Discovery. Boils,
| pimples, eruptions, scrofulous sores,
salt-rheum, and all kindred diseases are
| cured by it.
She Could Wait.
A Texas lady sent her colored servant
over to the house of a sick neighbor.
“Mrs. Smith saunt me over to ask how
your husband am comin on dis mawn-
ing ?V
“Very bad, indeed. The doctor says
he may die any minute,” was the reply.
“Den I reckon I had better wait a
little while, as I hasn’t got nuffin else to
do jess now,”
——Mamma: “Who dwelt in the Gar-
den of Eden ?”’
Neddie: ‘Oho, 1 know — the
Adamses.”’
Book Bindery.
je BOOK BINDERY.
[Established 1852.]
Having the latest improved machinery 1 am
prepared to
BIND BOOKS AND MAGAZINES
of all descriptions, or to rebind old books,
Special attention given to the ruling of paper
and manufacture of BLANK BOOKS.
Orders will be received at this office, or ad-
dress GLH ,
Book Binder Third and Market Streets,
25 18 Harrisburg, Pa.
a
Old Honesty Tobacco.
] POLNTS
—ON——
{——OLD HONESTY — }
PLUG.
1. It’s the best.
2. It lasts.
3. It's a pleasure to chew it,
4, Tt satisfies,
5. Always thesame.
6. Everybody praises it.
You will like it.
8. Yonshould try it.
Ask for it. Insist on having it.
of
to I
JNO. FINZER & BROS.,
36 40 1t Louisville, Ky.
| Bellefonte.
Saddlery.
(OHOFIEL 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 Harpei Bros, on Spring street. It has been
added to my factory and will be used execlu-
sively for the sale of harness, being the first
exclusive salesroom ever used in this town, as
heretofore the «ustom 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 large, but
3 selling lots of goods we can afford to live in
We are nol indulging in idle
philanthropy. Itis 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. 4
When other houses discharged their work-
men during the winter they were all put to
work in my tactory, nevertheless the big (2)
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
$3.00 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 Nete sold cheap
$150 worth of whips
from 15¢ to $3.00 each,
Horse Brushes,Cury Combs
Sponges, Chamois, RIDING
SADDLES, LADY SIDE SADDLES
Harness Soap, Knee Dusters, at low
prices, Saddlery-hardware always on hand
for sale, Harness Leather as low as 25c¢ 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 houses discharged their hands,
they soon found work with us.
JAS. SCHOFIELD,
33 37 Spring street, Bellefonte, Pa.
Farmer's Supplies.
Ji sevens SUPPLIES AT
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES.
SOUTH < 20, CHILLED
BEND <P Zy PLOWS
nS SHARES 2 &y,
A reduced from 40 to Cay
30 cts.—all other repairs re-
duced accordingly.
CHILLED PLOWS are the best
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.
Roland
HARROWS—7he 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
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,
PHAETONS,
AND PLATFORM SPRING WAGONS.
a “The Boss,” Bent Wood, Oval
Churns and Union Churns. Our sale of
churns is constantly inereasing.
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
AND GARDE SEmp,
“4 S
ower Pots and Urns.
£11 FERTILIZERS, | {
Agricuitural Salt, our Champion Twenty-five
Dollar Piosphate; Lister's hest 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 justifies 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
intereat of every farmer in Central Pennsylva-
nia to examine our stock before purchasing.
We take great asure in entertaining
farmers. It does not cost anything toexamine
the articles we have on exhibition.
McCALMONT & CO.,
Hale Building, Bellefonte, Pa.
Wm. Shortiidge, Y p,,uinase =
Robt. Mc Calmont. { Business Managers.
35 4 1y
HECK-WEIGHMAN'S RE-
PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 150
with name of mine and date line printed in
full, on extra heavy paper, furnished in any
quanity on to days’ notice by the.
32 39 WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS.
Tourists.
em eee
rps ND. £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 *
PFF EEE
ANjosrans HAS
the Largest Gold Mines.
the Largest Silver Mines,
the Largest Copper Mines.
the Largest Lead Mines.
HAs EXTENSIVE GRAZING RANGES, FINE TIMBER
Bers, WIDE AGRICULTURAL VALLEYS.
Is larger than New England, New York,
i vann) New Jersey ana Delaware com-
ned.
_ The Great Northern Railway is the direct
line from St. Paul and Minneapolis to Great
Falls, Monarch, Neihart, Barker, Helena,
Butte and other Montana points. Apply to
your home railway agent for tickets over the
Great Northern. :
I donot wish to blow,into them,
but merely whisper that the Red
River Valley offers fine induce-
ments for home seekers, as also
the entire region along the Great
Northern Railway through Min-
nesota, North Dakotaand Montan-
na. For Maps, Guide Books, etc.,
apply to F. I, Whitney, G. P. &
. A., St. Paul, Minn.,, or your
nearest railway agent,
Insome states the ra-
Hig is two any often ites
one in favor of the
men. The best route YOURS
from St. Paul, Minneapo-| MEN
lis, Duiuth and West Su-(ARE OUT
perior to the Northwest- THERE
ern and Pacific States is
NOW.
LEND
ME
YOUR
EARS.
YOUNG THE
WOMEN,
GO
WEST! |via the Great Northern
Railway.
EE Farms can be had in Minnesota
and North Dakota on crop and oth-
er plans to suit purchasers. No
failure of crops in twelve years of
settlement. Large yieldsof wheat
and other staples. Fine stock re-
ion, Good schools and churches.
ealthful climate. Great Markets
within easy reach. Farms paid
for from the proceeds of one crop.
Highest prices paid for product.
The Great Northern Railway has
three lines through the Valley.
Address W. W, raden, Land
Commissioner, St, Paul, Minn., for
particulars.
ABOUT A GREAT COUNTRY.
.
Maps and publications sent free, and letters
asking information atout travel and settle-
ment in Minnesota, the Dakotas and Montana
answered by F. I. Whitney, G. P. & T., Great
Northern Railway, St. Panl. Tickets to all
points in the West. Lowest ratesto the Paci-
fic Coast. 36 32
$22 ¢ 44
Flour, Feed, &c.
RED
RIVER
VALLEY,
{3 caper, HALE & CO.,
—BELLEFONTE, PA.—
:- Manufacturers of -:-
And Dealers in
0—ALL KINDS OF GRAIN.—o
&&5-The highest market price paid for
reds wRY Buss CORN J.
riots AND cers OAT Ec erviner
Illuminating Oil.
{povy 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
Railway Guide.
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
AND BRANCHES.
. Dec. 14th, 1890.
L Bell I ram,
eave Bellefonte, 4.55 a. m.. arrive ut
6.10 a. m., at Altorna, 7.45 a. Su Ives,
bog 12.45 p. m.
Leave Reallefonie, 10.25 a. m., arrive at Uyrone,
11.555. n A'nona, 1.45 p. m., & Pitts.
ourg, 6.50 p: m 2
Lesve Bellefonte, 5.20 p. m., arrive at Tyone,
3.40, at Altoona at 7.50, at Pittsburg at'1 55.
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD,
ueavy Bellefonte 4.55 a.m. arrive at Tyrqne
5.10, at Harrisburg 9.20 a. m., at Philaig].
phia, 1216 p. m.
Leave Belletoate 10 25 a. m., arrive at Tyrore,
11.55 a. m., at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m, st
Philadelphia, 6.50 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.20 p. m., arrive at Tyrme,
6..40 at Harrisburg at 10.00 p. m., at Phla-
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—FEASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 1300, 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,
2 Harrisburg, 3.13 p- m., at Th at
m
Leave Bellefonte, 8.49 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha~
Jon, oad i 2 isave Williamsport, 12.25
-, leave Harrisburg, 3.45 a. m., arrive
Philadelphia at 6.50 &. mm. 2 o
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.
Leaye Bellefonte, 2.00 p. m., arrive at Lewis-
burg, 4.45, at Harrisburg, 9.45 p. m., Phila-
delphia at 4.25 a. m.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
B " 5 B B "
bE o Dec. 14, > ing| HN
E 8 & B 1890. Fl B= 3
P.M.| A. M. | A. M. [Arr Lv. A.M. p.m | p.m.
6 40{ 11 55/ 6 10 ...Tyrone 8101310] 715
6 33| 11 48 6 08|.E.Tyrone..| 817/13 17| 7 22
629] 11 43] 5 59)...... Vail...... 8 20(3 20| 7 28
6 25 11 38 5 55/Bald Eagle] 8 25/3 24| 7 33
6 191 11 32! 5 49{......Diz...... 8 30/3 30 7 39
6 15) 11 29| 5 47... Fowler 8 32/3 33] 742
6 13| 11 26 5 45... Hannah...| 8 36/3 87] 7 46
6 06] 11 17| 5 38|Pt. Matilda.| 8 43/3 44] 7 55
5 59| 11 09] 5 31|...Martha....| ‘8 51/3 52| 8 05
5 50| 10 59] 5 23|....Julian..... 859/401; 815
5 41| 10 48| 5 15/.Unionville.| 9 10/4 10] 8 25
5 33| 10 38] 5 08|...8.8. Int...| 918/418 8 35
5 30] 10 35] 5 05|.Milesburg | 9 22/4 20! 8 39
5 20 10 25! 4 55|.Bellefonte.| 9 32/4 30/ 8 49
5 10] 10 12| 4 45|.Milesburg.| 9 47/4 40| 9 01
5 02 10 01] 4 38|....Curtin....| 10 01{4 47| 9 11
4 55 9 56| 4 :5/.Mt. Eagls..| 10 06/4 655| 9 17
449) 9 48! 4 30|...Howard...| 10 16/5 02| 9 21
4 40| 9 37) 4 22|.Eagleville.| 10 30/5 10| 9 40
4 38) 9 34) 4 19 Beh. Creek.| 10 35/5 13] 9 45
4 26] 9 22 4 11.Mill Hall...| 10 50/5 24| 10 01
423 919) 4 09 Flemin’ton.! 10 54/5 27| 10 05
420] 915 4 05Lck. Haven| 11 00/5 30| 10 1¢
P.M.| A. M. | A M. | A.M. [A.M.| P. M.
TYRONE & CLEARFIELD.
NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD,
3 fr Fo |e)
28] ° g
P.M.| P. M. | A. M. |Lv. Arla. M.A. Mm. [P.M
725 315 8 20(..Tyrone....| 6 50 11 45/6 17
7 32| 3 22| 8 27.E. Tyrone.| 6 43| 11 38/6 10
7.38] 13 27|<8i81}...... Vail... 6 37| 11 34/6 04
7 48| 3 36/ 8 41|.Vanscoyoc.| 6 27| 11 25/5 55
7 55| 3 42| 8 45|.Gardners...| 6 25| 11 21/5 52
8 02| 3 50, 8 55Mt.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| 11 006 34
816] 4 05 9 12|... Retort....., 6 03] 10 55/5 81
819 4 06] 9 15..Powelton...| 6 01] 10 52/5 30
8 25] 4 14| 9 24/...Osceola...| 5 52| 10 15/56 20
8 35] 4 20| 9 32/..Boynton...| 5 46] 10 39/5 14
8 40) 4 24| 9 37|..Steiners...| 5 43| 10 35/5 09
8 42! 4 30| 9 40/Philipshu gl 5 41( 10 32/5 07
8 46| 4 34, 9 44|..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 07(4 41
9 12] 5 02| 10 14.Wood!land..| 5 17] 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| 5 26| 10 49|Sus. Bridge| 4 54] 9 26/4 00
9 50| 5 35 10 55/Curwensv’e| 4 50] 9 20/4 08
P.M.| P. M. | A. M. A.M. | A.M. P.M
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after
Dec. 14, 1890
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......6 45 a. m:
00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday. 30 x m.
25 p.m.
BELLEFONTE, NITTANY & LEMONT R.R
To take effect July 19, 1891.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
111 103 114 | 112
STATIONS.
P. M. | A.M. A.M. | PM.
2 15] 15:50]...00:4 Montandon........ 9 20 456
2 95] 6 20!........ Lewisburg........ 910] 445
taiirstelsranis gorlseens DAIL GPOURA 1 vseilerssesbroguasadesss
2 35] ‘6 30... ...Biehl 9 00] 437
2 40 6 35|........Vicksburg 8 63] 432
2 50| 6 45|.......Mifflinburg. 843] 4 22
3 06) T 00|.........Millmont 827 409
3 14, 7 08... Laurelton........| 817] 4 (2
8 38). '7.19]....;.. Cherry Run....... 753 338
3 58753. cuvieeend Coburn........... 730] 818
4 15| 8 10|....Rising Sezinge 712, 302
4 28 «......Centre Hal 6 58] 247
4 34 6 61) 240
4 40 643] 232
4 45 6 38] ‘2 27
4 49 634 223
4 53 629 218
5 02 Pleasant Gap......[ 6 19] 2 08
5101 9 10}.....\. Bellefonte........., 6 10] 2 00
P. M. f A.M | PM
‘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
=
2 May 12, =e 2
5 1390. 2 qh
Bs i
P. M. A.M. { P.M.
5 (5|....8cotia..... 9 21) 4 47).eeeee
5 25. Fairbrook.| 9 09] 4 27
5 37|Pa.Furnace| 8 56{ 4 15
5 44|...Hostler..., 8 50; 4 08
55 {Rarngs, 8 431 401...
5 57|.Loveville... 837] 3 55|.....
6 G4 FurnaceRd| 8 31; 3 49|.....
6 08 Dungarvin.| 8 27/ 3 46
6 18|..W. Mark... 819] 3 48
oar 11 20; 6 28/Pennington| 8 10{ 3 30!,
rade. 11 32| 6 40,..Stover....| 7.58 3 18
reqrie 11 40{ 6 50{...Tyrone....| 7 50] 3 10
»ELLEFONTE, BUFFALO RUN
AND BALD EAGLE RAILROAD.
To take ¢ffect May 12, 1800.
EASTWARD. WESTWARD.
6 2 | i lek
{ STATIONS. —-
P.M. | A M| A M| Pou
6 20 9 10/Ar....Bellefonte....Lv| 6 00] 8 00
6 3 9 03 Scales... | 6.07] 3.09
6 08) 85 Morris 611 318
603 87 i | 616] 319
5 59) 8 619; 828
5 571 84 6221 326
b 53) 8 6 26] 3 30
5 41] 8 632 336
543] 8: 638 348
539 8 6'46| 3 46
| 8 3 53
8 3 59
8 . ‘| 4 09
524) 7 SOARS RE
520 7.20|Lv. State Collego.Ar| 7 04] 5 04
Thos. A. SHOEMAKER, fini
Philadelphia Card.
Eos RD W. MILLER,
WITH
WOOD, BROWN & CO.,
Dealers in
HOSIERY, NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS &O0.
429 Market Street:
1561 ©HILADELPHIA, FA.